
    CITY OF PHILADELPHIA v. POSTAL TELEGRAPH CABLE CO. et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    December 16, 1892.)
    1. Telegraph Companies—Taxation by City. The right of a city to impose license fees on a telegraph company’s poles and wires within the limits of the city is not in conflict with Rev. St. U. S. §5263, which grants to telegraph companies, on certain conditions, the right to construct and operate lines over any of the domain of the United States, and over any military and post roads of the United States.
    2. Same—Interstate Commerce. .Whether such charges imposed by the city come under the police or taxing power, they do not violate the interstate commerce cjause, under Const. U. S. art. 1, § 8, subds. 3, 18, providing that congress shall have power to regulate commerce between the different states,
    8. Same—Due Process op Law. Nor do such charges violate Const. Ui S. Amend. 14, which provides that no state shall deprive any person of his property without due process of .law, nor deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
    4. City Ordinance—Police Power. The ordinance under which such charged were made recited that great inconvenience had been occasioned to property owners by the placing of telegraph poles in front of their premises, that the lives and property of citizens traveling about the city were imperiled by the maintenance of unsound telegraph poles, and that it was necessary to establish a system for the inspection and regulation of the maintenance of such poles. A subsequent ordinance was entitled “An ordinance to regulate the introduction and use of underground conduits, wires, and cables for electrical conductors in the streets of Philadelphia, ” etc. It also appeared that all charges were removed from wires placed underground. Held, that it clearly appears from the ordinance set forth, and the fact that charges were removed from wires placed under-' ground, that such charge was not a tax, but merely an exercise of police power by the city to reimburse itself for its expense in discharging its duty in furthering the public safety and convenience.
    5. Same—Reasonableness. It appeared that, in order to have the regulations under the ordinances carried out effectively, there was an “electrical report” given each morning by all policemen on duty at night, and there were 1,526, receiving a salary of $2.50 per day; that there was an appropriation for the police bureau in 1891 of $1,000,090; for the bureau of fire escapes, $600,000; and for the electrical bureau, $140,000,—and all three bureaus assisted in enforcing the regulations of the ordinances. It further appeared that if the wires were put underground there would be a saving of one fire station, whose annual expense is about the amount of the total charge on all the telegraph companies in the city. Held, that an annual charge by the city of $1 per pole and $2.50 on each mile of wire belonging to defendant companies was a reasonable charge, considering the outlay made by the city in carrying out the provisions of the ordinances.
    Appeal from judgment on report of referee.
    Action by the city of Philadelphia against the Postal Telegraph Cable Company and the Bankers’ & Merchants’ Telegraph Company to recover annual license fees imposed on each telegraph pole and mile of wire belonging to defendants within the limits of the city of Philadelphia. Judgment for plaintiff. Defendants appeal. Affirmed. 0
    Argued before VAN BRUNT, P. J., and O’BRIEN and BARRETT, JJ.
    R. S. Guernsey, for appellants.
    William McMichael, Charles F. Warwick, City Sol., and E. Spencer Miller, Asst. City Sol., for respondent.
   O’BRIEN, J.

This action was brought by the city of Philadelphia to recover several annual license fees and charges imposed by city ordinances upon each telegraph pole and mile of wire in the streets of Philadélphia. The defendants conceded that plaintiff has power and authority to make and prescribe ordinances for the inspection and regulation of telegraph lines within the city limits, but denied that it has either power or authority to require the payment of any fee or charge therefor, or to charge for a license, or to make any special tax upon their property, or upon each pole or wire permitted within the city limits. This restricts the contention to the question whether a charge for such regulation and inspection is valid, and whether such a charge is an interference with the interstate clause of the United States constitution, or with the rights conferred on telegraph companies by the United States Revised Statutes, (section 5263,) relating to telegraph companies and the postoffice service. The appellants .contend that such a tax or claim is a restraint upon the instruments of interstate commerce and communication, which is placed solely in the hands of congress by the constitution, (article 1, § 8, subds. 3, 18, U. S. Const.;) that the United States Revised Statutes (section 5263) grant to any telegraph company complying with certain conditions “ 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,” etc.; and that such a tax would impair and ■destroy the right thus conferred. In the case of Telegraph Co. v. Attorney General, 125 U. S. 530, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 961, where the question was as to the right of the state to impose a tax upon the property of a telegraph company within its limits, it was held—

“That the privilege conferred upon telegraph companies by the Revised Statutes (section 5263.) carries with it no exemption from the ordinary burden of taxation in a state within which they may own or operate lines of telegraph. ”

And it was further held therein that a tax upon the property owned ■and used by the corporation within that state—

“Is not forbidden by the fact of the acceptance on the part of the company of the rights conferred on telegraph companies by the Revised Statutes, § 5263, nor by the commerce clause of the constitution.

