Pacific Telephone Etc. Co. v. Eshleman

137 P. 1119, 166 Cal. 640, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 373
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 6499.
StatusPublished
Cited by150 cases

This text of 137 P. 1119 (Pacific Telephone Etc. Co. v. Eshleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Telephone Etc. Co. v. Eshleman, 137 P. 1119, 166 Cal. 640, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 373 (Cal. 1913).

Opinions

HENSHAW, J.

The Tehama County Telephone Company and the Glenn County Telephone Company lodged with the railroad commission separate petitions or complaints, seeking orders of the railroad commission compelling the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company to permit a physical connection or physical connections to be made between its telephone lines and the lines of the complaining companies. The proceedings were consolidated, and, after hearing, the railroad commission made certain findings upon which was based its order in accordance with the prayers of the petitioners. The Tehama County Telephone Company may be described as a telephone company doing a local business in the county of Tehama. In like manner the Glenn County Telephone Company is engaged in the same business in the county of Glenn. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company does a similar local business in each of those counties, and in addition thereto conducts a long distance business, reaching into many if not all of the counties of the state. The order of the railroad commission gives to the Tehama County Telephone Company and the Glenn County Telephone Company and their subscribers the use of all the extended long distance service maintained by the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company within the state of California, excepting therefrom an *647 interchange for use of the Pacific Company’s lines between the two counties of Tehama and Glenn, the petitioning companies between themselves having established such communication.

In conformity with the provisions of section 67 of the Public Utilities Act, (Stats. Ex. Sess. 1911, p. 55), the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company made application to this court for a writ of review. Hon. Ralph C. Harrison, as amicus curiae, filed a brief presenting to the attention of this court constitutional questions touching not only its own jurisdiction in the matter, but as well the jurisdiction of the superior court. Those questions demand first consideration, not alone from their gravity, but because their determination, the one way or the other, will greatly limit or enlarge the scope of the inquiry now before us. The argument of the learned friend of the court may be thus epitomized: Article VI of the constitution of the state vests judicial power in certain designated tribunals, and apportions the exercise of the judicial power between and amongst them. Section 4 of this article gives to the supreme court certain appellate jurisdiction and original jurisdiction to issue named writs, including the writ of certiorari or review. Section 5 of the same article confers upon the superior court original jurisdiction of great extent, in fact, and generally speaking, over all matters of consequence in law and at equity involving the enforcement of public or private rights or the redress of public or private wrongs. Next, so proceeds the argument, it is to be remembered that the jurisdiction thus conferred upon these judicial tribunals is not subject to legislative control, that is to say, that jurisdiction cannot be either enlarged or curtailed. “It is a well recognized principle that where the judicial power of courts, either original or appellate, is fixed by constitutional provisions, the legislature cannot either limit or extend that jurisdiction.” (Chinn v. Superior Court, 156 Cal. 478, [105 Pac. 580] ; Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, 137, [2 L. Ed. 60].) It is then pointed out that at the time of the adoption of the present constitution the writ of certiorari had a limited and well understood scope, defined by sections 1068 and 1074 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and illustrated and expounded in conformity with these sections by many decisions of this court. The *648 availability of its employment and the limitations of its scope may be thus summarized: 1. It is a writ issued by a superior judicial tribunal to an inferior officer or tribunal exercising judicial functions, and the proceeding'- sought to be brought up for review must in its nature be a judicial proceeding ; 2. To justify its issuance by a superior tribunal it must appear that the applicant for it has no other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy; 3. When issued, the superior tribunal reviews the action of the inferior officer or tribunal only to the extent of determining whether the inferior board or tribunal has exceeded its jurisdiction. (People v. Bush, 40 Cal. 346; Quinchard v. Board of Supervisors 113 Cal. 664, [45 Pac. 856] ; Cook v. Civil Service Commission 160 Cal. 589, [117 Pac. 663].) Thus in Central Pacific R. R. Co. v. Placer County, 46 Cal. 671, it is said: “A writ of certiorari is not the appropriate proceeding for the correction of mere errors of judgment, in respect either to the facts or the law of the case, in determining questions within the jurisdiction of the board.” In Sherer v. Superior Court, 96 Cal. 654, [31 Pac. 565], it is said that “ it must be deemed to be the settled law of this state that the writ of certiorari brings up for review but one question, and that is, whether the inferior tribunal or court exceeded its jurisdiction.” And in Spring Valley Water Co. v. Bryant, 52 Cal. 138, this court declared: “The resolution and ordinance sought to be annulled may be obnoxious to the criticism that they were attempts to deprive the corporation of its rights and property without due process of law, and violative of constitutional principles; but neither this, nor the circumstance that they were not authorized by the city charter to pass them, can justify a review of the action of the board and mayor by certiorari.” And, finally, the indisputable proposition is advanced that the legislature cannot enlarge the scope of any writ named in the constitution beyond that which it had at the time the constitution was adopted. (Camron v. Kenfield, 57 Cal. 550.)

Such being the law, it is argued that the conclusion is irresistible that the legislature’s attempt to enlarge the purview of the writ of certiorari when in section 67 of the Public Utilities Act it declares that “the review shall not be extended further than to determine whether the commission has regularly pursued its authority, including a determination *649 of whether the order. or decision under review violates any right of the petitioner under the constitution of the United States or of the state of California, ’ ’ is null and void, and that the attempt of the legislature to confer upon the supreme court the power to include in its. determination under the writ of review the question of the violation of constitutional rights is nugatory and in. direct conflict with the principle of the decision of Spring Valley Water Co. v. Bryant, 52 Cal. 138. Next it is insisted that the attempt to confer exclusive jurisdiction upon the supreme court to review the proceedings of the railroad commission, to the impairment of the general jurisdiction of the superior court, is itself violative of the constitution, in that it is a plain legislative attempt to curtail the jurisdiction vested in the superior court by the constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 P. 1119, 166 Cal. 640, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-telephone-etc-co-v-eshleman-cal-1913.