89 Pa. Super. 352 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued October 12, 1926. Appellant is the owner of a tract of land situate in the 35th Ward of the City of Philadelphia, approximately 800 by 3,498 feet, and containing about fifty-six acres. The intervening appellee, The Philadelphia Electric Company (hereinafter referred to as the company), was incorporated October 27, 1902, under the Act of April 29, 1874, P.L. 73, and its supplements, *355 and more particularly under the Act of May 8, 1889, P.L. 136, for the purpose of supplying heat, light and power by electricity to consumers residing in or adjacent to the City and County of Philadelphia, etc. Having undertaken the construction of a 66,000 voltage transmission line on steel towers from a substation at Luzerne and G Streets in the 33rd Ward of said city through the northeastern section thereof to the Bucks County line, and being desirous of securing a right-of-way for said line across the property of appellant, with whom it was unable to agree upon compensation for the damages which would be sustained, the company instituted appropriate proceedings before the Public Service Commission of this Commonwealth for the purpose of obtaining the approval of the Commission of the exercise by it of the right conferred upon it by the Act of May 21, 1921, P.L. 1057, to appropriate private property for, inter alia, the erection of facilities for the transmission or distribution of electric power. By this act it is provided that before any such company shall exercise such powers the Commission "upon application of such company shall have found and determined, after public hearing, that the service to be furnished by said company through the exercise of said power is necessary or proper for the service, accommodation, convenience or safety of the public." Accordingly, on October 16, 1925, the company presented to the Commission its petition, afterwards amended by permission, setting forth in substance that it is constructing the above mentioned transmission line on a private right-of-way (therein minutely described) for the purpose of "supplying and furnishing light, heat and power, or any of them, by means of electricity to the public in the City and County of Philadelphia and particularly the section thereof lying northeastwardly of said Luzerne Street and in the 35th Ward thereof, including Bustleton, *356 Somerton, Byberry and intervening territory, and also for the purpose of supplying and furnishing the same to the public in territory adjacent to said City and County, to wit, in Bucks and Montgomery Counties, by supply of electric energy to Philadelphia Suburban Gas Electric Company, which supplies the same directly to its customers in said other counties, adjacent to the City and County of Philadelphia." The petition contains the usual averments relative to the ownership by appellant of the tract over which it desires to secure a right-of-way, the inability of the company to reach any agreement with him, and the public necessity for the construction of the line.
Appellant protested the granting of said certificate but after a public hearing the Commission under date of November 16, 1925, filed its report and order, in which it stated that it had found, from the evidence adduced, that the construction of the proposed line "will manifestly improve" the service of the company and that the service to be furnished through its proposed exercise of the right of eminent domain is necessary and proper for the service and convenience of the public and accordingly granted an appropriate certificate. From the order thus granted appellant took this appeal. During its pendency the company presented a petition setting forth that at his offices on December 24, 1925, it had tendered to the attorney who represented appellant before the Commission and who took the appeal the bond of the company, with a corporate surety, conditioned for the payment of such damages as appellant should be entitled to receive after the same had been agreed upon or assessed as provided by law, which bond had been accepted by the attorney in behalf of appellant, and praying for a rule to show cause why the appeal should not be quashed because the questions involved had, by reason of such acceptance, become academic and *357 because appellant was no longer affected by the order appealed from. Upon this petition a rule was granted returnable October 1, 1926, to which appellant filed an answer, and we directed that the questions arising under the rule and answer should be argued at the same time argument was heard upon the merits of the appeal. For reasons hereinafter stated we now discharge this rule and proceed to a consideration of the appeal upon its merits.
At the argument the assignments of error alleging that the proceedings had been instituted without proper corporate action were withdrawn. The remaining assignments charge error on the part of the Commission: (a) in not requiring the company to prove that it had municipal consent to enter on the streets of the city for the construction of the transmission line; (b) in failing properly to describe in its order the premises thereby affected.
