187 Ind. 486 | Ind. | 1918
— The Home Telephone and Telegraph Company, of Fort Wayne, an appellee herein, may be described, for the purposes of this case, as a long-distance telephone company, having lines reaching numerous points in Indiana and adjacent states. The Northern Indiana, and Southern Michigan Telephone, Telegraph and Cable Company, appellant, may for like purposes be described as a. company doing a local business at LaGrange, Indiana, and its vicinity, and having a contract with said Home company for long-distance service over the latter’s lines. This contract is, in terms, exclusive, in that all of the Home-company’s'long-distance messages to LaGrange and vicinity are to be communicated through the Northern company’s exchange at LaGrange; and all the Northern company’s long-distance messages are to be communicated over the lines of the Home company. The People’s Mutual Telephone Company of LaGrange has an exchange in La-Grange with which are connected several exchanges located in towns of LaGrange county, owned and operated by other local companies, and all interested in the People’s company. The latter exchanges have lines radiating in all directions and serving their respective neighborhoods. The People’s company thus serves about 1,500 patrons, but had at the time hereinafter mentioned no long-distance connections; and, desiring such long-distance connections, the People’s company petitioned the Public Service Commission of Indiana for an order providing that the exchange of the People’s company be connected with the long-distance lines of the Home company. The Northern company, being notified of said petition, appeared before the commission and
Thereafter appellant filed in the court below a complaint in two paragraphs, asking that the judgment of the commission be so modified as to order that the long-distance connection of the People’s company with the Home company be made through the exchange of appellant at LaGrange, and asking an injunction preventing the commission, the People’s company, and the Home company, from doing anything to carry out the order of the commission without recognizing the rights of appellant. The second paragraph of this complaint contains more specific and detailed allegations of substantially the facts stated in the first paragraph. The commission and the People’s company, defendants to said complaint, each demurred to each paragraph thereof. Said demurrers weie sustained and judgment rendered thereon in favor of each of said, defendants as against appellant. From this judgment this cause was brought here on appeal, and the appeal was dismissed by this court, for the reason that the cause in the court below had not been entirely disposed of but was pending and undetermined as to the Home company, the third defendant. Northern, etc., Cable Co. v. Peoples Mut. Tel. Co. (1915), 184 Ind. 267, 111 N. E. 4. The court below thereupon overruled the demurrer of the Home company to each paragraph of complaint. The Home company answered the complaint by a denial, and the cause was submitted for trial; whereupon the court announced that no remedy,, under the circumstances, could be granted appellant as against the Home company, and the court dismissed said cause as to the Home company.
The errors now assigned are: The sustaining of the demurrers of the commission and of the People’s company to the complaint; the dismissal of the cause against
The complaint, by indefinite allegation, attacks the corporate existence and organization of the People’s company and some of its associated and connected companies and alleges that none of said companies has issued any capital stock, or has “means,” and says that neither the persons nor companies in said aggregation constitute or operate a public utility; that they are not authorized so to operate in serving the general public, which has at all times been excluded from service.
Waiving all question of the right of appellant to thus question the corporate existence, powers or authority of any of said companies, we find sufficient in the- complaint to overcome said allegations. The complaint embodies appellant’s answer filed with the commission, wherein appellant alleges that the People’s company and several of its connecting local organizations are incorporated under the laws of Indiana, and states details of organization and the purposes thereof. The complaint alleges that the People’s company has a franchise from the town and county of LaGrange; that it and its associates are competitors of appellant, and have sought and received, and transmitted for hire messages that would otherwise have been transmitted over appellant’s lines. Thus it appears that the People’s company and its as
A point' made on demurrer is that the alleged contracts between appellant and the Home company, whereby appellant claims an exclusive right to receive and transmit all long-distance messages between Fort Wayne and LaGrange are monopolistic, and therefore void.
Appellant’s allegations that it has local lines and exchanges in several of the communities served by the People’s company, and allegations as to appellant’s preparation and willingness to furnish all such localities with long-distance service, are of little force when the complaint does not negative the fact that the 1,500 subscribers of the People’s company would be compelled cither to install appellant’s instruments, or leave their places of business or their homes in order to use appellant’s instruments elsewhere located. This is not regarded as sufficient to exclude other companies from connections enabling a more constant and convenient opportunity for long-distance service. Tillamook County M. T. Co. v. Pacific T. & T. Co., Public Utilities Rep. 1917D 1. The allegations of the complaint are not sufficient to show that the Home company’s long-distance wires will be so overtaxed or the use thereof so complicated by the long-distance connection granted by the commission to the People’s company as to materially interfere with or destroy appellant’s long-distance service.
This complaint does not present facts showing one! company in LaGrange in business, and another asking a franchise to establish a competitive business. The complaint rather shows two companies in business and in competitión in LaGrange, each having a franchise; and one having long-distance arrangements for the ac
The judgments in favor of the Public Service Commission of Indiana and the People’s Mutual Telephone Company of LaGrange are affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 119 N. E. 212. See under (1, 3, 5-9) 37 Cyc 1629; (2) 12 C. J. 1064.