12 Mont. 102 | Mont. | 1892
Appellants brought this action “on their own behalf, and on behalf of others similarly situated/’ to obtain an injunction permanently restraining respondents from erecting a certain telephone pole at the place hereinafter described, in the city of Helena.
Respondent demurred to the complaint on the ground that the plaintiffs failed to allege therein facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer was, upon hearing and consideration, sustained, and the temporary injunction dissolved. Plaintiffs elected to rest upon their complaint without amendment, and judgment was therefore entered in favor of defendant, from which plaintiffs appeal, assigning error in sustaining said demurrer, and contend that sufficient facts are alleged to constitute a cause of action.
The facts sufficient for the discussion of the points considered on this appeal, as found in the complaint, are alleged substantially as follows s That defendant is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the Territory of Utah, and is doing business in the city of Helena, county of Lewis and Clarke, and elsewhere in this State• that said city, by ordinance No. 187, a copy of which is annexed to plaintiff’s complaint as a part thereof, granted to defendant for the term of twenty years the right to erect and maintain poles and wires, with the arms and braces necessary thereto, over and above the streets, avenues, alleys, and public grounds of said city, necessary to establish and operate a telephone service therein; that, under the privilege granted by said ordinance, respondent has, by means of poles and wires, established, and is operating, a telephone service in said city. Said ordinance, in addition to said grant, provides that “ all of the rights hereby granted to be subject to such terms and conditions as the city council of the said city may from time to time prescribe, and expressly reserving the right to require the said company to place its wires under ground if the city shall at any time require: provided, that said company shall at all times, when so requested by the city authorities, permit their poles and fixtures to be used for the purpose of placing and maintaining thereon any wires which may be necessary for the police and fire departments of said city.”
That prior to the entry of said town site of the city of Helena the predecessors of plaintiffs in interest in said premises were inhabitants of said city, and occupied and possessed said premises as the owners thereof, against all others except the United States of America; that as such occupants, possessors, and owners they established and laid out in front of said premises a street designated as “Main Street,” also another designated “Edwards Street,” for the ordinary use and purpose of streets and highways; that while the said premises were so occupied and possessed by the predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs, and while said streets were so laid out, established, and used, the probate judge, acting as county judge of the county of Lewis and Clarke, as by law provided, did in the year 1869 enter and acquire title to the said land in question, among other lands, from the government of the United States, as the town site of said city of Helena, in trust, for the use of the inhabitants of said city; “that thereafter the said probate judge, in discharge of his trust in that behalf, conveyed the premises hereinbefore described to the predecessors in interest of these plaintiffs, describing the same as bounded by said Main and Edwards Streets, who in like manner conveyed the same to plaintiffs and their grantors, by reason whereof these plaintiffs became and are the owners of the fee in said premises, and to the center of said Main and Edwards Streets, subject to the ordinary use and purpose thereof as streets and highways; ” that since the entry of said town site for the use of the inhabitants of said city, “ and while the predecessors in interest of these plaintiffs were so the owners, seized and possessed of the premises aforesaid, they cut off from their said lot ten feet in front thereof and adjacent to said Main Street, for the sole purpose of allowing the same to be used as a street and highway, for the purposes of travel, and for the convenience
There are no allegations in the complaint showing that in the proposed planting of said pole at the place described, respondent had located the same contrary to the permission obtained from the city authorities; nor that by the arrangement of the poles set up by respoudent under such permission there has been discrimination against appellants by way of locating the pole in question in such a position as to work an unneces
There is no doubt, considering the nature of the matter under discussion, that a system of poles could be so arranged along the street as to answer the necessity of respondent’s business, and avoid placing one in the street in front of plaintiffs’ lot, by placing the necessary poles in front of other lots. The allegations of the complaint bring to the court the general proposition as to whether defendant may, under the authority granted by said city, erect the necessary appliances for a telephone service in the streets along the front of plaintiffs’ lot, without any peculiar, unnecessary, or greater inconvenience to plaintiffs at that place than to others in front of whose lot a pole is erected.