1. At the hearing the learned counsel for appellant sought to raise the question whether the company had obtained consent of the city to cross public streets with the high tension line in question. It was objected that this amounted to a collateral attack upon the franchises of the company and that the question was not material to the issue before the Commission, which objection was sustained by the sitting Commissioners. Subsequent to the hearing there was filed with the Commission a copy of the charter of the company and of a franchise-ordinance granted to it by the City of Philadelphia on December 26, 1902. This ordinance authorized the company to enter upon and use the streets and alleys of the city for the purpose, inter alia, of constructing and operating "underground conduits, erecting poles and wires overhead," etc., for the purpose of furnishing electric service "to the public and to private individuals and corporations in and throughout the City of Philadelphia." It is argued *358 in behalf of appellant that there was no evidence before the Commission that the city had given its consent to the erection of the present line for the purpose of supplying service "outside of the City of Philadelphia." It does not appear that there are any opened streets on appellant's property and the City of Philadelphia was not a protestant against the granting of the application. We prefer, however, to base our disposition of this matter upon a broader ground than the absence or remoteness of the interest of appellant in the question he endeavors to raise.
When the jurisdiction of the Commission, as an administrative body, and the scope and effect of its order in a proceeding of this kind are properly considered it is clear the Commission was right in declining to consider and construe this ordinance in disposing of the application then before it. Manifestly the order of the Commission does not confer the right of eminent domain upon an applicant company. That right is conferred upon it as an additional right and power by the Act of 1921, supra; but such power may not be exercised until the Commission shall have determined that there is a public necessity for the service to be rendered through its exercise. We said in Reiber v. Commission,
2. The petition of the company is open to the *360
criticism that it does not contain in the body thereof a description of the entire tract of land owned by appellant, containing approximately fifty-six acres and which may be affected by the taking, but merely a detailed description of the right-of-way about seventy-five feet wide and eight hundred feet long across this tract, containing about one and one-third acres. In the fifth paragraph of the petition it is stated that "the route of said transmission line as laid out and partially constructed by applicant crosses a certain tract of land bounded as follows," and then follows, not a description of the tract to be crossed by the right-of-way but a detailed description of the right-of-way itself. We are of opinion however, that this error is cured by the fact that it is further stated in said paragraph that "A blueprint showing the location of the right-of-way to be acquired is attached hereto, made a part hereof and marked `Exhibit A.'" This blueprint shows the entire tract owned by appellant by courses and distances and in the same way the location of the proposed right-of-way across it. The order of the Commission finds and determines that the service to be furnished by the company through the acquisition of a right-of-way over and across "a certain tract of land, as more fully and at large set forth in the petition," is necessary and proper, etc. We pointed out in Dickson v. Commission, supra, that the Commission has no jurisdiction over the question of damages arising from the exercise of the powers conferred by the Act of 1921 because it is therein expressly provided that these damages "shall be ascertained, recovered and paid as provided by the forty-first section of the Act of April 29, 1874, P.L. 73, and the amendments and supplements thereto," and also that the power of eminent domain cannot be exercised until the property to be taken has been specifically defined, its selection approved and the taking authorized *361
by proper condemnation resolutions. In the recent case of Kerry v. West Penn Power Company,
3. It is proper that we now state our reasons for discharging the rule to show cause why this appeal should not be quashed. In the answer of appellant it is denied that either he or his attorney approved the said bond or waived any right of appellant or did anything other than receive the bond. It also appears from the petition that, pursuant to corporate action by the board of directors of the company for the condemnation of the right-of-way and following the tender of the bond, the company entered upon the property and commenced the erection of the line. It is denied in the answer that this entry was with the knowledge and without the objection of appellant as averred in the petition. The position of counsel for the company is that the acceptance of the bond by the attorney divested appellant's estate in the right-of way, vested it in the company and authorized the entry, and that appellant must now look to the bond for compensation. Appellant on the other hand contends that the electric company is a trespasser. We are not prepared to hold upon the facts appearing from the petition and answer that there has been an acceptance in law by the landowner of the bond of the company, or, in other words, that security has been given in such "due course of law" that "the grasp of the owner upon his property is loosened by the *362
constitution itself": Fries v. Railroad and Mining Co.,
The order of the Public Service Commission is affirmed. *363