delivered the opinion of the Gourt.'
This is a bill in equity- brought in the Circuit Court by the •appellee, the Trust Company, as mortgagee of the Dawspn Water Works Company,-do restrain the' city of Dawson from taking measures to build a new set of- water, works, and to compel it specifically to perform a contract' made with the, Water Works Company in 1890 to pay that company or its' mortgagee a certain sum for the use of its'water for- twenty, years. The Trust Company is a Pennsylvania corporation, and the only ground of jurisdiction for the bill as originally filed was diversity of citizenship. The bill, after stating the contract, set up a formal repudiation of the same by the city on June 27, 1894, refusals to pay for the water fro'm that time, and attempts to collect taxes which by the contract were to be satisfied by the furnishing of water, but alleged a continued use of the water by the city. It further stated the calling of an election for December 12, 1894, to see if the city should issue bonds to erect or buy water works or electric lights, a vote in favor of the issue, an issue óf ten thousand dollars for the erection of an electric light plant, and a present intent, to sell the residue for the .purpose of erecting new water works. It also alleged that the Water Wolks Company, recognizing the plaintiff’s right to be paid the rentals for the water in the events which had happened, which had made the’Water Works
We are of opinion that the bill should have been dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The Water Works Company is admitted to have been, a necessary party, and it, like the defendant city, was a Georgia corporation. It was made a defendant, but the court will look beyond the pleadings and arrange the. parties according to their sides in the dispute. When that is done it is obvious that the Water Works Company is on the plaintiff’s side and was made a defendant solely for the purpose of reopening in the United States Court a controversy which had been decided against it in the courts of the State. There was a pretense of asking relief against it, as we have stated, but nb foundation for the prayer was laid in the allegations
The attempt by an afterthought to give jurisdiction by setting up constitutional rights must fail also. The bill presents a naked case of breach of contract. The firét step of the city was to repudiate the contract and to refuse to pay. Whatever it may have done subsequently, its wrong, if, contrary to the decision of the Supreme Court of the State, there was a wrong, was complete then. The repudiation and refusal were kept up until the bill was filed and the other acts were subsequent, subordinate to and in aid of them. The mere fact that the city was a municipal corporation does not give to its refusal the character of a law impairing the obligation of contracts or deprive a citizen of property without due process of law. That point was-decided in
St. Paul Gas Light Co.
v.
St. Paul,
Undoubtedly the decisions on the two sides of the lines are very near to each other. But the case at bar is governed by the one which we have cited and not by
Walla Walla
v.
Walla Walla Water Co.,
Decree reversed.
