The petitioner in 1916 owned and maintained in the respondent town a high tension power transmission line, which was used in conveying electric current for the operation of its street railway. This line was erected on private land of persons other than the petitioner; the latter owning, by lease or purchase, only the right to maintain its poles and wires over such private land of others. The respondent town assessed' and levied a tax on this transmission line, and the assessors refused to abate the same, whereupon the petitioner paid the tax under protest and brought this appeal in the Superior Court under St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, § 77. It is agreed that if said power transmission line “was not locally taxable by said town, but was illegally assessed by said assessors,” the petitioner is entitled to judgment for a stipulated sum; otherwise judgment is to be entered for the respondent.
The statute under which these poles and wires were taxed is St. 1913, c. 458, which further amended St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, § 23, and reads as follows: “Tenth: Underground conduits, wires and pipes laid in public streets, except such as are owned by a street railway company, and poles, underground conduits and pipes together with the wires thereon or therein laid in or erected upon private property or in a railroad location by any corporation, except such poles, underground conduits, wires and pipes of a railroad corporation laid in or erected upon the location of such railroad, and except such poles, underground conduits, wires and pipes laid in or erected upon ¡any right of way owned by a street railway company, shall be assessed to the owners thereof in the cities and towns in which they are laid or erected.” Plainly this statute made the street railway company taxable for the poles and wires constituting its transmission line unless they were “ erected upon any right of way owned by” it. And the controversy narrows down to the meaning of these words as used in the statute.
For the history of the legislation relating to the taxation of
Admittedly the statute under consideration (St. 1913, c. 458) was enacted in response to this suggestion. It was entitled “Ah Act relative to the taxation of the poles and wires of street railway companies.” When read in the light of its history it seems apparent that the Legislature intended thereby to tax to their owners the poles and wires which were upon private property of others, and that the exception in favor of street railways, like that in favor of railroads, applies only to the poles and wires on the property which is owned by it and used as a part of its location. The failure to use the word “location” instead of
Without undertaking a comprehensive interpretation of the term “right of way” as used in this section, plainly it does not apply to the facts in this case, where the petitioner has only the right to erect poles and string wires on land of different people, without having an exclusive right over any defined area. See St. 1911, c. 442; Connecticut Valley Street Railway v. Northampton, 213 Mass. 54, 64, 65.
It follows that the petitioner’s exceptions must be overruled, and in accordance with the stipulation above referred to the entry must be
Judgment for the respondent.