State ex rel. Lincoln Traction Co. v. Frost

110 N.W. 986, 78 Neb. 325, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 141
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1907
DocketNo. 15,013
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 N.W. 986 (State ex rel. Lincoln Traction Co. v. Frost) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Lincoln Traction Co. v. Frost, 110 N.W. 986, 78 Neb. 325, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 141 (Neb. 1907).

Opinion

Letton, J.

This is an original application for a writ of mandamus. The relator, a street railway company which is the owner of a franchise to construct and operate a line of street railway on certain streets in the city of Lincoln, among which are N street and Twenty-first street, had commenced to build a line of railway upon N street, when an injunction was issued at the instance of the city of Lincoln, restraining it from further proceedings. A mandatory order was contained in the temporary injunction issued, commanding it to remove from the street the rails and ties already laid and put the street in the same condition in which it was found. This order was not final, but was merely interlocutory; and since the relator was unable to appeal from the same it began this action, praying for a writ of mandamus to require the respondent to vacate so much of the temporary order as requires it to take up and remove its tracks on Twenty-First street and on N street. The application for the writ alleges that the sole [327]*327ground for the injunction was that the relator had not obtained from the city council a permit in conformity with a certain ordinance of the city, and further alleged that the ordinance in question is void for various reasons set forth in the petition and which will be hereafter noticed. It was conceded upon the hearing that the question of whether or not the relator was entitled to a writ in this case depended upon the question whether the ordinance in question is void, or is a valid and proper exercise of the police poAvers of the city in the matter of the regulation of the construction of street railways.

The ordinance in question is entitled “An ordinance regulating the construction of new street railway tracks, gas mains, or other constructions or works of Avhatever kind in streets, public ways or grounds; to prohibit additional construction of street railway lines, except by consent of the mayor and council; and to amend and repeal all ordinances in conflict herewith.” The first section provides'in substance that no street raihvay company, gas company or OAyner of any system of public works, having or claiming a franchise within the city, shall construct any new lines of tracks, mains or Avorks, or the repair thereof, that requires obstruction of the use of the streets, except in accordance with the terms and conditions following. Section 2, so far as material here is as follows: “Any street railway company desiring to construct neAV tracks on streets not by it previously occupied * * * shall file with the city clerk a Avritten application for permit to construct such track, stating location thereof, Avith complete specifications and plans of its proposed manner of construction and material to be used” (omitting the remainder of said section, which provides for the deposit of a certified check for and an estimate of the cost of paving on streets already paved). Section 3: “On filing such certified check, application, and estimate of the city engineer, the matter shall come for consideration of the council, who shall cause publication of notice in two daily papers published in the city for not less than one [328]*328week that the matter of such application will he considered by the council at a meeting, the time of which shall be therein stated, at which any persons interested may appear and show cause, if any there be, why such permit should not be granted. Such application shall then come before the council to be considered and may then be granted or refused as the mayor and council determine. If the permit is refused the certified check shall be returned to the company applying for such permit.” Section 4 makes similar requirements as to gas companies or other companies having franchises for underground construction. Section 5 recites: “Every such applicant, street railway or other owner shall with their application file its undertaking to hold the city of Lincoln harmless of all claim for loss or damage that may at any time accrue to any person whomsoever or to any property by reason of such proposed work, or for the manner of its execution and construction, and thereupon, except as hereinbefore provided, permit shall be granted to such company and it shall be authorized to proceed with such work.” Section 6 provides penalties for a violation of the ordinance.

The relator contends that the ordinance is void because it empowers the city council to grant or refuse a permit to street railways to construct tracks, and thereby enables the council to prohibit the exercise of the franchise and destroy the franchise itself, and that it is not a regulative ordinance, since it does not contain any terms or conditions whereby the exercise of the franchise is regulated. In support of this contention it shows that in the state of Nebraska street railway franchises are granted not by the municipalities, but under the provisions of section 2, art. XI5 of the constitution, which provides that “no general law shall be passed by the legislature granting the right to construct and operate a street railway within any city, town, or incorporated village, without first requiring the consent of a majority of the electors thereof,” and of sections 1-5, art. VII, ch. 72, Comp. St. 1905. These sections require the organization of a corporation; [329]*329that the termini of the proposed street railway must be. fixed and the precise route described in its articles of incorporation, naming the streets through which the railway is to be constructed; the consent of a majority of the (hectors of the city to be given at a special (lection; the canvass of the vote by the council, and the recording in the office of the county clerk of a certificate, of the city clerk of the result, showing the consent of a majority of the electors: whereupon such company shall he authorized to construct and operate a street railway, “subject to such rules and regulations as may be established by ordinances of such city.”

Construing these sections of the constitution and the statutes, we have held that there is no authority given to i city to grant charters to street railways; that the only authority given the city is to submit the proposition to the electors; for the consent of a majority of the electors is a condition precedent, on the happening of which depends the right to construct and maintain the railway. The grant by the legislature under general law is ineffectual to give street railways the right to operate upon the streets of a city, unless such company has obtained consent of a majority of the electors. The constitution and the statutes and the articles of incorporation constitute the charter of the company, and the consent of the electors properly7 certified and recorded give it the license and authority to enter upon the streets, and the city can never add to nor take away any of its charter rights. Lincoln Street R. Co. v. City of Lincoln, 61 Neb. 109. Since, therefore, the city of,Lincoln has no power to grant or withhold a franchise to the corporation, and since the ordinance confers upon the city council the power to refuse the company permission to enter and construct its lines upon the streets upon which the consent of the electors has already been given it to operate, the relator argues that it is void, being in contravention of both the statutes of the state and the constitution.

On the other hand, the respondent contends that, grant[330]

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Related

Application of Omaha Transit Company
94 N.W.2d 461 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1959)
State ex rel. Caldwell v. Lincoln Street Railway Co.
114 N.W. 422 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 N.W. 986, 78 Neb. 325, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lincoln-traction-co-v-frost-neb-1907.