Murray v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co.

88 S.E. 31, 103 S.C. 427, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 3, 1916
Docket9303
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 S.E. 31 (Murray v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 88 S.E. 31, 103 S.C. 427, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 42 (S.C. 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

This is a case at law, and there is only one issue made by one exception. The plaintiff sued for a tort, and the Court directed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, at which the plaintiff appeals.

These are the plainly proven facts: That the plaintiff was at St. George and called a lady at Columbia. That there is at St. George only one telephone company, the Bell, and it maintains an exchange and an operator at that point. That the 'alleged -tort was committed at Branchville, a town on the defendant’s line betwixt St. George and Columbia. That the base or “central” of the defendant’s operations in *430 that vicinity is Denmark. That there is at Branchville a telephone company, owned and operated exclusively by the citizens of that town, with lines in the towii and into the country round about. That the defendant, which we shall refer to as the Bell Company, owns and operates, besides local, lines and exchanges, what is called a long distance line, which ramifies the South and maybe the Union; and its line in issue ran through' St. George, Branchville, Denmark and Columbia. That the Branchville Telephone Company and the Bell Company had a contract by which the Bell Company was let into the switchboard of the Branch-ville Company, and for this connection the Bell Company paid the Branchville Company 15 per cent, of all messages that originated at the Branchville exchange, and went from thence over the Bell lines. That the Bell Company agreed to transmit messages over its lines which came off the Branchville line; and the Branchville Company agreed to transmit over its line messages which came off the Bell line, each company to pay the other so much. That the Bell line ran within 20 feet of the Branchville central, and a wire ran from off the Bell line into the Branchvillé central, which by some manipulation of the operator at Branchville, connected the two systems.- That the Bell Company had no exchange or operator at Branchville, unless the tort-feasor in the instant case was its operator, which is the question to be decided. That the procedure in the instant case, where a person at St. George would talk with a person at Columbia, is this: The operator at St. George would by two rings signal Denmark, betwixt which St. 'George and Branchville lay, and Denmark would get Columbia and join the terminal; but in signaling Denmark from Stl George, and in talking from St. George to Columbia, the sound passed through Branchville, and by the intervention of a human agency at Branchville might be heard there. Such an event is thus described by a witness:

*431 “Q. At that time there were two wires passing through there? A. There were three circuits passing through. Q. Tell us whether if a person was talking from St. George to Denmark you could hear in your exchange there. A. Not unless you put the plug in and. opened the key; that wire was not connected up so you could he.ar anything, unless you put the plug in the No. 1 drop.' Any person could have put that plug in. Q. When the operator at St. George would ring Denmark, you would hear it in the office at Branchville ? A. Yes, sir; you could hear it on an extension bell in our office,; an extension bell that was on the wall there. Q. All you had to do, then, was to put the plug in and go to work? A. Yes, sir; put the plug in and take up the receiver and throw the switch. Q. Don’t the operators keep the receivers- on? A. I think the Bell operators do when they are busy, but ours do not. Q. By putting the plug in and putting the receiver on they could hear? A. Yes, sir. Q. Would your operator at Branchville necessarily have anything to do with a message that was being transmitted from St. George to Columbia? A. No, sir; not a thing; the operators all along the line would have to call Denmark and let them keep a record of the message before they could use the line. Q. There was no relay station at Branchville at all? A. No, sir. Q. Could the operator at Branchville hear what they had to say? A. You could hear when they were on that line; you could hear between New York and Jacksonville. Q. You could talk into that line if you wanted to? A. Yes, sir; you could talk into it. Q. What was necessary for him to do to get connection with that line? A. He would have to pick up the receiver and put in the plug and pull the key back. It was not connected so you could hear until you did that. The line passed through the office, and the extension bell was the only signal for the operator to come in on the line.”

In the instant case the thing here described was done by a lad at the Branchville exchange, some 12 or 14 years old, *432 named McDuffy, and son of the operator there. That is to say, when Denmark was signaled from St. George an extension bell on the wall at Branchville rang, but not the signal for Branchville; McDuffy then put in the plug, pulled the key back, and picked up the receiver. In the language of the shop, that “put him on the line,” and while thus on the line he used offensive words to the lady at Columbia terminus; and they constitute the alleged tort.

The Circuit Court thus admirably stated the facts, and the Court’s conclusion of law thereupon:

“I hold that there is testimony, some testimony to show that the Branchville agency of the local company at Branch-ville was for the purpose of receiving and transmitting all long distance messages from Branchville to other points. Columbia, for instance, and from Columbia to Branchville, ’ or from any other point to Branchville or from Branchville —that this local company at Branchville was for the purpose of handling and transmitting and receiving such long distance messages the agent of the defendant company. I hold that the testimony shows that they were not the agent of the defendant company for any other purpose. I hold that the testimony shows conclusively that they had no duty to perform in connection with.a message from St. George to Denmark or Columbia, and I hold therefore that neither the Branchville exchange or its employees, so far as concerned the message from St. George to Columbia, was in any sense the agent of the defendant company. I hold that the defendant company is not responsible in this case because the testimony tends to show that the employee of the local company at Branchville interrupted the message, a message from St. George to Columbia, in which the exchange at Branchville had no duty to perform, and it therefore was not the agent of the defendant company in reference to that message.”

‘The Court concluded, and we conclude, that the lad, McDuffy, was the employee of the Branchville Company *433 about the business of the company; and it was and is con-, eluded that, for certain purposes, the Branchville Company was the agent of the Bell Company.

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

Related

Tucker v. Pure Oil Co. of the Carolinas
3 S.E.2d 547 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.E. 31, 103 S.C. 427, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-southern-bell-telephone-telegraph-co-sc-1916.