Appellants contend that they have alleged facts showing that they own the freehold estate not only in their said lot, but also to the center of the said streets adjoining; but, apparently conceding that they can recede somewhat from this proposition, they contend that, if that is not sustained, they still have shown that they own the fee in that portion of the street where said pole is about to be erected, namely, within ten feet of the front of their said lot on Main Street. Much emphasis is laid upon this point by appellants’ counsel. Inasmuch as this is an action to prevent the erection of said pole under the authority granted by the city, it is no doubt important to consider whether plaintiffs own the fee in the street at that point, although, in actions by abutting lot owners to recover damages alleged to have resulted from the erection of such poles, or street railways, or other erections in the street, it has been questioned in the more recent cases whether the fact that the lot owner also owns the fee in the street is of so great importance as formerly supposed. (2 Dillon on Municipal Corpo
It is alleged that said town site was entered in trust for the use and benefit of the inhabitants thereof, under an act of the Congress of the United States entitled “An act for the relief of the inhabitants of cities and towns upon the public lauds,” approved March 2, 1867. In section 1 of that act it is provided : “ Whenever any portion of the public lands have been or may be settled upon and occupied as a town site, not subject to entry under the agricultural pre-emption laws, it is lawful in case such town be incorporated, for the corporate authorities thereof, and, if not incorporated, for the judge of the county court for the county in which such town is situated, to enter at the proper land office, and at the minimum price, the land so settled and occupied, in trust for the several use and benefit of the occupants thereof, according to their respective interests j the execution of which trust as to the disposal of the lots in such town, and the proceeds of the sales thereof to be conducted under such regulations as may be prescribed by the legislative authority of the State or Territory in which the same may be situated.” (§ 2387, Rev. Stats. U. S.; 14 U. S. Stats, at Large, p. 541.)
The legislature of Montana Territory in 1867, before the entry of said town site, had enacted a statute relating to the subject of the entry of town sites under said act of Congress, which provides as follows: “Sec. 3. And the said incorporate authorities, or judge of the Probate Court, as the case may be, shall within three months from and after the entry of such town site, unless a survey and an accurate plat thereof has previously been made, cause the same to be surveyed, and a plat thereof made, which said survey and plat thereof shall conform as near as may be to the existing rights, interest, and
In section 5 of the same act it is provided that “ immediately after such survey and plat has been made, or, if a survey and plat has been made previous to the entry according to the provisions of section 3 of this act, then immediately after the entry of the lands at the proper land office, as provided in the first section of this act, the corporate authorities, or the probate judge, as the case may be, shall cause a notice to be published, .... requiring every claimant or claimants of any town lot or lots to file in the office of such incorporate authorities or probate judge .... a statement of his or their claims within two months from the date of the first publication of such notice.”
Other sections of said act provide for proving the claims of prior occupants of lots in the townsite, and that upon sufficient proof “the probate judge, or corporate authorities, as the case may be, shall, upon payment of the fees prescribed, .... make to such claimant or claimants a good and sufficient deed for such lot or lots.” Said act was amended by the fifth session of the legislative assembly of said Territory in 1869, but not in respect to the provisions above quoted. (5th Sess. Laws, p. 80.)
It is alleged that before the entry of said town site plaintiff’s predecessors in interest occupied and possessed said premises as the owners thereof, as against all except the United States; and that said Edwards and Main Streets were established in front of said premises, and used as highways by the inhabitants of said city for the ordinary use of streets and highways.
Now, the statute, as we have seeu, provided that when a
When this appeal was argued this court gained the impression from the argument that the complaint showed that after such entry of said town site, and conveyance of said lot to plaintiffs’ predecessors, bounded by Main and Edwards Streets, they cut off ten feet from the front of said lot on Main Street, and devoted it to street purposes; but on looking at the complaint such is not found to be the allegation. It is alleged that, since the entry of said town site, that portion of said lot was cut off for street purposes. That may have been the case. The law provided that within three months after the entry the proper survey and plat should have been made and filed, and that such survey should conform, as near as may be, to the former conditions as to lots, streets, and alleys. It may be that since the entry of the town site, in adjusting the streets and alleys, some portion of the said lot, as occupied by plaintiffs’ predecessors, was cut off by them, to become part of said Main Street in front of said lot. But it is not shown by any facts alleged in the complaint that, after the predecessors of plaintiffs obtained
Under this state of facts we are of opinion that, if the municipal authorities of the city of Helena had power to authorize the establishment of a telephone service for the use and convenience of the inhabitants thereof, and it was proper to use the streets for that purpose to the extent of placing necessary poles and wires therein, the plaintiffs not owning the fee in the street, would not be in a position to prevent such use on the ground that it was imposing an additional servitude upon an easement granted by them; for it does not appear from the allegations of the complaint that they, or their predecessors in interest, ever acquired the fee in the land occupied by the street. (1 High on Injunctions, § 637; Lewis’ Eminent Domain, § 172; Mills on Eminent Domain, § 14.) It cannot be successfully questioned that the telephone is an appliance of great public utility to the inhabitants of towns and cities, and its use can be extended far beyond the limits of urban settlements. The use of this means of communication, as well as the telegraph, was considered of so much importance to the people, it was provided in the Constitution that “any association or corporation, or the lessees or managers thereof, organized for the purpose, or any individual, shall have the right to construct or maintain lines of telegraph or telephone within this State, and connect the same with other lines; and the legislative assembly shall,
Is it germane to the proper use of streets to allow such poles to be set in and wires strung over them as are necessary-to set in operation this service? Upon this question Mr. Justice Norton, speaking for the majority of the court, in the case of Julia Bldg. Assoc. v. Bell Tel. Co. 88 Mo. 269; 57 Am. Rep. 398, reasoned as follows: “If it be true, as laid down by the authorities herein cited, that when the public acquires the right to a street, either by dedication, grant, or condemnation, the municipality has the power to appropriate it, not only to such uses as are common and in vogue at the time of its acquisition, but also to such new uses as advanced civilization may suggest as conducive to the public good, the conclusion is inevitable that the use of Sixth Street in the manner and for the purposes proposed is allowable, for it cannot with any show of reason be denied that the means these appliances would afford for the instantaneous transmission'of communications for the transaction of business, without resorting to the slower and common methods of bearing them, would be conducive to the public good, and make the street by these means serve one of the chief purposes for which it was dedicated.”
