1. Boards and commissions may be either legislative or constitutional, and, where their powers are set out in the Constitution, unless the act complained of violates some constitutional principle, the courts should not and cannot interfere.
Bedingfield v. Parkerson,
The Public Service Commission is constitutionally created. Article IV, Par. II, Sec. I of the Constitution of 1877 first conferred on the General Assembly the duty to regulate railroad rates and tariffs with power of enforcement, pursuant to which it enacted Ga. L. 1878, pp. 125, 128, setting up a three man commission to make and enforce just and reasonable rates and tariffs, to adjudge compensatory damages for violation, and to provide fines for nonobedience to the Commission’s orders. This developed in the Constitution of 1945 (Art. IV, Sec. IV, Par. Ill; Code Ann. § 2-2703) into the creation of the Public Service Commission for the regulation of utilities, among which telephone companies are now included, "vested with the jurisdiction, powers and duties now provided by law or that may
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hereafter be prescribed by the General Assembly, not inconsistent with other provisions of this Constitution.” This constitutionally fixes the sole power for determination of what are reasonable rates in this body, as required by our present Code § 93-309. Under Code Ann. § 93-307 the commission has the sole power to require telephone companies, among others "to establish and maintain such public service. . '. as may be reasonable and just.” Code Ann. § 93-307. "The function of making telephone rates is legislative in nature and such rates cannot be judicially fixed by courts.”
Southern Bell Tel. &c. Co. v. Ga. Public Service Comm.,
An example of the unconstitutional use of ratemaking power is the setting of rates at a confiscatorially low level. "It is the responsibility of the commission to require a regulated utility to provide a level of service within its service area this year, next year, and in the foreseeable future; consonant with this responsibility the commission must approve utility rates that will produce enough revenue not only for operating expenses but also for the capital costs of the business. Capital for the business includes that required for current and future construction, and its costs include interest and dividends that must be paid to reasonably attract such capital.”
Ga. Power Co. v. Ga. Pub. Serv. Comm.,
The question raised in this case is this: Where a telephone subscriber claims damages due to negligence on the part of the company in curtailing service, may the company defend based on the Commission General Subscriber Services Tariff § A2.4.4: "The liability of the Telephone Company for damages arising out of mistake, omissions, interruptions, delays, errors or defects in transmission, or failures or defects in facilities furnished by the Telephone Company, occurring in the course of furnishing service or other facilities and not caused by the negligence of the customer, or of the Telephone Company in failing to maintain proper standards of maintenance and operation and to exercise reasonable supervision shall in no event exceed an amount *800 equivalent to the proportionate charge to the customer for the period of service during which such mistakes, omissions, interruptions, delay or error or defect in transmission, or failure or defect in facilities occurs.” The plaintiff appellee contends that putting a ceiling on damages amounting to no more than a rebate is in excess of the powers of the commission, an attempt at legislation, and void.
However, the power to legislate rates rests exclusively with the commission. Rates must, in the constitutional sense, be "just and reasonable.” What is just and reasonable to be charged, what is actuarially sound, what limitations of liability are necessary to reach this result, are matters which need to be taken into account in the determination of public utility rates, just as there are proper actuarial considerations in fixing insurance premiums. Cf.
Royal Indemnity Co. v. Smith,
2. Count 3 alleges that the interruptions of telephone service, delays, and disconnections of plaintiffs telephone were the result *801 of wilful misconduct on the part of the defendant. Here the tariff quoted above has no application, and constitutes no defense as against this count, and the grant of the motion to strike was to this extent accurate.
Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part.
