City of Osceola v. Middle States Utilities Co.

257 N.W. 340, 219 Iowa 192
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 20, 1934
DocketNo. 42193.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 340 (City of Osceola v. Middle States Utilities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Osceola v. Middle States Utilities Co., 257 N.W. 340, 219 Iowa 192 (iowa 1934).

Opinions

Albert, J.

Prior to October 1, 1897, the Iowa Telephone Company installed and operated a local and long distance telephone system in and through the city of Osceola, Iowa. The Clearfield & *193 Mt. Ayr Telephone Company built a long distance line through said cily in November, 1897. The Southern Iowa Telephone Company, as successor to the Clearfield & Mt. Ayr Company, put in operation a local exchange in said city in 1901. In March, 1913, the city, by proper ordinance and an election, granted a franchise to Ayres-Emary-Gibson to operate a local telephone exchange in Osceola. The franchise thus acquired was transferred to the Clarke County Mutual Telephone Company, which put in such local exchange. In December, 1920, the Iowa Telephone Company changed its name to the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company. Through a series of transfers, the dates of which are not material here, all the rights of all these companies eventually (in March, 1929) were transferred to the Middle States Utilities Company of Iowa. On September 1, 1929, the Middle States Utilities Company raised the rates charged for telephone service in said city to- $3.75 for an individual wall bush ness telephone and $2.25 for an individual wall residence telephone, per month. A 25-cent reduction was' allowed if paid by the 10th of the month. In October, 1929, the petition in this action was filed in the district court of Clarke county, Iowa.

On the 5th day of April, 1897, the said city of Osceola passed two ordinances alleged to grant franchises, one to the Iowa Telephone Company and one to the Clearfield & Mt. Ayr Telephone Company for the establishment of local exchanges in said city. As will be later shown, neither of these transactions had any validity because of the lack of power on the part of the city to grant the same.

The first question raised by the appellant is bottomed on the following conceded facts: That the telephone company, “an Iowa corporation,” constructed a long distance telephone system through the town of Osceola and put in operation a local system prior to October 1, 1897, and it is the claim of the present holder of the rights of the Iowa Telephone Company that it thereby acquired a perpetual franchise to operate such local and long distance system in said town of Osceola.

This gives rise to a question that has on several occasions been before this court. The right to grant such franchises is a part of the sovereignty of the state, and prior to the date on which the Code of 1897 went into operation, that power rested with the legislature. In pursuance thereof, the legislature enacted section 1324 of the Code of 1873, and following the same the General Assembly enacted chapter 104 of the Acts of the Nineteenth General Assembly. The *194 material part of the aforesaid section 1324 of the Code of 1873 reads as follows:

“Any person or company may construct a telegraph line along the public highways of this state, or across the rivers or over any lands belonging to the state or to any private individual, and may erect the necessary fixtures therefor.”

The amendment made to said section by the aforesaid Nineteenth General Assembly was to insert after the word “telegraph” in the first line thereof the words “or telephone”. The purpose of this amendment was to extend to telephone companies the same rights as were given to the telegraph companies in the aforesaid section 1324. This court has held that a telephone company which constructed its lines, either long distance or local or both, in a city or town, under the aforesaid amended section, thereby acquired a perpetual franchise for the use and occupation of the streets and alleys of such town, subject to the reserved rights of the state. This is the conclusion reached in our cases as follows: Chamberlain v. Iowa Telephone Co., 119 Iowa 619, 93 N. W. 596; State v. Nebraska Telephone Co., 127 Iowa 194, 103 N. W. 120; State v. Chariton Telephone Co., 173 Iowa 497, 155 N. W. 968; State v. Iowa Telephone Co., 175 Iowa 607, 154 N. W. 678, Ann. Cas. 1917E, 539.

It is undisputed in the record that prior to the taking effect of the Code of 1897 on the 1st of October, the Iowa Telephone Company had constructed a toll line system and a local telephone system in the city of Osceola, and that it was occupying the streets and alleys of said town, and had some fifty-five local telephones in operation in said town, connected with said system. It follows of necessity, therefore, that the rights of the Iowa Telephone Company to so conduct said system and occupy the streets and alleys of said town were perpetual, under our prior holdings. The city answers this proposition by asserting that, while this might be true as an original proposition, whatever rights the company had were lost by abandonment and nonuser.

To a fair understanding of this contention on the part of the city some further statements from the record must be made. First, as to the two ordinances referred to, one granting a franchise to the Iowa Telephone Company and the other to the Clearfield & Mt. Ayr Company, it. is to be said that at the time they were passed (in April, 1897) the city had no authority whatever to pass such *195 ordinances and no election was ever held to ratify the same, which, of course, could not add validity under the law as it then existed; and, further, they expired on the 5th day of April, 1922, so they have no bearing on any of the questions involved herein.

What is known in the record as the Ayres-Emary-Gibson ordinance was passed in March, 1913, was a regular ordinance followed by an election, and granted a franchise to operate a local telephone exchange in Osceola. Among other provisions contained therein was a provision that the grantees or their assigns shall not “charge in excess of the following rates, which shall be;-collected not oftener than monthly: * * * For the use of such telephone ^g gum 0£ $p_Q0 per month * *. For the use of telephones in business houses, offices or places other than dwellings, a sum not to exceed $1.50 per month;” and it is the claim of the appellees that the telephone company has no right to increase its charges in excess of those above specified, and therefore that the appellees were entitled to the injunctive relief granted by the lower court.

That there may be such a thing as an abandonment of a franchise is held and discussed in the following cases: New Jersey, Given, Prosecutor v. Wright, 117 U. S. 648, 6 S. Ct. 907, 29 L. Ed. 1021; Thompson v. Schenectady R. Co. (C. C.) 124 F. 274; New York Elec. Lines Co. v. Empire City Subway Co., 235 U. S. 179, 35 S. Ct. 72, 59 L. Ed. 184; Todd v. Citizens Gas Co. of Indianapolis (C. C. A.) 46 F. (2d) 855; Wright v. Milwaukee Elec. Ry. & Light Co., 95 Wis. 29, 69 N. W. 791, 36 L. R. A. 47, 60 Am. St. Rep. 74; while in some of the states it is held that this doctrine of abandonment does not apply where the granting power has not given its consent. 12 R. C. L. p. 204, section 28. But, as a fundamental doctrine in all cases that have been brought to our attention, one of the necessary elements to constitute an abandonment is an intention to abandon; nonuser is not sufficient. See State v. Twin Village Water Co., 98 Me.

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Bluebook (online)
257 N.W. 340, 219 Iowa 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-osceola-v-middle-states-utilities-co-iowa-1934.