161 Ind. 524 | Ind. | 1903
— Action by appellant in ten paragraphs, to recover ten penalties of $100 each, under the provisions
The eleventh paragraph of complaint is of a representa- ! Ac character, and an exhibit of that will therefore sufficiently show what is alleged. Said paragraph, omitting the prayer, is as follows: “That the defendant is an incorporated telephone company, duly incorporated under the laws of the State of Indiana authorizing the incorporation of telephone companies, and that it is now, and has been for more than eight years past, engaged in carrying on a general telephone business in the city of Rushville, Indiana; that said company, at the time of its organization, adopted the plan of allowing patrons who desired telephone service to become stockholders in the company, to purchase and own their own telephones, and to purchase, and own their own wires leading from the location of their said telephones over the pole lfnes of the defendant to its exchange, and to pay a rental at the end of each month of a sum sufficient to pay the operating expenses of said company ; that tinder this arrangement the plaintiff purchased and paid for one share of stock in said company, purchased a - first-class telephone, and also paid for a line of wire leading from said telephone, which was and is located in plaintiff’s dwelling on North Main street, in said city of Rushville, and within the local limits of said telephone business, to the switchboard of the defendant in said city; that on the-20th day of July, 1898, he had said telephone and line in good working order and connected as aforesaid; that he had always complied with the reasonable regulations of said company, and that on said 20th day of July, 1898, he called up the exchange of the defendant and demanded that he be connected with number twenty-nine, which was the line leading from said defendant’s switch
On a former appeal of this case, where there had been a recovery on each of the first ten paragraphs of complaint, which were afterwards dismissed, it was held by the Appellate Court that said by-law or rule number thirteen was valid, and that appellee was not obliged'to yield such provision or incur the statutory penalty in case it could be proved that appellant had a set-off greater than the amount of the delinquent rental. Rushville Cooperative Tel. Co. v. Irvin, 27 Ind. App. 62. Much of the effort of appellant’s counsel on this appeal has been to show that the cause of action has been so changed that the decision of the Appellate Court above referred to is not the law of the case. It is claimed that the present complaint is based on an unlawful discrimination. It is further claimed that the question as to the reasonableness of said by-law or rule was not presented to the Appellate Court, and that therefore appellant is not bound by its decision upon that point. In the latter insistence counsel impliedly forget the announced
Section 5529 Burns 1901 is as follows: “Every telephone company with wires wholly or partly within this State, and engaged in a general telephone business, shall within the local limits of such telephone companies’ \_siff] business supply all applicants for telephone connections and facilities with such connections and facilities without discrimination or partiality, provided such applicants comply or offer to comply with the reasonable regulations of the company; and no such company shall impose any conditions or restrictions upon any such applicant that are not imposed impartially upon all persons or companies in like situation, nor shall such companies discriminate against any individual or company engaged in any lawful Easiness, or between individuals or companies engaged in the same business, by requiring as a condition for furnishing such facilities that they shall not be used in the business of the applicant, or otherwise for any lawful purpose.”
