City of Toledo v. Western Union Tel. Co.

107 F. 10 | 6th Cir. | 1901

WANTY, District Judge,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

We assume for the purposes of this appeal that the complainant was rightfully occupying the streets, alleys, and conduits in the city of Toledo, for the conduct of its ordinary and usual business. We also assume that the defendant had no intention of interfering with the complainant in such use, and that the resolution of the common council was directed against the installation of the district telegraph plant which was being put in, “whether,” in the words of the resolution, “it belonged to the National District Telegraph Company or any other individual, company, or corporation, without having first complied with the laws, ordinances, and regulations governing this class of work in the city of Toledo.” The broad claim is made by the complainant that by accepting the terms of the act of congress of 1866 it became an agency of the federal government, and as such has the right to occupy with its wires and poles the post roads of the United States, which include the streets and alleys of the city of Toledo, subject only to the limitation of not interfering with ordinary travel; that, as it was not necessary originally to obtain the consent of the municipality to occupy its streets, it is under no obligation to obtain permits to put in new construction and do the work under the direction of the city civil engineer and superintendent of fire-alarm telegraph. We think, however, in the use of these streets and alleys, although it had accepted the terms of the statute of 1866, the complainant was subject to the control of the municipality, and could not, in defiance of its reasonable regulations, erect poles and stretch wires without let or hindrance. It is necessary for its fire protection, and a proper knowledge of the obstructions in its streets, and the use to which its public places are being subjected, for the city to know, before any construction is put in, what is contemplated, and to have the work done under the supervision of its officers; and the complainant is no more exempt from such restrictions than any other corporation rightfully occupying the streets and alleys of the .city. The complainant recognized its obligation to obtain permits *13in all of its conduit work and in its outside construction until the municipal authorities attempted to prevent the installation of a district telegraph plant, and it then for the first time claimed that it was an agency of the federal government, and was subject to no-such restrictions. We think in taking that position it was mistaken, as there was no intention on the part of the federal government in permitting the complainant to use its post roads to dispossess the state and municipalities of the control of them, but the permission was given like any other franchise granted to a corporation, to he exercised in subordination to both public and private rights.

The claim that the acceptance of the terms of the act of congress of 1866 made the complainant an agency of the federal government, and exempt from state and municipal control, has been made by the complainant whenever state or municipal authorities have tried to subject it to tbe same burdens borne by other corporations doing business within tbe state or municipality, but without avail. When the state of Massachusetts passed an act taxing the Western Union Telegraph Company on account of tbe property owned and' used by it within that state, it set up its acceptance of the terms of tbe act of 1866 making it an agency of tbe federal government, and claimed that it was, therefore, exempt from such taxation; that to tax it was equivalent to taxing a government bank, or any other government agency, and therefore beyond the power of the state. But it was held that the act of 1866 was only a permissive statute, and nothing in it implied an exemption from the ordinary burdens of taxation. W. U. Tel. Co. v. Massachusetts, 125 U. S. 530, 8 Sup. Ct. 961, 31 L. Ed. 790. When the city of St. Louis, in the state of Missouri, imposed an annual charge for each pole erected in its streets by the complainant, tbe same claim was again made. In announcing tbe judgment of tbe supreme court of the United Stat.es, Justice Brewer used the following language, which is not inappropriate here, in view of the claim made in this case:

“It is a misconception, however, to suppose that the franchise or privilege granted by the act of 1866 carries with it the unrestricted right to nnpropriate the public property of a state. It is, like any other franchise, to be exercised in subordination to public as to private rights. While a grant from one government may supersede and abridge franchises and rights held at the will of its grantor, it cannot abridge any property rights of a public character created by the authority of another sovereignty. No one would suppose that a franchise from the federal government to a corporation, state or national, to construct interstate roads or lines of travel, transportation, or communication, would authorize it to enter upon the private property of an individual, and appropriate it without compensation. No matter how broad and comprehensive might be the terms in which the franchise was granted, it would he confessedly subordinate to the right of the-individual not to be deprived of his property without just compensation. And the principle is the same when, under the grant of a franchise from the national government, a corporation assumes to enter upon property of a public nature belonging to a state. It would not be claimed, for instance, that under a franchise from congress to construct and operate an interstate railroad the grantee thereof could enter upon the State-house grounds of the state, and construct its depot there, without paying the value of the property thus appropriated. Although the state-house grounds be property devoted to public uses, it is property devoted to the public uses of the state, and property whose ownership and con*14trol áre in the state;, and it is not within the competency of the national government to dispossess the state of such control and use, or appropriate the same to its own. benefit, or the benefit of any of its corporations or grantees, without suitable' compensation to the state. This rule extends to streets and highways. They are the public property of the state. While for purposes of travel and common use they are open to the citizens of every state alike, and no state can, by its legislation, deprive the citizens of another state of such common use, yet when an appropriation of any part of this public property to an exclusive use is sought, whether by a citizen or corporation of the same or another state, or a corporation of the national government, it is within the competency of the state, representing the sovereignty of that local public, to exact for its benefit compensation for this exclusive appropriation. It matters not for what that exclusivo appropriation is taken, whether for steam railroads or street railroads, telegraphs or telephones, the state may, if it chooses, exact from the party or corporation given such exclusive use pecuniary compensation to the general public for being deprived of the common use of the portion thus appropriated.” City of St. Louis v. W. U. Tel. Co., 148 U. S. 100-102, 13 Sup. Ct 488, 489, 37 L. Ed. 384.

We think the complainant should have made the usual applications for permits to string its wires, stating exactly what was required, in accordance with the regulations of the city, with which it had been accustomed to comply, and it had no right to construct its work in defiance of those requirements.

We are also of the opinion that the Western Union Telegraph Company had no right, under the privileges granted to it by the act of 1866, to install a district telegraph system ití the city of Toledo, as that act only extended its privileges to the business of telegraph companies. A district telegraph business, as disclosed by this record, consists in securing the attendance of messenger boys to carry telegraph messages, run miscellaneous errands, carry packages, distribute posters, invoices, invitations, etc. The business also includes night watchman signals, fire and burglar alarms, and police calls. If the act of 1866 is construed to embrace a company formed for such service because it uses wires and appliances in use by a telegraph company, then it would not have been necessary for the proposed National District Telegraph Company to ask permission of complainant to install its proposed plant on its poles and in its conduits, because, by accepting the terms of the act of congress, it would itself have been entitled to all the privileges that the complainant derives from that act. It was conceded on the argument that such -a corporation would not be entitled to the privileges conferred by the act, but complainant insists that the installation of the call boxes is necessary for gathering messages to be transmitted in order to meet modern competition, and that they are a necessary incident to its business, and therefore come within the privileges granted to it. It is claimed that the test is, are the boxes and wires put in for telegraphing? If they are, no matter in what business they are used, they come within the privileges granted. If this contention is correct, the complainant may, with the consent .of the owner, run its wire into every store, shop, office, manufactory, and residence in the city. Instead of the limited number of wires used for the business of interstate commerce, the number would be limitless. Instead of the complainant being limited to transmitting *15messages by telegraph, it could become engaged in every known business. We do not: assent to this view. We think the business of a district telegraph company does not come within the privileges granted by the act, and it cannot, as an incident in procuring messages to be sent, he privileged more than a telephone service, for the same purpose, to which it has been held by the supreme court the act has no application. Citv of Richmond v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 174 U. S. 761, 19 Sup. Ct. 778, 43 L. Ed. 1162. It follows tliat the order for a preliminary injunction was improvidently made, and must be reversed.