As to the effect of the telephone in relieving the street of some portion of the throng which would otherwise pass over it, the same judge observes as follows: “ These streets are required by the public to promote trade and facilitate communications in the daily transactions of business between the citizens of one part of the city with those of another, as well as to accommodate the public at large in these respects. If a citizen living or doing business on one end of Sixth Street wishes to communicate with a citizen living and doing business on the other end, or at any intermediate point, he is entitled to use the street, either on foot, on horseback, or in a carriage, or other vehicle/ in bearing his message. The defendants in this case propose to use the street by making the telephone poles and wires the messenger to bear such communications instantaneously, and with more dispatch than any of the above methods, or any other known method of bearing oral communications. Not only would such communication be borne with more dispatch, but to the extent
In this view (and it seems to be very practical) the telephone pole would in fact facilitate passage upon the street, for it would constantly keep out of it a hundred or perhaps a thousand fold more of encumbrances than it brings in, by enabling persons to communicate without physically passing through the street to meet one another.
We think that to use the street in a reasonable manner, and to a reasonable extent, for this purpose, is just and proper, and is within the uses to which the street may lawfully be put, when such use is sanctioned by the public through its duly-authorized municipal agents. (McCormick v. District of Columbia, 4 Mackey, 396; 54 Am. Rep. 284; Pierce v. Drew, 136 Mass. 75; Irwin v. Great Southern Tel. Co. 37 La. An. 63; Taggart v. Newport St. Ry. Co. 16 R. I. 668; People v. Kerr, 27 N. Y. 188.)
Appellants contend that the city counsel possessed no power to grant said company the privilege mentioned, and that such attempted grant of said privilege was consequently void. It is provided in the city charter (§ 44, p. 178, Sess. Laws, 1883, and § 44, p. 18, City Charter & Ordinances) that “the city council shall have power to license, tax, and regulate .... street railways, water companies .... electric light companies, telephone companies, gas companies, and all other branches of business.”
The grant of this power, in our opinion, carried with it the necessary concomitants of its exercise; and that to license and regulate the telephone service, it was necessary to grant permission to use the appliances requisite thereto. The Constitution of the United States provides that Congress “shall have power to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.” Mr. Justice Field, expressing the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Glouchester Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania, 114 U. S. 203, in referring to this “power to regulate,” said: “The power also embraces within its control all the instrumentalities by which that commerce may be carried on, and the means by
Appellants alleged in their complaint that respondent, a corporation organized under the laws of the Territory of Utah, and doing business in this State, has failed to comply with the laws of this State, as prescribed in chapter xxiv., page 720, division 5 of the Compiled Statutes, entitled “Foreign Corporations,” in that it has not filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Lewis and Clarke County a duly authenticated copy of its charter, or certificate of incorporation. A forfeiture to the people of Montana of ten dollars for every day it shall so neglect to file such authenticated certificate or charter of its incorporation, and that all acts and contracts made by such corporation during such neglect shall be void and invalid as to the corporation, are penalties prescribed by said statute against corporations for non-compliance with the provisions thereof. It is evident, however, that appellants cannot enforce or avail themselves of those penalties, or any of them, in an action, until they have alleged facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against said corporation. (King v. Exploring Co. 4 Mont. 1.) The judgment of the court below will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.