Smith v. Central District Printing & Telegraph Co.

1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 475
CourtTrumbull Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 475 (Smith v. Central District Printing & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Trumbull Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Central District Printing & Telegraph Co., 1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 475 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Woodbury, J.

This is an action which comes into this court upon or by appeal from the court of common pleas.

There are three other cases upon the docket which have been submitted with this case, and which are conceded to involve the same questions that are involved in this case, and that the decision of this case shall determine the other three cases as well as this one.

This case was brought in the court of common pleas to enjoin the defendants from constructing their telephone line along and upon the highway in front of the premises of the plaintiff in this action, which are described in his petition. At the time of the commencement of the action, the telephone line was not constructed, although the defendants were engaged in and about to construct a line along in the highway in front of the plaintiff’s farm. A temporary injunction was allowed by the judge of the court of common pleas, and a motion filed by the defendants to dissolve that injunction. Upon a hearing of that motion, the court of common pleas dissolved the injunction, and an appeal was taken to this court from the interlocutory order dissolving that injunction, and ten days were given by the court of common pleas in which the plaintiff was allowed to perfect [476]*476that appeal, and in the meantime, the original injunction which had been allowed, was allowed to remain. The appeal, however, was not perfected within ten days allowed by the court below, and not being perfected, the defendants went on and built and completed their telephone line as contemplated by the defendants, and as it is alleged in plaintiff’s petition, would be done unless enjoined by the court.

A motion was made in circuit court, after the telephone line had been completed by the defendants, to amend the petition ; but it was held by the court that an amendment could not be allowed to the original petition, for the case was still pending in the court of common pleas ; so the plaintiff went back to the court of common pleas and got leave to amend his petition, and there and then alleged that since the commencement of this action the defendants had gone forward and built and completed their line of telephone along on the highway and upon the premises, as alleged, of the plaintiff, and in front of the farm of the plaintiff.

A further relief was prayed for in the amended petition, to-wit: that an order might be issued requiring the defendants to remove the telephone wires and poles so erected, and that the plaintiff might recover damages which he alleges he has sustained by reason of the wrongful erection of the poles and stretching of wires by the telephone company along, upon, and over the premises of the plaintiff as alleged.

The plaintiff also alleges in his petition, that he is the owner of the fee of this highway along in front of his premises to the centre of the highway, and that this line is constructed upon his said land within the boundaries set forth in the plaintiff’s petition.

The defendants deny, or say they have no information upon this question of title by the plaintiff in the highway, and therefore deny the same ; but they admit in their answer that for twenty-five years and more there has been a public highway along and in front of the premises of the plaintiff in this action and that they propose to, and finally admit that they have constructed upon that highway their telephone lines, in pursuance of the law. Evidence has been introduced bearing upon this question, and there is no controversy in this case but the defendants have built and constructed their telephone line along and upon the highway in front of plaintiff’s premises, and we have no doubt from the evidence, and from the way and manner that this case has been tried and treated, that the plaintiff in the action holds and owns the fee in the highway to the centre thereof; that this is a mere country or county road in which the public have but a mere easement, while the title in fee remains in the plaintiff — but that may not make any difference in the final result of the case.

The questions which are involved in this case are very important indeed. We have given it a great deal of consideration. We have examined every authority which we could find bearing upon the questions which are involved, and have finallj' come to a conclusion. The statute of the state, chapter 4, commencing with sec. 3454, provides that “a magnetic telegraph company heretofore or hereafter created, may construct telegraph lines from point to point along and upon any public road by the erection of the necessary fixtures, including pos's, wires and abutments necessary for the wires; but the same shall not incommode the public in the use of such road.”

Section 3456, provides that “any such company may enter upon any land, whether held by an individual or a corporation, and whether acquired b37 purchase or by appropriation, or in virtue of any provision in its charter, for the purpose of making preliminary examinations and surveys, with the view to the location and erection of lines-of magnetic telegraph, and may appropriate so much thereof as may be deemed necessary for the erection and maintenance of its telegraph poles, piers, abutments, wires and other necessary fixtures, and for stations, and the right-of-way over such lands and adjacent lands sufficient to ei able it to construct and repair its lines.” The next provision, or section, provides that “no such compan37 shall, without the consent of the owner thereof in [477]*477writing, enter any building or edifice, or use or appropriate any part thereof, or erect any telegraph pole, pier or abutment, in any yard or in any enclosure within which an edifice is situate, nor in any case not provided for in section three thousand four hundred and sixty^-one, erect any telegraph pole, pier, abutment, wires or other fixture, so near to any edifice as to occasion injury thereto, or risk of any injury in case such pole, pier or abutment be overthrown, nor injure or destroy any fruit or ornamental tree.”

The next two sections are provisions providing for appropriation by telegraph companies of the right to construct their telegraph lines upon the railroads of the state, with a limitation providing ás to where they may thus appropriate the right to construct, to-wit: within the limit of five feet of the outside line, excepting in the case therein specified. The limitation contained in sec. 3457, is an exception to cases not provided for in sec. 3461 ; that section is a provision for construction of telegraph lines within municipal corporations, upon any public street, alley or public grounds in any village, etc.

Section 3471, provides that the provisions of this chapter shall apply also to any company organized to construct any line or lines of telephone ; and every such company shall have the same powers and be subject to the same restrictions as herein prescribed for magnetic telegraph companies.

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Related

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136 Mass. 75 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-central-district-printing-telegraph-co-ohcircttrumbull-1886.