118 F. 382 | 8th Cir. | 1902
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The judgment of the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory, in so far as it undertook to reverse the decree of the lower court and to grant an injunction in favor of the Creek Nation, was erroneous, for the reason that the nation had not appealed from the decree of the lower court, so far as the record now before us discloses. The Creek Nation intervened in the cause for the protection of its own interest, namely, for the protection of the revenue which it expected to derive from the exercise by the telephone company of the exclusive franchise which the nation had attempted to grant, and to prevent the erection of telephone poles on land of which it claimed to be the owner in fee. The case was fully heard on the bill and the defendants’ answer thereto, and the nation’s right to any relief was denied. It failed to take an appeal from the decree, and the adjudication of the lower court, so far as it was concerned, accordingly became final. We fail to see any ground, therefore, upon which the decree of the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory, reversing the judgment of the lower court “as to the Creek Nation,” can be sustained. The nation was not before it seeking any relief, but was apparently satisfied with the ruling of the lower court, since it did not appeal.
The decision of the lower court as respects the Muskogee National Telephone Company was clearly right, unless the exclusive franchise which it asserted to erect and maintain lines of telephone within the Creek Nation can be sustained as a valid grant. If it did not have an exclusive franchise, it goes without saying that it had no right to complain because the defendants were erecting a line of telephone in the town of Tulsa, although they were doing so without lawful authority. No right of the complaining company was violated by their so doing, unless its franchise was exclusive and was being invaded; and that the Creek Nation had no power to grant an exclusive franchise such as it attempted to confer is settled, we think, by the decision in Pensacola Tel. Co. v. W. U. Tel. Co., 96 U. S. 1, 8, 24 L. Ed. 708, where precisely such a franchise, granted by the state of Florida as respects only two counties of that state, was adjudged to be invalid. It is true that in the latter case the franchise that was held to be invalid had been granted to a telegraph company; but telephone companies are equally agencies of interstate commerce, and every reason which was or that may be assigned against the grant of a monopoly to maintain telegraph lines applies with equal force against the grant of such a monopoly to a telephone company. Telephone companies, like telegraph companies, are common carriers of information, and their lines are daily employed in the transaction of interstate commerce. Some courts have held that a telephone company is included by the words “telegraph company.” Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. City of Richmond (C. C.) 78 Fed. 858, 860, and cases there cited. But, be this as it may, telephone companies, like telegraph companies,
It is argued in behalf of the appellant, and that view seems to have been adopted by the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory (Telephone Co. v. Hall, 64 S. W. 600), that because the defendants below were engaged in erecting a telephone line simply within the town of Tulsa, and had not, so far as shown, made a connection with lines outside of the nation, the exclusive franchise in question did not interfere in any way with interstate commerce, and may be upheld against it as a valid grant. The fault with this reasoning is that the exclusive feature of the grant was void ab initio. It did not remain in force until the defendants had extended their line of telephone to the borders of the nation, and cease td be operative when they had made a connection with some exterior line of telephone; but it was invalid from the time the grant was made, being an attempt on the part of the nation to exercise a power vitally affecting interstate commerce, which did not belong to it. Pensacola Tel. Co. v. W. U. Tel. Co., 96 U. S. 1, 11, 24 L. Ed. 708. Even if this were not so, and even if it should be conceded that until congress legislated on the subject the exclusive feature of the franchise might be upheld, yet, when congress, on March 3, 1901 (31 Stat. 1083), in the exercise of its constitutional power to regulate commerce, saw fit to provide how franchises for the construction and maintenance of telephone lines within the Indian Territory must be obtained, such action on its part necessarily prevailed over all local regulations on the subject, and operated to extinguish such exclusive rights to construct and maintain lines of telephone or telegraph within the territory as had theretofore been granted. No act of the Creek Nation on a subject within the lawful jurisdiction of the federal government can be given the effect of
Erom any point of view, therefore, when this case was decided by the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory on October 4, 1901, the Muskogee National Telephone Company, in view of the then recent act of congress of March 3, 1901, supra, had no right to complain that any of its charter privileges were being invaded, as it had not up to that time established any lines of telegraph in the town of Tusla, and the decree of that court, affirming the decree below in so far as the telephone company was concerned, was clearly right. The decree as respects the Creek Nation was erroneous, for the reasons already stated. The result is that the decree of the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory should be reversed, and the decree of the United States court in the Indian Territory, Northern division, which was rendered on April 10,1900, being for the right party, should be affirmed. It is so ordered.