Delaware Power & Light Co. v. Terry

194 A.2d 553, 41 Del. Ch. 328, 1963 Del. Ch. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 19, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 A.2d 553 (Delaware Power & Light Co. v. Terry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware Power & Light Co. v. Terry, 194 A.2d 553, 41 Del. Ch. 328, 1963 Del. Ch. LEXIS 101 (Del. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

Seitz, Chancellor:

Plaintiff, Delaware Power & Light Company, seeks a declaratory judgment determining whether or not it is entitled to receive compensation for the relocation of its poles and wires situated along Sussex Road No. 556. The relocation was required by the reconstruction of the road by the defendant, the Delaware State Highway Department (“defendant”).

Plaintiff is a public utility corporation and, among other things, transmits electricity through wires erected upon poles. Plaintiff obtained grants of easements from the owners of lands abutting on Sussex Road No. 556 permitting it to place its poles and wires on such lands. The earliest of such easements was granted on October 20, 1939, and subsequent easements were obtained periodically with the last one being granted on May 26, 1959. Plaintiff from time to time installed its poles and wires along the roadway. In 1960, defendant engaged in a project of widening, relocating and resurfacing this public road, and the project required the use and occupancy of the land upon which plaintiff’s poles and wires were situated. Plaintiff relocated its poles and wires, but it was agreed by the parties that such action by the plaintiff was without prejudice to its present claim. Parenthetically, the defendant obtained easements for the purpose of widening the road from the abutting landowners.

Plaintiff contends that since its facilities were located on private property pursuant to easements granted by the owners thereof, the compulsory removal of such facilities was a taking of its property for [330]*330which it is entitled to receive just compensation. Defendant, on the other hand, maintains that plaintiff’s pole line was located without defendant’s permission within the highway right-of-way and therefore the relocation expenses incurred must be borne by it.

Defendant further asserts, in the alternative, that even if the poles and wires were not located within the right-of-way of the highway, they were located “along” the highway and that pursuant to 26 Del.C. § 901 the plaintiff was required to obtain the defendant’s consent before so locating its lines, which it failed to do. Parenthetically, as a condition of its giving such consent the defendant, as a matter of practice, requires a utility company to agree to relocate its facilities at its own expense when requested to do so. Defendant contends that plaintiff could not circumvent the consent requirement of the statute by erecting its lines “along” the highway without the Highway Department’s permission. Plaintiff denies that the statute in question applies to poles and lines erected on private property outside the highway right-of-way, which, it contends, was the situation here. Thus, plaintiff takes the position that its lines were not “along” the highway within the meaning of § 901 and urges that it was not obliged to obtain defendant’s consent before erecting its facilities.

I turn first to the claim of the defendant that it obtained a prior prescriptive right in the nature of a public right-of-way in the area where the plaintiff’s poles were located. Does the evidence in support of such claim establish the requisite adverse user?

Sussex Road No. 556 was laid out in 1809 as a public road pursuant to statute. I Del. Laws, Chap. 131(a). Both parties agree that the statutory width of this road was thirty feet. However, defendant contends that such width constituted a minimum standard and that in the present case the actual width of the road was extended by user to include the land upon which plaintiff’s facilities were subsequently located.

What are the facts ? The road here involved prior to its reconstruction was an unpaved country road without any definite bound[331]*331aries. The traveled portion was firmly packed and the sides sloped into a ditch line of soft dirt. Along most of this road outside the ditch line lay a growth of weeds which extended to cultivated areas. There were no fences or other monuments by which the boundaries of the road could be definitely fixed. Plaintiff’s facilities, with the exception of one pole as to which there is no claim, were located more than fifteen feet from the center line of the road. The poles stood at the edge of the cultivated portion of land and in some instances were surrounded by growing crops.

Prior to 1935, i.e., prior to the emplacement of any of plaintiff’s poles, the repair and maintenance of the road in question were under the supervision of the Levy Court of Sussex County. Since then such matters have been supervised by the defendant. Defendant’s employees testified that even in recent times no definite plan existed as to the extent of the roadway area to be maintained. In practice only that area was mowed which was not being used by the abutting owners. This maintenance, apart from general maintenance, consisted of scraping the road, keeping it clear of snow, and mowing the weeds twice a year whenever money was available. No evidence was submitted as to the area maintained prior to the erection of plaintiff’s poles, which took place from time to time from 1939 to 1959. Before their recent removal, some of the abutting owners plowed toward the road and beyond the poles with deviations to avoid the poles. This pattern of plowing suggests that had the poles not been physically present there, such areas would also have been plowed. Since defendant’s policy was to maintain only the area not under cultivation, it is not unreasonable to infer that the areas where the poles were located had not been maintained by defendant prior to their installation.

It is defendant’s contention that regardless of the limits of the road as set by statute, its maintenance action enlarged the right-of-way of the road by prescriptive use. Defendant says that this prescriptive use ripened before plaintiff obtained its easements to erect wires and poles and that plaintiff’s easements are inconsistent therewith. Certainly defendant obtained no prescriptive rights superior to plaintiff’s easements once plaintiff’s poles and wires were erected on the land.

[332]*332Did defendant obtain rights superior to plaintiff’s easements by prescriptive use? One may reasonably infer from the fact that the abutting owners granted easements to plaintiff for the erection of its facilities that they considered that they then had the right to make such conveyances. As to the maintenance by defendant of land beyond its right-of-way, such conduct was not of the character or consistency to warrant the inference that it was a user inconsistent with the rights of abutting owners. The proprietary action on the part of the abutting owners in granting easements to plaintiff when combined with defendant’s subservient attitude in its maintenance policy tends to rebut defendant’s claim of a prescriptive right to that portion of land upon which plaintiff’s facilities were located. In summary, defendant failed to sustain its burden of proving the requisite adverse user of the area involved.

It need not be decided in this proceeding whether the right-of-way itself presently extends beyond the thirty feet established by statute. All that has been decided here is that defendant did not acquire as against plaintiff superior rights to the area formerly occupied by plaintiff’s facilities.

I come next to the question as to whether plaintiff erected its lines contrary to the mandate of § 901 requiring the consent of defendant prior to the construction of such facilities “along any highways” within this state.

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Related

Terry v. Delaware Power & Light Co.
200 A.2d 423 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 A.2d 553, 41 Del. Ch. 328, 1963 Del. Ch. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-power-light-co-v-terry-delch-1963.