delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is here on certiorari,
Whether the state court has denied to rights asserted under local law the protection which the Constitution guarantees is a question upon which the petitioners are entitled to invoke the judgment of this Court. Even though the constitutional protection invoked be denied on non-federal grounds, it is the province of this Court to inquire whether thе decision of the state court rests upon a fair or substantial basis. If unsubstantial, constitutional obligations may not be thus evaded.
Fox River Paper Co.
v.
Railroad Commission of Wisconsin,
The predecessor in interest of the Columbia Electric Gas & Railway Company, the petitioner, was incorporated in 1890 by special act of the legislature, S. C. Acts of 1890, p. 969, under the name of Columbia Electric Street & Suburban Railway & Electric Power Company, later changed to The Columbia Electric Street Railway Light & Power Company, called the Consolidated Company and, still later, in 1911, changed to its present name. Its corporate life was fixed at thirty years and it was given power, upon the consent of the city council, to construct or acquire railway tracks through any streets of the City of Columbia, to extend them into the country a distance of five miles from the state capital, and to operate cars with electric power over its tracks for the transportation of passengers and freight and to contract for and provide electric power for any other purpose. The act was continued in force provided the “ Company begins tó operate its railways in said city within five years.”
An act of December 16, 1891, S. C. Acts of 1891, p. 1453, authorized the consolidаtion of this company with the Congaree Gas & Electric Company. The latter had been incorporated under the Act of December 24, 1887, S. C. Acts of 1887, p. 1103, for a period of thirty years, with the power, not now involved, to manufacture and distribute gas, and power to sell and distribute- light, power and heat “made from electricity,” and for that purpose, subject to municipal ordinances, to erect poles and conductors! The Consolidation Act recited that these two companies had agreed to consolidate their franchises and privileges and authorized them to do so by
The consolidation was effected as authorized. The Consolidated Company acquired the line of street railway of the horse car company, established electric power plants and, under authority of City Ordinance, §§ 561, 562, of 1892, laid additional tracks and electrified the system by erecting poles and wires in the streets, also, so far as practicable, using them and its rights of way in its electric light and power business. From the organization of the Consolidated Company until 1925, both the street railway and power business of the Consolidated Company were expanded as a single business, its capital stock was increased from time to time, and the system of accounts was such that it did not disclose whether its power system was constructed more from the proceeds of its street railway or its power business.
Certain facts in this recital of corporate history are of persuasive if not controlling significance in determining the status of the franсhise of the Consolidated Company. The Consolidated Company was a new corporation. Its franchises and privileges were granted for its corporate life, extending beyond the duration of the franchises of the two companies consolidated, all of which would have expired before 1921. It had acquired the franchises of the two сonsolidated companies, one in terms a franchise to operate a railway and a power system, the railway system being for practical purposes dependent upon the
The Supreme Court of South Carolina, in referring to this corporate, history and the effect of the Consolidation Act said: “When the new company, in compliance with this Act, effected the consolidation and in pursuance of the provisions of the Act built, constructed and operatеd its electric railway and power properties as parts of one business for nearly forty years, these rights, ^powers and privileges became inseparably bound together and cannot be separated. As contended by the petitioners [respondents here], such diversity as there was in the conditions of the former franchises became obliterated and extinguished by the major purpose of the new act, namely, the consolidation of all the powers in one company for the greater benefit of the public.”
In the light of the familiar rule that franchises are to be strictly construed, and that construction adopted which works the least harm to the public, see
Blair
v.
Chicago,
Brooks-Scanlon Co. v. Railroad Comm.,
But petitioners contend that, even if the franchise of the Consolidated Company be deemed a unified oxie, the privilege of operating the street railway system was separated from the franchise to operate the.power system by the corporate reorganization under the so-called Merger Act of Marсh 19, 1925, S, C, Acts of 1925, p. 842.
Upon these and more detailed findings of fact, both the referee and the state court held that the reorganization resulted in a merger by which all the properties and
But we need not consider this aspect of the case, for we think that there was substantial basis for the further conclusion of the state court that the Merger Act cannot be taken to authorize the breaking up of the unified franchise of the Consolidated Company in such manner as to relieve it or any successor company from its duties and obligations as they existed before the merger. Nowhere in this legislation is there any affirmative disсlosure of a purpose to relieve any of the corporations of existing duties and obligations or to enlarge their privileges. As appears from the title of the act and also that of § 1, the dominant purpose was to effect a merger or consolidation. The authority given by § 1 to transfer “ all or any part
”
of the franchises affords but slender basis for the argument that there was any purpose to effect such a separation. The use of this phrase seems only subsidiary to' the dominant purpose to authorize a merger or consolidation. It is not repeated or in terms referred to in § 2, which deals with franchises, and it is declared to be in furtherance of the purpose of § 1. In any casé, the limitation in this section that the company acquiring any franchise shall take it subject to existing restrictions, requirements and conditions may, we think, reasonably be deemed to preclude the possibility of relieving from franchise duties
The very fact that legislative aсts of this character are commonly prepared by those interested in the benefits to be derived from them, and that the public interest requires that they should be in such unequivocal form that the legislative mind may be impressed with their character and import so that privileges may be intelligently granted or purposely withheld, has firmly established the rule that they must be strictly construed, and that any ambiguity or doubts as to their meaning and purpose must be resolved in favor of the public interest. See Blair v. Chicago, supra, 471; Fertilizing Company v. Hyde Park, supra, 666. “ The rule is a wise one; it serves to defeat any purposes concealed by the skillful use of terms to accomplish something not apparent on the face of the Act and thus sanctions only open dealing with legislative bodies.” Slidell v. Grandjean, supra, 438.
We conclude that the judgment below' is supported by a state ground which we may rightly accept as substantial.
Dismissed.
