76 Minn. 334 | Minn. | 1899
In separate proceedings, instituted in two counties, plaintiff sought to condemn and acquire a right of way six feet in width for the erection and maintenance of its poles and lines of wire over and across certain lands in these counties, including a portion of the territory previously acquired by grant or by condemnation by defendant railway corporation for its right of way, and in use as such. The proceedings, were had under and in accordance with G. S. 1894, §§ 2604-2615, and resulted in the appointment of commissioners, an appraisement and assessment of damages, the filing of the commissioners’ report, a refusal by defendant to accept the amount of damages assessed, a deposit thereof, and an entry of judgment in each case as prayed for in the petitions. Defendant appeals from the judgments as well as from the orders appointing commissioners.
A determination of one case necessarily determines the other. From the plats and maps introduced in evidence and presented on the argument, and from other records in the cases, it seems that, as a general rule, the defendant’s right of way through these counties is 100 feet in width, but at places, and for reasons not fully disclosed, it is 200, and in others 300, feet wide. But, without regard to width, the defendant’s main line of railway is in the center of the right of way. So it will be seen that, while the distance from the center of the tra ck to the margin of the way on either side
The plaintiff is a corporation organized, according to its articles, stated in a general way, for the purpose of organizing, maintaining, and operating telephone exchange systems, public and private telephones and telegraph lines, and doing a telephone and telegraph business within and without the state, incorporated under the provisions of Gr. S. 1894, c. 34, tit. 1. The petitions presented to the court below embodied the facts enumerated in section 2605.
The first point made by defendant’s counsel is that the petitions are insufficient, and the proofs defective, because it was not affirmatively alleged and proven that 80 per centum, at least, of the corporate stock shares were and are owned by citizens of the United States. G-. S. 1894, § 5876. Even if we should admit that condemnation proceedings are for the purpose of acquiring land, although they are brought to secure an easement therein only, there are several reasons why the point is not well taken. Á sufficient
The plaintiff, to some extent, relies upon an act of congress of July 24, 1866, found in E. S. (IT. S.) §§ 5263-5268, inclusive, while defendant’s counsel insist — First, that the plaintiff is not a telegraph company within the meaning of that act; and, second, if it be such a company, that the act does not authorize it to enter upon the right of way of a railway company without the consent of such company. Section 5263 of the act provides:
“Any telegraph company now organized, or which may hereafter be organized, under the laws of any state, shall have the right to construct, maintain, and operate lines of telegraph through and over any portion of the public domain of the United States, over and along any of the military or post roads of the United States which have been or may hereafter be declared such by law, and over, under, or across the navigable streams or waters of the United States; but such lines of telegraph shall be so constructed and maintained as not to obstruct the navigation of such streams and waters, or interfere with the ordinary travel on such military or post roads.”
And in section 5268 it is enacted that
“Before any telegraph company shall exercise any of the powers or privileges conferred by law such company shall file their written acceptance with the postmaster general of the restrictions and obligations required by law.”
In these days there ought to be no one to question the statement that a telephone is simply an improved telegraph. The former was originally called the speaking telegraph. The instruments used at the terminals are different, but the poles, the wires, the insulators, and the generation of the electric current are all the same. The slight technical difference was exceedingly well stated by one of the witnesses, at the hearing, in the following language:
*345 “In sending telegraph messages, the sender writes out into words what he wishes to transmit; another party takes it, and translates it into sounds that represent letters, which are sent oyer the wire by breaking the electric current which reproduces the sounds at the other end, which are retranslated by the operator at the end into words, and delivered to the • customer; and in sending the message by telephone the person who desires to send a message speaks into the instrument, and, instead of breaking and interrupting the current, it is partially broken and varied by the air waves produced by speaking, and the spoken words or air waves pass over the wire by their effect on the electric current, — that is, they are reproduced into sound waves, and give out the same sound at the other end as was spoken into the instrument at the transmitting end.”
