Read v. Central Union Telephone Co.

213 Ill. App. 246, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 120
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 28, 1919
DocketGen. No. 23,657; Gen. No. 23,663; Gen. No. 23,664; Gen. No. 23,670
StatusPublished

This text of 213 Ill. App. 246 (Read v. Central Union Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Read v. Central Union Telephone Co., 213 Ill. App. 246, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 120 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Per Curiam::

On February 13, 1919, complainants filed a petition in this court, in connection with the above entitled appeals, praying that a writ of certiorari issue to the Superior Court of Cook county, Illinois, ordering that court to certify certain proceedings to this court and that this court review a certain order entered in such proceedings, dismissing a petition filed in that court by petitioners, and determine whether said order should not be quashed and the trial court ordered and directed to enter an order granting the prayer of said petition.

The record discloses that final decrees were entered by the Superior Court of Cook county, Illinois, July 10, 1917, in theée causes, from which decrees, appeals have beemprosecuted to this court. The abstracts and briefs have all been filed and the appeals are now pending before this court, and would have been heard on oral argument on the 3rd of the present month but ■for the unavoidable absence of counsel, which necessitated a postponement until April, next. At the time the petition now before us was filed, upon suggestion of counsel, the petitioners were given 5 days within which to file suggestions in support of the petition and the respondents 5 days thereafter to file counter suggestions. On February 17, 1919, and before any suggestions were filed by either side, petitioners filed another petition praying that, pending the hearing on the petition of February 13th, this court issue its writ of prohibition to the Superior Court of Illinois, and to the receivers and their counsel, being the respondents to the original petition, enjoining and prohibiting them from taking any action in the Circuit Court of Marion county, Indiana, or elsewhere, that would recognize the claim of Postmaster General Burleson to jurisdiction and control over the receivers or the property of the Central Union Company. Upon presentation of this petition the order prayed for was duly entered, whereupon counsel for the respondents entered a motion to vacate and set aside said order. Subsequently the entire matter was argued orally, and counsel have submitted their suggestions in support of their respective contentions.

In the petition for the writ of certiorari, the petitioners alleged that the above entitled causes are pending in this court on appeal; that on February 5, 1919, they filed a petition in the Superior Court of Cook county, Illinois, in said causes, praying that that court enter an order instructing the receivers and their counsel not to send a certain telegram, which it was proposed to send to one Union N. Bethell, Chairman of the Federal Board of Control, duly appointed by the Postmaster General of the United States, in which they proposed to say:

“We recognize the authority of the Operating Board and will co-operate with it in 'the operation of the Central Union property and in the defense of suits brought to question the validity of rates established by the Postmaster G-eneral;”

and praying further that the court instruct said receivers and their counsel to immediately take steps to preserve and protect their possession and control of the assets of said Union Company wherever located and resist, by all lawful means, any attempt on the part of anyone whate.ver to interfere with their possession and control, and further that the receivers be instructed to immediately desist from further enforcement in the State of Indiana or elsewhere of unlawful telephone rates that are in violation of the Public Utilities Laws of the States, respectively, where such intrastate rates are in effect, and the petitioners in the trial court further prayed for such other and further relief as that court might deem necessary or proper to preserve the rights of the parties as fixed in the final decrees entered by that court, and to protect the said assets and effects of the said Union Company pending the appeals from the final decrees so that the jurisdiction of the trial court and of this court over such property, assets and effects might be maintained until the rights of the parties therein are finally determined.

The petition for the writ of certiorari further alleges that upon the filing of the petition just referred to in the trial court, that court entered a rule on the respondents to answer the same; that said respondents failed to make answer to the petition, and thereafter the court entered an order dismissing said petition on its face, which petitioners contend was error.

It is further alleged that the failure to grant them the relief prayed for in said petition of February 5th deprived them of the rights secured to them by the final decrees of July 10, 1917, without due process of law and without just compensation.

The petitioners further allege that since the action of the Superior Court in dismissing the petition of February 5th, they are informed and believe that the receivers have further acquiesced in the assumed authority exercised by the Postmaster General over the property, assets and effects of the Central Union Company, and are submitting in all things to his direction, authority and control, in violation of the duties assumed by them, and are enforcing in Indiana unlawful intrastate telephone rates established by the Postmaster General, in violation of the statutes of that State, and that they are thus exposing the property of the Union Company to jeopardy because of claims that will be made against it in the way of penalties, on account of the continued violations of the statutes of that State, and that, in so acting, the receivers are disqualifying themselves to act as receivers in any negotiations or dealings with the Postmaster General, or with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and its officials, to whom it is alleged said Postmaster General is attempting to delegate the control and domination over said Union Company and said receivers.

The petitioners, in support of their contention that the Superior Court erred in dismissing their petition, contend:

(1) That Albert S. Burleson, Postmaster General of the United States, is attempting to exercise supervision, possession, management and control over the property, assets and effects of the Union Company, now in the possession of the receivers, without any order having been entered by the Superior Court, or any other court having jurisdiction in the premises, in any way authorizing such action on his part,

(2) That the Postmaster General has no right or authority to take over the supervision, possession, control and operation of the property, assets and effects of the Union Company under the terms of the joint resolution of Congress of July 16,1918, except in furtherance of the national security and defense, and that such resolution does not authorize the President or the Postmaster General to take over the possession, control and operation of the private business of telephone companies and of their operating income, regardless of actual war uses or aids and having no relation to the national security or defense, and that there is no need, for any legitimate purposes of the government, to take possession of the property, assets and effects of the Union Company or deprive the receivers, or the courts having jurisdiction over them, of the property and assets of the Union Company.

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Related

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44 Ill. 142 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1867)
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247 F. 362 (S.D. Ohio, 1918)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 Ill. App. 246, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-central-union-telephone-co-illappct-1919.