City of Cadillac v. Citizens' Telephone Co.

161 N.W. 989, 195 Mich. 538, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 717
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1917
DocketDocket No. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 161 N.W. 989 (City of Cadillac v. Citizens' Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cadillac v. Citizens' Telephone Co., 161 N.W. 989, 195 Mich. 538, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 717 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Steere, J.

On December 3, 1894, one Henry W. Sill petitioned the mayor and common council of Cadillac for permission to use the public streets and alleys of the city for the purpose of erecting telephone and telegraph poles. This communication was referred to the street committee which, on December 17, 1894, recommended “that the petition of Henry Sill for the use of streets and alleys for. the placing of telephone poles be granted: Provided the city be allowed the free use of the tops of the poles.” The report was accepted and adopted. Sill soon thereafter installed a telephone system of modest proportions and operated the same, charging rates satisfactory to him and his subscribers, so far as shown.

On March 12, 1900, a general ordinance was passed by the common council, entitled:

“An ordinance to regulate the construction and maintenance of telephone lines in the city of Cadillac, and to establish rates for telephone service.”

This ordinance made no reference to Sill, and, so far as shown, did not in any way require him to change his manner of using the streets, method of operating his telephone system, or the prices he was then charging. The ordinance is devoted largely to specifications as to use of streets, etc., requires that before setting poles notice should be given of such intention and the work thereafter done under supervision of the board of public works or its authorized agent, and contains various other provisions common to such ordinances, not material here. It further provides that any person or company to whom permission is given to install a telephone line under the ordinance shall have the right—

“to erect, control and maintain an electric telephone plant in said city, and to repair and extend the same and carry on the business of renting electric telephones and furnishing telephone service: Provided, however, that the yearly rate for telephones used for business [540]*540purposes anywhere in said city shall not exceed $24, and the yearly rate for private residences anywhere in said city shall not exceed $15.”

These were the rates then charged by Sill. He is not shown to have formally accepted this ordinance, nor to have been required to recognize it in any particular. He continued with his business as before, charging the same rates, and operating his system undisturbed and apparently in an acceptable manner until-he sold out his plant and business in 1902 to the defendant Citizens’ Telephone Company, which then took over and has since operated it.

No application for permission to operate its plant or to install any of its lines under the ordinance was ever made by defendant, nor was any express agreement entered into between it and the city. Defendant’s general manager testified that he knew nothing about the ordinance until four or five years after they bought Sill out, but always supposed and claimed that defendant was using the highways in the city of Cadillac by authority of the telephone law under which it was organized; recognizing, however, under that law, the police power of the city to reasonably regulate the manner in which poles and other apparatus should be erected, installed, and maintained in its streets, for which reason, and not because of the ordinance, all reasonable requirements of the city in that particular have been observed and complied with.

No fault is found by plaintiff as to defendant’s use of the streets or method of doing business except in the matter of rates recently charged, which, it is claimed, are in violation of those authorized by the ordinance, and excessive, for which reason this bill is filed to restrain- defendant from violating the ordinance (on the ground that it is a binding contract between the parties), and (on the further ground that it is violating the general telephone act) —

[541]*541“from in any way, shape or manner increasing any rate, toll, rental or charge for telephone service, and from altering any classification, control, practice, rule or regulation so as to increase the rate, toll, rental or charge heretofore made to its patrons under the ordinance aforesaid, except upon application to the State railroad commission made in accordance with Act No. 206, Pub. Acts 1913, and after due permission and order made by such commission in conformity therewith,” etc.

The trial court held that no binding contract between the parties was proven for violation of which injunction could be granted; that plaintiff’s claim and conflicting testimony relative to a failure of defendant to comply with the telephone law touching rates was, in the first instance, cognizable only by the Michigan railroad commission, to which administration of the law was committed by statute, and plaintiff was therefore not entitled to equitable relief in that particular.

It is conclusively shown that neither Sill nor defendant ever directly accepted or consented to be bound by the terms of the ordinance, and it certainly never became an express contract between the parties. If intended to apply to and bind Sill or those who might succeed to his property and rights, it was unhappily worded to that end. By section 1 it provided that all telephone lines, etc., hereafter erected and maintained in the city of Cadillac shall be erected and maintained in accordance with provisions of the ordinance. It provided that any person or firm desiring to erect or maintain a telephone line should “first make application to the city council,” and in such application expressly-agree to be bound by the terms of the ordinance, following which is the provision before quoted as to rates, etc. Six years before the adoption of this ordinance Sill had erected and up to that time been operating his telephone system in the city with permission from the council, without any [542]*542contract, express or implied, as to rates. He then had the undoubted right, serving the public without discrimination, to fix and change his schedule of rates, making such charges to his patrons for service as were acceptable to him and them. He had also acquired vested rights and interests by virtue of his expenditures in installing a public utility plant with the city’s acquiescence, which could not be destroyed by a subsequent ordinance not accepted by him. While the city might have power to contract as to rates with those willing to contract, it is not shown nor presumed to have been empowered by its charter to regulate or fix the rates which might be charged. Having purchased Sill’s legally installed and operating public utility and business, defendant had, in addition to the rights acquired from him, the further right under the law by which it was incorporated to maintain, construct, and operate its lines “along, over, across,” etc., “any public places, streets and highways * * * in this State,” subject to the police power of the city to control, for public safety and convenience, the manner of so doing. The testimony in this case fails to show any binding contract as to rates, express or implied, between the city and either Sill or defendant. Therefore the grounds for exercise of. original equity jurisdiction, before the State railroad commission acted or was appealed to, recognized in City of Monroe v. Railroad, 187 Mich. 364 (153 N. W. 669), and City of Traverse City v. Telephone Co., ante, 373 (161 N. W. 983), are wanting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.W. 989, 195 Mich. 538, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cadillac-v-citizens-telephone-co-mich-1917.