Webster v. Susquehanna Pole Line Co.

76 A. 254, 112 Md. 416
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 76 A. 254 (Webster v. Susquehanna Pole Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Susquehanna Pole Line Co., 76 A. 254, 112 Md. 416 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Harford County, as a Court of Equity, refusing to grant a preliminary injunction restraining proceedings by the defendants to condemn certain lands belonging to the plaintiffs, and dismissing the plaintiffs’ bill. The appeal is brought under sec. 31 of Art. 5 of the Code authorizing an appeal at such a stage of the case, as held in C. & P. Telephone Co. v. Baltimore City, 89 Md. 689.

The principal defendant is a corporation, as appears from the copy of its charter filed with the bill as an exhibit, under the name of the Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County, formed on August 13th, 1907, under sec. 28, class 13 of Article 23 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland. Its charter recites that it is formed “for construction, owning or operating telegraph or telephone lines in this State, and for the transaction of any business in which *419 electricity, either over or through wires may he applied to any useful purpose, and especially to huy, sell, operate or lease pole lines, erect poles, string wires thereon, or on poles of other individuals or corporations on any and all streets, avenues, highways and roads, public or private, and over and under all canals and other waterways, and across any and all bridges, and to use the same either for the transmission of electric current for delivery to customers on such lines, or for transmission of current to independent vendors thereof, and for the transmission of current for any individuals or corporations producing or delivering the same to said corporations, and to sell or lease to either individuals or corporations the right to string electric wires on, or attach electric wires to, any or all poles so erected, owned or leased and to use such lines both as through lines and for local delivery, and to sell or lease wires, cables or fixtures for the transmission and use of electric current in any manner or form whatsoever, and to manufacture and deal in any and all apparatus and things required for, or capable of being used in connection with, the transmission, delivery, and accumulation, and other employment of electric energy and current, or of electricity; to build and construct and use for any of the purposes stated above, underground subways or conduits, either under or across any streets, avenues, highways, roads, canals and waterways, and to string electric wires, cables or conductors therein, and to buy dr lease from or sell or let to any other individual or corporation, the right to string and use as aforesaid electric wires, cables or conductors in such subways; to erect, operate, maintain and either lease or let the sub-stations for raising or lowering the voltage of any electricity received for it for distribution over its lines, and for the accumulation, storage, transmission and distribution of electric current, and to purchase, lease, hire, buy, sell or deal in any and all machineiy used therein or in connection therewith, or convenr ient to its economical and practical operation; * * * and to have the powers provided by section 366 of Art. 23 of the Code of Public General Laws of 1904, together with such *420 other rights, powers and privileges, as are by the general laws granted to all corporations formed under the general incorporation Acts of the,State of Maryland, and granted by any laws that may be particularly applicable to corporations formed under the class aforesaid.”

In ^November, 1909, the defendant corporation amended its charter in the manner allowed and prescribed by law, by inserting after the clause which ends with the words “convenient to its economical and practical operation,” the following clauses:

“To act as á common carrier of electrical power or energy by means of all appropriate or necessary structures, appliances, machinery, fixtures, devices, inventions or processes now or hereafter capable of being used in the transaction of any business wherein electricity or electric power or energy may at any time or place or in any manner be applied to any useful purpose.
“And the public in like situation with said Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County, its successors and assigns, whether individuals, partnerships or corporations, are hereby vested with and entitled. to a right to apply for and demand of the said Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County, its successors and assigns, all connections and facilities without discrimination or partiality, to the extent of the just and reasonable distribution, transforming, carrying and connecting capacity and facilities of the said the Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County, its successors and assigns, provided such applicant comply or offer to comply with all .reasonable rules, regulations, terms and rates of said the Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County its successors and assigns, and the said the Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County, its successors and assigns, shall and must supply all applicants as aforesaid in like situation as aforeaid, who may exercise their said right, with such connection and facilities as aforesaid and to the extent and upon the condition aforesaid and the said the Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford *421 County, its successors and assigns, shall not impose any conditions or restrictions upon any such applicant that are not imposed impartially upon all persons, corporations or partnerships' in like situation with it; and further the said Susquehanna Pole Line Company of Harford County shall not discriminate against any such applicant engaged in any lawful business or between any such applicants engaged in the •same business by requiring as a condition, for furnishing such facilities aforesaid, that said facilities shall not be used in the business of said applicant or otherwise for any lawful purpose.”

After alleging the foregoing, the bill further alleged that, “the particular business in which electricity over or through wires may be employed to any useful purpose which said defendant company purports to be transacting is the “transmission of electric power, energy or commerce, from tbe power house of the McCall Ferry Power Company a corporation incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and which is constructing a hydro-electric plant for the generation of electric power or energy on the Susquehanna river at McCall’s Ferry, in York and Lancaster Counties in said Commonwealth, to points of delivery to consumers within the State of Maryland.

“And the said defendant company purports to have contracted with said McCalls Ferry Power Company for the transmission of such electric power or energy so to be generated as aforesaid from the power house of said company to points in Pennsylvania and Maryland for delivery to consumers.

“And said defendant company is claiming that therefore it is engaged in interstate'commerce between said States.”

And also alleged that on November 23, 1909, the defendant corporation professing to act under and in virtue of the aforesaid powers, and of those claimed to be conferred by Chapter-240 of 1908 amending and re-enacting section 366 of Article 23, took proceedings under sections 251. 252 of Art 23 relating to condemnation by railroad corporations, for

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Bluebook (online)
76 A. 254, 112 Md. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-susquehanna-pole-line-co-md-1910.