Rudolph v. Potomac Electric Power Co.

24 F.2d 882, 58 App. D.C. 54, 57 A.L.R. 865, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2186
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 1928
DocketNo. 4583
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 F.2d 882 (Rudolph v. Potomac Electric Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rudolph v. Potomac Electric Power Co., 24 F.2d 882, 58 App. D.C. 54, 57 A.L.R. 865, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2186 (D.C. Cir. 1928).

Opinion

VAN ORSDEL, Associate Justice.

Appellee company filed a bill in equity in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, seeking to have declared unlawful and void certain assessments and taxes levied by the defendant District on the poles, wires, conduits, and lamps used by the plaintiff in connection with its business.

Prom a decree declaring the taxes levied on said property and the sales for nonpayment thereof to have been imposed and made without warrant or authority of law, and annulling, canceling, and declaring the same void ab initio, and enjoining the defendant commissioners to cancel said alleged assessments for the years 1917 to 1926, inclusive, and perpetually enjoining defendants from collecting, claiming, or referring to said assessments, this appeal is prosecuted.

It appears that the defendants asserted the right to assess and tax as real estate plaintiff’s poles, lamps, conduits, and overhead wires, located in the business streets, avenues, and highways throughout the District of Columbia, on the theory that plaintiff’s poles have been planted in the earth, and its conduits have been laid under the surface of the ground, and the wires and lamps are connected with the poles and conduits, that are to be regarded as real estate and taxable as such, although standing on and lying under the streets belonging to the United States.

The ease can be disposed of upon the single question of whether or not the property here sought to be taxed is real or personal property. Unquestionably the franchise or privilege accorded a quasi public corporation of attaching its poles, conduits, wires, and lamps to the streets is a property right, and as such taxable. Owensboro v. Cumberland Telephone Co., 230 U. S. 58, 65, 33 S. Ct. 988, 57 L. Ed. 1389; City of Louisville v. Cumberland Telephone Co., 224 U. S. 649, 661, 32 S. Ct. 572, 56 L. Ed. 934. But it is not here sought to tax the franchise or the right accorded the plaintiff by the city as so much personal property, but as personal property transformed into real estate by virtue oi its connection with the streets, avenues, and highways of the District.

There is some conflict of authority as to the exact status of the property of a corporation connected to or laid under the streets of a city for the purpose of carrying on its public business. Por example, in Providence Gas Co. v. Thurber, 2 R. I. 15, 55 Am. Dec. 621, gas pipes buried under a publie street were held to be taxable as real estate, and in Willard v. Pike, 59 Vt. 202, 9 A. 907, water mains were held to be taxable as real estate. On the other hand, in Newport Illuminating Co. v. Tax Assessors, 19 R. I. [883]*883632, 36 A. 426, 36 L. R. A. 266, poles and wires in a public street were held, for the purposes of taxation, to be personal. property. In rare cases it bas been held that water mains, pipes, and hydrants in public streets are taxable as real estate, on the theory that they are physically connected with the main plant of the corporation, and as such taxable as part of the real estate of the corporation. Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. v. Pueblo Water Co., 11 Colo. App. 352, 53 P. 232.

Judge Cooley epitomizes the law on this subject, as reflected in the opinions of the courts, as follows: “Gas pipes and mains laid under the streets have been held assessable as real estate in some states, while in other states they are assessable as personal property. * * * Poles, wires, etc., of electric light and power companies are generally held assessable as personal property.” 2 Cooley on Taxation, 968.

With this conflict of opinion, we agree with the court below that the rule to be applied in this ease can best be adduced by reference to the statutes of the District bearing upon the subject of taxation. The act of Congress of 1894 (28 Stat. 282), after providing that all real property shall be assessed in the name of the owner, when the owner is known, prescribes the method of valuation as follows: “That said board of assistant assessors shall, from actual view and from the best sources of information in its reach, determine the value of each separate tract or lot of real property in the District of Columbia in lawful money, and shall separately estimate the value of all improvements on any tract or lot, and shall note the same in the proper field book, which shall be carried out as part of the value of such tract or lot, and shall also return the dimensions of each tract or lot.”

It will be observed that all real estate in the District shall be assessed in the name of the owner on a valuation to be determined as to each, separate tract or lot of land with the improvements thereon, the improvements and the land being valued separately. It would require a stretch of the imagination to apply this statute to the poles, conduits, wires, and lamps of plaintiff company erected upon the nontaxable property of the United States, the streets, avenues, and highways of the District.

It would logically follow that, if the poles, conduits, wires, and lamps are to be assessed under the real estate tax law of 1894, they must be treated only as improvements upon the real estate; but, as said by the court below:

“Upon what real estate can they be said to be improvements? The assessment designates no lots. They are in fact located in the streets and public places, the title to which is in the United States. The plaintiff is not the owner of these parcels of real estate, if such they may be called. The plaintiff has no ownership therein. How, then, can the plaintiff be said to have improved its real estate, merely by using the streets as a convenient place to set its poles and lay its conduits and -string its wires? When land is improved by structures, the land itself is, in contemplation of law, the principal thing, even though the structure be of more value to the land. * * * Moreover, the de-fendants themselves do not undertake to assess as real estate the right of the plaintiff, whatever it may be called, to place its poles and conduits in the streets. They do not pretend to tax the easement, if there be one. They merely attempt to treat the poles and conduits as metamorphosed into real estate by virtue of their attachment to the soil, which belongs to the United States, and this merely because the United States has given it a limited and conditional right to make such use of its soil. If Congress had intended such a result, would it not have expressed the intention . in unambiguous and apt words?”

Two courts have spoken convincingly on this proposition. In Readfield Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cyr et al., 95 Me. 287, 49 A. 1047, it was held that poles, wires, and lines of a telephone company were legally sold under execution as personal property. And in Newport Illuminating Co. v. Tax Assessors, supra, where the poles and wires of the company had been taxed as real estate, and the tax paid thereon, the court held that the tax could be recovered, although it resulted in the total exemption of the property from taxation.

The late Connecticut decisions hold underground piping, water mains, reservoirs, and water mains and pipes laid in highways and through private property, to be personal property. Field et al. v. Guilford Water Co., 79 Conn. 70, 63 A. 723; City of Norwalk v. New Canaan, 85 Conn. 119, 127, 81 A. 1027. And in Connecticut Lt. & Pr. Co. v. Town of Oxford, 101 Conn. 383, 126 A.

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24 F.2d 882, 58 App. D.C. 54, 57 A.L.R. 865, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudolph-v-potomac-electric-power-co-cadc-1928.