Court Opinion

ID: 9442626
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-03 18:53:44.298626+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:29:09.680283
License: Public Domain

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge
(dissenting).
I disagree with my brethren in this case. The trial court said: “The Court does not feel that there is any breach of contract shown * * I agree with that.
A few facts must be noted. They are not in dispute. Plaintiff was a full-time Government employee. He was also a sundown orchestra broker, booking bands for parties, *998meetings, etc. Prior to July, 1947, his wife was not employed. They had two phones in their home, Georgia 6012 and Taylor 1381. Plaintiff advertised in the classified section of the telephone directory, showing the Georgia number and also showing the Taylor number as his night, Sunday and holiday number. In July, 1947, Mrs. Clay obtained daytime employment in a downtown office. They then had a phone, National 3257, installed at her office desk. So we have three phones involved, a Taylor number which remained untouched throughout, a Georgia number -which was taken out, and a National number which was installed. The Taylor number would not answer to a call in the daytime, and the National number would not answer to a call in the evening.
The contract which plaintiff says he made with the Company was that all calls to him at the Georgia number be transferred to the National number. But he testified that “I can’t prove that anyone called” the Georgia number and was not transferred. Later he testified that he had written statements from two persons who called 'him -at the Georgia number and could not get him. But those persons said they called at 7:30 p. m. and at 7:50 p. m., respectively. If those calls had been referred to the National number pursuant to the alleged contract, they would have received no answer, as that number answered only when Mrs. Clay was at her office during regular office hours. That is all the proof there was on breach.
For proof of breach appellant apparently relies upon the assertion that he received no calls. But the fact is that if the Company had referred to the National number all calls to appellant at the Georgia number, and if all such calls had been made after 5:00 or 5:30 p. m., when appellant was available to do business, he would have received no calls at all; the National number would have been rung but no one would have answered. There is no proof, and appellant said he had none, that any daytime calls were attempted.
Moreover, it is significant, I think, that Clay received no evening calls on 'he Taylor number, although that phone remained undisturbed throughout the period. If customers were actually trying to get him, it seems peculiar that nobody called him in the evening on the phone advertised as his evening phone.
The sum of it is that if all Clay’s calls in this period came in the evening on the Georgia number, and if the Company transferred those calls to the National number, as Clay claims it should have done, he would not have received a single call. I think, as the trial judge held, that no breach of contract was shown by the plaintiff in this action.
In the next place, I think that appellant did not establish a contract. There are three phases to this feature of the case. (a) The written contract between him and the Company provided, in clear type just above his signature, that it was subject to the rules and regulations of the Company. Those regulations are published, under requirement of law. One regulation provided :
“ * * * In view of the possibilities of errors, arrangements * * * for advising calling parties of the telephone number of a station at which the subscriber may be reached, are made with the understanding that the subscriber assumes all risks in connection therewith and that no liability shall attach to the Company by reason of failure to complete a particular call.”
(b) The Company could not legally make such a contract. Negligence or other tort by a public utility is one thing, but a contract by a public utility is something else. A basic tenet in public utility law is that a utility cannot render to one person a service which it does not render to all under like conditions. To enforce that requirement, the regulatory statutes require utilities to file publicly the rules and regulations relating to service. The statutes then make unlawful any deviation from the published rules. The District statutes have such provisions.1 The service involved in the case at bar, the so-called “split reference”, was not included in the Company’s published rules. The court now holds that *999a contract between one individual and the Company for that service is binding. I do not see how it could be. It seems to me that one of the foundation stones of effective utility regulation in this jurisdiction is disintegrated by the rule now promulgated by the court, (c) The evidence did not establish a contract as a matter of fact. Appellant’s wife talked on the phone to an unidentified person at the Company’s office, who told her that calls to the Georgia number would be referred to the National number and that there would be no charge for such reference. There was no consideration even alleged, quite apart from the question whether an unidentified person on a phone can bind a corporation to a contract contradictory of a writing executed by the same parties. The court says that the plaintiff’s promise to take and pay for a new phone was consideration sufficient to support a binding contract to refer calls. I do not agree with that view. Appellant had a phone; he gave that phone up and took another one, a mere exchange of phones all at his, not the Company’s, instance. I do not see how the taking of the new phone was either a consideration moving to the Company or a detriment to Clay.
In the next place, it seems to me that under the circumstances it was incumbent upon appellant to take some step to effectuate the transfer of his incoming calls to the number at which he wanted them received. He had the Georgia phone. He testified that he had advertised it by penny postcards, picture cards, and card advertising. So he must have had an address list of potential customers. Also he had the number registered at union headquarters. He, not the Company, relinquished the Georgia phone for reasons of his own. But he testified that he made no attempt to advertise the new number (National 3257) or any change in number until after the new telephone directory was published in March or April, 1948, after the period here involved. It seems to me that under those facts he did not show a cause of action for damages for the destructiqn of his business by breach of a contract with the Company. When he, himself, changed his number, he could not, it seems to me, rest the blame for lack of business entirely on the Company without any effort whatever on his part to effectuate the transfer. The undisputed facts simply negative the cause of action he asserted.
In the last place, the testimony of appellant and his wife affirmatively negative any possibility of proof of damages. They testified that they had no records of business in prior years. The only records they ever had were scraps of paper, and they had largely been destroyed. Mrs. 'Clay made up some “statements” for the purposes of this case. She testified that she made them up from “such slips of paper as I had about the telephone calls, and from the calendar or from various paper publicity that we had on the jobs, and from what Mr. Clay and I could remember at the time this was made up.” They had no records of expenses or of the amount of the net profit. It seems to me that when the undisputed evidence is affirmative in its showing that no proof is available to prove the amount of damages in the destruction of a business — that is, the amount of the business, if any, which was destroyed — the trial court may properly grant summary judgment in the action.
I do not know what my brethren intend that the trial court do with the case. If it proceeds to a trial it would be trying issues which the parties agree, and the trial court has found, do not exist. If this court means that summary judgment should be entered for the plaintiff and trial be had as to the amount af damages, the trial court would have to attempt to receive evidence which has already been affirmatively shown not to exist.

. See D.C.Code, tit. 43, §§ 324, 902, 904 (1940).