38 Mich. 154 | Mich. | 1878
Leave is asked to file an information in the nature of a quo warranto to deprive the respondent of the franchise, as it is claimed to be, of laying its gas pipes and distributing gas through the streets of Detroit. The ground of the application is that the company violated some of the terms of an agreement imposing conditions against making combinations with other companies and doing certain other acts, regarded by the city of Detroit as important conditions of its assent to allowing the respondent to use its privileges within the city.
The statute contemplates the punishment of corporations for nothing but violations of the laws and policy of the State. In the present instance the State has shown by the incorporating act that public policy is not opposed to and is in favor of allowing gas companies to exist, as they only can exist by having power to lay their pipes. The consent of the municipal corporation is required because the terms on which streets may be safely allowed to be occupied for the purposes of laying gas pipes can be best determined by leaving the regulation to be harmonized with all other exigencies by the authorities controlling their use. The law contemplates that permission will not be' unreasonably refused or unreasonably burdened, but regards the municipality as competent to determine the proper conditions for itself.
The exercise of the power of using streets for laying gas pipes is rather an easement than a franchise, and a similar power is used as often for private drainage and other purposes as for more general purposes. It is a matter peculiarly local in its character, and which should always be to a reasonable extent under municipal supervision to prevent clashing among the many convenient uses to which ways must necessarily be subjected, for water, drainage and other urban needs. But the permission to lay these pipes does not differ in any respect from that
The application must be denied.