57 Fla. 374 | Fla. | 1909
Appellee, a corporation, operating and maintaining a telephone exchange business in the city of Jacksonville since 1890, on the first day of February, 1909, file a bill in the Circuit Court of Duval county against appellant praying an injunction against the enforcement of a certain órdinance known as “ordinance No. J-57, being Bill No. J-103,entitled an ordinance regulating and fixing maximum rates to be charged by telephone companies using the streets o'f the City of' Jacksonville, Fla., and prescribing a penalty for the violation thereof,” passed January 25, 1909, and approved January 26, 1909. The ordinance is in the following words and figures:
“Ordinance No. J-57.
Bill No. J-103.
An Ordinance Regulating and Fixing Maximum Rates to be charged by Telephone Companies Using the 'Streets of the City of Jacksonville, Fla., and Prescribing a Penalty for the Violation Thereof.
Be it Ordained by the Mayor and City Council of the City of Jacksonville:
Section 1. That from and after the passage of this Ordinance it shall be unlawful for any telephone company using the streets of the City of Jacksonville, Fla., for its wires, poles or otherwise, under a franchise from the City of Jacksonville, Fla., to charge, collect, or receive, for the use of any telephone, -operated or maintained by such company, any rate, fee, compensation or payment for the use of such telephone and the line service incident thereto in excess of the rate prescribed in the following schedule, to wit: For single telephone'with in
The foregoing rate shall not apply to two or more persons having a joint telephone, nor where more than one telephone is used in the same place.
Sec. 2. Any person, firm, association or corporation violating the provisions of this Ordinance shall be fined by exceeding Five Hundred Dollars or imprisonment not exceeding three months.
Sec. 3. That any charge, collection or receipt of money in excess of the rate hereby fixed as to each telephone shall be a separate offense hereunder and punishable as such.
Pass January 25, 1909.
Approved January 26, 1909.
W. H. Sebring, Mayor.
G- D. Acklerly, Recorder.
Attest: (Seal)-
Published January 26, 1909.”
The bill contains sufficient allegations to present for adjudication the question whether the City of Jacksonville has power and authority under the charter to pass and enforce this ordinance prescribing maximum rates for the use of telephones operated by the appellee, and that is the only question we are called upon to adjudicate
Upon a hearing the Circuit Judge granted the appellee a temporary injunction, and the case is here on appeal from this order.
It is not contended by the appellant that the special charter of the City of Jacksonville gives it in express terms the power to prescribe the maximum rates set forth in the said ordinance for the use of telephones. We are requested to determine whether or not the power
“1. A municipal corporation can exercise only such powers as are granted to, it in express terms, or those necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted, or those that are essential and indispensable, not simply convenient to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation. Any fair, reasonable doubt concerning the existence of the power is resolved by the courts against the corporation.
2. While a strict construction should be applied to the grant of powers, and especially those which result in public burdens, or which are out of the usual range of corporate action, yet if a power is fairly or necessarily implied in or incident to those clearly given, is should not be impaired by a strict construction.
3. All the powers conferred upon a municipal corporation should be construed with a view of carrying out the objects and purposes of its creation as a public agency.
4. Supplying the inhabitants of a city with electric light for use in their private residences and houses is such a municipal purpose as to authorize its delegation bjr the Legislature to municipal bodies.”
Applying the foregoing principles the court held that the power conferred upon the city to provide for lighting the city by gas or other illuminating material or in any other manner in connection with other specified powers was sufficient to authorize the erection and maintenance
The case of Charles Simon’s Son’s Company v. Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Company, 99 Md. 141, 57 Atl. Rep. 193, 63 L. R. A. 727, is cited to sustain the ordinance here .involved. The opinion in that case is a long and instructive one. A bill was filed by the appellants to enforce the provisions of an ordinance of the City of Baltimore under which the defendant Telegraph and Telephone Company was doing a telephone business in said city. The telephone company was granted permission by the city to use the streets and public places of the city for its lines of wire, electrical conductors, &c., subject to the condition that the prices to be charged for telephone service were not to exceed certain mentioned rates, accepted the terms of the ordinance embodying this condition and was operating thereunder. The court held: “The duty to furnish service at specified rates may be imposed by a municipal corporation having statutory authority to regulate the use of its streets for telephone wires as a condition to the use of such streets by a telephone company;” and also, “A telephone company which accepts the condition as to rates to be charged by it, imposed by a municipal corporation as a condition to its use of the streets for its conduits, cannot complain that the rates are not reasonable.”
It is also suggested on the part of appellant that the power to pass the ordinance in question may be implied from the terms of Chapter 4052 Laws of 1891 (Section 1024 General 'Statutes of 1906). The act, however,.
We feel constrained to hold in the light of the doctrines enounced in Jacksonville Electric Light Co. v. City of Jacksonville, supra, Galloway v. Town of Tavares, supra, and other decisions of this court, as well as the other authorities cited, that there is at least a “fair and reasonable doubt” concerning the existence of the power in the City of Jacksonville to adopt the ordinance in question, and therefore the order appealed from must be, and is hereby, affirmed.
All concur.