Aberdeen Cable TV Service, Inc. v. City of Aberdeen

176 N.W.2d 738, 85 S.D. 57, 20 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2137, 1970 S.D. LEXIS 90
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1970
DocketFile 10731
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 176 N.W.2d 738 (Aberdeen Cable TV Service, Inc. v. City of Aberdeen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aberdeen Cable TV Service, Inc. v. City of Aberdeen, 176 N.W.2d 738, 85 S.D. 57, 20 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2137, 1970 S.D. LEXIS 90 (S.D. 1970).

Opinion

HANSON, Judge.

On August 12, 1968 the Aberdeen City Commission enacted Ordinance No. 1187 - Amended entitled:

“An ordinance granting to Aberdeen Cable TV Service, Inc. the non-exclusive right to erect, maintain and operate in, under, over, along, across, and upon the present and future streets, lanes, avenues, sidewalks, alleys, bridges, highways and other public places in the City of Aberdeen, South Dakota and subsequent additions thereto, towers, poles, lines, cables, wires, other apparatus and additions thereto, for the purpose of transmission and distribution by cables and/or wires of television signals to enable sale of community television antenna service to the inhabitants of said City and other purposes, for a period of twenty (20) years, regulating the same, and providing for compensation to the City.”

*60 The Ordinance was referred to the electors of the City and substantially defeated at the election. The referendum petitions were determined by the trial court to be insufficient and the election void. Nevertheless, the court concluded Aberdeen Cable TV Service, Inc. was not a public utility and Ordinance No. 1187-Amended was in full force and effect as it did not grant a franchise and did not have to be submitted to a vote of the electors. Therefore, the sole issue on appeal is whether the Ordinance required submission to a vote of the electors before it could become effective.

Community antenna television is a relatively new means of television transmission. It is described and explained in a symposium on “Communications” in Vol. 34, No. 2, Law and Contemp. Prob. on p. 238 as follows:

“Cable television, alias community antenna television (CATV), began for the purpose of serving people in communities which did hot receive over-the-air television and has become the potential complete telecommunications system. By linking space satélites, radio, television, facsimile, telephone, teletype, telemetry, computers, data storage and retrieval systems, and other communications hardware in a complete cable-to-home communications system, it is possible to place each person in contact with his full information environment and to allow each person to contribute information to the storehouse of knowledge.
“Cable television had its inception in 1949. By mid-1968, approximately 2,000 cable television systems were operating or under construction. These systems were capable of carrying their own programs, in addition to signals received from regular television stations. Initially, cable television served communities lacking television service or receiving a signal of poor quality. An antenna was placed on a mountain or tall tower, and the signal was picked up, amplified, and transmitted via cable to the viewer’s home. Later, microwave relay also was used to bring the signal from the point of origination *61 or capture to the distribution point in the community served. At the distribution center, connection is made with coaxial cable or other wire-distribution lines. Usually, the distribution cable is supported by telephone or electric utility poles, the cable television system paying a rental for the use of the poles. In some cases, the'cable is laid beneath city streets, an easement being obtained from the city; in other cases it may be necessary for the cable television system to erect poles for the cable. The signals are amplified at the central distribution point, and, depending upon the length of the cable and other conditions, further amplification of the signal may be necessary along the line. The systems now being installed usually are twelve-channel systems. However, twenty-channel systems are technically feasible at slightly greater cost, and some such systems have been installed. The multiple purpose cable can carry simultaneously as many signals as there are channels, using different frequencies.
“At home, the cable is attached directly to the television receiver. The viewer, as with the selection of conventional over-the-air broadcasting channels, turns the dial to select -the channel carrying the program desired. More than three and a half million homes in the United States are receiving cable television service.”

In this state an abutting property owner in a municipality holds fee title to the center of the street, SDCL 43-16-3, subject and subordinate to an easement or servitude in favor of the public. “When a street is used for any proper street purpose by permission of the city authorities, such use does not constitute an additional servitude, though such use may not have been known when the streets were dedicated, appropriated, or condemned for street purposes, and the abutting fee owner is not entitled to compensation for any damages he may sustain by reason of such use.” Kirby v. Citizen’s Telephone Co., 17 S.D. 362, 97 N.W. 3. But an unauthorized use of the streets for private purposes is compens *62 able. 39 Am.Jur.2d, Highways, Streets, and Bridges, § 160, p. 535. In this respect every municipality in this state is expressly authorized

“* * * to regulate or prohibit the erection of poles for telegraph, telephone, or electric wires in the public grounds, streets, or alleys, and the placing of wire thereon, and to require the removal thereof from such places and to require the placing of such wires under ground; and to grant and regulate rights and franchises for such purposes.” SDCL 9-35-1.
“The governing body shall grant no franchise to any public utility authorizing it to occupy any of the streets, alleys, or public' places of the .municipality without submitting the proposition of issuing such franchise to a vote of the electors thereof at a general or special election called for the purpose.” SDCL 9-35-3.

In State v. Scougal, 3 S.D. 55, 51 N.W. 858, the court pointed out the term “franchise” means a special privilege conferred by government upon an individual which does not belong to citizens generally by common right. Accordingly, the ordinance granting Aberdeen Cable TY Servic'e, Inc. the right to erect, maintain and operate towers, poles, lines, cables, wires, and other apparatus in, under, over, along, across and upon all the streets, sidewalks, alleys, bridges, and highways in the City of Aberdeen for the transmission and distribution of audio, visual, electronic and electric signals for a period of twenty years is clearly a franchise ordinance as it confers upon a private corporation for profit a right or privilege which does not belong to the citizens of Aberdeen generally by common right. Kornegay v. City of Raleigh, 269 N.C. 155, 152 S.E.2d 186; 36 Am.Jur.2d, Franchises, § 1, p. 723.

The public utility commission is given general supervision of all common carriers in the state, except street railways, SDCL 49-3-4

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.W.2d 738, 85 S.D. 57, 20 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2137, 1970 S.D. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aberdeen-cable-tv-service-inc-v-city-of-aberdeen-sd-1970.