United States v. Western Electric Co.

698 F. Supp. 344
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 14, 1988
DocketCiv. A. No. 82-0192
StatusPublished

This text of 698 F. Supp. 344 (United States v. Western Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Western Electric Co., 698 F. Supp. 344 (D.D.C. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

HAROLD H. GREENE, District Judge.

The issues before the Court concern Regional Company practices with respect to so-called “calling cards,” that is, telephone credit cards, and with respect to telephones owned by the Regional Companies that are located in public places (e.g., airports, service stations, street corners). Unlike many of the recent controversies in this case, the current issues do not involve the line of business restrictions on the Regional Companies; what is claimed here by the Department of Justice, with support from a number of the interexchange carriers, is that the Regional Companies have been favoring AT & T in violation of the nondiscrimination and equal access provisions of the decree.

The Department of Justice has filed a motion1 pursuant to the decree,2 seeking an order to enjoin (1) the continuing assignment to AT & T of all long distance calls3 made on Regional Company credit cards; (2) preferential treatment accorded by these companies to AT & T’s calling cards; and (3) the routing exclusively to AT & T of long distance calls from public telephones owned by the Regional Companies. The Court grants the motion in substantial part, but it denies some aspects of the requested relief.

I

Regional Company Calling Cards

This is the first time the Court has considered in detail telephone calling cards in light of the decree. Calling cards have assumed considerable importance in consumer telecommunications, as roughly fifty percent of operator-assisted4 telephone traffic is now conducted by means of such cards. It is appropriate to outline briefly the evolution of the processing of these charge cards for making telephone calls.

A. Background

Prior to divestiture, the Bell Operating Companies performed billing functions for all Bell System calls. In order to permit customers to credit calls to their accounts when away from their home telephones, these companies issued so-called “calling cards” which enabled the holder to charge both local and long distance calls to the [351]*351account number appearing on the card. The customer could accomplish this task by punching the calling card number on a touchtone telephone, by reading the number to an operator, or by inserting the card into the telephone.

Although with the breakup of the Bell System, AT & T and the Regional Companies issued separate calling cards, they continued to share information concerning the identity of the customers who held cards and the validity of these cards. This sharing was specifically authorized by the Plan of Reorganization.5 Under the Plan, the Regional Companies received the Data Base Administration Systems (hereinafter referred to as the DBA systems) which are used, inter alia, to assign and maintain calling card numbers, while the so-called Billing Validation Application database, necessary, inter alia, to validate calling cards,6 was assigned to AT & T.7 By virtue of the Plan, the Regional Companies are required to provide data base maintenance service under contract to AT & T.8 The decree itself (in section 1(A)(2)) gives the Regional Companies the right to continue to use AT & T’s billing validation database for the limited purpose of validating local calling card calls.9

The existence and use of common databases not surprisingly led AT & T and the Regional Companies to adopt the same calling card number for any particular customer. Moreover, the contractual relations between the Regional Companies and AT & T resulted in the refusal of the former to share the information contained in these databases with any interexchange carriers other than AT & T; AT & T is therefore the only interexchange carrier to receive from the Regional Companies the information necessary to validate its calling cards.

The effect of these practices is that all long distance calls made with Regional Company calling cards are assigned to AT & T, and, as might be expected, the other interexehange carriers complain vociferously about this arrangement. After thorough examination, the Court has concluded, as did the Department of Justice, that these practices discriminate in favor of AT & T in violation of the decree.

B. The Decree Permits Regional Companies To Issue Calling Cards

MCI, US Sprint, and ALC Communication Corporation, all of them interex-change carriers, argue that the decree entirely forbids the Regional Companies to issue calling cards which may be used by the holder to charge long distance calls,10 the argument being that the very issuance of such cards constitutes an interexchange telecommunications service prohibited to the Regional Companies by the decree.11 [352]*352However, the Court concludes that the issuance by the Regional Companies of calling cards is not part of the interexchange business, and that the availability for use of Regional Company calling cards for long distance calling is not otherwise inconsistent with the decree.

The issuance of calling cards does not constitute an interexchange telecommunication service; rather, it is an “exchange access” service, a term which is defined in the decree as including the “provision of information necessary to bill customers.” 12 This billing function permitted by the decree is not restricted to local calls; the Regional Companies are actually required by section II of the decree13 to furnish exchange access services “for the interex-change services of any interexchange carrier.” 14

This understanding of the decree is further supported by the assignment of the DBA systems to the Regional Companies by the Plan of Reorganization. In fact, the Plan explicitly notes that these systems may be used to “update and maintain Calling Card and other billing information files_” 15 More, the DBA systems lawfully update and maintain calling card information for both local and long distance calls.16 Since the DBA systems properly handle long distance calls under the authority of the Regional Companies, it is appropriate to conclude that these companies were intended to be able to bill long distance calls made from their calling cards.

The issuance by the Regional Companies of calling cards for long distance calls not only does not offend the terms of the decree; it is also consistent with its purposes. The purpose underlying the prohibition against the provision of interexchange services by the Regional Companies is the prevention of competition by these companies with the interexchange carriers for long distance business. United States v. Western Electric Co., 627 F.Supp. 1090, 1100 (D.D.C.1986). There is no threat of such competition in this instance.

Regional Company calling cards good for long distance calling create no incentives to favor their own long distance operations: the Regional Companies are prohibited from engaging in the long distance business.

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Bluebook (online)
698 F. Supp. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-western-electric-co-dcd-1988.