Mayor of Wilmington v. Addicks

8 Del. Ch. 310
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 5, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 Del. Ch. 310 (Mayor of Wilmington v. Addicks) 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
Mayor of Wilmington v. Addicks, 8 Del. Ch. 310 (Del. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

The Chancellor:—

This cause is brought to a hearing before me upon bill, plea, answer in support of plea, replication, and proofs.

The substance of the plea is that the bill does not contain proper parties. It alleges that the respondents named in the bill are the officers, agents, and employees of the Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware; “that the said company is a duly incorporated corporation of the State of Delaware, duly organized under its charter, and properly authorized to build gas works and lay gas pipes in the streets of the city of Wilmington; that the said defendants above named were engaged in the laying of pipes, as set out in the bill of complaint, solely and only as the officers, agents, and employees ®f the said Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware, and claim no right to lay such pipes save and only by and through the authority and direction of the said Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware, yet the said complain *325 ant has not made the said Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware a party defendant to the said bill, although said Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware ought to have been made a defendant.”

This plea, if found to be sustained by the answer and proofs in the cause, discloses a. fatal objection to the bill as it now stands, and would entitle the respondents to a decree dismissing the bill, or an order, in accordance with the established precedents of the Court of Chancery in such cases, for the cause to stand over, with liberty to the complainants to amend their bill by making the Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware a party.

The defense made by that plea has been already made in the progress of this cause by demurrer, and the demurrer overruled by Chancellor ad litem, Henry R. Johnson. The Chancellor ad litem, in his opinion overruling the demurrer, analyzed the case as it was presented to him, and reviewed the allegations of the bill; but there is so much that is exceptional in the history of this cause, and in the manner in which the complicated and important questions it involves have been presented to the Court, that it is impossible to arrive at a clear comprehension of the issues actually presented at this stage of the long litigation, without a review of the whole case from the filing of the bill.

The complainants, the Mayor and Council of Wilmington, at the instance of Joseph L. Carpenter, Jr., J. Newlin Gawthrop, and Samuel Chambers, the Board of Directors of the Street and Sewer Department for the City of Wilmington, filed a bill in equity on the 2d day of April, 1891, against the defendants, John Edward Addicks, John G. Baker, Frederick P. Addicks, Simon B. Conde, and Samuel Austin.

The bill, after alleging the incorporation of the complainants and their powers over the streets of the City of Wilmington, the organization and powers of the Street and Sewer Department, and the rules and regulations prescribed by them, which are annexed and made a part of the bill, alleges as follows:

*326 “ (5) That the said Board of Directors of the Street and Sewer Department on the 30th day of March, A. D. 1891, was notified, in writing, by the counsel of certain persons, designated as the ‘ Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware,’ that it was the intention of said alleged company on the day following, to wit, on the 31st day of March, A. D. 1891, to begin the laying of gas pipe in the streets of said City; a full and true copy of which said notice is hereto annexed, marked ‘B,’ and your orators pray that the same may be taken and considered as a part of this bill of complaint.

“(6) That afterwards, to wit, on the day and year last aforesaid, pursuant to said notice, said defendants, John Edward Addicks, John G. Baker, Frederick P. Addicks, Simon B. Conde, and Samuel- Austin, together with sundry other persons to your orator unknown, claiming to be officers, servants, or agents of said alleged Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware, unlawfully, and without the permission of the said Board of Directors of the Street and Sewer Department, and without first'making application to said Board for such permisson, pursuant to the aforesaid rules and regulations of said Board, entered upon, opened, and excavated a certain street of said City known as ‘Liberty Street,’ for the purpose of laying gas pipes therein, and still continue engaged in the opening and excavation of said Street for the purpose aforesaid, and threaten and intend to enter upon, open, and excavate other streets of said City for the purpose of laying gas pipes therein.

“(7) That said defendants claim and pretend that they were and are authorized and empowered to enter upon, open, and excavate any and all streets of said City for the purpose of laying gas pipes therein under and by virtue of the charter of the said alleged Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware, without the consent or permission of said Board of Directors of the Street and Sewer Department, and without making any application to said Board, as required by the aforesaid rules or regulations of said Board.

“(8) That an act of incorporation entitled' ‘An act to-incorporate the Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Del *327 aware was passed by the General Assembly of this State on the 3d day of April, A. D. 1873,,a copy of which said act, marked ‘C,’ is hereto annexed, which your orator prays may be taken and considered as part of this bill of complaint, under which said act the said defendants claimed to be acting as aforesaid; but your orator is informed, believes and charges that no legal or valid organization of said company has ever been effected, and your orator denies that under, or by virtue of said act of incorporation, the said defendants, or any of them, have any right or authority to enter upon, open, or excavate any of the streets of said city for the purpose of laying gas pipes therein.

“(9) That your orator is advised, believes, and avers that the said alleged Oxy-Hydrogen- Company of the State of Delaware has not, and even if possessing a legal organization would not have, any right or authority, under the said act of incorporation, without the permission of said Board of Directors'of the Street and Sewer Department, to enter upon, open, or excavate any of the streets of said city for the purpose of laying gas pipes therein.

“(10) That, before the expenditure by or on behalf of the said alleged Oxy-Hydrogen Company of the State of Delaware of any money in or for the prosecution of the business for which said charter was granted, said Board of Directors of the Street and Sewer Department became possessed of and vested with entire jurisdiction and control of the streets of said city, as hereinabove set forth; and the power granted by said charter to said company to lay gas pipes in the streets in this State was thereby subordinated to the paramount power and authority of said Board to control the streets of said City and to prescribe and regulate the use thereof.

“ (11) That the opening and excavating of the streets of said City, as threatened and intended by the said defendants as aforesaid, would, in the opinion of your orator, be inexpedient, and in the highest degree detrimental to the health, convenience, and welfare of the public.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Del. Ch. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-wilmington-v-addicks-delch-1899.