Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Riggs

234 S.W. 875, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1054
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1921
DocketNo. 245-3440
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 875 (Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Riggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Riggs, 234 S.W. 875, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1054 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, J.

Plaintiff • in error, Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Company, operated the only telephone system in Houston. When a telephone was installed' it required the subscriber' to sign a written contract for a year, and pay two months’ rental in advance. Defendant in error, H. P. Riggs, signed such a contract for a. telephone in his residence and paid in advance the rental for two months from July 12, 1917. This contract was accepted by the company, and the telephone installed.

The company kept its accounts with its subscribers by numbers only, and through some mistake the money paid by Riggs was credited to another number, leaving his telephone number apparently delinquent. About 8 o’clock on the morning of August 8, 1917, Riggs called his residence and was informed that his phone had been “temporarily disconnected.” This explanation meant, and was generally known to mean, that the subscriber was in default in paying rental.

'The operator referred Riggs to the cashier, who inquired if he had paid his telephone bill. Riggs told the cashier that he ought to know, and asked if they did not keep a record of such matters. The cashier referred to his books and told Riggs that they showed that he owed $3.25. Riggs told him that the record was wrong; that the phone had been installed less than a month; that he had paid two months’ rental in advance and had a receipt for such payment. The cashier suggested that Riggs bring his receipt to the office of the company. Riggs told him that he was very busy and could not bring the receipt to the office of the company, and that it was important that he be allowed to talk to his wife at his residence at once. The cashier declined to do anything until Riggs should bring his receipt and exhibit it at the company’s office, and stated that they would not connect his phone until he did so. Riggs again insisted on being allowed to talk to his wife at his residence, and again advised the cashier that the matter was very important. The cashier retorted, “Well, you cannot talk until you get your phone paid.”

Riggs still insisted that he had paid for his phone, and stated that he would talk to his wife or there would be something doing at the courthouse. The cashier replied, “Is that so,” and laughed at him.

Riggs testified that it ruffled his feelings because the cashier spoke so sarcastically and cold-blooded. Within three to five minutes Riggs called his residence again, and was again informed that his phone had been “temporarily disconnected,” and the operator offered to again refer him to the cashier. Riggs again insisted upon talking to his residence, and the operator again told him that he could not do so. This irritated Riggs. The operator then connected him with the manager’s office. The clerk, in that office, upon being informed of the contention, inquired if he would expect to be connected if he had not paid his bill, and, being informed by Riggs that he had paid his bill and had told the cashier so, told him to come down to the company’s office and bring his receipted bill. In about 30 minutes Riggs called his residence from another number and was informed that the phone was “temporarily disconnected.” The treatment Riggs received made him angry, but the principal effect on him was that he felt it was an insult to him-to be told he had not paid his bill, when he had paid it, and assured the employds of the company that he had done so. 1-Ie had always had ah ambition to be a man of unquestioned integrity and wanted every one to know that he had sound moral principles and character, and he felt that the fact that the company was telling all who might call his phone, in effect, that he had not paid his bill would hurt his reputation. All this ruffled his feelings and hurt him very much.

The company did inform one lady who called Riggs’ residence that the phone was “temporarily disconnected.”

It was customary, when a subscriber claimed his bill was paid, to give him the connection asked for and to investigate aft-erwards. No explanation why such course was not pursued in this case was made.' The company began an investigation of the matter and soon discovered its error, and in about one hour after Riggs first called his residence reconnected his phone. It had been, in fact, disconnected since some time the day before.

The company tendered in court the sum of 20 cents as the pro rata part of monthly rental accruing while his phone was disconnected, and also tendered costs accrued to the date of tender.

The case was tried by a jury, which returned a verdict that Riggs suffered annoyance and inconvenience by reason of his telephone being disconnected, and 'that $250 would compensate him for such annoyance and inconvenience. Judgment was rendered in his favor against the company on such verdict. A majority of the Court of Civil [877]*877Appeals affirmed this judgment. 216 S. W. 403.

Plaintiff in error requested tlie court to charge the jury peremptorily to return a verdict in its favor, except as to the 20 cents tendered in court. The refusal of the court ¡to so charge the jury is assigned as error. This assignment is based on the contention that the proper measure of actual damages for breach of contract to furnish telephone service is compensation for the pecuniary loss sustained, and that defendant in error could in no event recover more than 20 cents, the proportionate rental for the time his phone was disconnected, no other pecuniary loss having been shown.

The question of the proper measure of damages in such cases was before the Court of Civil Appeals for the District of Columbia in the ease of Sommerville v. Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. & Tel. Co., reported in 49 App. D. C. 3, 258 Fed. 147, 149, and in which case certiorari was refused by the Supreme Court of the United States. 250 U. S. 661, 40 Sup. Ct. 10, 63 L. Ed. 1195.

The telephone company contended in that case that Sommerville was delinquent and cut off his service for one day. The issue of delinquency was submitted to the jury and found against the company. There was no proof of pecuniary loss,, other than one day’s proportionate part of the monthly rental of $3.25, and the court instructed the jury that such proportionate part of such rental was the measure of his damages, and verdict was rendered accordingly. We quote from the opinion of the court in that ease as follows:

“But we think that Sommerville is entitled to more than a proportionate part of the $3.25. While the inconvenience which he suffered was for a short period of time, the same principle must apply as if it was for a month or more. It does not seem reasonable that in these days, when a telephone is an indispensable adjunct to every line of business, the inevitable inconvenience, annoyance, and loss of time caused to a subscriber by the wrongful action of the company in cutting off his service without notice should not be regarded as a proper subject for. compensatory damages. To prove that one lost a certain number of dollars by reason of the company’s action might be very difficult, and yet, we think, all reasonable men would say that he was injured thereby. That the company may for just cause, such as the failure to pay his bills when the same become due, refuse to further serve a patron, we may concede (Southwestern Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Danaher, 238 U. S. 489, 35 Sup. Ct. 886, 59 L. Ed. 1419, L. R. A. 1916A, 1208); but, when the company takes such action, it must know at its peril that it has a valid reason for doing so. Here, according to the verdict of the jury, it was wholly without justification.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 875, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-telegraph-telephone-co-v-riggs-texcommnapp-1921.