Public Service Corp. v. American Lighting Co.

57 A. 482, 67 N.J. Eq. 122, 1 Robb. 122, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 104
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 57 A. 482 (Public Service Corp. v. American Lighting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Corp. v. American Lighting Co., 57 A. 482, 67 N.J. Eq. 122, 1 Robb. 122, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 104 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The complainant, the Public Service Corporation, is the lessee for a long term of years, and in the possession as such, of the property of the other complainants, the Hudson County Gas Company and the Jersey City Gas Light Company.

The complainants own and control, and have been in the undisputed possession for many years of a gas manufacturing and distributing plant in the city of Jersey City, which distributing plant covers the entire city, and the companies are enjoying the franchise of laying and maintaining their gas mains under the surface of the streets of that city.

They have for many years supplied the householding inhabitants with gas for domestic use, and have also, for a like period of time, supplied the municipality with gas for street lighting purposes.

All gas for domestic purposes has been, and is, in accordance with common knowledge, delivered and sold by the cubic foot; the ascertainment of quantity being by gas meters placed in some convenient position on the premises occupied by the householder, where the same will be reasonably protected from injury by violence and also accessible to the agents of the company for the purpose of taking periodical “readings” thereof.

The lighting of the streets has been accomplished by annual contracts for lights of a certain candle power, furnished for certain hours according to a fixed schedule, varying with the season of the year, and paid for by the lamp and not by the quantity of gas consumed. But in the latter case the gas was turned on and off night and morning by the agents of the gas companies, so that they were able to control absolutely both the length of time the lights were burning and also the pressure of the flow of gas while burning.

It is proper here to say that the lamps were set in cast-iron lamp-posts owned by the city, but the gas was conducted thereto through ordinary gas pipes attached to the street main and leading from thence to the foot of the lamp-post and thence through the centre of the lamp-post by a “riser” to the top. [125]*125This gas pipe and the lamp, or burner, were all the property of the complainants.

. The only check which the city had upon the companies was a right to test and determine both the intensity of the lights produced and the number of hours they were maintained.

The contracts with the city ran from December 1st to November 30th, and a new contract was made each year. For that purpose proposals for bids were annually put out and advertised. But, as the complainant corporations enjoyed a practical monopoly, there could, in the nature of things, be very little room for competition. This, however, as I shall show further on, did not compel the city to pay any price that the gas company might be pleased to demand by its bid. The fundamental and cardinal principle'being that all corporations enjoying a franchise of this character,- and the complete or partial monopoly resulting therefrom, are bound to serve the public upon reasonable terms and upon reasonable rates, so that neither the public is at the mercy of the corporations enjoying the franchise nor are the corporations at the mercy of the public. Their dealing must all be subject to the test of reasonableness on both sides.

The defendant the American Lighting Company is a corporation of the State of Maryland and has no franchise whatever in the State of New Jersey or in the city of Jersey City, nor does it pretend to have any. It is simply the proprietor of what it claims to be a peculiarly meritorious light-producing lamp, or burner, which it claims will produce a much greater amount of light from the same amount of gas than the burner heretofore in use by the complainants and known as the “Welsbach Burner.” By its affidavits it states that it has recently introduced its burners into several cities, including Baltimore, with great success.

This being its sole business, and, it not being either a citizen or householder of Jersey City, it has in my judgment no standing whatever in its own right to demand and receive from the complainants a supply of gas for any purpose whatever.

In this state of affairs the city of Jersey City, about the 1st day of December last, went through the usual process of mak[126]*126ing a contract for lighting its streets for the year intervening between December 1st, 1903, and November 30th, 1904. Proposals were made by the city in the usual form, calling for proposals to furnish street lights at so much per lamp.

It appears by statements of counsel on both sides, though not shown by the affidavits, that bids were made by both the complainant and the defendant the American lighting Company, which were rejected by the city, and fresh proposals on the same basis, viz., by the lamp, were asked.

A second set of bids were put in by the same parties with the result that the bid of the American Lighting Company was accepted, and a contract was entered into between the city and that company Maxell- 2d, 1904, for the lighting of the streets of the city at a certain sum per lamp.

I do not find, among the affidavits handed up, a copy of that contract; I find only the bid.

This contract for lighting, I understand, -expires on November 30th, 1904, and that the complainant corporation furnished the lights for the months of December, 1903, and January and February, 1904, at the old rates. So that though the bid of the American Lighting Company was somewhat less than that of the. complainant, yet, inasmuch as it was at the rate of so much per lamp per month, taking it from March 1st to November 30th, it is claimed by counsel for the complainants that it will in fact amount to a little more than the bid of the complainants for those months.

But this is a matter of no consequence.

As soon as the contract was signed, the American Lighting Company, claiming that it was satisfied that the complainants would not furnish it with gas, applied, on a bill and affidavits, to Judge Bradford, of the federal court, and obtained from him, on March 4th, which was Frida}1, an order to show cause, on the first Monday of April next, why an injunction should not issue in accordance with the prayer of the bill, which was to the effect that the defendants be restrained from discriminating between the American Lighting Company and other gas consumers in Jersey City, and from stopping the-present passage [127]*127and flow of gas through said lamp-posts in Jersey City, and it contained interim restraint against such discrimination and against interfering with the passing and flow of gas to, in and through the lamp-posts situate in the streets, &c., and to the burners which are affixed thereto.

Under the protection of this injunction and the police force of Jersey Cit3r, the American Lighting Company proceeded at once, without stopping for the Sabbath, to detach the Welsbach burners and lamps owned by complainants from the lamp-posts of Jersey Cit}r, and to place instead thereof its own particular burner. All this was done against the protests of the complainants.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A. 482, 67 N.J. Eq. 122, 1 Robb. 122, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-corp-v-american-lighting-co-njch-1904.