52 Tenn. 495 | Tenn. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts in this case agreed upon by the parties, and necessary to be noticed in determining the questions raised, are as follows:
The city of Memphis has been for many years a municipal corporation, regularly chartered and organized. On the 18th of December, 1866, the Mayor and Aldermen passed an ordinance to create a board of commissioners for the erection, care, and maintenance of the Memphis water works. The commissioners were appointed and organized, and entered on the discharge of their duties, and made reports from time to time to the Mayor and Aldermen, the last of which was made in April, 1869, when a plan of constructing water works was reported and adopted by the Board of Mayor and Aldermen. The commissioners caused surveys, maps, drawings, measurements, and estimates to be made, preparatory to commencing the actual construction of the water works. In these prepara
On the 28th of February, 1870, the Legislature granted a charter of incorporation . to the Memphis Water Company for the purpose of supplying water to the city of Memphis and the inhabitants thereof by means of public works. The water company, claiming the right to do so under its charter, immediately on its organization expended sums of money in and about the construction of its water works in the city of Memphis, and proceeded to take up the pavements and sidewalks, and to use the streets, lanes, and alleys of the city for the purpose of laying down its pipes, aqueducts, and conductors, and constructing its water works under its charter, without the consent and in opposition to the will of the General Council of the city of Memphis, and without making compensation therefor to the city, or to the adjacent property owners.
After the Water Company entered upon the construction of its water works under its charter, the city of Memphis commenced to erect water works for the
These are the material facts, agreed on and submitted to the Court below for adjudication. The Court below decided the case against the city of Memphis, and it appeals to this Court.
We have devoted as much time to the investigation of the important legal questions involved in this case as was practicable, in view of the heavy pressure of business now upon ns. But our labor has been so materially aided and lessened by the elaborate and exhaustive printed arguments on both sides, that we are enabled to announce the results to which we have arrived. We have not the time, however, to discuss the several questions so ably and ingeniously argued, but must be content to state the several propositions of law which are decisive of the case.
1. The city of Memphis is a municipal or public corporation. As contra-distinguished from a private corporation, municipal or public grants of franchises are always subject to the control of the legislative power for the purpose of amendment, modification, or entire revocation; 5 Hum., 241; 3 Head, 317; Cooley’s Const. Lim., 192.
3. The repeal, or revocation, or modification of the powers of a municipal corporation may be effected, either expressly or by necessary implication, by subsequent legislation. Hence, if the act of 28th February, 1870, incorporating the Memphis Water Company, with exclusive powers to erect water works in Memphis, and supply the city and its inhabitants with water, was a valid and constitutional exercise of legislative power, it operated, by necessary implication, as a revocation of the power of the city corporation to erect water works for the same purposes.
4. The Memphis Water Works Company is a private corporation, and upon the acceptance of its char ter by the corporators and their organization under it, a contract was thereby consummated between the State and the corporators which was beyond the reach of subsequent legislative interference. It is conceded that by its express terms, the privilege granted to the
5. By sec. 22, art. 1, Constitution of 1834, “per-petuities and monopolies are contrary to the genius of a free State, and shall not be allowed.” The charter of the Memphis Water Company limits the duration of the corporation to ninety-nine years, with exclusive privilege for thirty years. It does not, -therefore, create a perpetuity. Does it create a monopoly by securing to the company the exclusive privilege of supplying the city with water by means of water works ?
We know of no better definition of a monopoly, than that given by Lord Coke, and adopted by the Supreme Court in the case of Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Peters, 707: “A monopoly is an exclusive right granted to a few, of something which was before of common right — so that it is not a case of monopoly, if the subject had not the common right or liberty before, to do the act, or possess or enjoy the privilege or franchise granted as a common right.”
The question then is narrowed down to the inquiry, did the individuals composing the Memphis Water Company have the right, before their incorporation, in common with all others, to erect water works in Memphis, to take up pavements, occupy the streets and do
6. Is the exclusive privilege granted by its charter to the Memphis Water Company forbidden by sec. 7, art. 11, of the Constitution? It would be, difficult to show that the privileges secured to the Water Company are not embraced within the prohibitions of this-section — but it is even more clear, that the power to grant an act of incorporation is forbidden by the language of the body of this section. The proviso to the section, however, gives the power to grant charters of incorporation, and for the purpose of enabling the Legislature thereby to grant exclusive privileges, which, but for the proviso, would be prohibited by the body of the section. In this grant of power 'to create corporations, there is no limitation on its powers, at least, as curtailed by the general terms of the section. The Legislature is required to consult “ the public good” in granting charters: 1 Sneed, 115; 4 Col. 414; Cooley’s Con. Lim., 281.
Our conclusion is, that upon the facts agreed upon, the Memphis Water Company has the exclusive privilege of supplying the city of Memphis and its inhabitants with water by means of the water works erected in pursuance of their charter. Such was the judgment of the Court below and we affirm it.