Fort Worth & Rio Grande Railway Co. v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co.

71 S.W. 270, 96 Tex. 160, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 115
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1903
DocketNo. 1124.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 270 (Fort Worth & Rio Grande Railway Co. v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fort Worth & Rio Grande Railway Co. v. Southwestern Telegraph & Telephone Co., 71 S.W. 270, 96 Tex. 160, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 115 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Certified questions from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District, as follows:

“This is a condemnation proceeding instituted by the Southwestern Telegraph and Telephone Company against the Port Worth & Rio Grande Railway Company, and resulting in a judgment in favor of the Telegraph and Telephone Company, in accordance with and subject to the limitations stated in its petition, and an appeal by the railway company. The essential averments of the plaintiff’s petition are as follows:

“ ‘That the plaintiff is a corporation duly incorporated and is duly authorized and empowered to do business as a telegraph and telephone company in the State of Texas, having complied fully with the requirements of the law relative to foreign corporations in that regard and holding a permit from the State of Texas to do business therein. And plaintiff further says that it is duly and legally authorized and empowered to erect, own, operate and maintain magnetic telegraph and telephone lines for the use of the public in the rapid transmission of intelligence in the States of Texas, Arkansas, Mew York and elsewhere in the United States of America, being duly chartered for that purpose.

“‘4. That the said defendant is a public highway and postroad of the United States; and that plaintiff has, in all things, complied with the acts of the Congress of the United States in such cases made and provided, and has filed its written acceptance of all the restrictions and obligations imposed by the acts of Congress, with the Postmaster-General of the United States, as is required by law, and that plaintiff is entitled to all the rights and privileges conferred upon telegraph companies by the acts of Congress of the United States in such cases made and provided.

“‘5. That the defendant is a private corporation duly incorporated and organized and transacting the business usually conducted by railway companies in the public service of carrying passengers, freights and the United States mails for hire, being a postroad. This business defendant conducts through and over its railroad, known as Port Worth & Rio Grande Railroad, by it owned and operated from and between the cities of Stephenville and Brownwood, in the State of Texas, and passing through the cities of Dublin, Comanche and other towns in the State of Texas.

“ ‘7. That plaintiff has already built and is maintaining a system of several thousand miles of telegraph and telephone lines in the State *167 of Texas, Arkansas and New York, by it now owned and operated for the use of the public for the rapid transmission of intelligence for commercial purposes and for other public purposes.

“ ‘8. That as an addition to the part of the said system of telegraph and telephone lines now maintained and operated by plaintiff as aforesaid, and to be used for the same purposes as said system (to wit, to the service of the public) and in connection therewith, plaintiff desires to build upon defendant’s right of way a telegraph and telephone line, hereinafter called ‘additional line/ from the said city of Stephenville, in Erath County, Texas, in a southerly direction, at a distance near to and parallel with (except as hereinafter shown) defendant’s main line of railway to the city of Brownwood, in Brown County, Texas.

“ ‘9. That plaintiff and defendant, after considering this matter together, can not agree upon a purchase by plaintiff of a right of way upon, along and over said lands and property, hereinafter more particularly described, for said additional line, nor can they agree as to amount of damages that may be caused to the lands and property of defendant by the construction, operation and maintenance thereon of the said additional line, hence plaintiff desires to have a right of way along, upon and over the said lands and property condemned in accordance with law, in order that plaintiff may lawfully construct, operate and maintain thereon its said additional telegraph and telephone lines.

“TO. That plaintiff shall locate said telegraph and telephone (additional line) at a distance of thirty-five feet from and in a direction easterly of the center line between the rails of the main track of defendant’s railway, and parallel with said center line of said railway, except where deflections are made as herein elsewhere shown; that in order to do so, it will be necessary and most advantageous for plaintiff to build, operate and maintain its said (additional) line in, along, upon and over certain land owned and occupied by the defendant as a right of way for its said railroad, at the place and in the manner herein indicated, which land is hereinafter more fully described, and the points of entering upon and leaving the said land are hereinafter specially given.

“ Tl. That the poles, wires and crossarms shall be so placed upon said land and at all times thereon so kept and maintained as not to obstruct any private roadway or railway crossing; and so as not to impede the free use by the said defendant of the said lands for the purpose of accommodating public travel upon said railway; and so as not to impede the defendant in the use of said railroad for any other purpose as a common carrier; and so as not to obstruct the free use of or come in contact with any other telegraph or telephone line now existing upon the said land, along and upon the right of way of the defendant over the same, and in such manner as not to interfere with any structure, drain or ditch upon the defendant’s right of way now there existing and by defendant used in its railway purposes, or that may hereafter be there placed by defendant in the necessary use of its right of way for railway purposes.

*168 ‘And plaintiff shall only have an easement in defendant’s right of way for the purpose of building, operating and maintaining thereon its said telegraph and telephone line, having ingress and egress to and from said lands for that purpose, and the building, operating and maintaining of said line shall not prevent free passage under the wire to defendant, nor the use of timbers, soil, rock, gravel, or any other material between the poles or beyond the wires from the railway; and if the defendant shall at any time desire to change the location of its tracks, or to construct any new tracks or sidetracks, or erect any depots or other structures, or to open any gravel pits or rock quarries, or to remove any material or soil, or in case the poles and wires shall be found to interfere with the running or operating of cars or trains upon defendant’s tracks; or to endanger the safety of employes of defendant or passengers traveling on defendant’s trains, then the plaintiff shall remove poles and wires from the point of interference, at its own cost, to any point on defendant’s right of way or on the same side of defendants main track of railway, near and adjacent to the former position occupied by said poles and wires as may be designated by defendant, such removal to take place after written notice for a reasonable time to be given plaintiff by defendant, stating why the removal is desired and the place to which the removal shall be made.

“ T2.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 270, 96 Tex. 160, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-rio-grande-railway-co-v-southwestern-telegraph-telephone-tex-1903.