Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Chas. Simons Sons Co.

63 A. 314, 103 Md. 136, 1906 Md. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 A. 314 (Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Chas. Simons Sons Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Chas. Simons Sons Co., 63 A. 314, 103 Md. 136, 1906 Md. LEXIS 107 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

*138 Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the lower Court restraining the appellant from exacting or requiring of the appellees a greater rate of rental than $48.00 per annum for business telephones and service connections on a one party, double copper wire metallic circuit, central energy system, with unlimited calls, and declaring that such leases aré illegal and void, so far as they provide for rates in excess of the said sum of $48 per .annum; and further restraining the appellant from refusing to continue the said service so long as the appellees tender and pay therefor a rental at the rate of $48 per annum.

Many of the legal questions affecting the cause have been heard and decided in a former appeal reported in 99 Md. 142, which arose upon demurrer to the'appellees’ bill. We refer to the proceedings in that case, for a fuller statement of the averments of the bill, and also for the several questions that must be taken as settled here. The cause having been remanded to the lower Court for further proceedings, the appellant answered the bill, and testimony was taken by each party, and- the decree was rendered, from which this appeal is taken. In its answer the appellant admits that it has charged for telephone service at the rates stated in the bill, but denies these rates are in excess of the amount if is entitled to charge; that Ordinance No. 1 ro was enacted as stated in the bill, and was accepted by the appellants; that it has established a large and effective telephone system in Baltimore City to over 7,000 subscribers; but it denies that the central energy system had been supplied prior to or at the time- of the enactment of. Ordinance No. no, but, it is averred, an inferior system known as the trunking' system, was then in general use by the company. It denies that it has charged higher rates for telephone service, such as it is now supplying. It avers that the said rates are reasonable, and that since the time of the enactment of the ordinance referred to, “ordinary” telephone equipment did not include a metallic circuit nor the central energy feature. That at that time there were only five hundred in the city, and the central energy system was unknown, and there *139 fore these were not then contemplated, and it. was not intended that the appellant should be prohibited from making special contracts at special rates for special or improved equipment. It admits that when it first began operations in Baltimore City, it supplied a metallic circuit, not because it was under legal obligation to do so, according to the terms of the ordinance, but “for purely business reasons,” made to compete with its powerful rival, the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company. It avers that this was continued long after it was financially profitable to do so. That as the number of telephones increased «the cost per telephone also increased, and it finally became impossible to supply the best service at the rates mentioned in the ordinance. That it therefore became and was necessary to adopt a scale of charges, regulated to some extent by the number of calls per day required by the subscriber. That the rates charged are reasonable, the highest being $72 per annum and the lowest $60, &c.

The testimony taken by both parties, shows the contracts entered into between the appellant and the appellees, the kind of service ‘rendered by the former, the cost of supplying it-per ’phone, the several kinds of equipment needed, and the financial status of the appellant, and the conditions existing at the time of the passage of the ordinance.

The Court in the case* reported in the 99th Md., overruled the demurrer to the bill filed by the Telephone Company, and in its opinion decided as follows.

1. That there was nothing in the previous legislation of 1892, ch. 387, or in the Act of 1894, ch. 207, to prevent the appellant from making the contract, which the appellants made, to furnish the citizens of Baltimore with telephone service at the rates specified in Ordinance No. no.

2. That the kind and description of equipment and service that was to be supplied must be sought for, not in the law theretofore existing but in the contracts that were made.

3. That by the “most natural and reasonable construction to be given or meaning to be imputed to word telephone as used in the ordinance,” is the “telephone with all improve *140 ments, equipments and appliances essential in its operation to make it most effective in use; and if any other construction is to be applied, it can be only after it is made to appear from all the “circumstances and conditions surrounding the parties to the contract at the time of the making'of the contract that such was the intention.”

4. That the design of the ordinance w^s to promote the public welfare, and to that extent was more than “a mere contract.” That the ordinance was within the authority and power of the Mayor and City Council and that the appellant at the time had the right to refuse to accept its terms, but it cannot now object that the regulation of rates therein contained is not a reasonable one.

5. And finally that the ordinance imposed upon the appellant “a duty to the general public which the members thereof have a right to enforce against it in conditions which will show that is violating such duty.”

It is contended upon the part of the appellant that the legal effect of the bill is practically to bring about the enforcement of the contract contained in the ordinance, and that therefore the principles regulating the specific enforcement of contracts must govern. The appellees claim to have the right to require the Telephone Company to furnish telephone service at $48 per annum, because of its contra'ct with the city, as embodied in the Ordinance No. no. The plain purpose of this bill is to secure the telephone service, at the rates prescribed, and it is sought to reach this end by an injunction, forbidding and restraining the appellant from interfering with the ’phones, and also from charging or exacting more than forty-eight dob lars per annum. Should such an injunction issue it is clear, there would be accomplished everything a decree for the specific execution could effect. It would prevent the removal of the ’phones and require the continuance of the service at a rate not exceeding $48 per annum, and this being so, the bill must be taken as one for the enforcement of the contract; and therefore all the principles which apply to the case of a bill for specific performance, must be applicable here. This Court *141 in Gurley v. Hiteshue, 5 Gill. 223, said “all the principles which apply to the case of a bill for specific performance, apply with equal force to the case of a bill for perpetual injunction, when that injunction accomplishes all the objects which could be accomplished by a successful prosecution of a formal bill for specific execution.” This doctrine so stated, has substantial support in many cases in this State as well as elsewhere. Canton Co. v. N. C. R. R. Co., 21 Md. 399.

In Strang v. R. R. Co., 101 Fed. Rep.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Snodgrass v. Stubbs
54 A.2d 338 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1947)
Albright v. Cavacos
3 Balt. C. Rep. 323 (Baltimore City Circuit Court, 1914)
Whalen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
69 A. 390 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 314, 103 Md. 136, 1906 Md. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-telephone-telegraph-co-v-chas-simons-sons-co-md-1906.