GREENVILLE & MP & L. CO. v. Thomas

131 So. 2d 659, 241 Miss. 633, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 382
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1961
Docket41898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 131 So. 2d 659 (GREENVILLE & MP & L. CO. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GREENVILLE & MP & L. CO. v. Thomas, 131 So. 2d 659, 241 Miss. 633, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 382 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

*641 McGehee, C. J.

On January 21, 1910, the City of Greenville for a recited cash consideration of $4,950 acquired from the Delta Fair Association a deed of conveyance for 13.2 acres of land, and which deed contained a certain provision, the pertinent part of which is that the grantee was to hold, maintain and keep open the land for the purpose of a park. For several years and prior to 1950 the land has been known as the Greenway Park. The appellees, S. B. Thomas and others, own residential properties in the City of Greenville which abut the north side of the said park.

The special charter of the City of Greenville, which was evidently granted prior to the happenings hereinafter mentioned, provides in Section 17, subparagraph 8 thereof, that the city shall have power among other things; “To grant to any person or corporation the use of the streets, alleys and public grounds for the use of laying * # * conduits for electric power * * * wires to *642 be used in furnishing or supplying the city and inhabitants or any person or corporation .with * * * lights.”

In other words, at the time the 13.2 acres of land was deeded to the City of Greenville, the grantee’s special charter contained the above quoted provision. This was before the appellees acquired their residential properties which abut the north side of the said park.

At sometime prior to the year 1950 the appellant Mississippi Power & Light Company, which the consent of the appellant City Council of Greenville, began to use'1' 'the north 30 feet of the Greenway Park as an easement for erecting and maintaining its power lines across the land. On June 20, 1950, the City Council of Greenville granted unto the Mississippi Power and Light Company an easement for the erection of transmission lines and towers across the north 100 feet of said park land. Thereupon the said Mississippi Power & Light Company entered upon the north 100 feet of said park and erected 50-foot steel towers and electrical transmission lines thereon.

Section 2778, Code of 1942, the source of which is Chapter 233, Laws of 1926, provides as follows: “All companies or associations of persons incorporated or organized for such purposes are authorized and empowered to erect, place and maintain their posts, wires and conductors along and across any of the public highways, streets or waters and along and across all turnpikes, railroads and canals, and also through any of the public lands; but the same shall be so constructed and placed as not to be dangerous to persons or property; nor interfere with the common use of such roads, streets, or waters; nor with the use of the wires of other wire-.using companies; or more than is necessary with the convenience of any landowner.”

Section 2780, Code of 1942, provides, among other things, that: “All companies, associations of persons, municipalities, associations of municipalities, or natural *643 gas districts, incorporated or organized for the purpose of building* or constructing pipelines and appliances for the conveying and distribution of oil or gas or for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating lines for transmitting electricity for lighting, heating* and power purposes, are hereby empowered to exercise the right of eminent domain in the manner now provided by law, and to build and construct the said pipelines and appliances along and across highways, *■* *, and public lands, above or below grounds, but not in a manner to be dangerous to persons or property, nor to interfere with the common use of such roads, * * *, and public lands.”

Section 3374-120, Code of. 1942 Rec., provides, among other things, the following: “The governing authorities of municipalities shall have the power to grant to any person, corporation, or association, on such terms and conditions as the governing* authorities may prescribe, the use of the streets, alleys and other public grounds for the purpose of laying, constructing, repairing and maintaining gas, water, sewer, or steam pipes or conduits for electric light, telegraph and telephone lines, and pipe lines for the purpose of transporting * * *, gasoline and other commodities transportable by pipeline.”

On July 27, 1960, the appellees, S. B. Thomas and others, filed their original bill of complaint against the appellants City Council of Greenville and the Mississippi Power & Light Company, for a permanent, mandatory and prohibitory injunction to require the appellant City Council of Greenville to remove that portion of the street known as Causey Drive where it crosses the north 30 feet of Greenway Park, and to require the appellant Mississippi Power & Light Company to remove its transmission lines and towers from the north 100 feet of the said Greenway Park, or, in the alternative to place its transmission lines underground, the bill of *644 complaint alleging that the 50-foot steel towers and high voltage electric transmission lines constitute an attractive nuisance for the children using the said park, and constitute a dangerous hazard for children flying kites and model airplanes in the said park. But nowhere in the bill of complaint is it alleged that the portion of Causey Drive running across the northern end of Green-way Park substantially or materially interfered or interferes with the use of Greenway Park as a park. There is no allegation that its usefulness as a park has been destroyed or seriously impaired.

The appellants each filed a general demurrer and a special demurrer to the bill of complaint. The grounds of the general demurrer were (1) that there is no equity on the face of the bill, (2) that the bill of complaint failed to state a cause of action, and (3) that the original jurisdiction to regulate the operation and maintenance of the facilities of the Mississippi Power & Light Company is vested exclusively in the Mississippi Public Service Commission. The special demurrers asserted the additional ground that the bill of complaint was multifarious and that the same was barred by the ten-year and six-year statutes of limitation. The demurrers were all overruled, and on motion of the defendants an interlocutory appeal to settle the principles of the case and to avoid expense and delay, was granted with supersedeas, upon the filing of an appeal bond by the defendant Mississippi Power & Light Company in the sum of $1,-000, within the time provided by law, — no appeal bond being required of the defendant City Council of Green-ville.

The declared public policy of this State, as evidenced by such statutes as Section 2778, 2780, 7723, 7737 and 4070, Code of 1942, is to encourage the development of the public utilities by affording them the right to place their lines along the streets and highways. This *645 was expressly declared in the case of Gandy v. Public Service Corp. of Miss., 163 Miss. 187, 140 So. 687.

In reaching our conclusion that the general and special demurrers interposed by both the City of Greenville and the Mississippi Power & Light Company should have been sustained, we base our decision on Section 17, sub-paragraph 8, of the special charter of the City of Green-ville, and upon Sections 2778 and 2780, Code of 1942.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 2d 659, 241 Miss. 633, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenville-mp-l-co-v-thomas-miss-1961.