48 Iowa 133 | Iowa | 1878
The city council has only such power as has been given it by the Legislature. To determine whether the power to grant an exclusive right to operate a ferry at the point mentioned has been given, we have to inquire whether any act has been passed purporting to give such power, and if so> whether the Legislature had power to pass such act.
The act of the Legislature upon which the plaintiff relies is found in the charter of the city of Burlington, approved June 10, 1845. Section 15 of the Charter provides that “the city council shall have power, and it is made their duty to regulate by good and wholesome laws and ordinances, all fer
The defendant denies that the charter purports to confer upon the city council the power to exclude him from the operation of his ferry. In the first place it is said that the charter purports to grant the exclusive power to license ferries^ but not the power to grant an exclusive license to a ferry. In the second place it is said that the power granted is to license ferries from the city, and that even if the city council had the power to grant an exclusive license to ferry from the city, such license would not exclude the defendant’s right to ferry from the opposite shore.
The mere power to license, or to license and regulate, does not, it seems, include the power to create a monopoly. Chicago v. Rumpff, 45 Ill., 90; Logan & Sons v. Pyne, 43 Iowa,
We come next to consider that the charter purports only to confer the power to license ferries from the city to the opposite shore.
The defendant claims that he does not need a license from the city, because his ferry is not maintained from the city, but from Illinois. He claims that the right which the plaintiffs can exercise under the charter is different from the right which he seeks to exércise, and that the plaintiff’s license, therefore, does not exclude him.
The Legislature, in conferring upon the city council of Burlington the power to license ferries from the city, conferred all the power in that respect which it possessed. It could not give any rights upon the Illinois shore. Weld v. Chapman, 2 Iowa, 524; Gear v. Gear, 34 Ill., 74. Por the same reason' the defendant, under the laws' of Illinois, could acquire no rights upon the Iowa shore. The fact, then, that the Legislature did not confer more power, is not an indication that it did not intend to confer the power to exclude persons licensed merely under the laws of Illinois. We must then hold that the plaintiffs’ license is exclusive, unless the rights conferred by it are different from those which the defendant seeks to exercise; and upon this point we have to say that we do not think that they are. The plaintiffs are operating a ferry between the city of Burlington and the opposite shore,
If the license is not exclusive, it must,, we think, be for want of power in the Legislature. The defendant insists that there is such want of power. Upon this point he says that “the Mississippi river, being a free navigable stream, vessels may land at and discharge passengers at any point between high and low water mark, for that they have the same right to touch and make fast at and between these limits, which are a part of the river, that they have to float or anchor in mid stream. ”
The point is made, however, by the defendant, that since the decision in Jones v. Fanning, a restriction has been imposed upon the power of the Legislature in this respect. We are referred to art. I, sec. 6, of the Constitution of the State. That section provides that “the General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen or class of citizens privileges or immunities which upon the same terms shall not belong equally to all citizens.” The effect of this restriction we need not consider further than to observe that it has no application to the charter in question, unless the constitution is retroactive. The charter antedates the constitution. As to the operation of a constitution it is said in Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, 63: “We shall venture to express the opinion that a constitution should operate prospectively only, unless the words employed show a clear intention that it should have a retrospective effect.” The learned author, in the same connection, after commenting upon the rule in regard to the operation of
One question remains to be considered. The ordinance under which the license is derived provides that if the ferry company fails to run its boat for ten days, when the river is navigable, all privileges shall be forfeited. The answer avers that the plaintiff has neglected for periods of from six weeks to two months, and at various times, to operate its boat; and trade and travel have been driven from the city; and the ferry has not been run for the accommodation of the public, but at the whim of those in charge. The answer, however, does not aver that the plaintiff neglected to run a boat for ten days, when the river was navigable. It is not shown to us, then, that anything has transpired by reason of which, under the ordinance, a forfeiture could be declared.
We think that the demurrer to the defendant’s answer was properly sustained.
Affirmed.