243 F. 980 | W.D. Wash. | 1917
The city of Bremerton seeks to condemn a certain lighting plant owed by the defendant North Pacific Public Service Company, covering certain franchises in the city of Bremerton, the county of Kitsap, the town of Port Orchard, and the city of Charleston, Wash. The action was commenced in the state court and removed to this court. Process was served on the 19th of March, 1917. A demurrer was filed to the original complaint and sustained. An amended complaint was filed in this court on the 19th of June, 1917. In the amended complaint, after alleging the corporate capacity of the plaintiff as a city of the third class, it is stated:
“That on or about the 28th day of October, 1912, the city council of the city of Bremerton duly passed an ordinance, entitled ‘An ordinance for the purchasing, acquiring and constructing of an electric lighting system for the city of Bremerton, and providing for the borrowing of money to be used therefor by issuing the negotiable coupon bonds of said city of Bremerton in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, and for the issuance and negotiation of special lighting fund bonds against the earnings of said electric lighting system in such further sum or sums as to the city council may seem proper, and providing for the holding of a special election for submitting the said proposition to the qualified voters of the said city of Bremerton for ratification or rejection,’ which said ordinance was approved on the 28th day of October, 1912, and was thereafter published as by law provided, a copy of which- said ordinance is hereto attached, marked ‘Exhibit A’ and made a part of this amended complaint.”
Motion to dismiss has been filed, on the ground that the amended complaint does not remedy the defect disclosed by the original complaint. A demurrer is likewise filed upon the ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or to entitle the petitioner to any relief. They will be considered together and as challenging the sufficiency of the petition.
“An ordinance for the purchasing, acquiring and constructing of an electric light system for the city of Bremerton, and providing for the borrowing of money to be used therefor by issuing the negotiable coupon bonds of the said city of Bremerton in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, and for the issuance and negotiation of special lighting fund bonds against the earnings of said electric lighting system in such further sum or sums as to the city council may seem proper * * * ”
—and then submits three proposed plans. Propositions 2 and 3 do not submit a “plan or system” adopted, but leave the matter for the future determination of the council, clearly not within the provisions of the law. Section 8006, Remington & Ballinger’s Code of Washington, provides that the council, by ordinance, “shall specify and adopt the system or plan proposed, and declare the estimated cost thereof, as near as may be.” A liberal construction might hold sufficient proposition 1, which, in substance, is to purchase, acquire, or condemn, “by whatever negotiations, condemnation suits, or proceedings may be found necessary or appropriate, * * * ” provided it had -included a legal plan for payment. The Supreme Court of Washington, in Hansard v. Green, 54 Wash. 161, 103 Pac. 40, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1273, 132 Am. St. Rep. 1107, and Uhler v. Olympia, 87 Wash. 1, 151 Pac. 117, 152 Pac. 998, held that payment is as much a part of the “plan or system” as is the purchase, and that the method should be provided in the ordinance. While the ordinance provides for the issuance of bonds to the amount of $25,000, the estimated value of the plant is placed at $125,000, and proposition 1 provides that:
“Sucb other and further sum as may be required as aforesaid for payment of and for the said eleetrie„ lighting plant over and above the said sum of $25,000 shall be derived from the sale by the said city of Bremerton, on the open market, at such terms and upon such conditions as may be deemed wise and proper. The special lighting fund bonds of the said city which said bonds shall be a lien upon the profits and revenues of said lighting plant, subject to the terms and conditions set forth hereinafter in this ordinance.”
The amount is left indefinite, and clearly within the holding of the Supreme Court in Uhler v. Olympia, supra, in which the court said that “the purpose of 'the statute was to compel a reasonably definite estimate of the value of the thing to be purchased, beyond which the council could not go,” and further said:
“It will be seen that this section of the ordinance violates the spirit and intent of the act giving the council power to pass an ordinance providing for the submission of such questions. The council had fixed, as the estimated sum necessary to purchase the waterworks, $90,000. It could not, therefore, make its own act indefinite by providing, in the event a larger sum became necessary*983 after the condemnation to carry out the purpose intended, that it might provide by supplemental ordinance for tile issuance of bonds in the total amount necessary, whatever that sum might be. If the council could (lo this, it could make out of the statute a mere form and leave the citizen as uninformed as to the probable amount of the bond issue as if no sum had been fixed as an estímale at all. It could fix an estimate at, say, $25,000, without reference to probable values, and issue bonds at will and to any amount.”
In the instant case, while in the preamble the value of the plant is placed at $125,000, there is no limit, to the amount of bonds which might be issued. This is clearly insufficient. Uhler v. Olympia, supra.
It is said that the court is not concerned with the legality of bonds in this case, and that subsequently an ordinance could be passed and submitted after the value of the plant was ascertained. The statute, however, provides a method, which is that a “plan and system” must be adopted, and the estimated value to be expended, and the payment, the Supreme Court, supra, says is a part of the plan. This court must adjudicate the necessity, and also, prima facie at least, the qualification under the statute of the plaintiff to exercise the right, and if it is apparent upon the face of the complaint that the requirements of the statute and the decisions of the state Supreme Court have not been complied with or conformed to, the court would not do an idle thing and proced in the cause. The Supreme Court, in State ex rel. Wright v. Tacoma, 92 Wash. 591, 159 Pac. 765, did say that “such additional costs * * * as' might be incurred should not go unpaid, but should be paid out of the earnings of the plaintiff”; but in that case provision was made for such payment in the ordinance, and the bond issue limited. The court did not modify its holding that the limit of the bond issue must be fixed by the ordinance, and the expression of the voters obtained thereto.
"The power is not within the terms of the several acts to which reference luis been hail, and it is certainly not within the necessary implications of any of them. Tile purpose of the law is plain.”
Light and water are included in the same acts of the Legislature, and the construction and statutory power given with relation to water franchises, I think, would equally apply too light franchises. .Tt follows that so much of the plant as lies within the cities is not subject to condemnation by the plaintiff.
Attention has been directed to Omaha v. Omaha Water Co., 218 U. S. 180, 30 Sup. Ct. 615, 54 L. Ed. 991, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1084, as being in contravention to the rule adopted by the Supreme Court of this state, and it is urged that this court should adopt the rule announced in the Omaha Case. It will be noted that the charter of Omaha provided, among other things:
*984 “Power to appropriate any waterworks system, plant or property already constructed, to supply the city and the inhabitants thereof with water, or any part thereof, whether lying within said city or in part without the city and within ten miles from the corporate limits of such city, including all real estate, buildings, machinery, pipes, mains, hydrants basins, reservoirs and all appurtenances reasonably necessary thereto, and a part of or connected with said system plant or property, and franchises to own and operate the same, if any.”
The Omaha act was much more comprehensive than the Washington law, and that case was based upon express power granted; whereas, the Supreme Court of Washington based its conclusion upon lack of legislative authority.
The other objections raised will not be discussed.
The demurrer must be sustained.