City of Cincinnati v. Diamond Light Co.

4 Ohio App. 177, 25 Ohio C.C. Dec. 235, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 260, 21 Ohio C.A. 260, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 210
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Ohio App. 177 (City of Cincinnati v. Diamond Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cincinnati v. Diamond Light Co., 4 Ohio App. 177, 25 Ohio C.C. Dec. 235, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 260, 21 Ohio C.A. 260, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 210 (Ohio Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Jones, Oliver B., J.

The city of Cincinnati by its solicitor, under the direction of the city council, brought this action in the court of common pleas against the defendant, seeking to enjoin it from laying, constructing and maintaining wires and conduits in public streets and alleys for the purpose of conducting electricity for power and lighting for commercial purposes in said city.

The defendant, The Diamond Light Company, is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Ohio, and has constructed and installed an expensive and effective plant on the west side of Walnut street, between Fifth and Sixth streets, in the city of Cincinnati, for the generation and distribution of electricity, and is engaged in the business of generating and supplying electric current for light and power for commercial purposes to consumers within that city.

In furtherance of such purpose, without any consent from the council or other officers of the city of Cincinnati, said company has laid wires and constructed conduits across the following public ways in said city: Vine street, between Fifth and Sixth streets; Hatters alley, between Walnut street and Lodge (Fountain) alley; Lodge alley, between Hatters and Thorp alleys; and Thorp alley, between Vine street and Lodge alley, below the surface of said streets and alleys without disturbing the pavements thereof. It also claims the right to use for such wires a conduit which had been constructed, connecting premises on the west side of Walnut [179]*179street with premises directly opposite on the east side of said street, known as The Commercial Tribune building. It also claims the right to further extend its conduits and wires under the streets and alleys of said city for the purpose of supplying electrical current for commercial purposes to consumers.

Streets, alleys and public ways are held in trust for the public for the use for which they were dedicated or acquired, and, subject to the property rights of the abutting owners, they are for such public use under the absolute control of the legislative power of the state (L. & N. Rd. Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 76 Ohio St., 481). Electric light companies, in connection with telegraph and telephone companies, are authorized to use and occupy the streets and highways of the state, county or municipality, under the provisions of Part Second, Title 9, Div. 2, Sub-Div. 2, Chap. 2, General Code (Sections 9170 to 9198).

These laws were first enacted for telegraph companies and later were extended and applied to telephone companies by Section 3471, Revised Statutes (Section 9191, General Code), and afterwards were applied to electric light and power companies by Section 3471a, Revised Statutes, which reads as follows:

“The provisions of this chapter, so far as the same may be applicable, except section three thousand four hundred and sixty-one, shall apply also to any company organized for the purpose of supplying the public and private buildings, manufacturing establishments, streets, alleys, lanes, lands, squares and public places with electric light and [180]*180power,1 or automatic package carrier; and every such company shall have the same powers, except those given by said section three thousand- four hundred and sixty-one, and be subject to the same restrictions, as are herein prescribed for magnetic telegraph companies. Provided, however, that in order to subject the same to municipal. control alone, no person or company shall place, string, construct or maintain any line, wire, fixture or appliance of any kind for conducting electricity for lighting, heating or power purposes through any street, alley, lane, square, place or land of any city, village or town, without the consent of such municipality; and this inhibition shall extend to all levels above and below the surface of. any such public ways, grounds or places, as well as along the surface thereof; but this inhibition shall not be applicable to any rights which have heretofore been received and exercised through proceedings of any probate court. Any person or company violating any portion of the inhibition aforesaid shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall upon conviction thereof be fined in any sum not less than one hundred and not more than five hundred dollars. The means thus created for enforcing said inhibition shall be held to be only cumulative to any other lawful means open to the municipality by way of injunction or otherwise; and this act shall apply to actions and causes of action or proceeding named in section seventy-nine of the Revised Statutes, except such as may be pending on error, and not on appeal, in any circuit court of the state.”

[181]*181The substance of this section now appears in the General Code in Sections 9192, 9193, 9194 and 12644.

By force of these statutes, therefore, permission is given to an electric light company, such as the defendant, to use the streets and public ways in a city or village, but such use is placed under municipal control and can be had only with the consent of the municipality, subject to such conditions as it may see fit through its council to impose.

Under the provision of Section 9178, General Code, which applies to telegraph or telephone companies, where the company fails to agree with the municipal authorities of the city or village as to the mode of use of the streets and public ways, it is authorized to bring a proceeding in the probate court to procure from such court an order or judgment directing in what mode its line shall be constructed. This provision has been upheld in City of Zanesville v. The Zanesville Telegraph & Telephone Co., 64 Ohio St., 67. But by the express provision of Section 9192, General Code, this proceeding is not applicable to an electric light company. And it has been held in The Queen City Telephone Co. v. City of Cincinnati, 73 Ohio St., 64, that such proceedings in the probate court could not be had for the purpose of authorizing the construction and maintenance of underground wires and pipes or conduits for a telephone company, but that the consent of the city was an essential condition for their construction. In the opinion of the court, at page 81, the following language is used:

“But, taking the sections of the statutes as a whole and considering the conditions imposed on [182]*182the exercise of such right, it is not to be inferred that the municipal authorities are stripped of all power to finally determine any matter relating to the general subject. It will be remembered that by Section 2640 those authorities are given the control of the streets and are required to keep them open, in repair, and free from nuisance. It is to be noted, also, that by no statute is power given any tribunal to authorize permanent structures upon or in, or the use of any street, which will incommode the public, the dominant purpose being to facilitate public travel and transportation. Railway Co. v. Tel. Assn., 48 Ohio St., 390; L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Elyria, 69 Ohio St., 414. It seems, therefore, clear that there is no power in the probate court to authorize or direct the construction of conduits in subways under the streets of a city in the absence of consent by the municipal authorities.”

This principle has been recently reaffirmed in the case of The Columbus Cit. Telephone Co. v. City of Columbus, 88 Ohio St., 466, the court in its opinion, at page 468, using the following language:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio App. 177, 25 Ohio C.C. Dec. 235, 21 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 260, 21 Ohio C.A. 260, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cincinnati-v-diamond-light-co-ohioctapp-1915.