Southern Telecom, Inc. v. Tw Telecom Inc. of Georgia, L. P. F/K/A Time Warner Telecom of Georgia, L. P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
DocketA12A2381
StatusPublished

This text of Southern Telecom, Inc. v. Tw Telecom Inc. of Georgia, L. P. F/K/A Time Warner Telecom of Georgia, L. P. (Southern Telecom, Inc. v. Tw Telecom Inc. of Georgia, L. P. F/K/A Time Warner Telecom of Georgia, L. P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Telecom, Inc. v. Tw Telecom Inc. of Georgia, L. P. F/K/A Time Warner Telecom of Georgia, L. P., (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MCFADDEN and MCMILLIAN , JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 29, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A2381. SOUTHERN TELECOM INC. v. TW TELECOM INC. McF-111 OF GEORGIA L.P. et al.

MCFADDEN, Judge.

This dispute is about the interpretation of certain contracts for the creation of

telecommunications networks in Atlanta and Birmingham, Alabama. Those contracts

were entered in the 1990s between the parties’ predecessors in interest. Appellant

Southern Telecom and its predecessors are affiliates of the Southern Company, whose

subsidiaries own power lines, power poles, conduits, rights-of-way and related

equipment. Appellees TW Telecom Inc. of Georgia LP and TW Telecom of Alabama

LLC (together, “TW”), like their predecessors, are in the telecommunications

business. TW’s predecessors contracted to run cable and fibers along power lines and

rights-of-way and through conduits belonging to Southern Telecom’s affiliates in the Atlanta and Birmingham areas. Under the terms of those contracts Southern Telecom

is entitled to a share of the revenue generated over TW’s predecessors’ Atlanta and

Birmingham telecommunications networks.

The parties now disagree about the scope of the telecommunication networks

from which Southern Telecom’s fee is calculated. The subject networks are identified

and their scope is defined in the subject contracts. Those definitions specify how the

subject networks at issue are to be distinguished from other networks to which they

are interconnected. The subject networks are defined broadly, and the definitions

contemplate future growth through expansion.

But the parties did not bargain for growth through acquisition, which is what

has occurred. When the TW entities acquired their predecessors in interest, they had

preexisting networks of their own in Atlanta and Birmingham. Southern Telecom now

claims a right to share in the revenues of those preexisting networks. We find no

warrant for that claim in the contracts. The contractual definitions of the subject

networks do not support that claim. We find instead that Southern Telecom’s claim

to revenue from the preexisting networks is controlled – and defeated – by the general

rule that assignees’ rights and obligations are no greater than their assignors’.

2 Ruling on cross motions for summary judgment, the trial court held that

Southern Telecom’s right to a share of revenues, and consequently to information

needed to calculate amounts owed, is limited to the networks as they existed at the

time the contracts were first assigned. The trial court properly rejected Southern

Telecom’s claim to revenue from TW’s preexisting networks and properly ruled that

TW was not required to provide financial records related to its preexisting networks.

We therefore affirm.

1. Facts.

Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings and evidence “show that

there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled

to a judgment as a matter of law.” OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). “On appeal from the grant

or denial of summary judgment, we conduct a de novo review, with all reasonable

inferences construed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”(Citations

omitted.) Forsyth County v. Waterscape Svcs., 303 Ga. App. 623 (694 SE2d 102)

(2010).

So viewed, the record shows that Southern Telecom’s predecessor entered a

contract with ICG Telecom Group, Inc. (“ICGT”) to construct and operate a

telecommunications network in Atlanta using Georgia Power facilities, such as power

3 poles, conduits and rights-of-way. Another Southern Telecom predecessor entered a

contract with ICG Access Services, Inc. to construct and operate a

telecommunications network in Birmingham, Alabama, using Alabama Power

facilities. The contracts contained provisions that entitled the Southern Telecom

predecessors to a percentage of the revenues the TW predecessors generated from the

sale of telecommunications services.

A. The Atlanta Contract’s Terms.

In addition to a $5.5 million initial payment, the contract required ICGT to pay

during the contract term a “Network Fee,” which it defined as a “percentage[] of

ICGT’s On-Net Revenue.” . The contract defined “On-Net Revenue” as “the gross

revenue . . . received by ICGT or any of its Affiliates derived directly or indirectly

from the sale of Telecommunication Services provided over the ICGT Network to

Telecommunications Customers located in any On-Net Building by ICGT or any of

its Affiliates.” The contract defined “On-Net Building” as “any building, facility,

plant, operation or structure in the Atlanta [area] directly or indirectly connected to

the ICGT Network.” The contract defined “ICGT Network” as:

the digital telecommunications facilities of ICGT within the Atlanta [area], including, without limitation, the ICGT Fibers as well as other

4 fibers utilized by ICGT, associated equipment and other digital telecommunications facilities that directly or indirectly intersect or connect to any ICGT Fibers or Cable, whether existing on the date hereof or constructed hereafter.

(Although the contract did not define “digital telecommunications facilities,” Federal

Standard 1037C defines “telecommunications facilities” as “[t]he aggregate of

equipment, such as radios, telephones, teletypewriters, facsimile equipment, data

equipment, cables, and switches, used for providing telecommunications services.”

Telecommunications: Glossary of Telecommu nicatio n Terms at

http://www.its.bldrdoc.gov/fs-1037//dir-036/_5352.htm.)

The contract goes on to distinguish between portions of the ICGT Network

which were installed on Georgia Power facilities, which are called “Route Segments,”

and portions installed on facilities owned by entities other than Georgia Power, called

“Alternate Route Segments.” Southern Telecom was entitled to payments calculated

on the basis of both, but smaller payments for Alternate Route Segments. The

contract defined “Route Segments” as the portion of “fiber optic cable incorporating

the ICGT Fibers, to be used by or installed for or on behalf of ICGT” on Georgia

Power facilities. The contract required the parties to designate the Route Segments

5 on Exhibit A to the contract. Exhibit A, in turn, referred to and incorporated a map

that set forth the build-out plan for the ICGT Network.

The contract provided that ICGT could propose Route Segments as additions

to Exhibit A. Georgia Power could then accept or reject the proposed additions. If

Georgia Power rejected a proposed addition, ICGT could use non-Georgia Power

facilities, thereby creating an Alternate Route Segment. Alternate Route Segments

were part of the ICGT Network, but “any On-Net Revenue generated by any On-Net

Building connected to the ICGT Network by an Alternate Route Segment, would be

reduced “for the purpose of calculating the Network Fee due Southern Telecom. . .

.”

The contract contained a provision authorizing assignment by ICGT, should

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Southern Telecom, Inc. v. Tw Telecom Inc. of Georgia, L. P. F/K/A Time Warner Telecom of Georgia, L. P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-telecom-inc-v-tw-telecom-inc-of-georgia-l-p-fka-time-gactapp-2013.