86 S.E. 1033 | N.C. | 1915
Civil action, heard upon a motion to continue a restraining order theretofore issued until the final hearing. His Honor dissolved the restraining order and the plaintiffs appealed. The plaintiffs seek to enjoin the defendants from constructing and operating a railroad along Russell and other streets in the city of High Point, and also to restrain the defendants from moving freight cars over the said track.
The facts disclosed by the record appear to be that the defendant the city of High Point, on motion of this plaintiff, a member of the board of aldermen, by a unanimous vote, granted a franchise to one Van Brunt and associates to build a street railway in said city for the *224 purpose of transporting passengers and freight by electricity, the location and construction of the said railway to be subject to the general supervision of the city. The public was protected by special provisions, limitations and conditions unnecessary to set out.
The said Van Brunt and his associates, not having performed all the conditions required, on 9 February, 1909, the board of aldermen granted the same franchise to John Leddy and others, who had purchased from the said Van Brunt and others all their rights therein. This franchise was duly assigned to the defendant, the North Carolina Public-Service Company, which has built and put in operation several miles of said railway in said city in accordance with the conditions, limitations and restrictions of the said franchise. In 1911 the board of aldermen, or city council, as the authorities are now designated in the new charter of said city, agreed that the public-service company might build certain additional lines of street railway within the city limits.
The defendant, the Carolina and Yadkin River Railway Company, has entered into a contract with the public-service company whereby certain freight cars, not more than two at a time, are to be pulled by the motive power of the public-service company so as to reach a number of industrial plants located in the city. By this method a large (174) number of drays, wagons, motor trucks and other heavy vehicles, necessary under former conditions to transport the large local shipments within the city, has been largely reduced.
It is contended that the city of High Point had no power to grant the franchise complained of to the public-service company. It is not claimed that the charter of the city, at the time the franchise was granted, authorized it, but it is contended that the authority is given by section 2916 of the Revisal, subsection 6, which reads as follows:
"A city or town is authorized to grant upon reasonable terms franchises for public utilities, such grants not to exceed a period of sixty years, unless renewed at the end of the period granted."
We think this contention is well founded. The words "public utilities" as used in the act are evidently intended to embrace such corporations as the public-service company. It is not a private corporation exclusively. It is affected with a public use and is under the control of the State. The term "public utilities" in an extended sense includes a great many matters of general welfare to the State and its communities. Within its well-established meaning, the term includes railways, both steam and street, whatever may be the motive power. It includes telegraph and telephones, waterworks and gasworks, electric lighting plants, as well as street railways. 3 Dillon, sec. 1290; 4 Words and Phrases, p. 35. A company which carries for the public all kinds of express matter between a city and suburban points is held to be *225
engaged in the public service and is a public utility and not strictly a private business. Dulaney v. Railways,
It is contended by the plaintiff that the construction of this track, or the running of freight cars upon it, is additional servitude for which as an abutting property owner he is entitled to additional compensation. This question is discussed by the Supreme Court of Maine in Taylor v. R. R.,
Affirmed.
(175)