This suit wаs brought by appel-lee to restrain by injunction the officers and agents of appellant from prosecuting, arresting, or in any manner interfering with appellee or its servants in the erection and construction of a telephone line in and upon certain streets of the city of Brownwood, wherein a temporary restraining order was issued as prayed for. Prior to the institution of this suit, appellee, who is duly incorporated under the laws of this state for conducting a telegraph and teleрhone business, filed with the city council of the city of Brownwood, which is a city incorporated under the general laws of this state, its petition, stating that its domicile was at Gold-thwaite, Tex., and that it desired to build a telephone line for long distance service from the city of Temple along the right of way of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway to Brownwood, and presented therewith, for its inspection and approval, a map or plat of the route of the proposed telephone linе into said city, showing the streets and alleys to be occupied and the location of each pole and fixture to be constructed, representing that, in accordance with said map, they would erect 36 poles, for which it tendered a certified check for the sum of $90, payable to the city treasurer of said.city, for the purpose of holding the city harmless against any damage that might be done to its sidewalks, streets, or alleys in the erection thereof, to be returned when the city marshal should report that the .conditions of the ordinances relating to telephone lines shall have been complied- with; further representing that it desired to erect poles and fixtures for the aforesaid line under the provisions of the ordinances having reference to the construction of telephone lines, the same being articles 108 to 116, inclusive, of the civil ordinances of said city, declaring its acceptance of all the provisions of said ordinances, and agreeing to abide by all ordinances and regulations thereafter to be adopted relating to such lines; and further agreeing to permit the city of Brownwood to occupy and use the top cross-arms of any poles so to be erected by it for telephone, telegraph, police calls, or fire alarm purposes, free of charge, praying that said city council accept the tender so made, approve the map and plat and the proposed setting аnd construction of the poles and fixtures, and, in the event said plat or route may, for any reason, be objectionable or any part of the same, then asking the council to point out such objection, to the end that such plat and route along the streets and alleys of the city may be changed to meet such objection.
Said city had theretofore enacted the following ordinances relating to the construction of telephone lines, designated under the head of “Criminal Ordinances,” to wit:
Article 108: “All telegraph and telephone poles used as herein provided shall be of sound timber, not less than five inches in diameter at the upper end, straight, shapely and of uniform size, neatly planed or shaved and thoroughly painted with lead and oil, paint of such coloring as the city council may direct, and shall be supplied with iron steps commencing within twelve feet of the ground and reaching the arms supporting the wires. Said wires shall be run at a height of not less than twenty-four feet from thе ground, and the arms lengths shall be determined by action of the city council. When poles or other fixtures are erected on a street they shall be placed if practicable, on the outer edge of the sidewalk just inside of the curbstone or a line dividing the lots of property owners, but in no case to be placed so as to interfere with, or damage the curbstone, trees or other public or private property.”
Article HO: “That any person or corporation desiring to erеct or construct said poles or fixtures, shall make a deposit of $2.50 for each and every pole to be erected, and the same shall be held by the city treasurer for the purpose of holding the city harmless against any damage caused to sidewalks, streets and alleys in the erection of poles, and the said deposit shall be returned to the parties making the same when the city marshal shall report that the conditions of this chapter have been complied with, and such persons shall first submit to the city council for its approval a map or plat of the .route of the proposed line or lines, showing *711 the streets and alleys to be occupied and location of each pole or fixture to be constructed. Unless the city council approves of the same, such person or corporation or their agents shall have no right to erect such poles, or construct such fixtures. All work pertaining to the erection or construction of such pоles on any sidewalk or alley, shall be done under the supervision of the city council, and the pavement shall be restored to its original condition as soon as possible.”
Article 112 provides that “all persons, companies or corporations desiring to erect poles and fixtures under the provisions of this ordinance shall first file, in the office of the city secretary, a written acceptance of all the provisions of this ordinance; also a written agreement permitting the city of Brownwood to occupy and use the top cross-arms of any pole erected for the use of said city for telegraph, telephone, police calls or fire alarm purposes, free of charge.”
Article 114 of said ordinances provides that “every violation of any of the provisions of the articles under the subject of ‘offenses pertaining to poles and wires’ shall constitute a misdemeanor, and the persons or companies or corporations, or any employé, agent, local manager or officer thereof in Brownwood violating any of said provisions shall, upon conviction in the corporation court be fined in any sum not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars for each offense.”
