Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Flagg

220 P.2d 522, 189 Or. 370, 1950 Ore. LEXIS 208
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 522 (Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Flagg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 & Telegraph Co. v. Flagg, 220 P.2d 522, 189 Or. 370, 1950 Ore. LEXIS 208 (Or. 1950).

Opinions

LUSK, C. J.

The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, a corporation, (Pacific) commenced three suits pursuant to the provisions of the Uniform Practice Act of the Public Utilities Commissioner, § 112-4,119, O. C. L. A., for the purpose of obtaining decrees declaring invalid, and enjoining the enforcement of, certain orders of the public utilities commissioner which rejected items of proposed expenditures by Pacific under its so-called [373]*373license contract with American Telephone and Telegraph Company, a corporation, (American) for the years 1948 and 1949, and prescribed the conditions under which payments for services rendered to Pacific by American may be made. The suits were consolidated for trial in the Circuit Court, which, after a hearing, entered a decree affirming the orders except in one particular. Pacific has appealed. The appeals were consolidated for hearing in this court.

The challenged orders are, in substance and meaning, identical; and the three suits present the same question, namely, whether, in making the orders, the commissioner has exceeded the authority conferred on him by statute.

The commissioner first indicated his views upon the propriety of the license contract in an order made January 8, .1948, in a rate case involving Pacific’s intrastate Oregon rates. Thereafter, in Order No. 21057, dated November 8, 1948, which is here under review, he rejected a proposed payment under the contract of $363,000.00 contained in Pacific’s supplemental budget for 1948. Pacific then asked for reconsideration of the item, and this was granted. There was an extended hearing, and on March 31, 1949, the commissioner entered his Order No. 21859, which, after certain recitals, concludes with the following “Findings and Conclusions”:

“I.
“That The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company is a California corporation duly authorized to transact business in Oregon, and is engaged as a public utility in furnishing telephone and telegraph service in the States of California, Washington, Idaho and Oregon, and through a subsidiary, in the State of Nevada.
[374]*374“II.
“That the American Telephone and Telegraph Company is a New York corporation, and as of December 31, 1948, owned 87.93% of the voting stock of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company. That the American Telephone and Telegraph Company is therefore an affiliated interest of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company as the term is defined in and by Section 112-483, O. C. L. A.
“III.
“That with the exception of the research and development work performed by the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., for the General Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, the services now being rendered by Ebasco Services, Inc. to the Pacific Power & Light Company at actual cost, in all respects are generally the same as the services the Oregon area of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company are now receiving from the American Telephone and Telegraph Company for which it is required to pay a percentage of its gross revenues.
“IV.
‘ ‘ That there is no relationship between the actual cost to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of rendering license services to the Oregon area of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company and the payments required to be made under the license contract based upon a percentage of gross revenues.
“V.
“That it is contrary to the public interest, the interest of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, its minority stockholders, and its rate payers in the Oregon area to permit it to continue to make percentage of gross revenue payments to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, pursuant to the provisions of the license contract.
[375]*375“VI.
‘ ‘ That no showing has been made by The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company that justifies different treatment of its proposed payment to American Telephone and Telegraph Company of $363,000 during the year 1948 than that ordered by P. U. C. Oregon Order No. 21057.
“Now, therefore, based upon the foregoing findings, the Commissioner concludes that the provisions of P. U. C. Oregon Order No. 21057 are fair and reasonable and are in the public interest, and that said Order will permit The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company to pay the American Telephone and Telegraph Company the actual cost to it of any service of value to The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company.
“The Commissioner further concludes that the procedure of ordering or requisitioning services as required by said Order has been proven workable and practicable, and will not be burdensome or unduly time consuming to The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, or the American Telephone and Telegraph Company.
“Now, therefore, based upon the foregoing findings, conclusions and the records and files herein, the Commissioner reaffirms his P. U. C. Oregon Order No. 21057 entered on the 8th day of November, 1948, and it is hereby
“ORDERED that as applied to its Oregon operations, The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company shall not, after January 1, 1948, pay to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company for services rendered by it to the Oregon Area of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company more than the actual costs to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of rendering said services, and that said costs do not exceed the amount such services could be obtained elsewhere or performed by its own personnel. That all such services provided for under the agreement between [376]*376it and the American Telephone and Telegraph Company that are necessary or of value to it shall be ordered or requisitioned from the American Telephone and Telegraph Company.”

Order No. 21057, referred to above, is, in substance, the same as the concluding paragraph of the foregoing findings and conclusions as are the other orders under review.

By the Circuit Court’s decree that part of the orders which required Pacific to requisition services from American was eliminated as going beyond the Commissioner’s authority.

Pacific is a California corporation which owns and operates a telephone and telegraph system in California, Oregon, Washington and Idaho, and, through a wholly owned subsidiary, in Nevada. It is a part of the so-called “Bell System”, which comprises American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Western Electric Company (Western), and Bell Telephone Laboratories (Bell Laboratories), all New York corporations, and twenty-two operating companies, one of which is in Canada. American owns 87.93 per cent of the voting stock of Pacific, all or substantially all the voting stock of sixteen of the other operating companies, and substantial fractions of the voting stock of the remainder. Bell Laboratories owns and operates laboratories engaged in research in all the sciences relating to the telephone art and in the application of discoveries in the art to the practical problem of rendering telephone service. The stock of Bell Laboratories is owned 50 per cent by American and 50 per cent by Western, while 99.8 per cent of the stock of Western is owned by American.

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Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Flagg
220 P.2d 522 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 522, 189 Or. 370, 1950 Ore. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-telephone-telegraph-co-v-flagg-or-1950.