аfter making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question arising on the foregoing facts is whether telephone poles and wires cоnstitute an additional burden upon complainants’ fee for which they are entitled to compensation.
In support of the liability, the following cases and text-writers are сited by complainants’ counsel, viz.: Eels v. Tel. Co.,
For the defendant the following authorities are cited, viz.: McCann, v. Tel. Co.,
Some other cases upon both sides oí the question may he found in the citations containеd in the opinions of the judges in the cases above referred to, and in the footnotes, and also in the notes to 27 Am. and Eng. Encyc. Law, pp. 1008, 1009; hut in those which we have cited will be found a full and satisfactory presentation of every consideration properly entering into the inquiry.
It is obvious upon a mere casual inspection, even, that the numerical weight of authority supports the complainants’ contention. The question is to be determined, however, not by numbers merely, but upon what shall appear to us the best reаsons.
The case is of first impression here. It has been held by this court that steam railways, both the ordinary commercial (Railroad v. Bingham,
To this latter view, it is replied that the same course
We are of the opinion that the second view is the sounder one.
When land has been dedicаted or condemned for street purposes, the city has the right not only to' use the surface of the ground, but also may go beneath the surface, or above it, so far as mаy be necessary to adapt to its proper use the land so devoted to the service of the public. We approve the authorities which hold that the chief purpose of a street is that of intercommunication between the inhabitants or denizens of a city or town and that the telephone is but a new and improved method of аffecting this purpose, and hence not a new burden upon the fee of the abutting owner. If this instrument of a larger and more generous civilization were destroyed, not only would sоcial intercourse be very greatly restricted, but the progress of all business would be retarded and its development confined within much narrower limits than now. Friends desiring to-conversе with each other, whether in near or remote
For the reasons stated, we are of the opinion that the court of chancery appeals erred in rendering a decree-in favor of the complainants.
The decree of that court must therefore be reversed;.
is of the opinion that the authorities first cited present the sounder view, that telephone poles and wires do constitute an additional burden upon the fee, and he therefore dissents.
