154 N.Y.S. 997 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The order of the Special Term, from which this appeal is taken, was made on the 27th day of February, 1915, and it denies the motion of the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company for judgment against the Western Union Telegraph Company, claimed to be due under the provisions of an order of May 17, 1913, which order amended a previous order, bearing date of May 10, 1913, by the terms of which the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company was stayed from enforcing the provisions of an order of the Public Service Commission pending a decision of this court on a writ of certiorari. The staying order, as modified by the order of May 17, 1913, provided that the Western Union Telegraph Company, in receiving messages from the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company for final delivery within this State, should give a certificate to the latter company which should provide for keeping an account and the refunding of any sums which should be paid to the Western Union Telegraph Company in excess of the amount allowed by the order of the Public Service Commission, in the event that the said
On the 19th day of May, 1914, the Postal Company applied to the Public Service Commission for an order which would, in effect, declare that the messages originating outside of the State in the offices of the Postal Company and delivered to the Western Union Company within the State of New York for final transmission, were within the terms of the original orders. This application was opposed by the Western Union on the ground above stated, and the Postal Company, without waiting for a determination of the question by the Public Service Commission, made an application at Special Term for judgment for the amount of the tolls collected upon the inter-' state messages. This motion was denied at Special Term, and the Postal Company appeals to this court from the order denying the motion.
It would seem to be a sufficient answer to this proposition that this court did not undertake to pass upon the merits of the order under review, for the reason that we regarded it as an effort on the part of the Western Union Company to get a review of a previous order which it had permitted to become final without seeking to review the same. This was not only distinctly pointed out in the prevailing opinion, but in the dissenting opinion of Presiding Justice Smith, concurred in by Mr. Justice Lyon, it was recognized as the controlling view, and this was dissented from. The Court of Appeals affirmed without opinion, and it would be doing violence to every presumption to suppose that with a diversity of opinion in this court the court of last resort affirmed upon any other theory than that presented by the determination made here; it certainly cannot be presumed that it went into a consideration of the proper construction of the order of the Public Service Commission on the question of its relation to the messages originating outside of this State and finally delivered here. All that
If we are right in this position, and theré has never been any litigation of the question involved in interstate messages, it must follow that there can be no ground for granting the relief which the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company demands by means of an order in the original proceeding. Such an order is justified only in a case in which all of the merits have been dealt with comprehensively, and the orders are merely of a supplemental character. Whether the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company should go forward with its application to the Public Service Commission or should bring an action to recover the alleged overcharges, it is not the province of this court to advise. Neither is it the duty of this court, in advance of a record requiring it, to determine the interesting question of jurisdiction over the class of messages involved in this appeal. We go no further than to hold that the order appealed from is proper, and that the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, upon the records which have been on review before this court, is not entitled to the relief demanded.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred; Smith, P. J., not sitting.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.