88 Neb. 259 | Neb. | 1911
On a section-line highway running north and south between Grand Island and the Soldiers* Home, John Alt, defendant, cut the York County Telephone Company’s toll-wires March 7, 1910, where they cross the right of way and track of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company. Tinder the charge that he was guilty of the offense described, he was convicted and sentenced to pay- a fine of $50. As plaintiff in error, defendant now presents for review the record of his conviction.
The statute which defendant was convicted of violating provides: “That any telegraph or telephone company incorporated or doing business in this state shall be and is hereby granted the right of way along any of the public roads of the state for the erection of poles and wires; provided, that poles shall be set at least six feet within the boundary line of said roadway and not placed so as to interfere; with road crossings; and provided, that said wires shall he placed at the height of not less than twenty feet above all road crossings.” Comp. St. 1909, ch. 89a, sec. 14.
“Any person or persons who shall break, injure, destroy, or otherwise1 interfere with the poles, wires, or fixtures of any telegraph or telephone company in this state shall
Defendant did not attempt to controvert proof of these facts: Assuming to act under authority of the statute quoted, the York County Telephone Company in September, 1909, erected its poles along the highway. Six telephone wires were strung on the poles in December, 1909, and thereafter were used for long-distance service, but they had been cut at the railroad crossing a number of times before defendant was arrested. Early in the morning, March 7, 1910, (-liarles J. Palmer, an agent of the telephone company, hid behind a big signboard and watched the crossing. Pretty soon a section gang came up the railroad on a hand-car and stopped. A little later a bridge gang of which defendant was a member arrived in the same manner, but before any overt act had been committed Palmer accosted them and a conversation in regard to the wires ensued. At that time the wires crossing the railroad track were supported by two 45-foot poles, one being north of the track and the other south of it. The poles were 115 feet apart. One was seven feet and the other eight feet outside of the railroad right of way. Roth were six feet within the boundary line of the highway. The wires were 30 feet above the rails at the crossing and were in good condition. There was nothing about either the poles or the wires to interfere with the passage of trains or with a man on a box car. That the wires in no way disturbed railroad traffic or endangered employees is further evidenced by the fact that an attorney for the railroad company, in testifying on behalf of defendant to the civil nature of the controversy, said that had a suit been brought to enjoin the cutting of the wires they would have been allowed to remain without a temporary injunction until the termination of the suit. With the poles and the wires in the situation and condition indicated by this undisputed proof, the conversation to which reference has been made took place. According to the
Correspondence between the respective counsel for the two companies and oral proof were adduced by defendant to show that in the cutting of the wires he acted under the direction of his employer; that the direction was given in the assertion of a legal right to prevent the telephone company from running its wires across the right of way without permission of the railroad company, and that defendant acted without the malice essential to the commission of a crime.
Defendant argues that the conviction should be reversed because the court gave an instruction containing a copy of the statute violated. It is proper to describe an offense in the language of the statute. Long v. State, 23 Neb. 33. To quote from the statute under which defendant is being prosecuted is not necessarily erroneous. Mills v. State, 53 Neb. 263. Defendant does not question these principles, but insists that the trial court, in quoting without explanation the statute which authorizes telephone companies to use the highways for poles and wires, deprived him of the benefit of another statute prohibiting such companies from crossing the right of way of a railroad company without its permission. That act, among other things, provides: “That all persons, associations, and corporations engaged in the generating and transmitting of electric current for sale in this state for power or other purposes, are hereby granted the right of way for
Further complaint is: The instruction was given without qualification and left the jury to infer that the telephone company had acquired an absolute right to the use of the highway without regard to the following considerations: The railroad company owns the fee to the land at the crossing. The public has a mere easement for highway purposes. The wires subject the railroad right of way to an additional burden. The telephone company has no right to cross the track without permission. When permission is given, the railroad company is entitled to compensation. Overhead wires are dangerous. The wires should be laid in a conduit under the track. The burden of keeping the crossing in a safe condition for travel is on the railroad company. Conceding all these propositions for the purpose of the argument, but for no other purpose, did defendant have a lawful right to cut the wires, when directed by his employer to do so? A text-writer says: “A telephone wire stretched over the property of another without authority, but causing no obstruction, is not a nuisance which may be summarily abated by cutting the wire.” McMillan, Telephone Law, sec. 88.
