Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Western Electric Light & Power Co.

10 Ohio C.C. 531
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. 531 (Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Western Electric Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Western Electric Light & Power Co., 10 Ohio C.C. 531 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Bentley, J.

I will say at the start that the condition of the plaintiff’s pleadings in this case, of course, is not such as to permit them to be commended as models for a basis upon which to carry forward the inquiries which we have finally permitted in the case; but the parties were before us, and as we thought we discerned in the pleadings the controversy which they really had, we formerly entered an order in the case respecting the injunction that had been allowed by the court of common pleas, and subsequently referred certain matters to a referee. We have concluded that the matter should be settled in the present case, and by a decree of the court.

Several of the important questions arising in this case were considered at some length when, on a former occasion, the motion to suspend the operation of the injunction granted by the common pleas was presented to us, and our views regarding them were stated when we allowed that motion. Thereafter, in consonance with those views, we ordered a reference for the ascertainment of certain facts which we considered it proper and necessary to know in finally determining the case, the proofs regarding which, but for the reference, we should have heard here in court on the trial. Our investigation of the case since its final submission has necessarily led us through the same fields as those traversed before, as well as others, and we are still impressed with the correctness of the general conclusions already announced, [533]*533and that the pleadings present a basis for the inquiry as to what particular poles the plaintiff seeks to use, the owners and condition of the same, whether they are in the streets under such circumstances that the qity may lawfully grant to an electic lighting company other than the present owners and ocupants thereof, n.náin invitum as to them,the right jointly with them to use such poles to string electric wires upon for lighting either public or private buildings with electricity; whether the plaintiff has been lawfully granted such right by the city authorities, wherever such joint use is practicable, and if so, the amount which the plaintiff should pay for such use before entering upon it, and to whom payment should be made.

The defendants urge that if such use of their poles can be acquired, it must be by proceedings for appropriation in the probate court, and that a court of equity would have no jurisdiction of the case to determine the amount, unless by some contract, express or implied, the defendants have waived, forfeited or granted away their common law right to hold their property exempt from such seizure until it has been regularly appropriated under the statute in the probate court, and its value assessed by a jury, and paid. And, in the sense in which we construe it, this proposition is correct, and this leads to the inquiry which lies at the main root of the controversy, whether by voluntary act, viewed with reference to the facts and laws, these defendants have subjected their property to the liability of being thus practically taken without the compensation therefor being ascertained by a jury.

To determine this, a brief review of the laws bearing upon the matter will be requisite. It seems to have been always assumed by the legislature that municipal authorities would not have authority under their general powers as to streets,to allow telegraph, telephone and electric light poles to be placed in the streets, and from time to time statutes have [534]*534been passed conferring upon them certain powers in this respect. And in this connection I call attention to the sections of the Revised Statutes from 3454 to 3471 a inclusive.

And in 5 Ohio Circuit Court, 340, it was held by the Circuit Court of Hamilton county, that until the act of May 12, 1886, municipal corporations had no power to allow in the streets poles and structures for electric light and power purposes. This holding has the apparent sanction of the Supreme Court, since it affirmed the judgment of the circuit court in that case, but without report.

The act of 1886 now appears in Smith & Benedict’s Statutes as section 8035-233, and provides as follows:

“That a company organized for the purpose of supplying electricity for power purposes and for lighting the streets and public and private buildings of a city, village or town, may manufacture, sell and furnish electric light and power required therein for such and other purposes, and such companies may construct lines ,for conducting electricity for power and light purposes, through the streets, alleys, lanes, lands, squares and public places of such city, village or town by the erection of the necessary fixtures, including posts, piers and abutments necessary for the wires, with the consent of the municipal authorities of the city, village or town, and under such reasonable regulations as they might prescribe. Provided, that all wires erected and operated under the provisions of this act shall be covered with a water-proof insulation, and said poles,piers, abutments and wires shall be so located and arranged as not to interfere with the successful operation of existing telephone and telegraph wires.”

It becomes important to consider the scope and meaning of the words “with the consent of the municipal authorities * * * and under such reasonable regulations as they may prescribe. ’ ’

It is evident that this power of regulation is something more than the city might exercise under its general authority over the streets, since if it means no more than that, the insertion of those words in the. statute would have been un[535]*535necessary, which the rules for the interpretation of statutes will not permit us to presume. Do these words confer the power to allow other electric companies to share in the use of such poles and structures when it would be practicable, and to prescribe reasonable terms and conditions upon which the added use may be had;? In this connection I will call attention to the case already mentioned of Brush Electric Light Co. v. Jones Bros. Electric Light Co. et al., 5 O. C. C. R. 340. In that case, after the court had announced what I have already mentioned, that there was no power previous to this act to entitle municipal authorities to grant the right to use the street for these purposes, on page 343 the court say this:

“There is nothing whatever to show, that after power was given to the municipal authorities to make such grant, any action required by these two sections was taken. And it is difficult to see how the alleged grant of this franchise is to become valid and binding on the city, or the public, by a mere acquiescence of the public authorities in its use for a while, when the statute is express that it can be granted in but one mode.
“But there is no such proof of continued acquiescence on the part of the municipal authorities as justifies the claim of the plaintiff. It is shown that on the second of November, 1889, the Board of Public Affairs directed the'city engineer “to withdraw all permits to erect electric light poles, heretofore used, until further orders;” and on November 3, 1889, such board by resolution provided that they would permit only one line of poles for electric lighting or power purposes, to be erected on any one street.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio C.C. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-electric-street-railway-co-v-western-electric-light-power-co-ohiocirct-1894.