State v. Southern Elkhorn Telephone Co.

106 Neb. 342
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1921
DocketNo. 21387
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 106 Neb. 342 (State v. Southern Elkhorn Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Southern Elkhorn Telephone Co., 106 Neb. 342 (Neb. 1921).

Opinion

Flansburg, J.

This was an action by the state of Nebraska, brought against a number of farmers, who had constructed a rural telephone line and who called themselves the Southern Elkhorn Telephone Company, and was to compel them to obey an order of the Nebraska state railway commission, commanding them to furnish to one Doxstader, a farmer living in the vicinity, a connection with their telephone line. The trial court found in favor of the defendant and entered' a dismissal, from which order the state appeals.

The sole question for determination is whether or not the so-called Southern Elkhorn Telephone Company is a common carrier and therefore under the jurisdiction of the Nebraska state railway commission. If found to be [344]*344such a common carrier, then the order of the railway commission, requiring it to extend its service to the farmer, Doxstader, must be enforced; otherwise, 'the order of the commission is without legal authority.

In 1917 the farmers mentioned, living in the vicinity of Norfolk, had requested telephone service from the Nebraska Telephone Company, which company was a public service corporation doing a telephone business at Norfolk and throughout the state. This the telephone company, in the first instance, refused to give, but the negotiations resulted in an agreement, in pursuance of whicn the farmers constructed at their own expense a telephone line from Norfolk to their farms, and purchased telephone boxes and rented transmitters from the telephone company, and were thereupon received by the telephone company as subscribers upon the same terms as the subscribers in Norfolk. Each one of the farmers contributed toward the expenses of constructing this party line. The telephone poles were placed, some in the highway, some along the property lines and used as fence posts, and some across private property. The farmers never incorporated or associated themselves as a company. They, however, adopted the name of Southern Elkhorn Telephone Company, for the purpose of convenience in their dealings as a collective body with the Nebraska Telephone Company. They kept their lines in repair and the expenses for such iepairs were borne by mutual assessments made from time to time as needed. The repairs amounted to from $2 to $2.50 yearly for each farmer. The Nebraska Telephone Company at Norfolk furnished switching service for them and arranged to connect them with the. Norfolk subscribers or with long-distance line’s, and for this service the farmers paid the same rates as the Norfolk subscribers. One of their number each month collected from the others the regular rates and whatever long-distance tolls had been incurred by any of them, and remitted the entire amount in one sum to the Nebraska Telephone Company at Norfolk. The subscribers at Norfolk, or any one [345]*345at distant points, who wished to talk with these several farmers, could call through the exchange at Norfolk and be connected with the farmers’ line. There are only 10 farmers connected with the rural line in question, but it is their contention that their line is already burdened and is insufficient to afford service for additional telephone users. The agreement, under which the farmers are acting, does not provide for taking in new members, nor for' extending service beyond the lines already constructed.

It is the contention of the attorneys for the state that the rural telephone line in question, having become connected with the Norfolk telephone system, has necessarily become an integral part thereof and therefore has become a common carrier. It is argued that the farmers on the rural line send messages to whomsoever they please, and hold themselves out as ready to accept and deliver all messages that may come to the rural line from subscribers at Norfolk and, in fact, from any part of the country over long-distance.

The legislature defined common carriers, so far as that term is applicable here, to be “telegraph and telephone companies * * engaged in the transmission of messages * * * for hire.” Rev. St. 1913, sec. 6124.

In order that a company be a common carrier, it.is essential, in view of this statutory definition, as well as by the generally recognized meaning of the term “common carrier,” that the service rendered by it must be a service that is rendered for hire. It Avas said by Justice Story in Citizens Bank v. Nantucket Steamboat Co., 5 Fed. Cas. (No. 2730) 719, 725: “I take it to be exceedingly clear that no person is a common carrier in the sense of the law, Avho is not a carrier for hire; that is, who does not receive, or is not entitled to receive, any recompense for his services. The knoAvn definition of a common carrier, ji. all our books, fully establishes this result.” If no compensation is received, “he is not in the sense of the law a common carrier; but he is a mere mandatory, or gratuitous bailee; and of course his rights, duties and liabilities are [346]*346of a very different nature and character from those of a common carrier.”

As pointed out in 10 O. J. 41, sec. 10: “The law applicable to common carriers is peculiarly rigorous, and it ought not to be extended to' persons who have neither expressly assumed that character nor by their conduct and from the nature of their business justified the belief on the part of the public that they intended to assume it.”

It is quite apparent that the farmers, when they constructed the rural line in question, had no idea of rendering service to the public. Their sole purpose was to procure telephone service for themselves. It was to that purpose, and that purpose only, that they dedicated their property. To now subject that property to another purpose than that for which it was given, or intended to be used, would be to take from them the right and the use of the property which has not been voluntarily yielded up. Where a person enters into the business of public service and operates as a common carrier, he voluntarily dedicates his property to the public use and acquiesces in a necessary public control of the business conducted; but where there is no such dedication to the public use, the state has no arbitrary right to take from an individual the control of property devoted to private interests. The farmers who constructed the line in question did not provide that they would extend service to whomsoever might apply, nor that they would engage in the business of transmitting telephone messages. They have not become bound to each other, fior to the public in general, to see that their rural line is always in first-class order and that messages' received will be promptly and efficiently transmitted. To hold them as a common carrier would fix a liability upon them for negligence in failing to keep their lines in efficient order. The lines that they have constructed are for their own private use, and certainly are subject to such control and provision for repair and. maintenance as they themselves shall elect to adopt.

It is argued that the rural line is similar to branch lines [347]*347of a railroad which are constructed to meet the demands of some private industry and become a part of the railroad system and subject to control as a part of a common carrier. The case of Union Lime Co. v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 233 U. S. 211, is one of the cases cited as bearing out that contention.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Neb. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-southern-elkhorn-telephone-co-neb-1921.