125 Tenn. 270 | Tenn. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the Oonrt.
The complainant is a telephone corporation having- its chief office at' Morristown, in Hamblen connty, Tenn., with lines running into various surrounding counties. The two defendants are likewise telephone corporations; the first named having its .chief office at Knoxville, with lines running through Knox county, and into various other counties; the second named has its chief office at Jefferson city, in Jefferson county, also with outrunning lines.
The complainant prior to the present litigation constructed an extension of its line from Morristown to within one mile of Jefferson city. Prom the latter point the Citizens’ Telephone Company extended its line to meet complainant’s line; and so the two were connected. The Citizens’ Telephone Company is also connected at Jefferson City with the People’s Telephone & Telegraph Company, but the latter is not connected with the complainant.
The purpose of the present bill is to compel the two defendants to make an electrical connection at Jefferson City between the complainant and the defendant People’s Telephone & Telegraph Company through the Citizens’ Telephone Company, so as to give to the complainant the benefit of the lines of the two defendants, in order that any patron of the complainant on any of its lines can, through the switchboards at Morristown, Jef-fersonCity, and Knoxville, talk with any person he or she may desire on the .lines of either of the two defendants;
It appears from the bill and from the evidence that there is an operating agreement between the two defendants for an interchange of business whereby each can use the lines of the other at an agreed rate for messages or conversations; the rate fixed for a conversation of five minutes from Jefferson City to Knoxville being ten cents. The complainant insists that on the payment of this rate it is entitled to have its lines, connected with the two defendants, to the end that it may use the line of the People’s Telephone & Telegraph Company into Knoxville, and all other points served by that company.
It appears that patrons of the complainant living at Morristown, and other points served by the complainant’s line, called the exchange at Jefferson City for the purpose of conversing with parties at Knoxville, but that the Citizens’ Telephone Company, under the direction of the People’s Telephone & Telegraph Company, declined to make the required connection with the latter, although complainant tendered ten cents for each message so offered and refused. The service was offered to the complainant of having its messages transmitted or repeated to .Knoxville, but this was refused, complainant insisting that it had, under the law, a right to a through connection with Knoxville over the defendants’ lines, so that one could talk directly from Morristown to the desired party in Knoxville.
It is insisted on behalf of the complainant that it is entitled to the right claimed under sections 10 and 11
The sections of the statute above referred to are as follows:
“See. 10. Every telegraph or telephone company doing business in this State, must, under penalty of five hundred dollars for each and every refusal so to do-, transmit over its wires to localities on its lines for any individual, or corporation, or other telegraph or telephone company, such messages, dispatches, or correspondence as may be tendered to it by, or to be transmitted to any individual or corporation, or other telegraph or telephone companies, at the price customarily asked and obtained for the transmission of similar messages, dispatches, or correspondence without discrimination as to charges or promptness; the penalty herein prescribed shall be recoverable in any court through proper form of law, one-half of Avhich shall go to the prosecutor and one-half to the State.
“Sec. 11. Every telephone company doing business within this State, and engaged in a general telephone business, shall supply all applicants for telephone connection with facilities Avithout discrimination or partiality, provided such applicants comply or offer to comply with the reasonable regulations of the company, and*278 no such company shall impose any condition or restriction upon any such applicant that are not imposed impartially upon all persons or companies in like situation, nor shall such company discriminate against any indi-vidual or company engaged in lawful business by requiring as condition for furnishing such facilities that they shall not be used in the business of the applicant or otherwise, under penalty of one hundred dollars for each day such company continues such discrimination and refuses such facilities after compliance or offer to comply with the reasonable regulations, and time to furnish the same has elapsed, to be recovered by the applicant whose application is so neglected or refused.”
A preliminary question is raised to the effect that the act above referred to is void because in violation of the constitution of this State on several grounds stated.
