Sunset Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City of Pasadena

118 P. 796, 161 Cal. 265, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 425
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2557.
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 118 P. 796 (Sunset Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City of Pasadena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunset Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City of Pasadena, 118 P. 796, 161 Cal. 265, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 425 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

These are appeals from an order dissolving a temporary injunction, and from a judgment denying an injunction and an order denying a motion for a new trial in an action brought by plaintiffs against the city of Pasadena and certain officers of said city to obtain a decree restraining the defendants from in any manner interfering with the maintenance or operation of plaintiffs’ telephone and telegraph system so far as the same is located on public streets in said city.

There is no conflict in the evidence as to what we consider the material facts in this case. Some of our statements in regard thereto are taken from the opinion of the trial court. The city of Pasadena was organized in the year 1886 under the general laws of the state as a city of the sixth class, and in the year 1901 reorganized under a freeholders’ charter, pursuant to the provisions of the constitution. Prior to its organization as a city in 1886, viz.: in the year 1883, the Sunset Telephone-Telegraph Company established a telephone system therein, using the roads and streets thereof for its poles and wires. Plaintiff Sunset Telephone & Telegraph Company was incorporated in April, 1889, and immediately acquired by assignment all of the property of the Sunset Telephone-Telegraph Company, including its lines in Pasadena, and whatever rights it had acquired in that city. The other plaintiff, the Pacific etc. Company, was incorporated in 1906, and is the lessee of its co-plaintiff of its entire telephone and telegraph system. The interests of the two plaintiffs in the matters involved are so close that they may be here treated as one person, and for convenience will be so treated and referred to in the singular number. As originally installed there was a local exchange and long distance connections. “The system has been extended, and has now about 4000 regular subscribers. Throughout the state of California, and in its various cities and towns, the said plaintiff has installed a similar system for both local and long distance use, serving its subscribers with about 195,000 telephones. It has likewise installed in the states of Oregon, Washington, Montana, Idaho, and Nevada, a system *269 for local and long distance service, having in those states an aggregate of about 135,000 telephones for its subscribers. The entire system in California and the other states is connected, forming a homogeneous whole.” It may be assumed for the purposes of this case that plaintiff’s lines in Pasadena have always been used in the conduct of an interstate telephone business. Although plaintiff’s charter describes it as a telephone and telegraph company, it is clear that it has always been primarily and principally engaged in purely a “telephone” as distinguished from a “telegraph” business, and that while it has occasionally telegraphed some messages over its main telephone wires, such transmission of messages, to use the langmage of the finding of the trial court, “is not usual or customary, and the number of them transmitted is insignificant, and too insignificant to characterize the lines of plaintiffs or any of the lines of either of plaintiffs, situated in the city of Pasadena, as telegraph lines.” Of course, its lines connecting its offices or exchanges with the houses and places of business of its subscribers, constituting the great bulk of its system in the city of Pasadena, have never been used at all for the transmission of telegraphic messages. The trial court found that until the year 1901, neither of plaintiffs transmitted any telegraph messages at all, over or by the aid or use of lines situated in the city of Pasadena, and that their lines situated in said city were not 'used at all for telegraphic' purposes, and that the only lines or wires of plaintiff over which any telegraph messages have been or are at any time transmitted are telephone wires, used usually for telephone purposes, placed upon poles running on Pair Oaks Avenue south of Colorado Street to the south limits of said city. The findings of the trial court in this connection are sufficiently sustained by the evidence. It is manifest from the record that what plaintiff is seeking is to restrain action on the part of the local authorities in regard to a “telephone” as distinguished from a “telegraph” system.

On August 6, 1887, an ordinance was adopted by the board of trustees of the city on application of the Sunset Telephone-Telegraph Company, being ordinance No. 75, entitled “An ordinance granting to the Sunset Telephone-Telegraph Company the right to erect poles and run telephone wires along the public streets.” This ordinance purported to grant to *270 the applicant the privilege for the period of twenty years from its date to erect and maintain telephone poles upon, and to run wires over and along the public highways and thoroughfares of the city of Pasadena, subject to certain conditions. These conditions reserved to the board of trustees of the city certain supervision and control in the matter of the location, construction, and maintenance of the poles and wires for the purpose of preventing undue interference with the use of the streets by the public. After the expiration of the term prescribed by this ordinance—viz.: on February 4, 1908, there was duly enacted an ordinance, known as ordinance No. 841, providing that it shall be unlawful to erect or maintain on any of the streets of the city any telegraph or telephone poles or wires for use in “doing local or intrastate business without a franchise or privilege therefor from the city of Pasadena,” and that any person, etc., maintaining or operating upon the streets any telegraph or telephone lines or poles “doing an interstate business,” shall pay to the city semi-annually in advance, “for the use of the streets, alleys, and public places by the poles, wires and appliances of such lines,” the sum of seventy-five cents for each and every pole so maintained and operated, unless such person, etc., shall “have or secure a franchise or privilege” therefor. Poles and wires maintained in violation of the provisions of this ordinance are declared thereby to be public nuisances, and it is made the duty of certain officers of the city to summarily abate and remove any poles, wires, or appliances so maintained. Plaintiff having failed to apply for or secure from the city any franchise for the use of the streets for its poles and wires, and having refused to pay any of the charges imposed by the ordinance for the use of the streets for its poles and wires, the city authorities were proceeding with the work of summarily removing such poles and wires from the streets, with the result that this action was commenced to obtain an injunction restraining any such action by the city authorities, the claim of plaintiff being that as to it ordinance 841 is void and without force.

It is to be borne in mind that the only interference with plaintiff threatened by the city authorities is that of preventing the exclusive occupation by it with poles and wires of portions of the public streets of the city except upon compliance with the terms of the ordinance. To warrant such *271 exclusive use of any portion of a public highway by any person or corporation, there must be, as was said by the trial judge, a “grant of right from a competent authority.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P. 796, 161 Cal. 265, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunset-tel-tel-co-v-city-of-pasadena-cal-1911.