On the 16th of April, 1912, by motion, said petition was referred to the street committee to investigate and make report at the next regular meeting of said council, which on the 7th of May thereafter reported to the effect that they had investigated the route, over which said company proposed to enter said city, and that they found no objection to the use of the streets and alleys for the construction of said line into the city of Brownwood as designated on the map of said route, provided that the construction of the same complied in all respects with the ordinances relative to the construction of such lines in said city, and that the legal rights of all other telephone, telegraph, and elеctric light companies be respected. Hearing upon this report was postponed until the 21st day of May thereafter, whereupon, after being duly considered, the council refused to concur therein, and denied such permit to the company, ordering that its petition, map, and certified check be returned. At this time appellee had already constructed its line from Goldthwaite to the city of Brown-wood at an expense of $5,000, and had upon the ground at Brownwood some $700 worth of material with the view of constructing its line in said town, but was prevented from so doing by threats of prosecution on the part of the officers of said city in the event it undertook so , to do. > .Thereupon appellee presented its- petition to the district- judge, setting up these - facts, as well as others which may hereafter be noticed, praying for a writ of injunction as heretofore indicated, which was granted, and the case set for hearing.
The main contentions of appellants, both in the triаl court and here, are that the court erred in granting the relief asked because, first, the effect of granting it was to divest appellant of the possession of its streets and vest the same in appellee — a possession it had enjoyed for many years — second, the facts alleged in appellee’s petition showed that it had three full and complete remedies at law: (1) By defeating the threatened criminal prosecution in the courts; (2) by testing the validity of the ordinances under habеas corpus; and (3) by mandamus to compel action by the city council. It is next urged that the right to designate where the poles should be located belonged solely to the city of Brownwood, and that the court had no jurisdiction, directly or indirectly, to review or regulate the exercise of such right, and further that the ordinances set out in appellee’s petition, which were alleged to be void, were a valid and lawful exercise of the city’s police powers expressly vested in it by. the lаws of Texas, and it appeared from its own petition that it had not complied therewith in the proceedings before the council on its application for permit in the following respects: (a) That no such deposit of money with the city treasurer was made as required by said ordinances, but instead thereof that, said company had merely deposited a certified check; (b) it was not shown to said council that M. L. Brown, the president and general manager, had any authority to bind said corрoration or act for it in the matter; (c) that plaintiff had not offered in said application to construct the character of line required by the ordinances of the city, nor did it furnish said council any specifications or evidence tending to show the character of line it had intended to build; (d) that it had not offered to build its line in accordance with the governing ordinances, but proposed to comply with ordinances not governing that matter, to wit, civil ordinances, whereas the ordinancеs controlling such proceedings were in fact criminal ordinances of said city. It further urged that the undisputed evidence in the case showed that the plaintiffs wholly failed to comply with the law and the governing ordinances of the city in its application and the accompanying plat presented to the city council asking for a designation on the' part of the city of places for setting its poles. And finally contending that, while appellee might have the right to conduct a long distancе telephone business within said city, it had no right to establisn a local exchange therein. .
The city, therefore, was without the right to exclude and prevent the company from occupancy of its streets. It merely had the right to direct where the poles should be placed. This it had undertaken to do by an-ordinance which appellee had agreed to comply with, and offered, in the event its application was not sufficient, to make it сonform to any suggestions on the part of the council, but the council merely refused to act, by which, it seems to us, it waived its privilege in this respect, whereupon the appellee, in our opinion, had the right to proceed with the work in accordance with the designation as made by the ordinance. If this be true, then it also follows that the court did not err in granting the writ forbidding the city and its officers to interfere with the progress of the work.
It is contended, in effect, on the part of appellant by- its sixteenth assignment, that, even though it be conceded that the company had the right to operate a long distance line within said city, yet it was not authorized to establish therein a local exchange. While we do not consider it necessary to pass upon this contention for the reason that the evidence only showed that it was the purpose and object оf the company to establish and maintain a long distance line, yet it may not be improper to observe in passing that article 1231, R. S. 1911, supra, does not seem to make any distinction between local and long distance lines in granting the right to such companies to construct and maintain their lines upon and across any of the public roads and streets of such cities. . The' remaining assignments have been duly considered, and are regarded as not well taken.
Believing that the court did- not err in granting the writ, its judgment is affirmed:
Affirmed.
