Altpeter v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.

164 P. 35, 32 Cal. App. 738, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 544
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1588.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 164 P. 35 (Altpeter v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altpeter v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 164 P. 35, 32 Cal. App. 738, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 544 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action for damages for the alleged injury of certain walnut trees standing and growing in and on Court Street, in the city of Woodland, in front of the plaintiff's houses, situated on lots 8, 9, and 10, of block 4, of said city, said lots being the property of the plaintiffs.

The complaint alleges a wrongful and unauthorized cutting of the limbs of the trees, the charge so alleged being that the defendant without lawful or any authority knowingly and *740 willfully cut down, chopped, mangled, mutilated, disfigured, and destroyed four of said trees, and prays for a judgment for five hundred dollars and treble any sum at which damages may be assessed. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 733.)

The answer denies the allegations of the complaint and, as an affirmative defense, describes the character of the defendant’s business, alleges the necessity of clearing its wires from the branches of the said trees, through the branches of which said wires pass, alleges that the lines of the defendant have been maintained on the street in question and through said trees for a long period of time prior to the acquisition by the plaintiffs of the premises in front of which said trees stand.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and judg- ‘ ment rendered and entered in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $450 and costs.

This appeal, supported by a bill of exceptions, is prosecuted by the defendant from said judgment.

The action is founded on section 733 of the Code of Civil Procedure, supra, which reads: “Any person who cuts down or carries off any wood or underwood, tree, or timber, or girdles or otherwise injures any tree or timber on the land of another person, or on the street or highway in front of any person’s house, village, or city lot, or cultivated grounds; or on the commons or public grounds of any city or town, or on the street or highway in front thereof, without lawful authority, is liable to the owner of such land, or to such city or town, for treble the amount of damages which may be assessed therefor, in a civil action, in any court having jurisdiction.”

Section 3346 of the Civil Code prescribes the measure of damages for the wrongful injuries to timber, trees, or under-wood “upon the land of another, or removal thereof.”

The general contention of the defendant is that the findings derive no support from the evidence.

The particular proposition urged by the defendant, however, is whether or not a telegraph company which maintains its lines in the public streets of a town or city may, as against an abutting property owner, lawfully trim trees growing and standing in a street, and through which its wires pass, for the purpose of preventing branches of such trees from in *741 terfering with the proper operation of the wires as transmitters of telegraph messages.

These propositions will not be controverted: 1 That trees may lawfully be grown and maintained along the sidewalks in the streets of cities and towns and in front of the premises of abutting property owners—that is to say, that trees so grown are not nuisances as would be a purpresture of any character which would ordinarily have the effect of obstructing or materially interfering with traffic in and over the street; 2. That, while the owner of property in front of which trees are grown and standing has only a qualified or limited interest in the trees—an interest which, in other words, is subject and subordinate to the right of the city to trim or remove them whenever the public interests require such action—if a person injures such trees without lawful right or authority, such owner may maintain an action for damages for the injury so inflicted, and recover such damages as he may be able to show that he has suffered by reason of any depreciation in the value of his property which has been occasioned by such injury; 3. That, where trees so grown are cut, trimmed, or removed by the city or town for the purpose of facilitating the use of the street in a legal manner by the public, then the damage resulting from such cutting or removal to the owner of the property in front of which such trees are standing is dammim absque injuria; 4. That cities and towns are generally empowered, as agents of the state, to grant to public utility corporations, such as are engaged in the distribution of water, gas, electricity, or the transmission by electric currents of telegrams or messages, the right to use, in a reasonable manner, or so as not to interfere with common traffic, their streets for the purpose of installing and maintaining in such streets the equipments essential to the carrying on of the business of such corporations, and that, when such right or privilege or franchise is so granted, such corporations are authorized, upon such conditions or under such restrictions as may have reasonably been imposed, to remove from the streets so used any object or thing which will, if permitted to exist, prevent proper and efficient service by them as such corporations to the public.

The last stated of the foregoing propositions is peculiarly applicable to telegraph and telephone corporations maintaining their wires over and along the streets of cities and other *742 urban communities. “The telegraph company,” well say counsel for the defendant in their opening brief filed herein, “exercises its franchise in the street as a public agency and not as a private individual. It is charged with a public duty which it can neither shirk nor avoid. It must maintain its lines at all times in a safe and workable condition, so that the messages of the public may be transmitted over them without delay and without error. In this respect, it exercises the same functions over its wires that the public authorities exercise over the streets and highways themselves. The latter are endowed with the right and charged with the duty of removing trees whenever they become an obstruction to travel by foot or vehicle over the surface of the highway. The same reasoning which supports this right requires that the owners of the telegraph lines dedicated to public use should be endowed with a similar right and charged with a similar duty whenever the free transmission of telegrams over their wires is obstructed by the growth of the branches of trees among the wires or from any other cause. And just as the street and highway authorities are given a wide latitude of discretion in performing their duties, so the telegraph company should be given a broad latitude in removing limbs of trees so long as the removal is not done carelessly or in bad faith. Furthermore, the telegraph company having been granted the right by the state to construct its lines on the public highways, such incidental powers as are necessary to make the principal grant effective naturally follow it. If it were otherwise the principal grant would exist only in name, and would be absolutely of no value or effect for practical purposes. Recognizing the soundness of this reasoning, the courts have uniformly held that the power and right to trim trees interfering with telegraph wires exist in the telegraph company owning the wires.” (See Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Constantine, 61 Fed. 61, [9 C. C. A. 359]; Southern Bell Tel. Co. v. Francis, 109 Ala. 224, 229, [55 Am. St. Rep. 930, 31 L. R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 P. 35, 32 Cal. App. 738, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altpeter-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-calctapp-1917.