Nebraska Telephone Co. v. State ex rel. Yeiser

76 N.W. 171, 55 Neb. 627, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 625
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1898
DocketNo. 9615
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 76 N.W. 171 (Nebraska Telephone Co. v. State ex rel. Yeiser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska Telephone Co. v. State ex rel. Yeiser, 76 N.W. 171, 55 Neb. 627, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 625 (Neb. 1898).

Opinion

Bagan, C.

The Nebraska Telephone Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state, having its principal office and place of business in the city of Omaha, and owns and operates a telephone plant in that city. John O. Yeiser is by profession a lawyer and a citizen of said city of Omaha. Yeiser desired a telephone placed in his law office for his own use and requested the telephone company to furnish him an instrument properly connected, and afford him telephonic service. The telephone company refused to comply with this request unless Yeiser would pay it for such instrument and service the sum of f>5 per month in advance. Yeiser claimed that this sum was an unreasonable and exorbitant charge, refused to pay the same, but tendered the telephone company $9 as compensation for the service required of it for three months and demanded that it supply him with the telephone and telephonic service for that length of time. This demand was refused and Yeiser thereupon applied to the district court for, and [632]*632obtained, a peremptory writ of mandamus directed to tlie telephone company commanding it to furnish Yeiser the telephone and telephonic service required by him for three months for the sum of $9. The telephone company has brought this judgment here for review.

1. Section 1, article 8, chapter 72, Compiled Statutes, provides that all charges made for any service rendered or to be rendered by the common carriers of the state •shall be reasonable and just, and every unjust and unreasonable charge for such service is prohibited and declared to be unlawful. By section 11 of said article and chapter certain state officers are constituted a board of transportation, and section 12 of said article and chapter defines the powers and duties of said board of transportation with reference to the common carriers of the state. Construing this statute this court held in State v. Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co., 22 Neb. 313, that the board of transportation had authority to determine what were just and reasonable charges for a service rendered or to be rendered by common carriers, and that said board of transportation was invested with jurisdiction to fix, prescribe, and determine the charges which a common carrier might demand and receive for a service rendered or to be rendered by it, subject only to the limitation that the rate or charge fixed by the board should be just and reasonable. The legislature of 1897 (Session Laws, ch. 56; Compiled Statutes, ch. 72, art. 8, sec. 24) conferred' upon this board of transportation the same and all the powers over the telephone, telegraph, and express companies of the state that it had over common carriers or railroad corporations of the state. In other words, if the statutes just referred to are valid, and we have placed a correct construction upon them, the legislature has conferred upon this board of transportation not only jurisdiction to inquire into charges of extortion and unjust discrimination on the part of telephone companies, and to make suitable orders for the redress of such grievances upon the complaint of the person aggrieved, but has also in[633]*633vested tlie board of transportation with authority to fix and determine to what compensation a telephone company shall be entitled for any service rendered or to be rendered by it, subject to the limitation that the scale of prices fixed which the telephone company may charge for services to be rendered by it shall not be unreasonable or unjust, either to the telephone company or to its patrons.

State v. Chicago, St. P. & M. R. Co., 19 Neb. 476, was a mandamus proceeding instituted in this court to compel the respondent to build a depot, side tracks, switches, and cattle yards at a certain point on its road. But thi 3 court held that whether the railway company should be compelled to build a depot at the place requested was a question — in the first instance at least — for determination by the board of transportation; that the legislature by the statute just quoted had committed the determination of that question to that board; that because the board was a special tribunal created for the purpose of determining the question, its powers in that respect must be exhausted before the court would interfere by mandamus to compel the railroad company to build the depot. We think this case controls the one at bar. So. far as the record before us discloses no application has ever been made by the relator to the board of transportation to have it determined whether the charge of $5 per month demanded by the telephone company for the use of a telephone and telephonic service is unreasonable and exorbitant, whether $3 per month for the use of a telephone and telephonic service is a reasonable charge, nor that the board has fixed a scale of reasonable charges which the telephone company may exact for a service performed or to be performed by it. It is a familiar principle that a litigant will not be permitted to invoke the extraordinary remedy of mandamus where an express statute affords him an adequate remedy for the redress of the grievance of which he complains, and this is the principle upon which the case just cited rests.

[634]*634A statute of the state of Indiana required each railway coxurpany of the state to file with the auditor of the county where its principal office was situate a statement of the amount of its capital stock for the purposes of taxation. This statement was to be filed between the first of January and the first of June each year. Another statute provided that if a railway company of the state failed to file with such auditor such statement, then it should be the duty of the auditor himself to make the statement, or list for the purposes of taxation the amount of the capital stock of such railway company, determining the facts in the manner provided by statute. A railway company of the state neglected to file with the auditor of the county where its principal office was located, between the first of January and the first of June, a statement of the amount of its capital stock, and thereupon the auditor of state instituted a proceeding in mandamus to compel the railway company to make and file such statement with such county auditor. The district court awarded the mandamus as prayed. But the supreme court reversed the judgment of the district court, saying: “If it were not provided by statute that, upon failure of the railroad company to file such statement within the time required by law, the auditor of the county shall proceed to make the same, a mandamus would doubtless lie to compel the officers of the railroad to furnish the list after the time had expired; but the rule is well established that mandamus will not lie where the statute has expressly provided another adequate remedy.” (Louisville & N. A. R. Co. v. State, 25 Ind. 181.) To the same effect are State v. Board of Supervisors, 29 Wis. 79, and Marshall v. Sloan, 35 Ia. 445.

2. The respondent in the ease at bar is a private corporation. By permission of the city of Omaha it is occupying the streets and alleys of that municipality with its poles, wires, and other appliances used in the conduct of the business in which it is engaged. It is a common carrier of news and intelligence. It is a corporation [635]

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.W. 171, 55 Neb. 627, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-telephone-co-v-state-ex-rel-yeiser-neb-1898.