State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Two Way Radio Service, Inc.

158 S.E.2d 855, 272 N.C. 591, 1968 N.C. LEXIS 703
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 2, 1968
Docket546
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 158 S.E.2d 855 (State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Two Way Radio Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North 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. Utilities Commission v. Two Way Radio Service, Inc., 158 S.E.2d 855, 272 N.C. 591, 1968 N.C. LEXIS 703 (N.C. 1968).

Opinion

LAKE, J.

Each of the findings of fact made by the Commission is supported by competent, material and substantial evidence in view of the entire record. Each such finding is, therefore, binding upon the reviewing court. Utilities Commission v. Coach Co., 269 N.C. 717, 153 S.E. 2d 461; Utilities Commission v. Telegraph Co., 267 N.C. 257, 269, 148 S.E. 2d 100; Utilities Commission v. Champion Papers, Inc., 259 N.C. 449, 130 S.E. 2d 890.

The superior court was in error in sustaining the applicant's Exception No. 3 to the order of the Commission, this exception being that the Commission erred in failing to find certain facts, set forth in the foregoing, statement of facts. The superior court may not make findings" of fact or reverse an order of the Utilities Commission on the ground that the Commission should have found the facts to be as the court believes the evidence indicates. The superior court may, in proper cases, remand the matter to the Commission for a finding by it upon a question of fact as to which the1 Commission *599 made no finding, or may reverse or remand because a finding made by the Commission is not supported by competent and substantial evidence before the Commission, but it may not reverse the order of the Commission because the Commission did not find facts which the court believes it should have found. See Utilities Commission v. Membership Corporation, 260 N.C. 59, 131 S.E. 2d 865. The Commission, not the reviewing court, is the fact finding body. The court’s function, upon an appeal from an order of the Commission, is set forth in G.S. 62-94. Furthermore, the evidence before the Commission would not support the findings which the superior court said the Commission should have made with reference to the protestant’s intent to offer communication service between two vehicles, between a vehicle and the dispatcher in the office of the owner of the vehicle or between any of these and the protestant’s operator; Finally, upon this question, the other facts which the superior court held that the Commission should have found would have added nothing of consequence to what the Commission did find concerning differences in the two proposed services. The applicant’s Exception No. 3 to the order of the Commission cannot, therefore, be deemed a sufficient basis for reversing that order.

The judgment of the superior court was that the order .of the Commission be reversed and that the cause be remanded to the' Commission, with directions to grant to the applicant “a certificate- of convenience and necessity as applied for.” The application was for “a certificate of convenience and necessity to operate as a common carrier in intrastate communications providing mobile radio service with interconnection with existing telephone service.” (Emphasis added.) In the similar case of Utilities Commission v. Telegraph Co., supra, we said:

“Even if the present record were sufficient to support the order granting the Applicant a certificate of public convenience and necessity ‘to act as a common carrier of communications providing mobile radio service,’ the Commission had no statutory authority to require Carolina [the telephone company there involved] to interconnect the Applicant’s radio communications system with Carolina’s land telephone system.”

For the reasons there stated, no such interconnection could be required of the protestant in the present case.

There remains for consideration the question of whether, upon the facts found by the Commission, there was error of law in its refusal to grant to the applicant a certificate of public convenience and necessity for its proposed operation without such interconnection, the *600 record showing that the applicant sought such a certificate without interconnection if interconnection could not be had. The determinative questions upon this phase of the case are: Is the protestant authorized by its certificate of convenience and necessity, previously issued, to render a service substantially similar to that proposed by the applicant? If so, may a certificate be issued to the applicant when the protestant is ready, able and willing to render in the same area such substantially similar service? See Utilities Commission v. Coach Co., supra.

In accordance with our decision in Utilities Commission v. Telegraph Co., supra, the Commission concluded that one rendering the service proposed by the applicant is a public utility, as that term is defined in G.S. 62-3(23); that the Commission has jurisdiction to grant a certificate of convenience and necessity for such service; that the public convenience and necessity, within the area in question, justifies the service proposed; and that the applicant is fit, ready, willing and able to provide such service. There is no exception to these conclusions and they are supported by the facts found by the Commission. It does not, however, follow necessarily that the applicant is entitled to the issuance of such certificate to it.

The applicant did not except to the Commission’s Findings of Fact Nos. 5 and 6 and, as we have seen, there is ample evidence in the record to support these findings. They establish that the protestant proposes to provide and is ready, able and willing to provide “Improved Mobile Telephone Service” in this area and that the principal differences between the two proposed services are as stated by the Commission. The Commission’s Conclusion No. 5 necessarily implies that the certificate heretofore granted to the protestant, authorizing it “to render telephone service,” grants to it the right to furnish, within its service area, its proposed “Improved Mobile Telephone Service.” There is no error in this implied conclusion.

A certificate of public convenience and necessity, which authorizes its holder to render “telephone service,” does not limit the holder to the practice of the art of telephony as it was known and practiced on the date the certificate was issued, nor to the use therein of devices, equipment and methods then in use. Obviously, it is the intent of such a certificate to authorize the holder to improve its service by adopting and using new and improved devices and methods for telephonic communication. The holder of such a certificate may, indeed, in a proper case, by proper procedures and upon proper proof, be required by the regulatory commission to do so. G.S. 62-32; G.S. 62-42. The very term “mobile telephone service” shows that the art of telephony has now been broadened to include the transmission of the *601 human voice by a system of communication not wholly dependent upon wires.

The Commission and the courts may take judicial notice of the well known fact that telephone companies today habitually transmit conversations by electrical impulses traveling through part of the intervening space without proceeding upon wires. There transmissions are a part of “telephone service” as that term is used and understood today. See Commercial Communications v. Public Utilities Commission, 50 Cal. 2d 512, 327 P. 2d 513, app. dism. and cert. den., 359 U.S. 119, 341, 79 S. Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.E.2d 855, 272 N.C. 591, 1968 N.C. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-utilities-commission-v-two-way-radio-service-inc-nc-1968.