The claim is made on behalf of appellant that his complaint states a cause of action within the following words of said statute, “nor shall such companies discriminate against any individual or company engaged in any lawful business.” It is not shown by allegation that there has been any discrimination against the business of appellant, and therefore he has not brought himself within the clause of the statute last quoted. Whether he complains of the failure to furnish him connections or facilities, or of the imposing of a condition or restriction upon him that is not imposed impartially upon all persons in like situation, it is evident that to recover he must either successfully assail the reasonableness or operation of the by-law or rule, or show that it was not impartially applied to all similarly situated. The statute travels on the assumption that telephone companies may make reasonable rules. Appellant
It is further to be noted that the complaint is so drawn that it is open to inference that appellee had warned appellant before the service was denied him' that it would enforce the by-law or rule against him as a consequence of his refusal of payment, and it may also be inferred that he was denied service for the reason that he had not complied with the regulation mentioned. The allegation of the complaint that at no time has the company enforced the rule was evidently inserted by the pleader by way of antithesis to the preceding charge that the rule had not been enforced against other patrons who were in default. This view is borne out by the following statement of counsel for appellant in their brief: “The thing we complain of in^this case is that the rule was unreasonably applied against the appellant; that under it the appellee refused appellant telephone service'when he did not owe it a cent under the rule.” If a corporation authorized to establish and promulgate a rule as a condition to furnishing service has done so, and a patron is charged with notice of the rule, and also' of the fact that he has violated it,'the corporation may refuse him service for such reason without informing him at the precise time of its refusal as to its reason therefor, but the corporation would not, of course, be permitted to bring its rule forward as a mere afterthought. When it is shown that the corporation in a case of this kind has acted under a rule, thereby suggesting a colorable defense,
The cases cited by appellant’s counsel to the effect that corporations engaged in the performance of a quasi public function, as in the furnishing of light, water, or gas, can not, by the enforcement of their rules, preclude the courts from an examination into the facts, are not in point. In this ease no question is involved growing out of the relation of the parties as telephone company and patron. The appellee, it may’be inferred, had rendered perfect service, and had in all respects complied with its agreement with appellant as its patron, and it is admitted that appellant’s indebtedness to it had matured. What appellant asserts is that he has an independent claim against appellee sufficient to extinguish the latter’s claim, and that the company must continue to furnish him service, and go into court as a suitor if it desires to collect its bill, or at its peril defend suits for penalties which might be accumulated ad infinitum. It will be observed that it is not alleged that the company is insolvent, and that it does not appear' that the company is not in good faith disputing the validity of appellant’s claim to a set-off. Considering the quasi public functions of corporations like the one at bar — corporations whose first duty is to the public whom they serve — we think that their revenues should not be. depleted by the furnishing of service to individuals who
In the course of the opinion by the Appellate Court on the former appeal of this cause (Rushville Cooperative Tel. Co. v. Irwin, 21 Ind. App. 62) it'was said: “It can not be denied that a rule of the company requiring these monthly payments to be made in advance would have been a reasonable rule, and that upon refusal so to pay service could be denied. The company must protect its plant and keep up its efficiency, and may enforce a rule that insures a reasonable revenue and its prompt receipt. It can maintain an efficient service only through prompt payment of its dues and tolls, and because of that fact it may use the summary remedy of denying service for nonpayment. It can not be said it may be denied the benefit of this rule because a patron claims the company is.indebted to him. It can not be required to stop -and adjudicate claims held against it. The law compels it to furnish service, a patron may take service or not as he chooses. It must furnish efficient service to all alike who are alike situated, and must not discriminate in favor of or against anyone. The law holds the company to these requirements strictly. Eór failure, the extraordinary remedies of mandamus and injunction may be successfully invoked. It may be said that the courts are open to the company to collect its claim, but as to this the company and the patron are on an equal footing. The fact that the patron is solvent aids nothing in determining a rule which must apply to solvent and insolvent patrons alike. Keeping in view the nature of the company’s duties, and the services it may be compelled to render, it must be held that the company may enforce the payment of its current dues and tolls by the summary remedy of denying service regardless of the fact that the subscriber claims the company is indebted to him.”
The right of set-off as to ihdependent demands having in them no element on which to base a claim of equitable.
As to the claim of discrimination, the statement of the complaint that thirty-five other patrons of the company “were in like situation with the plaintiff” is a mere conclusion. So far as averment goes, they are only shown to be in default; it is not shown that they refuse to pay.
It is contended that the action of appellee deprives appellant of property without due process of law. He has not been deprived of his tangible property or of his stock, and, as to the deprivation of telephone service, that has been brought about by his violation of a rule which we hold valid. He may regain his right by paying the rental up to the time service was denied him, and complying with such lawful conditions as the company has established. As to his own demand, he was at liberty to resort to the courts. This case differs essentially from the case of Indiana, etc., Gas Co. v. State, ex rel., 158 Ind. 516, 57 L. R. A. 761, where it was claimed that a public corporation had unlawfully discriminated against an individual, and thereby denied to him the equal protection of the laws.
While this court asserts, and has exercised, the right of treating the failure upon the part of an appellee to brief a cause as tantamount to a confession of error, yet it does not follow that the mere refusal of appellee’s counsel to
Judgment affirmed.