This act has been on our statute boohs for more than a quarter of a century. It has been tacitly treated by the court, the bar, and the people of the State as constitutional, except on a ground directed to the formality of its passage settled in 118 Tenn., 1, 101 S. W., 770, infra, and many important and valuable rights have been based thereon, and nothing could induce us now to declare it unconstitutional, except the clearest and most undoubted reasons. The- act has been often before the court in cases arising under it, and has been applied in more than one reported case. Telegraph Co. v. Nashville, 118 Tenn., 1, 101 S. W., 770; Vaught v. East Tennessee Telephone Co., 123 Tenn., 318, 130 S. W., 1050. It is a doctrine of the law that when acts have been Ions
We have, however, considered on their merits the various points made in the brief of counsel against the constitutionality of the act, and we are of the opinion that all of them shoud be overruled. We deem it unnecessary, in view of what has been said, to incumber this opinion with a detailed statement of the points referred to or of our reasons for overruling them. - They are such as have been many times examined and discussed in our reported cases, save one. This we shall mention briefly. It is that section 10 of the act is void
We come now to the question whether there was an unlawful discrimination against the complainant.
Sections 10 and 11 do not support the claims asserted in complainant’s bill.
Those sections are merely declaratory of the common law for the purpose of preventing discriminations (Vaught v. East Tenn. Telephone Co., 123 Tenn., 318, 130 S. W., 1050, 31 L. R. A [N. S.], 315; Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Kelly, 160 Fed., 316, 87 C. C. A., 268), with penalties added; and should be con
Telephone and telegraph companies are common carriers of negligence, and must give the same service on the same terms to all who apply therefor, without partiality or unreasonable discrimnation. Delaware & A. Telegraph & Telephone Co. v. Delaware, 50 Fed., 677, 2 C. C. A., 1; Missouri v. Bell Telephone Co. (C. C.), 23 Fed., 539; Postal Cable Telegraph Co. v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. (C. C.), 177 Fed., 726; Com. Union Tel. Co. v. New England Tel. Co., 61 Vt., 241, 17 Atl., 1071, 5 L. R. A., 161, 15 Am. St. Rep,, 893; State v. Nebraska Telephone Co., 17 Neb., 126, 22 N. W., 237, 52 Am. Rep., 404; United States Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 56 Barb., (N. Y.), 46; Central Union Telegraph Co. v. State, 118 Ind., 194, 19 N. E., 604, 10 Am. St. Rep., 114; Cogdell v. Western Union Tel. Co., 135 N. C., 431, 47 S. E., 490; Danaher v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co., 94 Ark., 533, 127 S. W., 963, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1027. But this does not mean that a telephone company is bound to permit another telephone company to make a physical connection with its lines for the purpose of using them as. its own subscribers use them. There is a wide difference between a telephone company’s transmitting to any point on its line equally and indiscriminately the messages of all companies that offer them and are willing to pay the same fare for the same service, and admitting such outside companies or their patrons to the same use of its lines, that its own patrons are entitled to. The supreme
The case just referred to correctly holds, as we understand the law, that each telephone company under the common .law is independent of all other telephone companies, save for the duty to receive and forward to any. point on its line messages received from such other company or companies, and hence that it is not bound to accord to any such outside organization or its patrons connection with its SAvitchboard on an equality Avith its own patrons: that such connection is a privilege to be
A question closely similar was presented in Atchison, etc., R. R. Co. v. Denver, etc., R. R. Co., 110 U. S., 667, 4 Sup. Ct., 185, 28 L. Ed., 291. In that case it appeared that the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Pe Railroad Company and the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company had established a junction and a joint station. Subse
In Montana there is a provision by statute under the constitution of that State for connections between telephone companies upon the payment of compensation asserted under the right of eminent domain. Under such provision it was held in Billings Mutual Telephone Co.
Our act of 1885, supra, contains no such provisions nor have we knowledge of any other statute in this State that does, though doubtless the legislature could enact such a law if it deemed the public good required it.
We are of the opinion on the grounds above stated that the defendant companies acted within their rights when they refused to yield to the complainant company the intimate connection it demanded.
It results that the chancellor committed no error in dismissing the bill, and his decree is affirmed.