The rule is well established that in applying the principles of the common law or in construing statutes the telephone is to be considered a telegraph, unless express statutory provisions govern the case. So the courts have almost universally held that telephone companies are engaged in public business, have the same public duty of serving the community, and may, when establishing their lines, exercise the right of eminent domain under the constitution and the laws. See the cases cited 25 Am. & Eng. Enc. 745, and notes. Also Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. United Electric Ry. Co., 42 Fed. 273; Chesapeake v. Baltimore, 66 Md. 399, 7 Atl. 809; Hudson River v. Watervliet, 135 N. Y. 393, 32 N. E. 148. No valid distinction can be made between federal and state legislation on the subject. So that the act of congress in reference to telegraph lines over and along post roads, before referred to, must, in our opinion, include telephone lines where applicable at all.
Unquestionably, a line constructed, as is proposed by plaintiff, for public use, for the transmission of intelligence by wire, whether it be, technically speaking, a telegraph or a telephone line, is a work of internal improvement. Rippe v. Becker, 56 Minn. 100, 57 N. W. 331; Cater v. N. W. Tel. Exch. Co., 60 Minn. 539, 63 N. W. Ill. Therefore its corporate owners may obtain its right of way by condemnation proceedings, as provided in G. S. 1894, § 2604. It seems clear from the construction placed on the act of congress of 1866, before mentioned, and in part quoted, that it is of no service to plaintiff in these proceedings, either when standing alone or
“It gives no foreign corporation the right to enter upon private property, without the consent of the owner, and erect the necessary structures for its business; but it does provide that, whenever the consent of the owner is obtained, no state legislation shall prevent the occupation of post roads for telegraph purposes by such corporations as are willing to avail themselves of its privileges;” and that:
“No question arises as to the authority of congress to provide for the appropriation of private property to the uses of the telegraph, for no such attempt has been made. * * * If private property is required, it must, so far as the present legislation is concerned, be obtained by private arrangement with its owner. No compulsory proceedings are authorized.”
This federal statute does not give a telegraph company the right to occupy the right of way of a railroad with its line,unless the road consents, or a contract has been made with a prior owner, which is binding upon such road. Western U. Tel. Co. v. Ann Arbor R. Co., 33 C. C. A. 113, 90 Fed. 379. It has no application in proceedings against an unwilling party, as is this defendant.
It is strongly urged by counsel for defendant that, even admitting' that plaintiff corporation has been given the power of eminent domain under the state laws, it is not authorized to appropriate any part of defendant’s right of way to its use. The general rule is that
“Express legislative authority is generally requisite, except where the proposed appropriation would not destroy or greatly injure the franchise, or render it difficult to prosecute the object of the franchise, when a general grant would be sufficient. Land already devoted to another public use cannot be taken under general laws, where the effect would be to extinguish a franchise. If, however, the taking would not materially injure the prior holder, the condemnation may be sustained.” Mills, Em. Dom. §§ 45, 47; New York v. Metropolitan, 63 N. Y. 326; Suburban v. Mayor, 128 N. Y. 510, 28 N. E. 525; Morris v. Central, 31 N. J. L. 205; Winona v. City, 4 S. D. 323, 56 N. W. 1077.
And that the rule has been repeatedly recognized in this jurisdiction is quite evident. Milwaukee & St. P. Ry. Co. v. City of
In the case at bar plaintiff’s right to obtain an easement for its lines over and across defendant’s way where it has been broadened to either 200 or 300 feet in- width depends upon the statute of the state, which is general in its terms. No express authority can be found therein for such a procedure, and therefore it must arise, if at all, from necessary implication. The right of plaintiff must be subservient to the extent indicated in the rules hereinbefore stated. The use which plaintiff proposes to make of the strip it seeks to condemn must not be inconsistent with the paramount right which defendant acquired long ago, nor can it be such as will materially interfere with, essentially injure, or tend to defeat the public use to which the property has already been devoted. There must also be some necessity for the appropriation, not a necessity created by the corporation asserting the right, that it may be convenienced, or a necessity arising out of a desire unreasonably to economize. So, in cases where the power is not expressly granted by statute,, but is to be implied therefrom, the conditions surrounding any particular case must disclose a practical necessity for the exercise of eminent domain over property already devoted to a public use. There must exist in a given case this necessity in order reasonably to effectuate the purposes for which the petitioning corporation was created, and hence to raise the presumption that such power was within the contemplation of the legislature which enacted the general law.
