Parker-Young Co. v. State

145 A. 786, 83 N.H. 551, 1929 N.H. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedApril 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 145 A. 786 (Parker-Young Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker-Young Co. v. State, 145 A. 786, 83 N.H. 551, 1929 N.H. LEXIS 105 (N.H. 1929).

Opinion

Snow, J.

The issue presented at the hearing before the commission on the petition of Parker-Young Co. and Fox & Putnam was whether the public good would be promoted by permitting the former to take over by purchase the utility business and property of the latter and to carry on the manufacture and distribution of electrical energy in the town of Woodstock. The commission stated its conclusion as follows: “On account of the attitude taken by the public in North Woodstock and the selectmen of the town, we feel that the petition must be denied. If it were granted, it would be ineffective unless the selectmen would grant the new owners a location for its poles in the highways. The commission has no jurisdiction over granting these locations, that matter being entirely in the hands of the selectmen of the town. Without such locations, the company could not render *555 service, and, therefore, an order from this commission permitting it to do so would be futile.” It is apparent that, in the denial of the petition, controlling importance was given to the announced refusal of the selectmen of Woodstock to grant Parker-Young Co. pole locations. In the commission’s report upon the later petition of Baker River Co. for like authority, the expressed willingness of the selectmen of the three towns there involved to grant that company pole locations is recited by the commission as a ground for its favorable finding, showing that like force was given to the supposed power of the selectmen to grant or withhold licenses at their pleasure. That the controlling weight accorded to the attitude of the selectmen was common to the consideration of both petitions is further shown by the fact that the commission’s conclusion was expressly attributed to a rule of procedure, namely, “At the hearing on any such petition, the petitioner will be required to file certified copies of records showing that the necessary license or licenses, easement or easements to enable the petitioner to engage in business in the town or city in question have been granted.” Rules of Procedure, Pub. Serv. Com. xv. The citation of this rule as the basis of its findings, as well as repeated remarks of the chairman during the course of the hearings, shows that the commission regarded a preliminary assurance of the selectmen of their favorable action as a sine qua non to a finding for a petitioner.

Unless selectmen of towns have power, regardless of the order of the commission, to grant or to refuse licenses for pole locations, and are bound by their advanced pledges to issue or withhold the same, there was error in the ruling which gave controlling weight to the promises and refusals of these officers. That the selectmen have no such power, and are not so bound, cannot be open to doubt.

Such powers as the selectmen have with respect to public utilities rest on P. L., c. 97. By this statute the erection and maintenance of poles and structures in highways for the support of electric and other wires are forbidden except upon a license from the selectmen of the town through which the proposed line is to pass locating the route thereof and fixing their size, location, etc. The selectmen are given powers to limit the duration of such license, to change the terms and conditions thereof and to revoke the license whenever the public good requires. This statute, so far as here material, is a re-enactment of P. S., c. 81, ss. 1, 2 (1891), which preceded the establishment of the public service commission. Laws 1911, c. 164. The provisions of P. S., c. 81, were designed to regulate and control the use made of highways for utility purposes so that such use may not unduly inter *556 fere with the other public uses to which the highways are dedicated. American Loan &c. Co. v. Company, 71 N. H. 192, 200. It confers no express power upon the selectmen to determine who may and who may not occupy the highway with poles and wires, nor to choose between two utilities competing for the right. Any such authority which selectmen may have originally possessed under the statute arose by implication, as an incident to the general control of highway uses, and has been superseded by the express provisions of the public service commission act. Laws 1911, c. 164. By this act the legislature undertook by comprehensive provisions to institute a new system for the establishment and control of public utilities in the state. It created the public service commission as a state tribunal, imposing upon it important judicial duties and endowing it with large administrative and supervisory powers. Sec. 13a of the act provided as follows: “No public utility shall commence within this state the business of transmission of telephone or telegraph messages or of supplying the public with gas, electricity or water, or shall engage in such business or begin the construction of a plant, line, main or other apparatus or appliance intended to be used therein in any city or town in which at the time it shall not already be engaged in such business, or shall exercise any right or privilege under any franchise hereafter granted (or any franchise heretofore granted but not heretofore actually exercised) in such town, without first having obtained the permission and approval of the commission. The commission shall grant such permission whenever it shall, after due hearing, determine and find that such engaging in business, such construction or such exercise of the right, privilege or franchise would be for the public good and not otherwise; and may prescribe such terms and conditions upon the exercise of the privilege granted under such permission as it shall consider for the public interest.” Sec. 21 provided that “All acts and parts of acts which in any way conflict with the provisions of this act are repealed so far as they do so conflict.” The former section has since been retained without material modification. P. L., c. 240, ss. 21, 24.

This act clearly confers upon the commission the exclusive power, subject to appeal, to find whether the public good requires that a petitioning utility shall be permitted to engage in business and allowed to construct its lines in any city or town; and by consequence to determine to which of two or more competing utilities the grant of such rights will best subserve the public good. Like power invested in local town officers would be inconsistent with the power here ex *557 pressly bestowed on the commission. Without any repealing words the later act must prevail when it is so inconsistent with an earlier one that both cannot be operative at the same time. State v. Otis, 42 N. H. 71, 73. This principle is applicable “where two statutes give authority to two public bodies to exercise powers which cannot consistently with the object of the legislature co-exist.” Daw v. Metropolitan &c. Works, 12 C. B. (n. s.) 161, 174; Eaton v. Burke, 66 N. H. 306, 312. See Opinion of the Justices, 66 N. H. 629, 668; Jones v. Railroad, 67 N. H. 234, 238. The subsequent inclusion of both the statutes under discussion in the recodification of 1925 (Public Laws) does not change the legislative intent to be inferred from their sequence. The exclusive power of the commission is not, however, dependent upon a repeal by implication. Sec. 21, c.

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 786, 83 N.H. 551, 1929 N.H. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-young-co-v-state-nh-1929.