Pennsylvania Publications, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

32 A.2d 40, 152 Pa. Super. 279, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1942
DocketAppeal, 90
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 32 A.2d 40 (Pennsylvania Publications, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Publications, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 32 A.2d 40, 152 Pa. Super. 279, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

'This appeal was argued on November 12, 1942; but supplemental briefs and reply briefs and supplements to supplemental and reply briefs were filed as late as January 15, 1943, which extended the decision of the appeal and the writing of the opinion.

The appellant is Pennsylvania Publications, Inc., a corporation engaged in the publication of a pamphlet or sheet — ¿leven inches long by seventeen in'ches wide, folded vertically down the middle so as to make four pages, each eight and one-half by eleven inches, three columns to a page — called “WILLIAM ARMSTRONG Jockeys Scratches Daily Sports”. It is commonly *282 known as a ‘scratch sheet’, and. is devoted almost exclusively 1 to furnishing information about horse-racing at the various tracks throughout the country, giving the names of the horses', the respective jockeys, the weights carried, the scratches, the condition of the tracks, the betting odds, the post positions, and the publisher’s choice of winners, place, etc., as well as other “handicappers’ selections”, and other matters supposed to be of interest to horse-race fans and bettors. It is a subsidiary of or successor to the William Armstrong Publishing Company, and is affiliated with Armstrong Eacing Publications, Inc. (New York), and gives in its ‘sheet’ the William Armstrong number’ immediately preceding the horse’s name, indicating the order in which the horses will probably finish in every race run that day. We shall refer to all of them, including appellant, as ‘Armstrong’ or ‘Armstrong Publications’.

Following the action of the Commission on a complaint filed by Abraham Plotniek against the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania 2 , hereinafter called Bell, the latter notified appellant on June 12, 1940 that as it construed the language of the report and order of the commission in that case it felt obliged to ¡terminate the telephone and teletypewiter service which it was furnishing appellant, and would, therefore, discontinue the same at noon on July 22, 1940.

On July 23, 1940 appellant filed its complaint with the commission praying for an order on Bell to continue the telephone and teletypewriter service that it had been accustomed to furnish appellant.

*283 An ¡answer was filed by Bell and hearings were scheduled but were continued at complainant’s request until after the decision of this court was filed in the Plotnick case on February 28, 1941. The hearings began on July 2,1941 and over five hundred printed pages of testimony were taken and several hundred additional pages of exhibits were filed.

The commission on January 12,1942 ordered the complaint dismissed, Commissioners Thorne and Morgal dissenting.

■Complainant appealed to this court. We refused its application to make the appeal a supersedeas.

The present appeal is so related to the Plotnick case as to make reference to the facts in that case necessary.

Plotnick had been an employee of Armstrong in Philadelphia from 1924 to July 14, 1940. He had formerly published in Philadelphia a similar sheet, known as ‘Burns’ Track Bulletin’, which was consolidated with Armstrong’s in 1924, when the latter began its Philadelphia publication. Plotnick wanted to set up again in the same business on his own account, and in order to do so applied to Bell, the respondent ■and intervening appellee in this case, for like telephone and teletypewriter service as it was furnishing this appellant. Bell refused the application and Plotnick then filed his complaint with the commission praying for an order on Bell to compel the service. As Plotnick had not yet started his service — and would not do so unless he obtained the desired service from Bell — he used Armstrong’s publications as examples of what he proposed to print and publish, and the case was heard and decided on the basis of the Armstrong publications — • including this appellant’s — and their general effect as aiding and abetting racetrack gambling and bookmakers carrying on that form of gambling.

We realize that this appellant was not a party to that proceeding and is not concluded by it as res *284 judicata. But we are not credulous enough to believe that it knew nothing about it. It certainly had full knowledge of it before the appeal in that case was argued in this court — see 143 Pa. ‘Superior Ct. 550; for it asked and obtained a postponement 3 of the hearings in the present case until this court decided the appeal in that case, and it presented to this court on that appeal a brief as amicus curiae — see page 552 of the report — in which it argued for a reversal of the Plotnick order.

Therefore, in affirming the order of the commission in 'that appeal, which had dismissed Plotnick’s complaint, we upheld the commission in its findings and conclusions that the ‘scratch sheets’, which the complainant Plotnick had presented as the model of his proposed activities, are generally used by book-makers in connection with the registering and recording of bets on horse-races; 'that bookies — persons who receive bets on horse-races from those desiring to bet — conduct a 'substantial part of their business on the streets of Philadelphia by the use of ‘scratch sheets’ of that type and character; that the telephone facilities of Bell, when furnished to complainant, would aid and abet book-makers and gamblers, by providing the means by which they were furnished information useful before making bets and necessary before paying off winners; that the publication and distribution of ‘scratch sheets’ and the telephone information furnished [free] to buyers of ‘scratch sheets’ by the publishers and distributors is definitely aligned with horse-race gambling in Pennsylvania and so related to it a® to make them adjuncts and aids thereto. We approved the following *285 extract from the commission’s report and order: “The respondent company was justified in concluding that from the nature of complainant’s ¡business the telephone facilities would be used, or might be used, in the furtherance of horse-race betting which is contrary to law. By reason and by law, respondent company was justified in its refusal bo furnish the complainant telephone service in connection with the operation of complainant’s business, and ¡the Commission will not direct the respondent company to provide such telephone service.”

The testimony in the present case closed on August 28, 1941. On January 12, 1942 the commission filed its report and order dismissing the complaint. The report contains fourteen printed pages and shows a careful consideration of the evidence. After reciting the introductory statements in this opinion in somewhat greater detail, the report described 'the telephone and teletypwriter service, which the respondent had notified complainant it proposed to discontinue, as follows: “There are installed on [complainant’s] premises 40 individual telephone trunk lines proceeding from respondent’s central exchange, each of Which terminates at each of five ‘order turrets’ mounted on tables.

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32 A.2d 40, 152 Pa. Super. 279, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-publications-inc-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1942.