Opinion
October, 1916.
Franklin Taylor, for plaintiff.
Charles T. Russell, for defendant.
This motion resolves itself into the question as to whether the defendant has the legal right to discontinue telephone service to the plaintiff, who is one of its subscribers, because of an unpaid balance due it under a contract which was terminated prior to or at the time of making the contract for service which was in force at the time the action was begun. The present contract among other things provides: "In the event of * * * the non-payment of any sum due * * * the company * * * may suspend the service until * * * all charges to the time of the restoration of the service have been paid. The right of a telephone company or any public service corporation to discontinue its service is based upon a breach of that contract by the subscriber, and the law has long recognized the right of a public service corporation to breach its contract by a refusal to give service after the patron's failure to make payment when due. Brass v. Rathbone, 153 N.Y. 435; People ex rel. Kennedy v. Manhattan Gaslight Co., 45 Barb. 136. I must hold on the affidavits before me, for the purposes of this motion only, that there is a balance due the defendant from plaintiff for service rendered under the first contract, but a breach of that contract by failure of the plaintiff to pay does not furnish an excuse or reason for the breach of the present contract by a failure of the defendant to furnish service. To put defendant's construction upon the contract would be to hold that it could, by right, discontinue service to a patron who might be indebted to it for any cause. Let us assume that the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant for material which it had sold to him, or for an advertisement which he had inserted in the telephone directory; could any one successfully maintain that such an indebtedness would furnish a sufficient excuse or reason for the defendant to breach its contract of service? I think not. Yet the contract provides that service may be discontinued for failure to pay any amount due. It seems to me that counsel recognizes the force of this position. He contends that in any event the two contracts must be regarded as one — because of an indorsement upon the last contract that it "supersedes prior contract." But the word "superseded" must be given its ordinary meaning which, to quote the Century Dictionary, is "To make void, inefficacious or useless by superior power, or by coming in the place of; set aside; rendered unnecessary; suspend; stay." How then can two instruments be regarded as the same contract if one is superseded by the other? The answer is that each of the instruments constituted a separate contract and when the new one came into life the old one went out of existence. Something has been said about a small balance due under the present contract, but the defendant recognizes that failure to pay that amount was an oversight, and the affidavits show that it has been paid since the motion was made. The right to restrain a public service corporation from discontinuing service, when there is a breach of a patron's obligations, has long been recognized. Richman v. Consolidated Gas Co., 186 N.Y. 209; McEntree v. Kingston Water Co., 165 id. 27; Sickles v. Manhattan Gaslight Co., 66 How. Pr. 314. I am not unmindful of the many decisions holding that a public service corporation has the right to discontinue service for failure to pay, and the principle laid down by the General Term in People v. Manhattan Gaslight Co., supra, that there was a right to refuse service for failure to pay a prior indebtedness, but I prefer to fix the rights of the parties according to the terms of the contract existing between them.
Motion granted.