97 Mass. 555 | Mass. | 1867
The sixty-fourth chapter of the General Statutes defines the powers, privileges, duties, restrictions and liabilities of companies incorporated for the transmission of intelligence by electricity. The second section of that chapter authorizes “each company” to construct lines of electric telegraph upon and along the highways and public roads and across any waters within the state, by the erection of the posts and other fixtures necessary to sustain the wires of its lines, under the provisions of the following section ; but forbids the company to incommode the public use of highways, or public roads, or to endanger or interrupt the navigation of any waters. The third section provides that the mayor and aldermen or selectmen of any place through which the lines of a company are to pass shall give the company a writing specifying where the posts may be located, the kind of posts, the height of wires, &e., and may afterwards, upon notice and hearing, direct any alterations; and that such specifications and decisions shall be recorded in the records of the city or town.
The first question which arises upon the report is, whether the determination of the mayor and aldermen of the places in which the poles of telegraph companies may stand, is to be
Whether the eleventh section is to be construed as giving or preserving a right of action, where the injury is caused by the mere placing of the poles at the places appointed for them, may perhaps admit of doubt. The liability of the poles to decay and fall, or to lean over, and of the wires to become displaced, would give the provision effect, if the right of the original location of them were regarded as unquestionable. But if the fullest force is given to the language of the section, it would not require us to hold that the original setting of the poles in the highway, is an indictable nuisance. In Young v. Yarmouth, 9 Gray, 386, it was expressly decided, under the St. of 1849, c. 93, that the license from the selectmen was a complete justification for placing telegraph poles in a highway, and that an action could not be maintained against the town for an injury occasioned to a traveller by them.
The other question presented by the report is one of even greater difficulty; and a careful study of the whole chapter hardly satisfies us that we can ascertain with certainty the intent of the legislature concerning it.
The telegraph poles which the jury have found were a nuisance and obstruction in the highway, were placed there by a telegraph company incorporated under the laws of New York. They had leave to place them where they did from the mayor and aldermen of Boston, and the specification in writing which gave the permission was duly recorded in the city records.
■ Upon any other construction than the one which we adopt, it would follow that, while the legislature was carefully guarding the responsibility of the corporations which it authorized by law and limited, the sphere of their operations, and made it the duty of the town and city officers to -designate the places where they might place poles in the highway, any other person or voluntary association, however irresponsible, might engage as advantageously in the same business, and have an equal right to the exclusive occupation of the public right. This would be an anomaly in legislation which neither the language, nor the apparent purpose and object of the statutes, would seem to countenance.
There is in the St. of 1859, c. 260, an expression which might be taken to imply that the legislature of that year supposed that others than incorporated companies might erect telegraph poles in the public ways. The first section provides that towns shall be liable for injuries to persons or property occasioned by telegraph posts or other fixtures in the highways, although they have been placed under the authority of the selectmen. The second section is as follows : “ The companies or persons erecting such telegraphic posts or fixtures, or to whom they may belong, shall be held to reimburse and repay to said town the full amount of damages and costs recovered as aforesaid by any party injured.” In the corresponding section in the Gen. Sts. c. 64, § 11, only the company owning the telegraphic line is mentioned. We do not think, on the whole, that it greatly affects the question of construction; and, at any rate, cannot give it
On tile ground, therefore, that in the case at bar the telegraph poles which created a nuisance in the highway, being erected by an association not incorporated in this Commonwealth, were not lawfully placed therein, it was the duty of the city of Boston to make the way safe and convenient by removing them, and the conviction at the trial was right.
If, as was suggested at the argument, the general understanding of the law, as shown by a very general and almost universal practice, is different from our interpretation of it, the legislature can easily furnish a remedy, by making any change in the statutes which it may deem that justice or the public convenience may require. Judgment on the verdict.