Case ID: nc_136/html/0258-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Clark, C. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

GODWIN v. TELEPHONE CO.
    (Filed October 18, 1904).
    1. PLEADINGS — Verification—Officers—The Code, sec. 258 — Acts 1501, sec. BIO.
    
    A managing or local agent of a corporation may verify its pleadings.
    2. TELEPHONES — Mandamus.
    A prostitute and keeper of a bawdy-liouse cannot by mandamus compel the installation of a telephone in such house.
    ActioN by Jane Godwin against the Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Company, heard by Judge G. S. Ferguson, at March Term, 1904, of the Superior Court of I/enoie County. Erom a judgment for the defendant the plaintiff appealed.
    
      Dortch & Barham, and Loftin, Mitchell & Varser, for the plaintiff.
    
      Wooten & Wooten, for the defendant.
   Clark, C. J.

The exception to ,the verification of the amendment to the answer is without merit. Since Phifer v. Ins. Co., 123 N. C., 410, the General Assembly has amended section 258 of The Code by providing (Acts 1901, ch. 610) that when a corporation is a party the verification of any pleading may be made by a “managing or local agent thereof,” as well as by an officer who alone, formerly, was authorized to make verification in such cases.

This is an application for a mandamus to compel the defendant to put a telephone with necessary fixtures and appliances in the dwelling-house of the plaintiff in the town of Kinston, and admit her to all the privileges accorded to other subscribers to the telephone exchange operated by the defendant in said town. It was admitted by the plaintiff that “she is a prostitute and keeps a bawdy-honse within the corporate limits of the town of Kinston and desires to have said telephone pnt in said bawdy-honse.” The Court being of opinion that the plaintiff was not entitled to a madamus for such purpose, the plaintiff took a nonsuit and appealed.

There was no error. A mandamus lies to compel a telephone company to place telephones and furnish telephonic facilities without discrimination for those who will pay for the same and abide the reasonable regulations of the company. This is well settled. State v. Telephone Co., 52 Am. Rep., 404; 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. (2 Ed.), 1022; 19 Ibid., 877; Joyce on Electric Law, sec. 1036, and numerous cases cited by all these. In Telegraph Co. v. Telephone Co., 61 Vt., 241, 5 L. R. A., 15 Am. St. Rep., 893, S. C., 3 Am. Elec. Cases, at p. 435, it is said: “A telephonic system is simply for the transmission of intelligence and news. It is perhaps, in a limited sense, and yet in a strict sense, a common carrier. It must be equal in its dealing with all.” That case cited many authorities, which are indeed uniform, that the telephone business, like all other services fixed with public use, must be operated without discrimination, affording “equal rights to all, special privileges to none.” “Telephones are public vehicles of intelligence, and they who own or control them can no more refuse to perform impartially the functions that they have assumed to discharge, than a railway company, as a common carrier, can rightfully refuse to perform its duty to the public,” is said in Telephone Co. v. Telegraph Co., 66 Md., 399, at p. 414, 59 Am. Rep., 167, which is another very instructive and well-reasoned case upon the same subject. Telephone companies are placed by our Corporation Act on the same footing, as to public uses, as railroads and telegraphs, and the Corporation Commission is authorized to regulate tbeir charges and assess their property for taxation.

But while it is true there can be no discrimination where the business is lawful, no one can be compelled, or is justified, to aid in unlawful undertakings. A telegraph company should refuse to send libellous or obscene messages, or those which clearly indicate the furtherance of an illegal act, or the perpetration of some crime. But recently in New York the telephone and telegraph instruments were taken out of “pool rooms” which were used for the purpose of selling bets on horse races. “Keeping a bawdy-house” was an indictable offense at common law and is still so in this State. State v. Calley, 104 N. C., 858, 17 Am. St. Rep., 104; State v. Webber, 107 N. C., 962, 22 Am. St. Rep., 920. One who leases a house for the purpose of its being kept as a bawdy-house or with the knowledge that it will be used for that purpose, is indictable. 9 A. & E. Ency. (2 Ed.), 527. A mandamus will never issue to compel a respondent to aid in acts which are unlawful Weidwald v. Dodson, 95 Cal., 450; Gruner v. Moore, 6 Colo., 526; Chicot v. Kruse, 47 Ark., 80; People v. Park, 117 Ill., 462.

It is argued that a common carrier would not be authorized to refuse to convey the plaintiff because she keeps a bawdy-house. Nor is the defendant refusing her a telephone on that ground, but because she wishes to place the telephone in a bawdy-house. A common carrier could not be compelled to haul a car used for such purpose. If the plaintiff wished to have the phone placed in some other house used by her, or even in a house where she resided but not kept as a bawdy-house, she would not be debarred because she kept another house for such unlawful and disreputable purpose It is not her character but the character of the business at the house where it is sought to have the telephone placed which required the Court to refuse the mandamus. In like manner, if a common carrier knew tbat passage was songbt by persons wbo are traveling for tbe execution of an indictable offense, or a telegraph company tbat a message was tendered for a like purpose, botb would be justified in refusing, and certainly when tbe plaintiff admits tbat she is carrying on a criminal business in tbe bouse where she seeks to have tbe telephone placed, tbe Court will not by its mandamus require tbat facilities of a public nature be furnished to a bouse used for tbat business. For like reason a mandamus will not lie to compel a water company to furnish water, or a light company to supply light to a bouse used for carrying on an illegal business. Tbe courts will enjoin or abate, not aid, a public nuisance.

Tbe further consideration of this matter is not required on this application for a mandamus, but should be upon an indictment and trial of tbe plaintiff for tbe violation of law so brazenly avowed by her.

No Error.