The questions presented in this case are not new. All of them have been, either directly or substantially, repeatedly decided by this court in opinions in which attempts were made to so fully analyze the public utility law as to relieve administration of it as free from embarrassment as practicable. Superior v. Douglas Co. Tel. Co. 141 Wis. 363, 122 N. W. 1023; La Crosse v. La Crosse G. & E. Co. 145 Wis. 408, 130 N. W. 530; State ex rel. Kenosha G. & E. Co. v. Kenosha E. R. Co. 145 Wis. 337, 129 N. W. 600; Calumet Service Co. v. Chilton, 148 Wis. 334, 135 N. W. 131.
*77Very little, if anything, need be added to what is said in the cases referred to as to the questions there discussed. The better way, it seems, as the same questions again happen to be pressed upon our attention, is to treat them as ruled by the previous decisions without additional discussion.
What has been said suggests impropriety of treating the multitude of authorities, foreign and domestic, cited to our attention.
The point that the contract with defendant was discriminatory at common law is met by Superior v. Douglas Co. Tel. Co., supra, holding that only unreasonable discriminations are so condemned, and absence of proof that there was any such discrimination in this case.
The suggestion that the special contract with defendant and others of his class is void under sec. 1791a, Stats. (1898), requiring every telephone company engaged in the business of furnishing telephone service to do so “without discrimination” is met by the fact that mere difference in method of dealing with customers, some by implied agreement to pay at schedule rates and others by express contract, was not considered by the legislature in passing the public utility law, discrimination within the meaning of sec. 179 la. Evidently such section was regarded as a mere incorporation of the common rule into written law, because sec. 1797to — 91, Stats. (Laws of 1907, ch. 499), specifically recognized the existence of special contracts and provided that “the furnishing by any public utility, of any product or service at the rates and upon the terms and conditions provided for in any existing contract executed prior to April 1$ 1907, shall not constitute a discrimination within the meaning specified,” — referring to the provision of the section' making any undue or unreasonable preference unlawful. Such section was held, in Superior v. Douglas Co. Tel. Co., supra, to have been intended to preserve existing agreements with public utility corporations from being affected by the public utility law, and to be efficient for that purpose as to mere contractual matters such *78as ordinarily occur inter pcurtes. That was affirmed in La Crosse v. La Crosse G. & E. Co., supra, such ordinary contracts as the one in question being distinguished from such as form an element of a corporate franchise, the latter being held superseded by the public utility law, and the former within the limitation mentioned in sec. 1797m — 91 and so expressly preserved and recognized as valid.
The foregoing seems to cover everything which needs treatment on this appeal. The case presents the question of whether a mere special contract with a public utility corporation for services, made prior to the time limit mentioned in sec. 1797m — 91, one not inhering in a corporate franchise, and so superseded by the public utility law; but, an ordinary agreement for service, recognized as valid and expressly given validity by such section, — can be relied on by one party thereto as binding on the other seeking to repudiate it. No reason is perceived why the answer should not be in the affirmative as it was below.
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.
Babnes, J., took no part.