Gressette v. South Carolina Electric & Gas Co.

635 S.E.2d 538, 370 S.C. 377, 2006 S.C. LEXIS 305
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 2, 2006
DocketNo. 26203
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 635 S.E.2d 538 (Gressette v. South Carolina Electric & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gressette v. South Carolina Electric & Gas Co., 635 S.E.2d 538, 370 S.C. 377, 2006 S.C. LEXIS 305 (S.C. 2006).

Opinion

Justice MOORE:

Appellants (Landowners) commenced this class action against respondent (SCE & G) for trespass, unjust enrichment, an injunction, and declaratory judgment. Landowners claim SCE & G’s conveyance of excess capacity on its fiber optic cables was an improper use of the electric easements granted by Landowners to SCE & G. The trial judge granted SCE & G’s motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), SCRCP. We reverse.

FACTS

A motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) must be based solely on the allegations set forth in the complaint and [379]*379we must presume all well-pled facts to be true. Overcash v. South Carolina Elec. and Gas Co., 364 S.C. 569, 614 S.E.2d 619 (2005). The complaint here alleges the following.

Landowners granted easements to SCE & G giving SCE & G “the right to construct, operate, and maintain electric transmission lines and all telegraph and telephone lines ... necessary or convenient in connection therewith....”1 Sometime in the 1990’s, SCE & G began installing fiber optic communications lines on its existing poles in these easements. Fiber optic lines do not carry electricity but transmit digital signals. After setting up this communications network,2 SCE & G began conveying excess fiber optic capacity to third-party telecommunications companies without notice or compensation to Landowners.

Landowners’ complaint further alleges that the easements granted to SCE & G do not include the right to apportion any part of these easements to third parties for general telecommunications purposes. Landowners do not contest SCE & G’s installation and use of the fiber optic lines for its own internal communications.

For purposes of the motion to dismiss, the trial judge accepted as true the allegation that the language of the easements does not allow third-party communications, but found the written easements were not determinative in light of this Court’s precedent in Lay v. State Rural Electrification Auth., 182 S.C. 32, 188 S.E. 368 (1936), Leppard v. Central Carolina Tel. Co., 205 S.C. 1, 30 S.E.2d 755 (1944), and Richland County v. Palmetto Cablevision, 261 S.C. 222, 199 S.E.2d 168 (1973). The trial judge concluded these cases stand for the proposition that utility easements “confer a broad right to use the utility easement for additional purposes” and therefore SCE & G’s conveyance was authorized as a matter of law.

[380]*380ISSUE

Does the holder of a utility easement have the right to apportion part of its own use to third-parties as a matter of law and without reference to the written easements?

DISCUSSION

Our resolution of this case rests on our reading of Lay, Leppard, and Palmetto Cablevision. Since we must presume as true the allegation that the language of the easements does not allow SCE & G to convey use of its fiber optic cable to third parties, the issue is whether these cases allow apportionment of the use of a utility easement as a matter of law despite the language of the written easements.

In Lay, a 1936 case, we considered whether the placing of an electric line on a highway easement constituted an additional servitude. At issue was an Act of the General Assembly allowing the Rural Electrification Authority to install electric lines in any public highway. The plaintiff landowners contended it was a taking without compensation to allow this additional servitude of the easements granted to the State “for highway purposes.” We held the placement of electric lines in the highway easements did not constitute an additional servitude because communication was within the traditional use of a highway. There was no issue regarding whether the written easements in Lay prohibited an apportionment of use to third parties. We simply held the erection of electric lines was not an additional servitude to easements that were granted “for highway purposes.”

In 1944, we decided the Leppard case which involved § 8531 of the 1932 Code, now S.C.Code Ann. § 58-9-2020 (1977). This section provides:

Any telegraph or telephone company ... may construct, maintain and operate its line . . . under, over, along and upon any of the highways or public roads of the State....

The complaining landowner had previously conveyed “an unqualified right of way” to the State Highway Department. The issue was whether the erection of telephone lines in the highway easement was an additional servitude entitling the landowner to compensation. We followed our earlier decision [381]*381in Lay and concluded the erection of telephone poles and lines within the highway easement was not an addition servitude and no compensation was due. Again, no restrictive language in the underlying easement was involved.

The third case, Palmetto Cablevision, was decided in 1973. Palmetto Cablevision did not involve private landowners but was an action by Richland County (County) essentially seeking to assert County’s authority over cable television services. Cablevision had an agreement with a telephone company to use the telephone company’s poles and rights-of-way and was required under the terms of that agreement to obtain consent from the State and private landowners, but not from County.

We found County’s permission to use these easements was not required and, even if it was, the facts indicated such permission was actually given. 199 S.E.2d at 172. We held that the telephone company’s easement was very broadly defined by statute and the stringing of additional cables for newly conceived communication uses was authorized without County’s permission.3 199 S.E.2d at 173. In essence, we found the television cables did not constitute an additional servitude on the underlying telephone easements. Again, the case did not involve restrictive language in the easements.4

SCE & G would have us read these three cases as standing for the proposition that the use of a utility easement may be apportioned as a matter of law without reference to the language of the easement itself. We disagree.

First, Lay, Leppard, and Palmetto Cablevision, while settling the issue of an additional servitude, did not involve restrictions on the apportionment of an allowed use. As other courts have noted, the issue of apportionment is a slightly different issue from that of additional servitude. Where an easement is granted for some category of use, for instance [382]*382“highway purposes,” the question of an additional servitude addresses whether some new use fits within that category of allowed use, a question that may turn simply on an evaluation of the new use rather than an interpretation of the easement’s language. Apportionment, on the other hand, involves the interpretation of a restriction on the easement holder’s conveyance of part of its own allowed use to a third party. See Jackson v. City of Auburn,

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Bluebook (online)
635 S.E.2d 538, 370 S.C. 377, 2006 S.C. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gressette-v-south-carolina-electric-gas-co-sc-2006.