Shelby County v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co.

140 Tenn. 86
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 Tenn. 86 (Shelby County v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelby County v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 140 Tenn. 86 (Tenn. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The hill in this case was filed by Shelby county to collect from the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company a pole rental of $1 per annum each for all the poles of the telephone company placed in the roads of Shelby county. The bill was dismissed by the chancellor, and the county of Shelby has appealed to this court.

The lines of the telephone company are located in Shelby county and its poles there- erected by virtue of chapter 66 of the Acts of 1885, granting to such corporations the right to string their wires and plant poles “along and over the public highways and streets of the cities and towns of this State, or across and under the waters, and over any lands or public works belonging to this State, and on and over the lands of private individuals, and upon, along, and parallel to any of the railroads or turnpikes of this State, and on and over the bridges,, and trestles or structures of said railroad; provided, that the ordinary use of such public highways, streets, works, . . . bridges, structures, and turnpikes be not thereby obstructed . . . by reason of the occupation of said land, railroads, and turnpikes, by said telegraph or telephone corporations. ” Section 1.

[88]*88In addition to this legislative sanction the county court of Shelby county, by resolution passed on July 9, 1883, conferred a similar authority upon the defendant telephone company in the following language :

“It is hereby ordered by the county court of Shelby county, Tenn., that the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company be and is hereby permitted to put up its poles, wires, appurtenances, and appliances on and along any and all of the public roads of the county of Shelby, in order to operate its telephones and telegraphs along the same, when the said company shall desire to do so. But in no event and in no manner to interfere with travel on any of the said roads, or to obstruct the same in any manner, and so as to not interfere with any private rights of citizens along the line or lines.”

By a resolution passed July 15,1907, the county court of Shelby county undertook to revoke the right of the telephone company to occupy the roads and highways of that county except upon certain conditions appearing in the resolution, which resolution will be hereinafter set out.

By the same resolution of July 15, 1907, the Shelby county court undertook to levy a charge upon the telephone company of $1 per annum for each one of its poles. This suit is predicated upon the resolution of the county court of July 15,1907.

A number of defenses are interposed by the telephone company and many questions made by it. The [89]*89scope of our investigation has been very much limited and this controversy confined to a narrow compass by concessions of learned counsel for Shelby county.

On the brief of counsel for Shelby county it is said:

” There is no insistence on the part of the county that it could compel a removal of the poles from the highways — its only claim is the right to exact compensation for the use of the highways by the poles. Unquestionably the statute gave the telephone company a right of way; but it is the contention of the county that that is given, subject to the county’s right in the exercise of its power to. regulate and control its roads, to exact compensation for the occupation thereof by poles planted therein.”

It is furthermore conceded on the brief of counsel for the county that the county has no right to regulate rates to be charged by the telephone company, and it must be conceded that the county has no right to levy any tax upon the telephone company except as the county may be authorized by the legislature.

It is urged on behalf of the county that the act of 1885 and the resolution of the county court of July 9, 1883, merely gave to the telephone company a license to occupy the roads and highways of Shelby county, and that this license does not preclude the county in the exercise of its police power from making a charge against the company in the nature of a pole rental by way of compensation to the county for the cost [90]*90of supervision and inspection of the company’s poles and wires.

The telephone company insists that it has 'fixed or contract rights to occupy the roads and highways of Shelby county by reason of the act of the legislature and the resolution of the county court of 1883. It is agreed that it has spent many thousands of dollars in extending and improving its property in Shelby county upon the faith of said act and said resolution. The telephone company also denies that Shelby county has been intrusted with police power that would authorize it to make any charge of this nature against poles of the company.

Without deciding these questions, it may be conceded for the purposes of this case that the county would have a right, in the exercise of its police power, to exact a pole rental for the purpose of supervision and inspection, and it may be conceded that the telephone company has no rights in the roads and highways of Shelby county that would exempt it from such a charge; nevertheless, the county’s suit must fail.

This results from the character of the resolution upon which this suit is predicated.

It is to be remembered that by concessions of counsel the county is without authority to require a removal of the company’s poles and wires from the roads and highways of Shelby county; that it is without power to regulate the rates of the telephone company; and that it has no legislative authority to [91]*91exact any pole rental of the telephone company nor to levy any snch tax upon the company for revenue.

Therefore all that can he claimed for the county is that it'has police power over its roads and highways, and in the exercise of that power and in the interest of the public safety it may demand a pole rental in the nature of a fee for meeting the expense of inspection and supervision of the lines of the telephone company.

Bearing in mind these conditions, we now consider the resolution of the county court of Shelby county passed July 15, 1907:

“Be it resolved, that as the right was given the Cumberland and Memphis Telephone Companies to place their poles along the side of the county roads, provided they did not interfere with the roads, their use, or with the working of the same, and as the purpose of this was not to benefit the telephone companies or of giving to them free of charge the use of the public roads, but to secure to the rural residents of the county an efficient telephone service at reasonable rates; and whereas the service of the telephone companies has become exceedingly bad and the rates have been increased in many localities, and in some have been placed at an amount that prevents the use of the phone, and especially is so on the part of the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company; and as it appears that a great number of the poles of both companies have been placed among the side ditches of the turnpikes and roads, thus great[92]

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Bluebook (online)
140 Tenn. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelby-county-v-cumberland-telephone-telegraph-co-tenn-1918.