Supreme Court of Maryland, 1925

Public Service Commission v. Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co.

Public Service Commission v. Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co.
Supreme Court of Maryland · Decided January 23, 1925 · Bond
128 A. 39; 147 Md. 279; 1925 Md. LEXIS 108

Public Service Commission v. Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co.

Opinion of the Court

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal' was taken from the granting of an injunction at the suit of the Chesapeake and .Potomac Telephone Company restraining the Public Service Commission from putting into effect an order passed by it on October 21st, 192J, to preserve the existing rate's for telephone service until after the conclusion of an investigation by it of new rates proposed by the company, and the passage of its final order on the results of that investigation. It was proposed that the new rates should go into, effect on January 1, 1925, and the case was heard out of place, in December, in .an effort to expedite the final determination. The Court had not been able, in consultation, to arrive at an agreement on the decision, when it was informed that the Commission’s investigation had been concluded and its final order passed, so that the interim order with which the court was concerned had been superseded. A copy of the final order has now been furnished to the court.

In the ease of Thom v. Cook, 113 Md. 85, this Court, alter a review of the decisions of the United States Supreme Court on the subject, decided that, it could not, after an election *281 had been held, go further with an application to restrain the printing of certain names on the official ballot. And in Syfer v. Spence, 103 Md. 66, it was decided that when the term of .a license in controversy expired during litigation upon a. bill to enjoin revocation of it, no further judicial 'action should be taken. And these are only local applications of a general rule that the court should confine itself to the particular relief sought in the case before it, and refrain from deciding abstract, moot questions of law, which may remain after that relief has ceased to be possible. Upon consideration of this and of all the circumstances of the case, we have concluded that the proper course for the Court is to dismiss the appeal.

Appeal dismissed, with costs.

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