263 F. 437 | W.D.N.Y. | 1920
In the year 1885 the trustees of the village of Jamestown, N. Y., by resolution granted the right and privilege to the defendant Pennsylvania Gas Company to lay mains, pipes, and branches for supplying natural and manufactured gas to the inhabitants of the village; nothing being stated in the resolution or grant as to the length of time during which such right was to be exercised. The said defendant, a Pennsylvania corporation, accepted such grant, and natural gas was,soon thereafter continuously supplied and distributed in Jamestown to consumers for light, heat, and power in dwellings, business places, and factories; the gas being piped in interstate commerce from Warren, Pa. On August 26, 1919, notice of intention to ■discohtinue the "distribution of gas, under the terms of the agreement, on April 30, 1920, stating as a reason the shortage of gas and rapid depletion thereof, was filed with the city clerk of the city of, Jamestown, which had succeeded to the rights of the village. •
This suit in equity was thereupon brought to enjoin the defendants from cutting off its gas supply and abandoning its means for local production. The bill is lengthy, and is accompanied by Exhibit A, which constitutes the grant or right which is the subject of this controversy. The National Euel Gas Company is joined as defendant, on the theory that it has acquired the majority of the capital stock of the grantee, and either directly, or indirectly influences the abandonment of the franchise or agreement and proposed discontinuance of the supply of gas to the citizens of the complainant. It is averred that the National Euel Gas Company is the owner of the Iroquois Natural Gas Company, which furnishes and intends to continue furnishing natural gas to the citizens of Buffalo, and that breaking off the gas service in Jamestown would be an unjust discrimination between such communities; that the defendant National Euel Gas Company owns gas-producing fields next to those owned by the Pennsylvania Gas Company, which are held in reserve, and which are adequate for continuing the supply of gas to Jamestown under the grant in question. It is also averred that the Pennsylvania Gas Contpany has an adequate supply of natural gas for delivery. Diversity of citizenship and irreparable injury in excess of $3,000 and costs is set forth.
By their motion to dismiss the defendants challenge the validity of the bill because of want of equity, the jurisdiction of this court, and
2. In the latter case it was said, inter alia, that an agreement conferring rights upon a city constituted the city the real party to the agreement, aniel, though the inhabitants were not parties thereto, they nevertheless were entitled to the benefits while the agreement remained in force.
Defendant attaches importance to Seaboard Air Eine Railway v. City of Raleigh, 242 U. S. 15, 37 Sup. Ct. 8, 61 L. Ed. 121; but in that case I think a different principle was applied. There the permission to use and occupy granted by the board of aldermen related to a spur track on a sidewalk, and the Supreme Court said the circumstances disclosed a mere license to exercise the facility without the necessity of discharging any corporate function. In this case, however, the very nature of the grant or privilege, together with the peculiar civic purpose attained thereby, “presuppose the right to exert the essential characteristics or the duty to perform them during a specified time or in perpetuity.” The rule that general implication may not be available to convert a license or permissive right thus obtained into a contract in perpetuity, true enough, has its limitations and exceptions. The grant in perpetuity may, quoting from the City of Raleigh Case, “be implied by considering the essential relation which the particular power or right granted bears to the general powers and duties possessed and the necessary connection between the two for the purpose of giving a common duration to both.” The essential relations in the case at bar were such that in my opinion the grant conveyed franchise rights in fee, while the city in turn acquired the right to enforce the furnishing of natural gas-to its inhabitants so long as the corporation carries on the business for which it was organized, and so long as it is not impossible for it to per- ' form the service.
It is true that in East Ohio Gas Co. v. Akron, 81 Ohio St. 33, 90 N. E. 40, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 92, 18 Ann. Cas. 332, it was held that a franchise to a gas company which was indefinite as to duration of the grant was revocable by either party and continued only at the will of both; but in a later case — Northern Ohio Traction & Light Co. v. Ohio, 245 U. S. 574, 38 Sup. Ct. 196, 62 L. Ed. 481, L. R. A. 1918E, 865 — the Supreme Court disagreed with that decision, and held that where there are no controlling provisions in the state Constitution or statutes, and no prior decision by its courts to the contrary, a franchise granted by the state authorities, without limit as to duration’ and without apparent intention to accept a mere revocable right, is such a contract as cannot be annulled at the will of the granting authority. So, also, in Owensboro v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 230 U. S. 58, 33 Sup. Ct. 988, 57 L. Ed. 1389, where it was held that an ordinance of a municipality conferring a right to use the streets for telephone poles and wires is not a revocable license, but a grant in perpetuity, unless limited as to time. See, also, New York Electric Lines Co. v. Empire Subway Co., 235 U. S. 179, 35 Sup. Ct. 72, 59 L. Ed. 184, L. R. A. 1918E, 874, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 906; Russell v. Sebastian, 233 U. S. 195, 34 Sup. Ct. 517, 58 L. Ed. 912, L. R. A. 1918E, 882, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 1282. It is not contended that the grant violated, at its inception or even now, the state Constitution or statutes. Indeed, none of the adjudications in this state, as I interpret them, treating of analogous situations, regard such a grant as here considered as a mere license or permission, terminable at will by either party, but as a property right which cannot arbitrarily be destroyed, and contemplates, as to duration, the exercise of the granted rights in perpetuity.
On the hearing of this motion it was suggested by counsel for the defendants that the natural gas supply of Jamestown was insufficient, and hence the intended discontinuance was on that ground alone. To this complainant rejoined that the grant was for both natural and manufactured gas; but we are not now concerned with any such questions, since the complaint is based on the threatened cessation of available natural gas for complying with the grant.
The motion to dismiss is denied on all grounds, with leave to defendants to answer.