STATE EX REL. PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. v. Duncan

230 P.2d 773, 191 Or. 475, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 219
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 230 P.2d 773 (STATE EX REL. PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE EX REL. PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. v. Duncan, 230 P.2d 773, 191 Or. 475, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 219 (Or. 1951).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is a proceeding in mandamus which The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company, as relator, in *478 stituted in this court for an alternative writ. Article VII, section 2, Constitution of Oregon, authorizes this court “in its own discretion” to “take original jurisdiction in mandamus. ’ ’ The defendant is the Honorable George R. Duncan, one of the circuit court, judges for Marion County. Judge Duncan, on February 19, 1951, in a proceeding entitled The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company, a corporation, plaintiff, v. George H. Flagg, as Commissioner of Public Utilities of Oregon, defendant, entered an order which read:

“It is hereby ordered that plaintiff’s motion for a temporary restraining order, suspending the operation of defendant’s Order No. 26346, be and the same hereby is denied.”

That order is the sole object of attack in this proceeding.

The defendant, by way of denial and further return, presents these issues: (1) the motion for the temporary restraining order mentioned in the language just quoted was addressed to the discretion of the'court, and the discretion was properly exercised; (2) the relator, if aggrieved by the challenged order, has a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law.

The case was submitted to us upon stipulation of facts which we will later review.

The term “Order No. 26346”, found in the quoted language, refers to a ruling made by the Commissioner of Public Utilities December 28,1950, which suspended permanently a tariff filed by the relator April 18,1950. That tariff set out a schedule of increased rates for the relator’s intrastate telephone service. Had it become effective, it would have yielded annually $3,041,-000 gross revenue, or $2,731,000 net revenue.

*479 It is seen from the foregoing that on April 18,1950, the relator filed with the Commissioner a tariff for increased rates. After the Commissioner had given proper notice, he conducted a hearing upon the tariff extending from November 28 to December 2, 1950. December 28, 1950, he entered the order which is mentioned in Judge Duncan’s order; that is, the order which permanently suspended the tariff. February 1, 1951, the telephone company, as plaintiff, instituted a suit in the Circuit Court for Marion County which named the Commissioner as the defendant and which prayed for a review of his order; that is, the order-entered by the Commissioner December 28, 1950. On the same day that that suit was begun the company filed the motion which is mentioned in the order entered by Judge Duncan, from which we have quoted. Motions of that kind are authorized by § 112-4,120, O.C.L.A., which says:

“After the commencement of such suit the circuit court may, for cause shown, upon application to the circuit court or presiding judge thereof, and upon notice to the commissioner and hearing, suspend or stay the operation of the order of the commissioner complained of until the final disposition of such suit upon the giving of such bond or other security, or upon such conditions as the court may require. The said bond shall be executed in favor of the commissioner for the benefit of whom it may concern and may be enforcible by said commissioner, or any person interested, in an appropriate proceeding.”

The suit instituted by the telephone company against the Commissioner is still pending in the circuit court.

The purpose of the proceeding filed in this court is to procure a writ of mandamus commanding Judge Duncan to vacate his order of February 19, 1950, and *480 issue an injunction pendente lite suspending the operation of the Commissioner’s order of December 28, 1950. If the desired order is issued, the tariff filed by the company April 18, 1950, will become effective and remain so until the circuit court has disposed of the case filed by the company for the review of. the Commissioner’s permanent suspension of the tariff just mentioned. If the Commissioner’s order is: vacated at the conclusion of that suit, the tariff will remain in effect indefinitely.

We shall now review the parts of the petition filed in this court wherein the relator sets forth specifically the premises upon which it desires this court to issue the writ. In the language which we are about to quote, the term “defendant” refers to Judge Duncan, and the term “Suit No. 37571” means the suit instituted in the circuit court by the company against the Commissioner for a review of his order of permanent suspensión. The petition alleges:

‘ ‘ The only evidence before defendant upon which he acted in making said order of February 19,1951, consisted of relator’s verified complaint in shit No. 37571, and the affidavits filed by relator and the affidavits filed by the Commissioner, copies of which documents are hereto attached, marked Exhibits I, V and VI.”
“The authority of the defendant to grant petitioner’s motion described in paragraph V hereof is contained in Section 112-4120, O.C.L.A. ”
‘ ‘ The evidence before defendant upon which he acted in ruling upon said motion established with certainty that the injury to relator would be certain and irreparable if said motion were denied and the final judgment and decree in said suit were in relator’s favor, and that if said motion were granted there would be no injury to the telephone-using public in Oregon or to the Commissioner, even if *481 the final judgment and decree in said suit were in favor of the Commissioner in that any damage to the telephone-using public which might otherwise occur may be adequately indemnified by a bond which relator offered to file, in compliance with the provisions of Section 112-4120, O.C.L.A. Despite the facts as herein alleged, defendant in abuse of discretion made said order filed February 19, 1951, denying said motion of relator for an order suspending and staying operation of said Order No. 26346, until the final disposition of said suit No. 37571.”

Thus, this proceeding in mandamus is predicated upon a charge that Judge Duncan’s order, which is the subject of attack, was entered in abuse of the discretion which § 112-4,120, O.C.L.A., contemplates the "circuit court shall exercise when a motion for a temporary restraining order is submitted.

So as to make the issues clear, we revert to a statement made by us in a preceding paragraph; that is, the order under attack in this proceeding is the order entered by Judge Duncan February 19, 1951. That order did nothing more than deny a motion filed by the company for a temporary injunction, but if we grant the relator the relief it seeks, Judge Duncan mil be commanded to vacate his order of February 19, 1951, and issue an injunction pendente lite which will suspend, until a final disposition of the case instituted by the company against the Commissioner, the latter’s order of December 28,1950. Upon the suspension of the Commissioner’s order, the tariff filed by the relator April 18, 1950, mil become effective.

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Bluebook (online)
230 P.2d 773, 191 Or. 475, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pacific-telephone-and-telegraph-co-v-duncan-or-1951.