Radio Telephone Commun., Inc. v. Southeastern Tel. Co.

170 So. 2d 577
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 20, 1965
Docket32863
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 170 So. 2d 577 (Radio Telephone Commun., Inc. v. Southeastern Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radio Telephone Commun., Inc. v. Southeastern Tel. Co., 170 So. 2d 577 (Fla. 1965).

Opinion

170 So.2d 577 (1964)

RADIO TELEPHONE COMMUNICATIONS, INC., a Florida corporation, Petitioner,
v.
SOUTHEASTERN TELEPHONE COMPANY, a Florida corporation, and Florida Public Utilities Commission, an agency of the State of Florida, Respondents.

No. 32863.

Supreme Court of Florida.

April 3, 1964.
On Rehearing January 20, 1965.

Wilfred C. Varn, of Ervin, Pennington & Varn, Tallahassee, for petitioner.

D. Fred McMullen, of Ausley, Ausley, McMullen, O'Bryan, Michaels & McGehee, Tallahassee, for Southeastern Telephone Co.

*578 Lewis Petteway and B. Kenneth Gatlin, Tallahassee, for Florida Public Utilities Commission.

ROBERTS, Justice.

This cause is before the court on certiorari to review an order of the Florida Public Utilities Commission entered in a proceeding brought before the Commission by Radio Telephone Communications, Inc., petitioner here (referred to hereafter as "RTC"). The Southeastern Telephone Company ("Southeastern" hereafter) was named as a "defendant" in the Commission proceeding and is a respondent here.

The facts upon which the order here reviewed was based were stipulated by the parties and are, in substance, as follows:

Both Southeastern and RTC hold licenses designated "Radio Station License, Common Carrier" from the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC" hereafter) authorizing them to provide "Domestic Public Land Mobile Radio Service" from base stations and transmitters located in Tallahassee, Florida, to the mobile units of the subscribers to their respective services.

Southeastern holds a certificate of public convenience and necessity No. 33 from the Florida Public Utilities Commission (the "Florida Commission" hereafter) under the authority of which it has for many years provided landline telephone service — local exchange and toll — in Tallahassee and environs (and in other areas which need not be listed here). It operates its mobile radio service in connection with its telephone landline system which serves the City of Tallahassee and an area within a 20-mile radius of the city. A subscriber to its mobile radio service can engage in a two-way conversation from within or without Southeastern's Tallahassee exchange area with a person at a station on the exchange telephone facilities of Southeastern, and can also make toll calls to persons in other of Southeastern's exchanges. And the reverse of such two-way conversation can be and are carried on. (And, of course, a two-way conversation between subscribers by radio alone, may be carried on.) Southeastern has on file with the Florida Commission a General Tariff covering its landline telephone service, as well as a tariff covering its mobile radio service operated in connection therewith. It has not filed with FCC its tariff respecting its mobile radio service.

RTC applied to and was issued a license by FCC to operate a mobile radio service as a "miscellaneous common carrier" — defined in the FCC Rules and Regulations, Part 21, as a communications common carrier which is not engaged in the business of providing a public landline telephone service. 47 CFR 927. It is licensed to operate 100 mobile stations and is presently servicing more than 50 mobile units from its base station in Tallahassee. It is also licensed by FCC to operate in the Rural Subscriber Fixed Radio Service and is presently providing service to a half-dozen or more rural fixed stations, at least two of which are within a 20-mile radius of Tallahassee. It also provides a message-relay and a dispatch service for its subscribers. The radius of RTC's reliable service area from its base station in Tallahassee is in excess of 45 miles, extending into Georgia and Alabama and the Gulf of Mexico. RTC has on file with FCC a tariff covering its various radio services. It has not filed with the Florida Commission its tariff respecting such services, nor did it apply to such Commission for a certificate of public convenience and necessity prior to undertaking such services under its several FCC licenses.

RTC is a subscriber to the landline telephone facilities of Southeastern, having a single-party business telephone line allotted for its use. By means of such landline telephone, a recorder, and the radio facilities of RTC, subscribers to RTC's radio services (both mobile and rural-fixed) can communicate with persons at stations on Southeastern's landline telephone system, and vice versa. RTC made the "interconnection" between *579 its radio service and Southeastern's landline telephone system with the knowledge but without the consent of Southeastern. (RTC states that its "interconnected" service with Southeastern represents but a fraction of its total service rendered to its subscribers, but that most of them "desire interconnected service and many depend upon such interconnected services as an incident to the operation of their businesses.") It pays to Southeastern the regular General Tariff rate for a single-party business line and recorder connector and offered to pay a reasonable rate for the use of Southeastern's landline in the two-way communication between Southeastern's landline subscribers and RTC's radio-service subscribers referred to above. Southeastern declined the offer, advised RTC that the "interconnection" with its landline system was in violation of its General Tariff on file with the Florida Commission, and demanded that RTC cease such interconnection under penalty of having its single-party business telephone disconnected. Thus inspired, RTC commenced the litigation culminating in the certiorari proceeding in this court.

RTC first sought relief in the Circuit Court of Leon County, Florida, by filing suit to enjoin Southeastern from interfering with the telephone service then being provided by it to RTC. The Circuit Court entered a temporary injunction granting such relief but, at the same time, ordering RTC to apply to the Florida Commission "for the determination of its right, if any, to be furnished telephone service" by Southeastern.

Pursuant to such mandate, RTC filed with the Commission its "complaint", naming Southeastern as a party "defendant". The complaint alleged, inter alia, that FCC had pre-empted the field of radio service, and that to permit the disconnection of its telephone service by Southeastern would violate various constitutional rights of RTC and constitute a burden upon interstate commerce. It asked the Commission to determine the present right of RTC to continue to receive telephone service from Southeastern or, in the alternative, to establish the requirements that should be met by RTC to entitle it to receive such service.

In its answer Southeastern asserted that RTC's unauthorized interconnection of its radio services with Southeastern's landline violated Southeastern's tariff as well as the laws of Florida requiring the issuance by the Florida Commission of a certificate of public convenience and necessity as a prerequisite to the operation of any "telephone line, plant or system, or any extension thereof * * *." Sec. 364.33, Fla. Stat., F.S.A.

The Commission found that RTC "is operating a telephone line used in the conduct of the business of affording telephonic communication for hire within this state and that RTC is a telephone company under the laws of Florida", so that a certificate of public convenience and necessity was required for the operation being conducted by it. Its order authorized Southeastern to discontinue the connection of its telephone service with RTC's fixed and mobile radio service and denied the relief requested by RTC.

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170 So. 2d 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radio-telephone-commun-inc-v-southeastern-tel-co-fla-1965.