In Re Sprint Communications Co.

592 N.W.2d 825, 234 Mich. App. 22
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1999
Docket197000
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 592 N.W.2d 825 (In Re Sprint Communications Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Sprint Communications Co., 592 N.W.2d 825, 234 Mich. App. 22 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

592 N.W.2d 825 (1999)
234 Mich. App. 22

In re SPRINT COMMUNICATIONS CO., L.P., COMPLAINT.
Ameritech Michigan, Appellant,
v.
Michigan Public Service Commission, MCI Telecommunications Corporation, AT & T Communications of Michigan, Inc., and Sprint Communications Company L.P., Appellees.

Docket No. 197000.

Court of Appeals of Michigan.

Submitted November 9, 1998, at Lansing.
Decided February 12, 1999, at 9:00 a.m.
Released for Publication May 5, 1999.

*826 *827 Clark Hill P.L.C. (by Roderick S. Coy and Haran C. Rashes), for Sprint Communications Company, L.P., Okemos.

Dykema Gossett PLLC (by Albert Ernst, Robert J. Franzinger, and Lori M. Silsbury, Lansing) (Thomas F. O'Neil, III, and Adam H. Charnes, Washington, D.C., of Counsel), for MCI Telecommunications Corporation.

Michael A. Holmes, Detroit and Dickinson Wright PLLC (by Joseph A. Fink, Lansing, ), for Ameritech Michigan.

Cheryl L. Urbanski and Fischer, Franklin & Ford (by George Hogg, Jr., Detroit and Sidney M. Berman), for AT & T Communications of Michigan, Inc., East Lansing.

Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Thomas L. Casey, Solicitor General, and Don L. Keskey, Patricia S. Barone, and David A. Voges, Assistant Attorneys General, for the Public Service Commission.

Before: WHITE, P.J., and MARKMAN and YOUNG, JR., JJ.

MARKMAN, J.

Ameritech Michigan (Ameritech) appeals as of right an opinion and order of the Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC), which finds that Ameritech sent a misleading and anticompetitive bill insert to its customers in violation of the Michigan Telecommunications Act (MTA), 1991 PA 179, amended by 1995 PA 216 and 1998 PA 41, M.C.L. § 484.2101 et seq.; MSA 22.1469(101) et seq. We affirm.

The customer bill insert at issue in this case offered Ameritech's customers protection against the practice known as "slamming," whereby a customer's preexisting choice of telecommunication service providers is changed without the customer's authorization. Slamming has occurred most frequently in the interLATA long distance market,[1] where customers typically preselect or "presubscribe" one particular long distance provider to service all their long distance telephone calls made by ordinary "1+"` dialing.[2] However, with the advent of provider presubscription and 1+ dialing parity for Michigan intraLATA calls, slamming can now also occur in the intraLATA long distance market, as well as in markets *828 for other telecommunications services where providers may be preselected by the customer, e.g., competitive markets for basic local exchange services.

Slamming can be prevented if the customer instructs the local phone company to make no changes in the customer's presubscribed provider choices unless the customer directly requests the phone company to make the change, instead of allowing the customer's newly selected provider to request the change on the customer's behalf. The parties variously refer to this type of arrangement as "PIC protection."

In December 1995, Ameritech included an insert in its monthly telephone bills to residential and small business customers offering Ameritech's PIC protection program, which program had been in effect for approximately ten years. The front of the insert contained the heading: "DON'T GET SLAMMED," followed by the following text:

You can stop unauthorized changes in your long-distance phone service. Please read and respond now to protect yourself.

The inside of the bill insert contained the following text:

Some phone companies are engaging in a practice commonly known as slamming: switching consumers' long-distance or other telecommunications service without their knowledge or consent. This is an illegal practice on which the Federal Communications Commission has begun to crack down.

While Ameritech can do nothing to resolve the problem after your long-distance service has been slammed, we can easily protect you before it happens.

Simply complete the information below and return this form with your bill payment to ensure that slamming never happens to you. Upon receipt, Ameritech will not permit any changes to your account unless you notify us by phone or in writing of your desire to make changes. There is no charge to you for this service.
If you have any questions about slamming or your current phone service, please call us at X-XXX-XXX-XXXX. [Emphasis in original.]

The remainder of the bill insert is a form with spaces for the customer's signature, name, address, and phone number.

On February 14, 1996, Sprint Communications Company, L.P., filed a complaint against Ameritech with the MPSC, alleging that Ameritech's bill insert was misleading and anticompetitive in violation of the MTA and the Michigan Consumer Protection Act, M.C.L. § 445.901 et seq.; MSA 19.418(1) et seq. Other competing long distance providers, known as inter-exchange carriers or "IXCs," i.e., AT & T Communications of Michigan, Inc., and MCI Telecommunications Corporation, subsequently intervened in the proceedings.

For the most part, the evidence before the MPSC focused on how Ameritech's customers were likely to have interpreted the bill insert with regard to the services covered by the PIC protection program[3] and whether Ameritech's motive in sending the bill insert out just before the January 1, 1996, intra LATA 1+ dialing parity conversion date in Michigan was to impede effective competition for its share of the intraLATA long distance market. In a 3 to 1 decision, the MPSC agreed with the hearing referee that the insert violated the MTA but also held that the Michigan Consumer Protection Act claims were beyond its jurisdiction. Specifically, the MPSC found that the bill insert was misleading and deceptive under all the circumstances:

The Commission finds the bill insert to be deceptive and misleading. Just a few months before sending the bill insert, Ameritech Michigan had provided notice of *829 the impending implementation of intra LATA dialing parity and used the terminology "intraLATA toll calling." Exhibit I-24, p. 2. Ameritech conducted a media campaign a few weeks after mailing the bill insert to encourage those who have not done so already to request PIC protection. It did not use the phrase "long-distance" service as the bill insert had used that phrase. It referred to "long-distance and/or local-toll service." Exhibit I-43, pp. 4-7. Yet, in the bill insert, Ameritech Michigan used the term "long-distance" to mean inter- and intraLATA services. Furthermore, at the time customers received the bill insert, for almost all customers, the only service for which the provider could be switched, with or without the customer's consent, was interLATA service. Customers could not presubscribe to an intraLATA provider and most did not have a choice of a local service provider. Therefore, the only kind of slamming that had any meaning to almost all customers was the slamming of interLATA service.

In that context, the definition of slamming inside the insert does not convey to customers that Ameritech Michigan intended the PIC protection program to apply to all services. Rather, the definition is just that, an explanation of how the term can be used.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
592 N.W.2d 825, 234 Mich. App. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sprint-communications-co-michctapp-1999.