So, in the present instance, the inquiry is, have we a case on the evidence of practical necessity? Is it reasonably necessary that plaintiff should cross these lands in order that it shall properly transact its business, and reasonably serve the public? And in determining this we must bear in mind the rights of the prior-holder, and its duty to the public. Let us therefore examine the conditions.
Defendant is a railway company, owning and operating its line of road in the usual manner and under ordinary rules. It is both
Let us now consider plaintiff’s case on the question of the reasonableness of its demands. As a rule, the railway line runs east and west, plaintiff’s proposed line paralleling it on the south. If it is not permitted to bisect defendant’s right of way, but is compelled to keep outside thereof, its easement must, at places, turn at right angles, and run north or south for from 50 to 100 feet. With its poles set within its six-foot strip, so that the wires would have to be strung directly over this strip, following it without deviation, there would be, of necessity, four right angles at each broadened tract of defendant’s right of way. This would not only prove a very expensive part of the work, but would necessitate the putting in of guy posts out in the fields, or on defendant’s right of way, and the use of guying wires at each corner, in order to keep the ■corner poles upright. And from the evidence it appears that with the greatest care and most substantial and best known methods of guying corner poles, they are apt to yield to the great strain upon them, and fall, carrying with them many in the vicinity. This is ■especially true when storms prevail. So, if it were necessary to place the wires to be strung by plaintiff directly over its easement, and thus make a great number of right angles, there might be a sufficient reason for saying that a practical and reasonable necessity existed for condemning the easement through the broadened portions of defendant’s right of way. But there is no absolute necessity for so stringing the wires. By placing poles at points
To illustrate, let us take one angle at the east end of a tract of defendant’s right of way, where it is widened out from 100 to 200 feet. Place a pole at a point midway between the north and south ends of the north and south strip six feet wide. We find, by calculation, that the next pole to the east would be set 137f feet east of the south end of said strip, while the next pole west would be set the same number of feet west of the north end. A line of wire running from the east to the west pole, connecting with the pole in the center, would be stretched at an angle of less than 11 degrees. If the defendant’s right of way is 300 feet wide, and a pole is set midway between the north and south ends of the north and south strip, the first pole on the east would be 130f feet east of the south end, and the first- pole on the west the same distance from the north end. Here the wire would angle less than 21 degrees. The objection to right angles would be almost entirely removed if this method were adopted, and no practical necessity would remain for placing poles or wires on defendant’s right of way except at the corners where the line would deflect.
We have stated that the six-foot strips with which plaintiff proposes to bisect defendant’s right of way where it is more than one hundred feet wide vary from one-fourth of a mile to one and one-fourth miles in length, aggregating eight miles in Murray county. To be more definite, there are in this county ten separate tracts of widened right of way, which plaintiff proposes to cross, instead of deflecting to the north or south for the purpose of going around. Six of these are at least one mile long, so that, if the detours are required, there would be, approximately, a mile of straight line paralleling each, between the deflections at each end. Nor would the deflections from the line where defendant’s right of way is of
The matter of expense has also been mentioned. If the six-foot strip was followed, and right angles made at each corner for the eight miles in Martin county, there would be less than 1,300 feet additional; and, of course, this added distance would be much reduced if the plan suggested by us is adopted. While we must admit that appropriating property, either by direct legislation or by the exercise of eminent domain, is not, generally speaking, an exhaustion of the right as to that particular property, the reasonable and practical necessity of a second appropriation must be considered whenever the question is presented.
The claims set forth in behalf of plaintiff in support of the judgment appealed from may thus be summed up. That its line of telephone, built in a straight line, will be stronger and better built than if built at right angles, and that it will not be so liable to break by the accumulation of snow and sleet, the expansion and contraction of the wires by heat and cold, and by the storms and blizzards to which they are exposed, as it will be if built at right angles; and also that it will be more expensive to build at right angles than it will if built as desired, requiring larger poles, set deeper in the earth, and at shorter distances from each other, and properly braced or guyed. These claims could be urged with equal potency by other companies desiring to enter into the same line of business, and also'' to obtain a like right upon defendant’s property. So that in time a multitude of poles and a network of wires
The judgments are reversed, and the causes remanded for further proceedings.
BUCK, J., absent.