Oil City v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.

68 Pa. Super. 77, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 76
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1917
DocketAppeal, No. 162
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 Pa. Super. 77 (Oil City v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oil City v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co., 68 Pa. Super. 77, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 76 (Pa. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

This appeal involves a consideration of the power of cities of the third class to require telephone and telegraph companies to place their wires under ground in limited districts within the municipal territory and the legal capacity of a telephone company maintaining telephone lines and doing business in such city to construct and operate a conduit within such district in which other telephone and telegraph companies in such district may be required to place their lines on such reasonable terms as may be lawfully established. The authority of such cities to require corporations or individuals owning electric wires to place the same in underground conduits is affirmed by the appellant both because of the general police power of the [81]*81city and the special authority conferred by the Act of June 12, 1913, P. L. 489. Among the powers conferred on cities of the third class by the Act of May 23, 1889, are the authority to keep the streets, avenues, alleys and lanes within the city in good order and repair and in safe passable condition and to make all such ordinances, by-laws, rules and regulations not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the Commonwealth as may be expedient or necessary in the proper management, care and control of the city and the maintenance of its peace, good government and welfare. This is very broad authority and covers the police power of a municipality. This power extends to the protection of the lives, health, comfort and peace of all persons and the protection of all property. It is a power which cannot be alienated, surrendered or abridged for it is the exercise of a function of government without which the State would become incapable of protecting the rights which it was organized to safeguard. It was said in Patterson v. Kentucky, 97 U. S. 501, “By the settled doctrines of this court the police power extends at least to the protection of the lives, the health and the property of the community against the injurious exercise of any citizen of his own rights.” The ordinance which the appellant seeks to enforce belongs undoubtedly in the category of police regulations. Its object is to abate what has grown ,to be an evil in congested districts in cities and a menace to the public welfare and was described in People ex rel. N. Y. Elec. Lines v. Squire, 107 N. Y. 593, as an evil so great that every large city is covered with a network of cables and wires attached to poles, houses, buildings and elevated structures bringing danger, inconvenience and annoyance to the public. The ordinance in question was intended to restrain and control in a measure at least the annoyance and obstruction created by the large number of poles and telephone and telegraph wires maintained on designated streets and to secure the greater safety of the city from fires and electrical accidents as well as the [82]*82removal of the many poles which obstructed to a greater or less degree freedom of travel on the parts of the streets affected by the regulation. The primary purpose of these thoroughfares was convenience to the public in traveling and while their use has been granted to electrical, water, gas and other companies suc'h use is necessarily subordinate to the primary purpose as ways of passage and the occupancy of the streets by such companies is subject to reasonable regulation in the promotion of general advantage to the community. It is an established principle that every property owner "holds title under the implied liability that his use of it shall not be injurious to the rights of the community. The right to maintain telephone and telegraph wires along the streets of a city is not absolute although such occupancy may be under municipal consent; it is subject to such regulation as the public interests demand. When, therefore, the safety and comfort of the community require that electrical wires be placed in conduits beneath the surface such regulation is as lawful as would be one which required the wires to be placed above the ground' or in a conduit along the surface or that prescribed the kind and location of poles to be used. The propriety of removing the poles and wires in the manner proposed by the city is not questioned and the facts disclosed by the evidence and the findings of the learned trial judge are a sufficient justification of the municipal action providing for the placing of the wires in the conduit. This right of regulation has been recently considered in Duquesne Lighting Co. v. Pittsburgh, 251 Pa. 557, in which case it was said: “The right of a municipality to exercise control over the erection and maintenance of poles and electric wires in the streets and to compel them to be removed or the wires placed underground, where the safety or convenience of the public requires such action, has been generally recognized.” It was there held to be settled law of the subject that the companies which in the prosecution of [83]*83their business required the stringing of wires for the transmission of electrical currents are peculiarly subject to police regulations in order to protect the public against the nuisance and dangers to life and property which are threatened by the network of wires which now encircle and interlace a large .city. In Com. v. Warwick et al., 185 Pa. 623, it was held that while the city had parted with its- power to designate the streets to be occupied by the telephone company it expressly retained the authority to regulate the manner of occupation which includes the power to compel the adoption from time to time of all reasonable and generally accepted improvements which tend to decrease the obstruction of the streets or increase the safety or convenience of the public in their use. The same principle is applied' in American Telegraph and Telephone Co. v. Mill Creek Twp., 195 Pa. 613, where the authority of the road commissioners of a township to compel the removal of telephone poles from one part of a highway to another was involved. The decisions in the federal courts and the courts of other states concur in the judgment that legislation compelling companies using electric wires to place the same in conduits beneath the surface is the exercise of police power and is a reasonable regulation merely of the mode in which the companies may exercise their franchises.

It is not necessary, however, to rely on the power implied in the general grant to the city of authority to legislate for the general welfare of the community, for the Act of June 12, 1913, expressly empowers such municipalities to require companies using electric light, telephone and telegraph wires to place the same in conduits within certain districts, and it is the refusal of the defendant to comply with this requirement of which the plaintiff complains. Objection is made to the enforcement of the ordinance because the conduit constructed and operated by the Petroleum Telephone Company is not such a conduit as is covered by the provisions of the [84]*84act referred to and because that company is not authorized to maintain such a conduit.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Pa. Super. 77, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oil-city-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-pasuperct-1917.