In the opinion of the court in that case it was said:

“ While the state could not interfere, by any specific statute, to prevent a Corporation from placing its lines along any of these post roads, or stop the use of them after they were placed there, nevertheless the company receiving the benefit of the laws of the state, for the protection of its property and its rights, is liable to be taxed upon its real or personal property as any other person would be. It never could have been intended by the congress of the United States, in conferring upon a corporation of one state the authority to enter the territory of any •other state, and erect its poles and lines therein, to establish the proposition that such a company owed no obedience to the laws of the state in which it thus entered, and was under no obligation to pay its fair proportion of the taxes necessary to its support. ”

See, also, Telegraph Co. v. Hess, 125 N. Y. 641, 26 N. E. Rep. 919.

With respect to the question of interstate commerce, urged by appellants as affecting the right of the city to impose the charges, we think the authorities are abundant to show that, whether the charges in question come under the police or the taxing power, they do not offend against the interstate commerce clause. Leloup v. Port of Mobile, 127 U. S. 640, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1380; Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 203; Railroad Co. v. Miller, 17 Wall. 560; Robbins v. Shelby Taxing Dist., 120 U. S. 489, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 592; Telegraph Co. v. Pendleton, 122 U. S. 347, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1126.

Appellants’ further claim, that it offends against the United-States constitution, in that it conflicts with the provision in the fourteénth amendment that no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within, its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, is disposed of by the case of New York v. Squire, 145 U. S. 175, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 880.

It will thus be seen that we agree with the conclusion reached by the referee—

“That the state has power to impose taxes upon the property of such companies-within the state, under the laws of the state, and that a municipality, under its delegated powers from the state, can-impose all lawful burdens upon the property of such companies situated within its corporate limits. Therefore, if these license-charges upon poles and wires within the city limits should be held or found to be legally imposed by the state, they would not be in conflict with the provisions of this act of congress; or if the municipality, under its delegated power of ‘regulation’ from the state, or what is commonly known as ‘police power,’ should be-found to have the right to make such ordinances, and levy such imposts upon the-poles and wires within its corporate limits, of a company "operating an interstate line, such ordinances and charges would not be in conflict with the act, as being-neither on the general business of the company, nor an interference with such-interstate business. ”

This view is consistent with the principle laid down in the case ofLeloup v. Port of Mobile, supra, and kindred cases, which hold that—

“The property of a telegraph company situated within a state may be taxed by the state, as all other property is taxed, but its business of an interstate charaetercannot be thus taxed. ”

It was therein held that no state within which a telegraph company-sees fit to establish an office can impose upon it a license tax, or require it to take out a license for the transaction of its business; that the telegraphic communications carried on between different states are interstate commerce, and within the power of regulation conferred upon congress, free from the control of state regulations, except such as are strictly of a police character.

A review, therefore, of the authorities, will show that the true construction to be given to the constitution of the United States, and the statutes passed relating to telegraph companies, are consistent with the right of the states to tax the property of corporations within their limits, and to subject them to regulations of a police character, and that the-United States constitution and statutes prohibit the states from placing, any embargo or tax upon business of an interstate character, or interfering with, obstructing, or destroying the working or business of such federal agencies. The record makes clear the fact that the plaintiff in-no way, by the charge made, attempted to impose a tax upon business-of an interstate character. The appellant, however, insists, if this conclusion should be reached, that the charge was, in effect, a tax which-was illegally levied upon the property of the companies, contrary to the-constitution and laws of Pennsylvania regulating the right and mode of taxation. In his argument he correctly presents the view which the courts of that state have adhered to in construing the method -which-should be adopted under the laws of that state in levying taxes, viz., upon an ad valorem principle; that is to say, that property is to be taxed at a uniform rate according to its value. If it had been shown that this was a tax, then there could be no question but this principle, not having been adhered to in levying the same, would have rendered the charges in suit invalid. We think, however, apart from the disclaimer of the respondent, it is clear that, in imposing the charge sought to be recovered in this action, the city of Philadelphia in no way intended to place a tax upon the business of the defendant companies, nor to-impose a tax upon their property, but its claim is based upon its right, under police power, to levy such a charge. The validity of license fees- or similar charges by a municipality under the police power has been, frequently asserted, and, so far as Pennsylvania and this state are concerned, the question must be regarded as settled in favor of their validity. As we have already endeavored to point out, charges thus imposed under the police power, and those imposed for revenue, proceed on an. entirely different and distinct principle; and, in cases where supposed police regulations come in question, the test must be whether the end in-view is one within the regulative sphere, and whether the means are reasonably appropriate. An examination of the ordinances levying this charge, we think, will leave no room for misconstruction as to their true intent and purpose, showing clearly that such charges were for regulation, and not for revenue. The ordinance of January 6, .1881, which was the first ordinance on-the subject, begins as follows:

“An ordinance to regulate the erection and maintenance of telegraph poles in the corporate limits of the city of Philadelphia.
“ Whereas, great inconvenience and annoyance have been occasioned to property owners by the placing of telegraph poles in front of their premises; and whereas, the lives and property of citizens traveling upon the public streets and highways have been imperiled by the erection and maintenance of inadequate or unsound telegraph poles thereon, so that it has become necessary to establish a system for the proper inspection of such poles and for the regulation of the erection and maintenance thereof. ”

And the ordinance of March 30, 1883, begins as follows:

“An ordinance to regulate the introduction and use of underground conduits, wires, and cables for electrical conductors in the streets of Philadelphia, ” etc.

