The gas company is the elder of the two companies, and it is not denied by plaintiff and appellee that the rights of the gas company in the street are prior and paramount to those of the plaintiff, unless the gas company by its representations and conduct has created an equitable estoppel, whereby it has precluded itself from claiming that its rights are paramount. The equitable estoppel upon which the plaintiff relies arises, it is alleged, partly out of the representations of the defendant’s officers and agents, and partly out of the defendant’s silence and failure to object to the location of the track while it was being laid. This leads us to consider first the character of the representations and the capacity in which the persons were acting who made them. As to the facts there is very little if any controversy.
The plaintiff claims that it relied in the first instance upon the representations of one Phalon, who, on being told by the plaintiff’s agent that it was about to lay its track in Brady street, and wished to avoid defendant’s pipes, informed said agent that the pipes were laid in the center of the street.
It is not denied that Phalon did so state. The plaintiff having a right to lay its track in the street, as much so as the defendant had a right to lay and maintain its pipes in the street, it was the plaintiff’s right to demand of the defendant information in regard to the location of the pipes. We are inclined to think,- too, that it was the defendant’s'duty, in view of the rights which others might acquire in the street, to know the precise location of the pipes and be able to give correct information to those who had a right to demand it. If we are correct, and the company did wrongly represent the location of the pipes so as to lead plaintiff to lay its track over them when it-was seeking to avoid them, and seeking information
As Davenport is uncontradicted by any person showing any reasonable means of knowledge in regard to Phalon’s powers,
The only other person who said anything about tlie location of the pipes was tbe superintendent, Baldwin, and what he said about it should have created distrust in regard to their location rather than confidence. lie said that they were in the center of the street so far as they knew, but that there bad been so much irregularity about laying the pipes he was not certain about it.
An estoppel may, of course, be created by silence, but not where, as in this case, there is no evidence that the persons whose silence it is claimed created the estoppel had knowledge of the matter in regard to which it is claimed that they should have spoken.
We think the Circuit Court erred in granting the injunction.
Reversed.