In re Brack & Hewitt

1 Fla. Supp. 56
CourtFlorida Public Service Commission
DecidedJanuary 5, 1951
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Fla. Supp. 56 (In re Brack & Hewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Florida Public Service Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Brack & Hewitt, 1 Fla. Supp. 56 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

BY THE COMMISSION.

On July 20, 1950 the Honorable Richard W. Ervin, Attorney General, notified the Jacksonville exchange manager of Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. that it had been determined by investigation made by his office that telephone numbers 56384, 51692 and 69354, located at 215 and 217 West Forsyth St., Jacksonville, were used on July 10, 1950 in the bookie room at said address for illegal purposes, to-wit: the transmission of horse race information for illegal gambling purposes. The Attorney General’s notice requested that the telephone service be discontinued and the facilities removed.

On the same day the Attorney General likewise served notice on the Jacksonville manager of the Western Union Telegraph Co. that a Western Union baseball ticker located at 215-217 West Forsyth St., Jacksonville, was being used for an illegal purpose, to-wit: gambling on baseball results. The Attorney General’s notice requested that the baseball ticker service be discontinued and the facilities removed from the premises.

On July 26, 1950 Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. notified the Attorney General and this commission that it had taken the following action pursuant to the request of the Attorney General:

“(1) Telephone no. 5-6384, business individual line (combined hand set), non-listed, billed to Hewitt’s Brack’s Smoke Shop, located at 215 West Forsyth St. Notice of discontinuance given on July 21, and the telephone service was discontinued, the instrumentalities and drop removed on July 22, 1950.
“(2) Telephone no. 5-1692, business individual line (combined hand set), listed as Hewitt and Brack’s Smoke Shop, 215 West Forsyth St. Notice of discontinuance given July 21, and the service was discontinued, instrumentalities and drop removed on July 22, 1950.
“(3) Telephone no. 6-9354, semi-public coin box service, listed as Brack’s Bar and Package store, 215 West Forsyth St. Also [58]*58listed as Jimmy Manes, office. Notice of discontinuance given on July 21, and the service discontinued, instrumentalities and drop removed on July 22, 1950.
“(4) In addition to the service recited in your letter of above reference, the following service was found and discontinued at this address, being listed and used by the same subscriber: ,
“Telephone no. 5-4012, business individual line (combined hand set), listed as R. W. Brack Liquor, 215 West Forsyth St. Notice of discontinuance given on July 21, and the service discontinued, instrumentalities and drop removed July 22, 1950.”

On July 25, 1950 the Western Union Telegraph Co. notified this commission that baseball sports ticker was removed from 215-217 West Forsyth St., Jacksonville, on July 21, 1950 pursuant to request of Attorney General made on July 20, 1950.

On August 17, 1950 W. R. Brack and Stanley Hewitt, both of Jacksonville, doing business as Brack & Hewitt, 215-217 West Forsyth St., filed their petition with this commission seeking restoration of telephone service and Western Union baseball ticker service which had been discontinued at the request of the Attorney General. A public hearing was held on the petition by the commission in Jacksonville on October 25, 1950 for the purpose of taking testimony on the question whether or not petitioners are entitled to reinstatement of telephone and telegraph service discontinued as aforesaid.

The Attorney General by official opinion dated October 18, 1950 has advised the Governor of Florida that Western Union sports ticker service is furnished over facilities which constitute “private wires” under the terms of chapter 25016, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1949, which regulates the use of “private wire” facilities and prohibits their use for gambling purposes or in furtherance of gambling.

Copies of contracts calling for the installation of Western Union sports ticker service at 215-217 West Forsyth St., Jacksonville, have not been filed with this commission and for that reason we do not know if this service was installed prior to or subsequent to the effective date of chapter 25016 which was May 4, 1949. If the service was installed prior to the effective date of the law then it would not have been necessary for a copy of the contract to have been furnished this commission. On the other hand the service could not have been lawfully installed subsequent to May 4, 1949 without furnishing three [59]*59copies of the contract for such service with this commission. Investigations which are presently under way will disclose full information concerning this particular service and will be the basis for appropriate action by the commission.

Inasmuch as the baseball ticker service is covered by the “private wire” statute the commission’s rule would not be applicable because the statute provides for a hearing prior to discontinuance of the service while the commission’s rule provides for a hearing after the service has been discontinued. The commission’s rule could not, of course, deprive one of a right of hearing given by the statute. In the instant case we do not consider the petition for restoration of the ticker service because this is a hearing under our rule and not under chapter 25016. Restoration of the ticker service cannot be considered until after the commission has determined whether it was lawfully installed in the first place. That is the subject matter of another investigation now under way as we have already indicated.

The telephone service involved in this proceeding was what is known as general exchange telephone service and is not embraced within the definition of the term “private wire” as contained in chapter 25016, supra. However, the illegal use of any telephone service or facility is prohibited by the rules and regulations of this commission and the hearing in the instant case has proceeded under the commission rule rather than under the provisions of chapter 25016.

The petitioners own and operate a pool room, billiard parlor, smoke shop and restaurant at 215-217 West Forsyth St., and for the use of the premises pay a monthly rental of $833. One of the petitioners quite frankly admitted on the witness stand that about a year ago they operated quite a different sort of business at this location, a charter membership club, the Forsyth Club, where gambling and things of that sort were carried on. In this connection it is an interesting coincidence that this commission on December 12, 1949 ordered Western Union Telegraph Co. to discontinue the private wire service of Hollywood News Service which had several drops or outlets in Jacksonville, one of which was at 217 West Forsyth St., because it was being used for the transmission of information for gambling purposes and in furtherance of gambling.

Petitioners now contend that they are engaged in a legitimate business and that if telephone service is reinstated they will not [60]*60allow it to be used for illegal purposes, in fact they have volunteered to “put up a sign on each telephone that they are not to be used in any way for gambling.”

On July 10,1950 James B. Toney, assistant attorney general, at the request of the Attorney General, made an investigation of petitioners’ place of business at 215-217 West Forsyth St. About 2:30 in the afternoon Toney went into the place and sat down in front of what he described as a “bookie counter.” A crowd of people were gathered around the cigar counter or “bookie counter” and men behind the counter were accepting horse bets.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Fla. Supp. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brack-hewitt-flapubserv-1951.