State Ex Rel. Gwynn v. Citizens' Telephone Co.

39 S.E. 257, 61 S.C. 83, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 257 (State Ex Rel. Gwynn v. Citizens' Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Gwynn v. Citizens' Telephone Co., 39 S.E. 257, 61 S.C. 83, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 140 (S.C. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice McIver.

This was an application, addressed to the Circuit Court, for a writ of mandamus, requiring the respondent to place a telephone in the relator’s grocery store and one in his residence, in the city of Spartanburg, and to connect them properly with its exchange and its subscribers, and to do all acts necessary to afford the relator the like service and telephonic communication afforded to its other subscribers. The application was refused by the Circuit Judge, and the relator appealed to this Court on'the several grounds set out in the record, which it is not necessary to state here, as it will be sufficient to consider the several questions, as stated by counsel for respondent, in his argument here, which are presented by this appeal.

As is said by the Circuit Judge in his decree, “there is practically no dispute as to the facts,” which may be stated, substantially, as follows: The relator is now and has been since the 28th of June, 1898, engaged in the mercantile business, carrying on a retail grocery store in the city of Spartanburg, and occupies a residence in said city; that the respondent, on 16th day of August, 1898, became a corporation under the laws of this State, for the purpose of owning, constructing, using and maintaining electric telephone lines and exchange within the city of Spartanburg, and as such is now and was at the time of the commencement of this proceeding engaged in the said business, having established an *85 exchange in said city, from which connections were made to telephone instruments in offices, places of business and residences of -its subscribers; that the city council of Spartan-burg 'has authorized the respondent to erect poles in the streets of the city for the purpose of transporting news over its wires to its subscribers, having a system of wires throughout the city, connected with telephone instruments furnished by it to its subscribers; that whenever a person desires a telephone, it is placed in the office, residence or place of business of the applicant, at the expense of the respondent, with authority to the subscriber to use the same, upon certain rates and terms, for the purpose of telephonic communication with others; that some -time in the year 1899, the respondent placed telephones in relator’s residence and grocery store, giving proper connections with respondent’s exchange and its subscribers or customers throughout the city of Spartanburg and elsewhere; that this was done under an agreement with the relator that he would use respondent’s telephones exclusively, and not the telephone of the Bell Telephone Company, and that certain of respondent’s subscribers in the said city of Spartanburg, including most of the grocerymen, were furnished with telephones by the respondent, under a similar agreement, but-some of respondent’s subscribers, including- some merchants, physicians and others and one groceryman, whose place of business was on the same street of said city as the grocery store of relator, were supplied with telephones by respondent under agreements which contained no such stipulation as tO' the exclusive use of respondent’s telephones, and they were using both telephones; that on or about the 6th of February, 1900, the respondent learning that the relator had purchased Holland’s market, in which there was a telephone placed there by the Southern Bell Telephone Company, a corporation duly chartered under the laws of this State, and that said market immediately adjoined relator’s grocery store, and that relator had cut a door through the wall separating his grocery store from said market, thus opening a means of communication *86 between the two structures, immediately removed, against the protest of the relator, the telephones which the respondent had previously placed in relator’s grocery store and residence, for the avowed purpose of preventing the relator from using respondent’s telephones while he was using the Bell Telephone — respondent claiming that under its agreement with relator he was bound to confine himself to the use of respondent's telephones; that on or about the 8th of February, 1900, the relator tendered to respondent the amount due for the past use of respondent’s telephones, which was accepted, and that relator thereupon demanded that respondent place one of their telephones in his grocery store and one in his residence, with proper connections with respondent’s exchange and its subscribers; but the respondent refused to comply with such demand unless the relator would agree to use respondent’s telephones exclusively, and not use the telephone which had been placed in said market by the Bell Telephone Company.

The respondent, in its answer, alleges : “that its supply of telephone instruments is limited, and that it is with difficulty that this respondent can furnish such instruments to all applicants therefor. That even if the respondent was legally bound1 to furnish such instruments now, it would be impossifor it to do so within less than sixty days, for the reason of its inability to enlarge its switch-board.” But as this allegation is not responsive to any allegation contained in relator’s petition, and was not sustained by any evidence, so far as the “Case” shows, it cannot now be considered. Besides, this Court, having reached the conclusion, as will presently appear, that the relator is entitled1 to the mandamus for which purpose the case will be remanded to the Circuit Court, with instructions to carry out the views herein announced, that Court can, in its order directing the writ of mandamus to be issued, make such provision, by giving a reasonable time within which the duty sought to be enforced shall be performed, provided the - fact be as alleged in the foregoing quotation from respondent’s answer.

*87 We will next proceed to consider the several questions of law, growing out of the facts above stated, and presented by this appeal. These" questions are thus stated in the argument here, on the part of the respondent, and we propose to adopt that statement, ist. Is the defendant telephone company, in any sense, a common carrier? 2. Can the defendant telephone company be required, in any case, against its will, to supply one of its instruments to petitioner? 3. Can the defendant telephone company be required by mandamus, under the circumstances of .this case, to so furnish its instruments to petitioner?

1 The first and, as it seems to us, the controlling question in the case, is, we think, conclusively determined' by the provisions of sec. 3, of art. IX., of the present Constitution, which reads as follows : “All railroad, express, canal and other corporations engaged in the transportation for "hire and all telegraph and" other corporations engaged in the business of transmitting intelligence for hire, are common carriers in their respective lines of business, and are subject to liability and taxation as such,” the balance of the section not being pertinent to the present inquiry. Now, if the respondent, “Citizens’ Telephone Company,” is a corporation, and is “engaged in the business of transmitting intelligence for hire,” then it is expressly declared by the highest authority to be a common carrier. That it is a corporation, is not and cannot be denied; and, as. we think, it is equally undeniable that it is “engaged in the business of transmitting intelligence for hire.” Indeed, that, so far as appears in this case, is the only business in which it is engaged.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 257, 61 S.C. 83, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gwynn-v-citizens-telephone-co-sc-1901.