Brown v. Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co.

2 Balt. C. Rep. 326
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 326 (Brown v. Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 2 Balt. C. Rep. 326 (Md. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

SHARP, J.

(Orally)—

In the case of Alexander Brown vs. The Maryland Telephone, and Telegraph Company I think the demurrer must be sustained.

The bill in this case was filed by a ¡stockholder in a corporation to restrain the corporation from engaging' in a business which it is alleged is ultra vires. The defendant has been engaged in the telephone business, and now proposes to engage in the electric lighting business. The defendant demurred to the bill.

No contention is made against the form of the bill. The defendant’s sole contention is that on the face of the proceedings it appears that the corporation has the power to engage in the electric lighting business. This is denied in the bill. The single issue then is on the question of the power.

The defendant was incorporated in January, 1890, by a certificate filed in the Superior Court pursuant to Article 23, Section 42 of the Code. The name of the corporation was the AVriting Telegraph Company of Baltimore city. The purposes for which the company was incorporated are as follows:

“For conducting, owning and operating telegraph lines in the State of Maryland and for the transaction of a general t'elegraph business and for the acquiring, developing, improving, using, working and otherwise utilizing and disposing of the inventions and processes patented by the United States for writing telegraph instruments or apparatus appurtenant to or necessary for the operation thereof, and which may be hereafter patented, and for the sale, lease or other disposition of articles manufactured under such patents, and for the transaction of any business in which electricity over or through wires may be applied to any useful purpose.”.

There can be no doubt, as a matter of construction, leaving Article 23, Section 111 of the Code, out of consideration, that this last clause would include the' power to do an electric lighting business.

Article 23, Section 111, provides that nothing in Article 23 shall authorize the incorporation of electric lighting companies in Baltimore city.

The defendant, therefore, did not acquire on incorporation any right to engage in the business of electric lighting in Baltimore city.

The Act of 1892, Chapter 469, provided that the charter of the AVriting Telegraph Company of Baltimore city, a corporation heretofore formed under the provisions of the General Corporation Laws of this State be, and the same is hereby amended so that the said corporation may, and It is hereby authorized to transmit any business in which electricity over and through wires may be applied to any useful purpose and to that end all the rights and privileges mentioned in Section 111, Article 23, Public General Laws, title Corporations, are hereby conferred upon said corporation in Baltimore city as fully and to all intents and purposes as though said corporation had been formed to carry on business in any city or town in Kent or Cecil county. The only new power given is the power to do electric fighting business in Baltimore city. The change is not in the character of the powers of the corporation, but merely in the locality in which they may be exercised.

Tlie rights and privileges mentioned in Section 111, Article 23, all of which are thus conferred on the AVriting Telegraph Company, are as follows:

“Any electric light company formed under this section shall have full power to manufacture, and sell, and to furnish such quantities of electric light or electric power as may be required or desired in any town of Kent or Talbot counties in which, or adjoining' which, the same may be located, for lighting the streets, roads, public or private buildings, or for motive power, or for other purposes; and such corporation is hereby authorized and empowered to lay, construct or build lines, or conductors under, along, upon or over the streets, squares, lanes, alleys and roads, paved and unpaved, and connect the same with any manufactory, public or private buildings, lamps or other structures or object, and with the place of the supply, subject, however, to any law or ordinance that may be passed [328]*328by tbe municipal authorities of the city or town, or the county commissioners having jurisdiction for the filling up, repaving or restoring such streets or roads to their normal condition.”

The same powers conveyed in precisely the same language had been previously given by the Act of 1890, Chapter 233, by the legislature in the form of an amendment to the Charter. of the International Telegraph and Construction Company of Baltimore city and several other companies, formed as the defendant had been formed under the provisions of Article 23 of the Code.

It appears that the various corporations mentioned in the act .were subsequently consolidated under the name of the Edison Company.

The Court of Appeals in construing this act (Edison Company vs. Hopper, 85 Md., 113) held:

'“It is clear that as the constituent corporations of the appellant were incorporated under the 23rd Article of the Code, they did not possess the franchise of carrying on the business of electric lighting companies in Baltimore city prior to the passage of the Act of 1890.

Does this act then empower them to both carry on the business of an electric light company and to conduct its operations in the streets of Baltimore as contended for on the part of the appellant?”

It was contended the act gave the corporations the right to use the streets of Baltimore city without the consent of the Mayor and City Council.

The Court of Appeals held:

“The sole effect of the act was to enable the corporations named and the appellant to have the franchise of an electric light and power company which they did not possess prior to the passage of this act, and to permit the operation of these corporations in Baltimore city as in Kent and Talbot counties, subject, however, to the paramount right and power of the municipality to regulate and maintain the streets of the city for the use of the public.”

A subsequent ordinance of the Mayor and City Council was passed giving the Home Telephone and Telegraph Company the right to use the streets. No. 76, 1904, approved May 11, 1904.

It is now contended by the plaintiff that notwithstanding the Act of 1892, Chapter 409, the defendant did not, after the passage of the act, have the power to engage in the electric lighting business, because:

1. The act is unconstitutional, 'being in violation of Article 3, Section 29 of the Constitution of this State, which provides that “every law enacted by the General Assembly shall embrace but one subject, and that shall be described in its title.”

2. That such an amendment of the charter would not be valid without the unanimous consent of the stockholders of the corporation.

It should be observed that the essential point in connection with this contention is not the use of the powers conferred, but their possession. A corporation may possess powers which it does not use.

It seems to me there can be no doubt that before the passage of the Act of 1892, that this corporation had the right to do an electric lighting business in Kent and Talbot counties under Article 23, Section 111 of the Code, and in Somerset and Carroll counties by the Act of 1890, Chapter 588.

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Related

Edison Electric Illuminating Co. v. Hooper
36 A. 113 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-maryland-telephone-telegraph-co-mdcirctctbalt-1904.