Simpson v. Phone Directories Co.

729 P.2d 578, 82 Or. App. 582
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 4, 1986
DocketA8301-00359; CA A37286
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 729 P.2d 578 (Simpson v. Phone Directories Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson v. Phone Directories Co., 729 P.2d 578, 82 Or. App. 582 (Or. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

*584 WARDEN, P. J.

Plaintiff brought this action charging defendants with gross negligence and breach of contract for omitting his name from Yellow Pages telephone listings. The gross negligence claims were dismissed for failure to state ultimate facts sufficient to constitute a claim. ORCP 21 A. On the contract claims defendants filed motions for partial summary judgment, seeking enforcement of the limitation of liability clauses in the contracts. The trial court granted those motions, restricting plaintiffs recovery to the amount which he had paid for the listings. Judgment was entered against Pioneer Telephone Cooperative (Pioneer) and GTE Directories Corporation (GTED) after they stipulated that they had breached their contract with plaintiff, and plaintiff obtained judgment against Phone Directories Co. (Directories) after trial. Plaintiff appeals, assigning error to the dismissal of his claims of gross negligence and to the granting of the motions for partial summary judgment. We affirm the dismissal of the gross negligence claims, affirm the judgment as to Pioneer and GTED and reverse the judgment as to Directories.

Plaintiff, a Waldport dentist, entered into two written contracts, one with Pioneer and GTED and the other with Directories, to provide listings in the August, 1980, Yellow Pages phone directories published and distributed by defendants. 1 In 1979 and 1980, Pioneer provided telephone service and classified telephone directory listings to its subscribers in the Waldport area. The listings were compiled and published in a directory on behalf of Pioneer by GTED. Directories published a separate directory for the whole Lincoln County area. Defendants failed to list plaintiff, because of a clerical error of an employe of GTED. 2 Plaintiff notified defendants of the omissions shortly after the directories were distributed. Defendants agreed to correct the following year’s directories, but did not provide any current year correction or addendum service. Plaintiff was also omitted from the 1981 directory published and distributed by Directories. 3 During that time, *585 rules of the Oregon Board of Dentistry prevented plaintiff from engaging in any form of advertising other than Yellow Pages listings. However, because of the omission of plaintiffs listings, the Board allowed plaintiff to run a business announcement in a local newspaper for one month.

Plaintiff first contends that the trial court erred in dismissing the gross negligence claims. Gross negligence is characterized by a state of mind which indicates conscious indifference to the rights of others or to the probable consequences of one’s acts. Garrison v. Pacific NW Bell, 45 Or App 523, 532, 608 P2d 1206 (1980); see Olson v. Pac. N. W. Bell, 65 Or App 422, 427-428, 671 P2d 1185 (1983). Plaintiff alleged that defendants were grossly negligent in failing to list plaintiff as agreed, in failing to have a system for notifying recipients of the directories of errors in those directories and in failing to provide plaintiff with the addresses of all phones in the service area. Plaintiff did not allege that defendants acted with conscious indifference to plaintiffs rights or that defendants’ conduct was wilful or wanton. Plaintiffs factual allegations are characteristic of simple negligence, and the mere addition of the word “grossly” before “negligent” does not convert the claims into ones for gross negligence. See Cook v. Kinzua Pine Mills Co., 207 Or 34, 41-42, 293 P2d 717 (1956). We conclude that plaintiffs factual allegations do not, as a matter of law, state claims for gross negligence. The trial court therefore properly dismissed the gross negligence claims pursuant to ORCP 21 A.

Plaintiff next contends that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motions for partial summary judgment, which enforced the limitation of damages clauses in their respective contracts. We agree with the trial court as to Pioneer and GTED, but not as to Directories.

Pioneer’s tariff regulations, which were filed with the Oregon Public Utility Commission (PUC), contain two provisions that limit liability for errors and omissions from directory listings. 4 We held in Garrison v. Pacific NW Bell, supra, *586 that the PUC has the authority to limit, by tariff regulations, the damages recoverable for an erroneous listing in a telephone directory. 45 Or App at 531-532. Garrison, however, expressly did not decide whether those tariff regulations were effective against a common law breach of contract claim such as plaintiff raises here. We therefore briefly review the PUC’s ratemaking authority to aid our discussion of that issue.

ORS 756.040 confers on the PUC broad authority to supervise and regulate every public utility. It has the duty to represent the customers of any public utility and the public in general in all controversies concerning rates and services and to obtain for those customers and the general public adequate service at fair and reasonable rates. It is granted general rulemaking authority under ORS 756.060 and has general ratemaking authority under ORS 757.205 and ORS 757.245. Under ORS 757.210, when a public utility files a new schedule of rates, the PUC may, on a complaint being made or on its own motion, conduct hearings to determine the reasonableness of rates. ORS 756.565 states that all rates and service levels approved by the PUC are prima facie lawful and reasonable and that those rates and service levels are subject to attack only in actions prosecuted against the PUC for that purpose. Those rates and service levels therefore cannot be collaterally attacked in proceedings such as this.

The overall statutory scheme inextricably links rates and service levels, and the limitation of liability for erroneous directory listings and service failures is an integral part of the rate structure. If a telephone company were exposed to almost unlimited liability, the cost of providing telephone service might increase and rates would as a consequence also increase. Tariff regulations, therefore, “[lie] at the core of the [PUC’s] *587 authority to set adequate service levels and establish reasonable rates therefor.” Garrison v. Pacific NW Bell, supra, 45 Or App at 531. We conclude that, because the legislature has seen fit to provide such an extensive statutory scheme to regulate rates charged by public utilities, and because “the limitation of liability [is] an inherent part of the rate,”

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Bluebook (online)
729 P.2d 578, 82 Or. App. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-phone-directories-co-orctapp-1986.