Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. State Roads Commission

103 A. 447, 132 Md. 194, 1918 Md. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 A. 447 (Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. State Roads Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. State Roads Commission, 103 A. 447, 132 Md. 194, 1918 Md. LEXIS 29 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed hy the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Baltimore City for the purpose of having the State Beads Commission of Maryland restrained from interfering with the construction and use of conduits, for the accommodation of the company’s telephone wires, in one of the State highways under the control of the Commission, without payment by the company for such user, and praying that the Commission be decreed to be without authority to make any charge against the company for the use of any of the State ro-ads for its lines-, either above or below the- surface of the ground, excep-t as to the payment o-f the expense o-f restoring the highways to their former condition when disturbed in the construction or renewal of any part of the telephone system.

It is alleged in the bill that the plaintiff company was incorporated in 1884 under the general incorporation laws of Maryland, which authorize it to- construct its lines- along any of the highways of the State, either above or beneath the surface, and that in the exercise of such power the plaintiff has constructed and now owns and operates an extensive and highly valuable system o-f telephone poles-, conduits and wires on and under the State highways, on account of which it is required to pay taxes, on the assessed value thereof, to the State and to the respective cities and counties in which the lines are located, in addition to taxes on its- capital stock *196 and a franchise tax of two pea' cent annually on its gross receipts. The charter powers of the plaintiff were accepted and its use of the public highways for the purposes described was begun and Has continued, the hill avers, without any payment being required or proposed for that privilege until the latter part of the year 1913, when the State Roads Commission imposed a charge of twenty-five cents per annum for each pole thereafter erected by any telephone or telegraph company on any of the roads under the control of the Commission. The exaction of such a charge is alleged to he unauthorized by the statutes defining the, power's of the Commission, but it is stated that the charge has been paid, though under protest, by the plaintiff, because of the urgency of the occasions when new poles wea’e to be erected, and the refusal of the Commission to issue a permit for the work without such payment. It is further alleged that iu the early part of the year 1916 the plaintiff applied to- the Commission for a permit to lay 128 feet of six duct conduit, with the necessary manhole, along and under the side of the Bel Air Road, a highway under the Commission’s control, upon a part of which a pole line of the plaintiff was already -located, and 'that, after some intermediate communications, which are recited in the bill, in relation to a contemplated charge of $10.26 for the privilege, limited to1 a period of twenty-five years, to which charge and time limit the plaintiff objected, it was finally proposed by the Commission that a permit for the construction and use of the conduit and manhole be issued, without any payment being required or any restriction imposed as to the duration of the- user, but without prejudice to the future exercise of such right as the Commission might have to imposb the charge iu controversy. The permit offered on this basis wasi declined by the plaintiff company, and being unable to obtain one without such a reservation, it filed the present bill to have the question in dispute judicially determined.

The theory of the bill is that the State Roads Commission is not in terms empowei'ed to charge the telephone company *197 for the use of the public highways in tbe construction and maintenance of its lines, and that no1 such authority could have been validly conferred. It is contended that the provisions of the general incorporation law under which the telephone company was formed, and the acceptance by it of the rights and privileges thereby granted, constituted a contract between the State and the Company which would he unconstitutionally impaired by tbe imposition of a charge for tbe use of the franchise. The further theory is advanced that the enforcement of such a charge would deprive the company of its property without due process of law, contrary to the State and Federal Constitutions, and would he an unlawful interference with inter-state commerce.

The statute under which the plaintiff was incorporated provides that telegraph and telephone companies so formed may construct their lines “along and upon any postal roads and postal routes, roads, streets and highways, or across any of the bridges or waters within the limits of this State, by tbe erection of the necessary fixtures, including posts, piers or abutments for sustaining the cords or wires of said lines, without their being deemed a public nuisance, or subject to be abated by any private party, provided tbe same shall not be so constructed as to incommode injuriously the public use of said postal roads or postal routes, roads, highways and bridges, or injuriously interrupt tbe navigation of said waters, or interfere with tbe convenience of any landowner more than is unavoidable.” Code, Art. 23, see. 359. Permission to such companies to lay any part of their lines underground, wherever they are authorized to construct them above the surface, is given by section 405 of Article 23 of the Code.

The general privilege thus accorded telegraph and telephone companies, formed under our incorporation law, to construct their lines on the public highways without thereby subjecting themselves to liability for the creation of a nuisance, does not place the State under any contractual or other *198 obligation to- permit any individual company, availing itself of the privilege and protection afforded by the statute, to occupy and use the higways of the State without compensation. Postal Telegraph Co. v. State Roads Commission, 127 Md. 256. The right of the City of Baltimore, in the exercise of powers delegated by the State, to impose a charge of $2.00 for each telegraph, telephone, electric light or other pole used in any of the streets, lanes or alleys of the city, was sustained by this Court, and, in an affirmance of its judgment, by the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Postal Telegraph Cable Company v. Baltimore, 79 Md. 502, 156 U. S. 210. The decisions in that case overruled the contention that the disputed charge was an interference with interstate commerce, or an infringement of the telegraph company’s rights under the Act of Congress relating to the use of post roads, and held that the ordinance in question did not attempt to- place any restrictions on the interstate business of the company, or to exclude it from the use of the city’s streets, but simply and legally required a reasonable compensation to- be paid by the company for its occupancy of ground which the city owned and controlled. This view was fully supported by the case of St. Louis v. Western Union Telegraph Company, 148 U. S. 92, in which the legality of a municipal charge for telegraph poles on the streets of St. Louis was sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A. 447, 132 Md. 194, 1918 Md. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-potomac-telephone-co-v-state-roads-commission-md-1918.