These ordinances, and the additional fact proved in the case, that all charges were removed from such wires as were placed underground, will show that the object sought was not the raising of revenue, but the reimbursement, to some extent, of the expense made necessary to the municipality in discharging its duty in furtherance of the public safety and convenience, as well as its co-ordinate duty to the defendants, of protecting their property by a proper regulation and inspection of overhead wires. So far as this state is concerned, the case of People v. Squire, 107 N. Y. 593, 14 N. E. Rep. 820, is authority for the view—

“That regulations of the character provided for in said acts are strictly police regulations, such are within the legitimate authority of the legislature to delegate the exercise thereof to municipal corporations. That the right to exercise this police power is a governmental function, which cannot be alienated, surrendered, or abridged by the legislature, by any grant, contract, or delegation, whatsoever. ”

So far as the state of Pennsylvania is concerned, the highest appellate ■court of that state has twice decided these very ordinances now brought in question to be valid. Telegraph Co. v. City of Philadelphia, 12 Atl. Rep. 144; City of Chester v. Telegraph Co., (Pa. 1892,) 23 Atl. Rep. 1070; City of Allentown v. Telegraph Co., (Pa. 1892,) Id. The description given in these cases of the condition of the streets confirms what the "observation of every citizen makes evident, that lives and property can only be protected against the dangers threatened by overhead wires by strict regulation and the most careful inspection. In addition, we are referred to the following cases in Pennsylvania distinctly holding that the plaintiff has power to exercise police" regulation over telegraph lines: City of Philadelphia v. Telegraph Co., 2 Wkly. Notes Cas. 455, 460; Railroad Co. v. Philadelphia, 47 Pa. St. 321; Branson v. Philadelphia, Id. 332.

It seems to us, therefore, that, with the legal questions disposed of,. all that remained was to determine whether the ordinances and the charges made were a proper exercise of the police power delegated to the plaintiff,- or possessed by it; and the referee is sustained by the cases to which he refers in his opinion, in holding that,whether there has been a proper exercise by the municipality of this power of regulation is to be determined by a consideration of the reasonableness of the terms of the ordinance, and of the charges imposed. This the referee proceeded to do. As to the expense entailed upon the city of Philadelphia, it was ■shown that, in order to have it thorough and effective, it was deemed essential to require a morning report, called an “Electrical Report,” to be made by'every policeman on duty at night, of whom there are 1,526, receiving a salary of $2.50 a day. In addition, it was shown' that the appropriation for the police bureau in 1891 was over $1,000,000; for ■the bureau of fire escapes, over $600,000; and for the electrical bureau, over $140,000,—and that these different bureaus were engaged and took part in enforcing the regulations and ordinances in question, in the public interest. It was also given in testimony by the chief.of the fire bureau that if the wires were put underground there would be a saving of one fire station, whose expense annually is about the amount of the total charges on all the companies. Upon such testimony, having regard to the extensive area of a city like Philadelphia, and the range of work" and expense involved in the regulation of poles and wires, we think the -referee was right in holding that, contrasted with the large outlay made by the municipality, the amounts charged the defendants, and sought to be recovered in this action, are reasonable. We think that the supreme court of appeals in the case of City of Allentown v. Telegraph Co., supra, in considering the particular charges in these ordinances, correctly defined the rule of law to be applied; viz.:

“The amount of the license fee. in such cases, rests with the city council, in the first instance. It is only when such discretion has been abused that we are justified in interfering. We cannot say that discretion has been abused in this case, •or that the license fee is unreasonable. ”

It will thus be seen that we concur with the view taken by the referee as to the reasonableness of the charges imposed on the defendants. Indeed, we might well have allowed this j'udgment to stand upon the able opinion of the referee, which thoroughly discusses every question that has been presented upon this appeal. It would serve no useful purpose to go over the same ground, refer to the same authorities, and draw the same conclusions as the referee has done. Though the question, in principle, is an important one, we do not regard it as either novel or difficult. An examination of cases in the United States supreme court, and in the highest appellate courts of this state and Pennsylvania, supports the legal principle invoked by the plaintiff; and the evidence adduced in this case sustains the conclusion of the referee favorable to plaintiff’s right to recover. In our opinion, the judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.  