76 F. 178 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1896
Complainant, a New York corporation. sues to restrain defendant , a California corporation, from operating the latter's line of electric wires on Second street, in the city of Los Angeles, Cal. The present hearing is on a demurrer to the bill-The pertinent matters therein alleged, briefly stated, are these:
Complainant owns and operates a telegraph system extending throughout the United States, and having its connections with the other countries of the civilized world. Most of its properties in this country have been constructed and acquired since June 12, 1867, at which date complainant flhM with the postmaster general of the United States its written acceptance of the restrictions and obligations of tbe act of congress of July 24, 1866, entitled “An act to aid in the construction of telegraph lines, and to secure to the government the use of the same for postal, military, and other purposes,” the provisions of said act being now found in the Revised Statutes of the United States (sections 5263 to 5269, inclusive). The first of these sections is as follows:
"Sec. 5263. Any telegraph company now organized, or which may hereafter be organized, under the laws of any state, shall have the right to construct, main-, tain and operate lines of telegraph through and over any portion of the domain of the United States, over and along any military or post roads of the United States, which have been, or may hereaitoi be declared such by Jaw, 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.”
Second street, above mentioned, is a post road. 23 Stat. 3.
Since its acceptance aforesaid, complainant has in all things, and at all times, complied with the provisions of said act. In the year 1889 complainant erected poles and strung wires thereon, and thus constructed, as a paid of its general system, and has since operated the same, a line along the north side of Second street in the city of Los Angeles, Cal. Over said line are sent governmental, commer-' dal. and social messages, by way of the Santa Eé route and its various branches, throughout the civilized world. In respect to the messages of the government of the United States, complainant is the agent of said government, and, as to the messages transmitted between California and the other states of the Union and foreign countries, complainant is an instrument of interstate and foreign commerce. In May, 1895, while said line was thus in full operation, with 10 wires strung upon the cross arms of its poles, defendant constructed a line of poles in an exact line with those of complainant, and
“(1) That the complainant hath not, in and by its said bill, made or stated such a case as entitles it, in a court of equity, to any relief against defendant as to the matters contained in the said bill, or of any such matters, (a) It does not set forth, state, or allege that this defendant prevented, or has been preventing, or will prevent the complainant from using the post roads, or any of them, of the United States, ‘(b) It does not appear from its said bill that the complainant has not a speedy and adequate remedy at law, or that it will suffer Irreparable damage by any act on the part of this defendant, (c) The said bill does not show any exclusive right in this complainant, as against the defendant, to the use of the north side of Second street, in the said city of Los Angeles. (2) That the said bill is deficient in certainty, in that it does not in any manner show, or attempt to show, how far apart the wires of this defendant must be from the wires of this complainant in order to avoid the results of what is stated in said bill as ‘induction,’ nor how near said wires of this defendant must be to the wires of the complainant in order to .cause the process set forth in the said bill as ‘induction.’ (a) And, further, that the said bill does not state or allege that this defendant has in any manner interfered with the wires of this .complainant.”
Complainant’s franchise, by virtue of tbe act of congress of July 26, 1866, to construct, operate, and maintain a line -on Second street,
1. In support of its first contention, defendant suggests that there is no statement in the bill of the distance at which an electric current upon one wire will affect, by induction, another wire. This, I think, is a matter of evidence, which need not be specifically set forth. The ultimate fact, in this connection, essential to complainant’s case, and which should be alleged, is that defendant’s wires have been placed so near to complainant’s wires as to seriously impair the efficiency of the latter; and this situation, I think, is sufficiently shown. The bill alleges as follows;
“¡Said defendant has placed its poles in an exact line with those of your orator on said Second street, and-its wires, so far as they are strung, and in so far as they will he strung if the line of defendant is continued to Ala-meda street, are directly under the wires of your orator, and in many places so near to the wires of the telegraph line of your orator aforesaid as to interfere with the working of your orator’s wires, in consequence of the stronger electric- current sent over the wires of said defendant, the Los Angeles Klee-trie Company.”
Furthermore, the bill, after alleging that the electrical currents to be transmitted over defendant’s wires will be much stronger than those used by complainant, and that the instruments necessarily employed by complainant in the transmission of messages are delicate and sensitive, and must be adjusted with reference to the current generated by the batteries in its main office, and the conditions of the wires over which the signals are to be transmitted, proceeds thus;
“And therefore the induced current over the defendant’s line will disarrange, distort, and mutilate the telegraphic signals of your orator’s line, hy Interposing a foreign and stronger current, not under the control and not within the knowledge of the transmitting operator, and will result in serious errors in the transmission and reception of the telegraphic messages of your orator.”
From these quotations it appears the hill does expressly and directly allege that the operation of defendant’s line will seriously and prejudicially affect complainant’s line.
2. Defendant contends in the next place that the lighting of a street is necessary to its primary use, — travel,—and that, therefore,
“Sec. 223. Telegraph v. Electric Light. The use of the same street, or side of the street, for both telegraph and electric light wires, may bring up a question of which of the two uses of electricity is entitled to the precedence. The electric light wires carry, mi is well known, a heavy and dangerous electric current, which may, in case of sagging or breaking of the electric light or telegraph wires, be distributed over the telegraph wires, and bum out the instruments, and endanger the lives and safety of the employes of the telegraph company. On the other hand, the wires may be so adjusted that both companies can use the same side of the street with safety. The question which of the companies must make this adjustment of its wires depends upon the question of which company was prior in its occupation of the streets with its wires. If the telegraph company has strong its wires along the street, and is carrying on the telegraphing business, the electric light company cannot, even under a municipal ordinance granting it such power, string its wires within such distance of the wires of the telegraph companjr, or in such a manner, as to create a danger such as has been specified above, and a court of equity will enjoin the electric light company from so stringing its wires. On the other hand, if the electric light company has already strung, its wires, and is operating them, the telegraph company cannot compel it to remove them so as to allow it to occupy the street, even under the franchise and protection of the act of congress of July 14, I860 (Rev. St. U. S. § 5203), unless in no other way can it ava.il itself of this franchise.” Crosw.. Electricity, p. 194.
This author seems to consider the two uses of telegraphing and electric lighting, so far as concerns their respective privileges in a street capable of sustaining both uses, of equal necessity, and, therefore, that prior occupancy gives the better right. Without deciding the point involved,.I will say that defendant’s argument, although opposed by the text quoted, would not, if defendant’s sole business was that of lighting the streers, be without force. The act of congress of July 24, 1866, hereinabove mentioned, expressly provides that the franchise which it confers shall not interfere with “ordinary travel.” Whether the electric lighting of a city by night so promotes this primary use of its streets as that a company engaged exclusively in the business of such lighting has, for its instrumentalities, a right of occupancy in the streets superior to the franchise acquired by a telegraph company under the aJ'oresaid act of congress, is a question carefully to be weighed when presented for decision. It does not arise, however, in the case at bar, as the defendant is engaged in transmitting electricity, not only for lighting purposes, but also for propelling machinery. As against this latter use, a franchise acquired under said act of congress, I think, confers a superior right, where the right, as here, is fortified by prior occupancy. The demurrer is overruled, and the defendant assigned to answer the bill at the rule day in September next.