City of Portland v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co.

68 A. 1040, 103 Me. 240, 1907 Me. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 68 A. 1040 (City of Portland v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Portland v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co., 68 A. 1040, 103 Me. 240, 1907 Me. LEXIS 39 (Me. 1907).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is an action of debt to recover the sum of $1484.00 for taxes assessed by the plaintiff city against the defendant corporation, for the year 1906. The case comes to this court upon agreed statement of facts. It is admitted that the defendant is a legally organized corporation authorized by the Private and Special Laws of 1885, chapter 513, to do business in this State, and that during the year 1906, it’ was carrying on a telephone business in the plaintiff city and throughout the State. The tax in question was assessed upon the conduits of the company, as real estate, and was in addition to an excise tax assessed by the State Assessors upon the defendant corporation by virtue of sections 35 to 41, inclusive, of chapter 8 of Revised Statutes.

The conduits in question were iron and earthenware tubes or pipes laid under the surface of the streets with branch pipes running to poles set along the sides of the streets and the buildings on the streets, through which wires were run for the purpose of connecting the telephones in the central office of the defendant corporation, with telephones in the buildings of their subscribers and patrons.

These conduits were laid in the streets of Portland under the authority of section- one of chapter 204 of the Private and Special Laws of 1891, and by virtue of licenses therefor' granted to the defendant corporation by the municipal officers of the City of Portland, under rules and regulations established by them. Section one of chapter 204 of the Private and Special Laws of 1891, reads as follows:

[243]*243"The New England Telephone and Telegraph Company may have the right to place its wires and cables under the surface of streets in the cities of Portland and Lewiston, with the permission and under the supervision of the municipal officers and subject to such rules and regulations as they may from time to time impose, and for that purpose may, when authorized by the board of mayor and aldermen of said cities, construct and maintain its cables, wires, conduits and manholes in any public way or street designated in such grant of authority.”

Section 1 of the rules and regulations established by the municipal officers of Portland, provides, that these conduits shall be constructed and maintained "in accordance with the regulations hereinafter provided, and subject to existing ordinances and such rules and regulations in addition to, or in amendment thereof, as may hereafter be passed.”

It is further provided by section nine of these regulations that the defendant company "shall remove its conduits to other suitable locations whenever ordered to do so by the board of mayor and áldermen,” and by article 5 of section 10, that the company "will at once comply with any changes in its conduits, manholes or poles that the board of mayor and aldermen may after hearing duly appointed, oi’der.” And section 11, is as follows:

- "Any authority granted by said board of mayor and aldermen may, after notice and hearing, be revoked or altered at any time without liability on the part of the city therefor; but in case any location in any street shall be revoked, a substitute location in some other street, that will in the opinion of the said board accommodate the service, shall be granted.”

Sections 36 and 41, chapter 8 of the Revised Statutes, prescribe the method of taxing telephone companies in this State, as follows : "Every corporation, association or person operating in whole or in part a telephone or telegraph line within the state for tolls or other compensation, shall pay to the treasurer of state for the use of the state an annual excise tax for the privilege of conducting such business within the state, which tax, with the tax provided for in section forty-one, is in place of all taxes upon the property of such corpo[244]*244ration, association or person employed in such business, and of all taxes upon the shares of the capital stock of any such corporation.”

"The excise tax collected under the six preceding sections shall be in lieu of all taxes upon any corporation therein designated, upon its shares of capital stock and its property used in the conduct of its telephone or telegraph business, including the poles, wires, insulators, office furniture, batteries, instruments, telegraphic and telephonic apparatus, telephones and transmitters used under lease or license or owned by such corporation, association or person; provided, however, that the real estate and also personal property not hereinabove exempted, owned by such corporation, association or person, shall be taxed in the municipality in which the same is situated; but the amount of the tax assessed upon such real estate if owned and actually used by such corporation, association or person in the transaction of their business, shall be deducted by the board of state assessors from the tax laid hereunder. The assessment of taxes on such real estate shall be legal, whether assessed as resident or non-resident property.”

Thus it appears that the only question to be determined by the court is whether the conduits of the defendant corporation were legally taxed as real estate by the City of Portland. The defendant contends that these conduits are not real estate and cannot therefore be legally taxed as such by the city.

The intention with which an article is annexed to the freehold has come to be recognized as the cardinal rule and most important criterion by which to determine its character as a fixture, and the attendant facts and circumstances are chiefly valuable as evidence of such intention. "This controlling intention is not the initial intention at the time of procuring the article in question, nor the secret intention with which it is affixed, but the intention which the law deduces from all the circumstances of the annexation.

If the annexation is not intended to be permanent, -the chattel will not be deemed a fixture.” Cyc. of Law & Proc. Vol. 19, pages 1046, 1047, and cases cited. In accordance with this view was the decision of this court in Telephone Co. v. Cyr, 95 Maine, 287, and the principles enunciated in that case are invoked by the defendant [245]*245company as decisive of the case at bar. The question involved in that case was whether the telephone line of the company, consisting of poles, wires and insulators was personal property as between debtor and creditor at the time of its seizure and sale on execution, and it was held by the court in that case that from such external facts as the nature of the structure and mode of attachment, the purpose and use for which the annexation was made and the relation and situation of the party making it, no intention to make a permanent annexation could be legally deduced and that the poles, wires and insulators there in question, continued to retain their character as chattels which might be seized and sold as personal property. In the opinion, the court say: "The only privilege granted in any particular spot, parcel, or portion of land is temporary and not permanent, a mere license revocable at the will of the municipal officers so far as any particular portion of the highway or any particular highway is concerned, and not a permanent vested interest in the land itself.”

"In determining the intention a most important consideration is the relation of the party making the annexation to the property in question. 1 Wash. Real. Prop. 5 Ed. page 22.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 1040, 103 Me. 240, 1907 Me. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-portland-v-new-england-telephone-telegraph-co-me-1907.