Reasons for applying this doctrine to the present case are obvious. The state, in the proper exercise of its power to control public highways, may authorize a tele
In Bronson v. Albion Telephone Co., 67 Neb. 111, this court, in an opinion by Commissioner Pound, said: “We do not think public utilities of this kind ought to be suspended until every abutting owner upon the streets or highways to be used has been duly appeased. If he has been substantially or appreciably injured, an action at law will ordinarily afford him full compensation. If he has not, no opportunity for extorting an unreasonable settlement should be afforded Mm.”
In a case in point the following language was used by the supreme court of Alabama, though the opinion was not officially reported': “The theory of the defense was, and is, that, as the owner of the' telephone line without the consent of the railroad company, and without condemnation proceedings, had crossed the right of way of the railroad company, the railroad company had the right to cut and remove the wire, and its employee acting under its instructions could therefore be guilty of no offense. The facts in the case will not justify such defense. The tel
When defendant cut the wires in the public highway, they were not obstructing trains or endangering railroad employees. If the rights or property of the railroad company were invaded by the telephone company, as suggested by defendant, the courts were open for the purpose of granting adequate relief. Under the facts disclosed by the record, the protection of those rights did not justify a resort to violence or require the destruction of property which was at the time on a public highway and being-used in the public service, and the jury were justified in so finding. In giving the instruction assailed, the district court did not err.
Another assignment of error involves the following instructions :
“(12) You are instructed that where there is in fact a controversy between two parties over their-legal rights and one of the parties does or causes to be done an act in the honest belief that he is protecting his own property, there can be no such criminal intent as is necessary to make such act punishable as a crime, and in this case, if you find that there was a controversy between the rail
“(13) You are instructed that, if you find from all of the evidence in the case that the poles and wires of the York County Telephone Company were erected and constructed in a careful, skilled, and workmanlike manner, and as provided by law, and so as to offer security to life and property in operation of railroad, and that the wires thereof crossed the right of way of the railroad company, that they were not interfering with the use of the railroad company in its use and occupancy of its right of way, and that said telephone line at the point of said intersection was in good condition and in a good state of repair at the time it is charged that said wires were cut, and that they Avere occupying a legally established highway in said county' at a point crossed by said railroad company, then said railroad company would not have the right to cut and remove the wires of the telephone company, nor could the railroad legally authorize any of its employees to cut or molest the said wires.”
Defendant insists that instruction 13 misstates the law and nullifies instruction 12. This criticism is not well founded. Instruction 13 is in harmony Avith the vieAvs already expressed in discussing another assignment of error. The instructions should be considered together. Notwithstanding what is said in instruction 13, the jury were previously told in instruction 12 to acquit defendant, if they found there was a bona fide controversy between the companies over their respective rights, and that in pursuance thereof he was directed by his employer to
Defendant also contends that the conviction cannot be sustained because there was no evidence of malice on his part. He testified he had no ill will toward the telephone company. Malice, however, in its legal sense, does not necessarily signify ill will toward a particular individual, but “denotes that condition of mind which is manifested by the intentionally doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse.” Housh v. State, 43 Neb. 163. Under all the circumstances disclosed, the jury were justified in finding there was “malice” in defendant’s act, within the meaning of that word as legally defined. Knowing at the time he cut the wires that they were in
A reversal is also asked because tAVo witnesses for defendant were not permitted to testify to their knowledge of injuries resulting from overhead telephone Avires. The questions calling for testimony of this character had no reference to the Avires or place in controversy, and objections .thereto were properly sustained.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is
Affirmed.