Southwestern Associated Tel. Co. v. City of Dalhart

254 S.W.2d 819, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2295, 1952 WL 82986
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1952
Docket6274
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 254 S.W.2d 819 (Southwestern Associated Tel. Co. v. City of Dalhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Associated Tel. Co. v. City of Dalhart, 254 S.W.2d 819, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2295, 1952 WL 82986 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory-order denying a temporary injunction through an application for which appellant, Southwestern Associated Telephone Company, sought ultimate relief against appellees, The City of Dalhart and its city officials, in getting a raise in its city telephone rates. In support of its affirmative injunctive relief sought appellant pleaded by a verified pleading the authority of the City Council of the City of Dalhart, by virtue of Article 1119, Revised Civil Statutes, as amended, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 1119, and a city ordinance enacted of date August 31, 1921, giving the said Council power and making it the duty of the Council to fix reasonable telephone rates for appellant, but the said City Council had refused to follow the mandate given it by the said authority to. the irreparable injury of appellant by reason of losses suffered and the confiscation of its property. For which reasons appellant sought in this action to temporarily restrain ap-pellees (1) from enforcing or attempting to enforce the collection from appellant of the telephone rates prescribed and set forth in the city ordinance pleaded by appellant as heretofore stated; (2) from assessing or seeking to enforce against appellant any fine or penalty because of appellant’s failure to charge and collect only the telephone rates prescribed and set forth in the city ordinance previously referred to; (3) and from interfering in any way with appellant’s promulgating, charging and collecting what it alleges to be fair and reasonable rates and charges for telephone services in Dalhart until the City Council shall prescribe fair and reasonable rates and charges for such telephone service in the said City. Appellant is seeking ultimate affirmative relief by means only of a restrictive order.

Appellees answered with a verified plea in abatement, alleging that appellant had failed to comply with the methods prescribed for the raising o'f telephone rates as set forth in the city ordinance pleaded by appellant a.nd its suit for injunctive relief was prematurely filed and should be dismissed. Subject to their said plea in abatement, appellees, by a verified pleading, excepted to the pleadings of appellant on the grounds of insufficiency of its pleadings and a failure to. state a cause of action since it sought no- relief other than injunctive relief and failed to allege any proposed rate it sought to promulgate or charge. They further excepted on the grounds that appellant based its figures alleging losses for the year of 1951 only and there were no allegations to the effect that such conditions continued to exist for the year 1952 at the time the said suit was filed on June 30, 1952; that no pleadings existed charging appellees of attempting to enforce the existing telephone rates or that they were threatening to prosecute appellant or trying to collect fines or penalties from appellant in any event; that appellant’s pleadings were insufficient to allege any threatened wrongs or irreparable injuries; that the relief prayed for would interfere with the administrative functions lawfully given to appellees and that such, if granted, would enjoin the enforcement of a valid ordinance without sufficient lawful allegations to support the relief sought; that the relief sought would not preserve the status quo of the parties and the subject matter of the suit, but, on the contrary, such would change the status quo of the parties and the subject matter; that appellant has not exhausted its legal remedies by filing a primary suit seeking a raise in its telephone rates. Subject to the said plea in abatement and exceptions, appellees, by a verified pleading, denied generally appellant’s allegations, pleaded all of the foregoing matters defensively and further pleaded that they had used all the means possible to negotiate and determine fair and reasonable telephone rates for appellant and had offered appellant fair and reasonable rates which were refused by appellant; that appellant had never advised appellees what rate or rates it considered to be reasonable and necessary to allow it a fair rate on its *822 property values, which values it had sworn in a written statement rendered to ap-pellees to be $57,240, while it now claims such values to he much more; that appellant had failed to render reasonable and proper services to the general public of Dalhart.

Evidence was heard by the trial court on the plea in abatement, after which the same, together with appellees’ exceptions, were overruled by the trial court and the issue of temporary injunctive relief was heard with all parties present. The evidence consisted of the oral testimony of J. Eddie Jones, Mayor of Dalhart, together with ex parte affidavits and some of the city ordinances of the City of Dalhart.

Appellant offered ex parte affidavits of several of its officers showing or tending to show the total value of its investments in Dalhart to 'be $243,194.11, the existing prevailing labor conditions, that its net income at Dalhart for the year 1951 was only $757.32, that it had on several occasions unsuccessfully sought a satisfactory raise in telephone rates in Dalhart, the last time being on June 2, 1952, at a formal meeting of the City Council when the rates requested by appellant were refused by vote of the City Council, which offered no reasonable rate or proposal for a settlement. The city ordinance pleaded by appellant and offered in evidence by ap-pellees was enacted by the City Council of Dalhart on August 31, 1921, to “take effect and be in full force” thereafter, and it fixed the monthly telephone rates for Dalhart at $1.75 for a party line, $2.50 for residence telephone, $3,50 for office telephone, $4 for office desk telephone and additional charges of 50⅜⅝ or $1 for extension lines. With reference to making a change thereafter in telephone rates in the City of Dalhart, the said city ordinance likewise:

“ * * * provided further that said rates shall not then be changed until the said Dalhart Telephone Company, its successors or assigns, has served the Mayor of the City of Dalhart with written notice of its intention to change said rates, said notice to contain a sclmdle

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W.2d 819, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2295, 1952 WL 82986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-associated-tel-co-v-city-of-dalhart-texapp-1952.