City of Milwaukee v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.

237 N.W. 64, 205 Wis. 453, 76 A.L.R. 1180, 1931 Wisc. LEXIS 45
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 64 (City of Milwaukee v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin 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 Milwaukee v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co., 237 N.W. 64, 205 Wis. 453, 76 A.L.R. 1180, 1931 Wisc. LEXIS 45 (Wis. 1931).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed June 12, 1931:

Fritz, J.

There is no controversy between the city and the defendant, the present owner of the property and franchises of the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company, as to the right of the defendant to operate a street railway for the carrying of passengers, including “interurban cars,” on the streets in question. The case presents the narrower question of whether that franchise includes the right to carry merchandise, freight, or package goods, and particularly the right to do so in cars used exclusively for such carriage.

In 1905 the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company was organized to operate an electric railway to carry passengers “and all kinds of property” in and between Sheboygan and Milwaukee; and November 4, 1905, the supervisors of the town of Milwaukee granted a permit to that company to operate “interurban cars carrying passengers, merchandise, freight, and package goods” on and across certain town highways, up to the limits of the city of Milwaukee. On March 22, 1906, the plaintiff enacted the ordinance upon which defendant’s rights are based, and which, in sec. 1, authorized the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company to “operate a single or double track for street railways for the carrying of passengers” on the streets in question from the city limits to a proposed terminal of that company at Wells and Fifth streets, in the heart of the city. Sec. 2 provided that that company shall operate “over the street railway local [455]*455and interurban cars and carriages by means of power produced by electricity, . . . provided, however, said railway company shall at all times operate a reasonably convenient local street railway service,” etc. In sec. 4 the city reserved the right to grant the use of tracks atid power to any other company “operating any interurban railway or suburban street railway whose business is of a like nature.” Sec.. 11 provided that if the city elected to purchase the property of the company, the latter would have the right to run over the line “cars coming from interurban lines.” Sec. 13 provided that the franchise would be void unless the company constructed, connected, and operated twenty miles of railway north of the city limits within two years. Sec. 15 authorized the company to leave the main tracks within the city limits, to connect with a terminal station within the city, and to build connecting tracks from such terminal to its main track and other “electric roads.”

There was no definition or explanation in that ordinance as to what the “interurban cars,” “interurban railway,” or “interurban lines,” mentioned in the ordinance, were to be authorized to carry within the city limits, although it is manifest from contemporaneous events in which the company and the city participated that the subject matter, of the proposed carriage, and the propriety of specifying such subject matter in municipal permits or ordinances, was in the minds of the parties. Thus, in the permit which the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company then obtained for that portion of its project in the town of Milwaukee, which extended up to the Milwaukee city limits, it defined the cars as “interurban cars carrying passengers, merchandise, freight, and package goods.” On the other hand, it appears that the Milwaukee. Northern Railway Company withdrew an application for a franchise over; additional streets in the city of Milwaukee, to enable the city on February 26, 1906, to grant a franchise to the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric [456]*456Railway Company; that that franchise also provided that if the city elected to purchase the line, the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Company would have the right to run over such line its cars “coming" from interurban lines;” but that in that franchise the subject matter authorized to be carried and the limitation thereon were specified by the express provision that the business of the grantee, “its successors and assigns, shall be limited to the transportation of passengers, mail, express, and baggage, and that no freight shall be carried by the said grantee . . . over the right of way hereby granted.”

As that franchise of the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Company, with those provisions, was granted within four weeks of the granting of the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company franchise, and both franchises contained reciprocal provisions for the issuance and acceptance of transfers issued to passengers on either line, the officers of the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company and of the city were undoubtedly familiar with all provisions in both franchises, and aware of the express grant to the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Company of authority to carry mail, express, and baggage as well as passengers, and of the entire omission in the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company franchise to specify any subject of carriage excepting passengers. Is not that omission of considerable significance in construing that franchise ? In a matter of such importance, and which was the subject of enactment in contemporaneous franchises in which the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company was interested, it is hardly conceivable that the omission was inadvertent.

A comparative study of the provisions in the permit issued by the town of Milwaukee and in the franchises granted by the city of Milwaukee to the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Company and the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company, respectively, rather indicates that “interurban” [457]*457service was intended to include the transportation of (1) passengers, merchandise, freight, and package goods in the town of Milwaukee; (2) and, within the city limits, passengers, mail, express, and baggage, but not freight on the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Company line; and (3) passengers only on the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company lines. At all events, there is no provision in the franchise of the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company of March 22, 1906, authorizing the operation on city streets of interurban cars used exclusively for carrying freight.

Likewise, it does not follow that the right to any such exclusive use of interurban cars was contemplated under the franchise of March 22, 1906, even if the word “interurban,” as applied to a line of railway, had in 1906 the definite meaning which defendant now ascribes to it in its brief, when it says : “It clearly imported the meaning that the line was to operate from one urban community to another for the carriage of passengers and property.” In that connection defendant refers to the opinions in Milwaukee L., H. & T. Co. v. Milwaukee-Northern R. Co. 132 Wis. 313, 112 N. W. 663, and Beloit, D. L. & J. R. Co. v. Macloon, 136 Wis. 218, 116 N. W. 897, as illustrating the manner in which this court, in discussing then existing statutes, referred to interurban railways as “carrying passengers and freight,” “for the carriage of either passengers or freight,” “for the carriage of through passengers or freight.” Nothing was said then or in subsequent decisions, or in legislative enactments in this state, that warrants the conclusion that the word “interurban,” when applied to a railway, necessarily or unequivocally means both freight and passenger service, or the operation of some cars exclusively for freight service. Consequently, on its face, the franchise, authorizing the Milwaukee Northern Railway Company over certain city streets “to operate a single or double track for street railways for the carrying of passengers” and to “operate over the street rail[458]

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Related

City of Milwaukee v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.
245 N.W. 853 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
237 N.W. 64, 205 Wis. 453, 76 A.L.R. 1180, 1931 Wisc. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-milwaukee-v-milwaukee-electric-railway-light-co-wis-1931.