Telcom Systems, Inc. v. LAUDERDALE COUNTY BD.
This text of 405 So. 2d 119 (Telcom Systems, Inc. v. LAUDERDALE COUNTY BD.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
TELCOM SYSTEMS, INC.
v.
The LAUDERDALE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, its Individual Members: W.H. Billy Melton, Sonny Cunningham, Lamar Taylor, Stanley Shannon and Ikie E. Ethridge and South Central Bell Telephone Company.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
H.W. "Sonny" Jones, William B. Jacob, Meridian, for appellant.
Dean, Cameron, Prichard & Young, O. Winston Cameron, Sandusky, Bailey, Fortenberry & Stephenson, Robert W. Bailey, Meridian, Butler, Snow, O'Mara, Stevens & Cannada, George H. Butler, Roger M. Flynt, Jr., Jackson, for appellees.
Before PATTERSON, C.J., and SUGG and LEE, JJ.
SUGG, Justice, for the Court:
Telcom Systems, Inc. brought this suit to enjoin the Board of Supervisors of Lauderdale County and South Central Bell Telephone Company from carrying out a contract for telephone service between the Board and South Central Bell. The Chancery Court of Lauderdale County, Chancellor William Neville presiding, dismissed complainant's suit and complainant appeals. Concluding that the judgment of the chancellor was correct, we affirm.
There was no significant conflict in the evidence and the basic facts are undisputed. The Federal Communications Commission ruled in 1968 that subscribers to telephone service could, with some restrictions, attach customer owned equipment to the telephone network of the utility providing service. That decision gave rise to a new industry known as the "interconnect" industry consisting of business firms engaged in leasing or selling telephone terminal equipment that can be connected with the network of the utility providing telephone service. Such "interconnect" companies do not provide telephone service, are not public utilities, and are not regulated by the Mississippi Public Service Commission.
*120 Telcom is an "interconnect" company which sells and leases telephone equipment. It does not provide complete telephone service but sells or rents telephone equipment, including telephone sets and private branch exchanges (PBX's), which are capable of being connected to South Central Bell's telephone network.
In response to a request from the Board, South Central Bell submitted a proposal on April 23, 1980 for telephone service, including a PBX, for the Lauderdale County Courthouse in accordance with the terms and conditions of the "applicable tariff in effect at the time service is provided." On or about May 1, 1980, the Board accepted the proposal.
Subsequently, on various occasions, Telcom requested the Board to reconsider its decision to subscribe for service and equipment from South Central Bell, and contended that the Board should not have subscribed for such service without competitive bidding. After several conferences with representatives of Telcom, the Board reaffirmed its decision to subscribe to service from South Central Bell without competitive bidding. Thereafter, Telcom filed the present suit.
South Central Bell is a duly authorized and established telephone public utility regulated by the Mississippi Public Service Commission. It is the only company certificated and authorized to provide full telephone service in Meridian. Despite the advent of the connection of customer provided equipment authorized by the Federal Communications Commission in 1968, South Central Bell has continued to provide complete telephone service, under regulation, and has not sold PBX equipment to its subscribers.
Section 77-3-35 Mississippi Code Annotated (1972) requires South Central Bell to file with the Public Service Commission, and to keep open for public inspection, schedules[1] showing all rates and charges for its intrastate telephone service and equipment in Mississippi. At all times material here, South Central Bell had duly filed the required schedule with the Public Service Commission. Section 77-3-35 also prohibits any public utility, including South Central Bell, from charging or receiving a greater or less compensation for its services than that prescribed in its schedule. The rates and charges in South Central Bell's proposal to the Board on April 23, 1980, were in accordance with the schedule of such rates and charges on file with the Public Service Commission at that time.
Telcom seeks to enjoin the county from subscribing for full telecommunication service from South Central Bell. This case presents the following issue not heretofore considered by this Court: Do the public bid statutes of Mississippi prohibit a public body from subscribing for full public utility service from a regulated utility authorized to provide such service and require the public body to take bids for a part of that service?
In 81 A.L.R. 3rd, §§ 2, 981, 982, 983 (1977), the purpose requiring competitive bidding on public contracts and the majority rule when such contract is with a regulated public utility is stated as follows:
The purpose of provisions requiring that contracts with public authorities be let only after competitive bidding are to secure economy in the construction of public works and the expenditures of public funds for materials and supplies needed by public bodies; to protect the public from collusive contracts; to prevent favoritism, fraud, extravagance, and improvidence in the procurement of these things for the use of the state and its local self-governing subdivisions; and to promote actual, honest, and effective competition to the end that each proposal or bid received and considered for the construction of a public improvement, the supplying of materials for public use, etc., may be in competition with all other bids upon the same basis, so that all such public contracts may be secured at the lowest cost to taxpayers.
... .
*121 While a statutory provision may specifically except contracts with a public utility from a general statutory requirement that public contracts be awarded only after public advertising for bids, the courts are generally called upon to determine whether statutes or other enactments requiring competitive bidding for public contracts permit an exception for contracts with public utilities. It appears that a substantial majority of the courts that have considered the question have held or recognized, either expressly or impliedly, that a contract between a public body and a public utility for the furnishing of public utility service is not ordinarily to be considered as falling within the purview or intendment of a statute, ordinance, or other enactment requiring that public contracts shall only be let upon the basis of competitive bidding.
... .
Several courts holding that competitive bidding was not required for contracts between public bodies and public utilities for the furnishing of utility service has stressed that the absence of competitive bidding did not provide an opportunity for fraud or favoritism because a public utility is subject to state regulation and is only permitted to charge rates that have been fixed and determined according to tariffs which the utility has been required to file with the regulatory body.
One of the leading cases cited in A.L.R. is Wallace Stevens, Inc., v. Lafourche Par. Hosp. Dist. No. 3, La. App., 308 So.2d 299, affirmed by the Louisiana Supreme Court, 323 So.2d 794 (1975). The Louisiana Court of Appeals held that the public bid law was not applicable to a contract with a regulated public utility and stated:
Missing entirely from the instant case are the factors with which the statute was intended to deal.
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405 So. 2d 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telcom-systems-inc-v-lauderdale-county-bd-miss-1981.