157 Mass. 86 | Mass. | 1892
This is an information by the Attorney General, under the Sts. of 1887, c. 382, and 1885, c. 314, § 13, to restrain the defendant from maintaining or using certain wires over which the defendant furnished electricity for lighting. The defendant was incorporated since the passage of the St. of 1887, c. 382. By § 3 of that act, “ In any city or town in which a company is engaged in . . . the manufacture and sale of electric light, no other company shall lay or erect wires over or under the streets, lanes, and highways of such city or town for the purpose of carrying on its business, without the consent of the mayor and aldermen,” etc. There were companies in Boston engaged in the manufacture and sale of electric light at the date of the act, and the defendant- has not obtained the consent required by it. The wires in question are of three classes: first, two wires in a tunnel under Hawley Street, laid without license by a predecessor of the defendant, and now belonging to the defendant; secondly, wires put up by the defendant and still belonging to the defendant, throughout their entire length, except where they cross the streets, the portions which cross the streets having been sold by the defendant to its customers, or put up by the defendant for its customers in some instances, in others having been put up by the customers, these devices being intended by the parties to evade the statute; thirdly, wires put up by customers, and belonging to them, the intent presumably being again to evade the statute. The question is whether these wires fall within the statute.
The Legislature may think that a business like that of transmitting electricity through the streets of a city necessarily must be transacted by a regulated monopoly, and that a free competition between as many companies and persons as may be minded to put up wires in the streets and to try their luck is impracticable. Without wasting time upon useless generalities about the construction of statutes, it is enough to say that the statute before us had that consideration in view, and must be construed accord
We are of opinion that similar reasoning applies with greater force to the use of the second class of wires by the defendant. It seems to us quite out of the question to say that a company may escape the prohibition of the statute by turning over to a customer so much of each wire as crosses a street, and then continuing to use the wire. If it is forbidden to erect, it is forbidden to use wires which it has erected. And it is within the words of the act, as well when it erects a wire technically as a servant of its customer with intent to use the wire for the purposes of its business, but to evade the act, as when it erects it on its own behalf. We agree that we cannot order wires to be taken down, the owners of which are not before us. But we can order the defendant not to use them.
With much more hesitation we have come to the same conclusion about the wires put up by customers. If a use of them by the company for the purposes of its business is permitted, the statute is made nugatory by an easy evasion. It was suggested that in some of these cases the company did. not sell electric light because it did not own the device at the customer’s end by which the electricity furnished took the form of light, — that the
Injunction accordingly.