Southwestern States Telephone Co. v. State

1949 OK 165, 208 P.2d 581, 201 Okla. 603, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 385
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 12, 1949
DocketNo. 33174
StatusPublished

This text of 1949 OK 165 (Southwestern States Telephone Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern States Telephone Co. v. State, 1949 OK 165, 208 P.2d 581, 201 Okla. 603, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 385 (Okla. 1949).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an appeal taken by Southwestern States Telephone Company, hereinafter referred to as appellant, from an order of the Corporation Commission, hereinafter referred to as the Commission, declaring section 3, township 10 north, range 3 west, Cleveland county, Oklahoma, which territory was then occupied by appellant, open territory, to be serviced by anyone desiring to render telephone service therein without further order of the Commission.

The above described territory had formerly been occupied and served by the Moore Telephone Company Exchange of Moore, Oklahoma.

Appellant acquired the Moore Exchange by purchase on March 1, 1939, and' has operated the exchange ever since.,

Appellant, shortly after acquiring such exchange, entered into an agreement with Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, hereinafter referred to as Bell, which was operating a telephone exchange in Oklahoma City, whereby exchange boundary lines were agreed upon between them'. The territory here involved was allotted to appellant, a traffic and boundary map describing the boundary lines agreed upon was filed with the Commission by appellant, and on the 25th day of June, 1945, the Commission ordered that such maps be filed without either approving or disapproving the boundary lines agreed upon.

The territory involved lies immediately south of the Oklahoma City line and within three miles of the town of Moore and is now known and referred to as the Moore Exchange. The area is platted and is designated as Lochoma and Golden Acres Additions to Oklahoma City. Toll service between the Bell and Moore exchange is maintained under rates fixed by the Commission.

On the 1st day of April, 1946, P. D. Odom, who was a resident of the area and conducting various businesses therein, among which was that of building houses for defense workers, made application to the Commission requesting that Bell be required to furnish him with business telephone connections. In the application it is stated that his business is located on the line near what is known as the Moore Exchange area, but that no poles capable of carrying the lines of such exchange are closer to his premises than one and one-half miles; Bell had poles immediately adjacent thereto, was in a position and equipped to furnish such connections, and should therefore be required by the Commission to do so.

Thereafter, and in July, 1946, W. H. Yost, in behalf of himself and twenty-eight other families similarly situated and residing in the area, also filed an application requesting that Bell be required to furnish their residences with telephone connections.

The Bell responded to these petitions and applications in which it alleged and asserted that the Commission was without authority to grant them the relief requested for the reason that the territory involved was then occupied and being serviced by appellant under established boundary lines; that the Commission was without authority to change such boundary lines - or to require or authorize any other concern [605]*605to enter, occupy and service said territory except on application made as provided by statute (17 O. S. 1941 §133) by one desiring to enter and furnish telephone service therein.

During the progress of the hearing petitioners requested and were granted permission, over the objection of appellant, to amend their petitions. In the amended petitions it is requested that the area involved be declared open territory for any other company desiring to furnish telephone service therein. In the amended petitions the allegations of the original petitions are reiterated with the additional allegations that the service rendered by appellant is insufficient, inadequate and does not meet the needs and requirements of petitioners. Upon the filing of the amended petitions, the proceeding against Bell was dismissed.

Evidence was offered tending to show that at the time the original petitions were filed, and before the improvements hereinafter referred to were made, the service furnished by appellant was insufficient and inadequate; that it only furnished rural telephone connections in the area. It had no single line connections; that it was not able to comply with requests for new connections; that it was slow in making repairs; that it was difficult to obtain connections out of Moore. The evidence, however, is undisputed that these conditions were wholly due to war restrictions; that appellant by reason thereof was unable to get materials to make extensions and improvements and to provide new facilities; that it was impossible to obtain sufficient employees to keep the lines in continuous and proper repair; that the failure to get connections out of Moore was not entirely the fault of appellant but due largely to the volume of wartime business transacted over connecting lines. Mr. Richardson, telephone' engineer of the Commission, ‘as well as other witnesses, so testified. It is also shown that this condition with which appellant was confronted during the war, and which caused complaint to be made, was not applicable to it alone but was general to the telephone industry everywhere. Mr. Davis, commercial superintendent of appellant, testified that shortly after appellant acquired the exchange it commenced making extensions and improvements; that it had facilities to serve subscribers in the area involved; that it continued to make such improvements up to and until the beginning of the war; that it then had a considerable investment in the area and a returned valuation as of December 1, 1945, in a sum in excess of $28,000; that during the war it was impossible to make further extensions and improvements because of war restrictions; that after the close of the war and as soon as materials became available and in the year 1946 it made further improvements and extensions in the area and now has entirely new lines, poles and cables in the area, and that any person residing therein can now have any type of service desired, single or party line; that this improvement program was under way in March, 1946, and prior to the time the original Odom petition was filed, and construction was completed and the new lines and equipment ready for use prior to the time the amended petitions herein were filed. The testimony of Mr. Davis in this respect is undisputed but, on the other hand, is corroborated by the testimony of the engineer of the Commission who testified that appellant has now overbuilt its lines in the area and can now give and would give satisfactory, complete and adequate service to anyone residing in the area. Other witnesses, including some of the petitioners, also so testified.

This, in substance, constitutes the evidence upon which the Commission made its order, declaring the area to be open territory.

Appellant contends that the Commission was without power or authority to make such order. It is asserted that since it had already occupied the territory under established and agreed boundary lines, the Commission was [606]*606without authority and power to change such lines or to authorize or permit any other concern or telephone company to occupy or serve such area except by first applying for and obtaining a certificate of convenience and necessity as provided by 17 O. S. 1941 §133. It is further contended that assuming the Commission had authority on applications of persons residing in the area to declare it open territory on the ground of inadequacy of service, it would not be authorized to do so without first giving appellant an opportunity to make the service adequate.

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Bluebook (online)
1949 OK 165, 208 P.2d 581, 201 Okla. 603, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-states-telephone-co-v-state-okla-1949.