delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by the Opelika Sewer Company to enjoin the City against preventing the plaintiff by various means at its disposal from putting into effect a schedule of rates that the plaintiff has proposed. It is to be taken that the present rates, which the plaintiff seeks to increase, are confiscatory unless the City has a right to insist upon them; and the question before us is whether the City has that right by contract or whether its enforcement of them deprives the plaintiff of its property without due process of law contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States as alleged in the bill.
Cincinnati
v.
Cincinnati & Hamilton Traction Co.,
The Sewer Company is operating under an ordinance of 1902, which purported to grant the right for thirty years, and to authorize the Company to charge not in excess of rates specified in detail. It also provided that the Company should file a written acceptance, which was done, and that the ordinance
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shall thereupon become and be a contract between ” the Company and the City. There can be no question that the instrument purported to be a contract and that if it was a valid one it bound the Sewer Company not to charge more than the prescribed rates.
Columbus Ry., Power & Light Co.
v.
Columbus,
The charter of February 20, 1899, gives power “ to maintain the health and cleanliness of the city, and to this end to adopt and maintain an efficient system of sewerage,” § 11; and further on “to establish and build drains, sewers . . . and to regulate the same ” and still later to provide for assessing upon adjacent property a part of “ the expense of such sewers as the board may from time to time deem necessary for the purpose of receiving sewerage from houses and lots ” &c. These provisions suggest’that the Legislature expected the work to be done by the City itself. But it is not the interest of either party to maintain that the whole transaction was void and we shall assume that the City had power to make an arrangement with a company to do the work.
The Alabama decisions construe the State Constitution and such charters to allow a contract to be made, subject to being revoked whenever the Legislature of the State may think fit.
Greenville
v.
Greenville Water Works Co.,
It seems to us that the words of the charter “ to establish and build sewers and to regulate the same ” are used
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with reference to sewers built by the City and the regulation of the City’s own property. They do not go far enough to empower it to regulate prices charged by another — and in short we find no grant of that character elsewhere. But, as we have said, the Alabama decisions sustain the conclusion that the City had the power to make the contract upon which it. relies. In
Bessemer
v.
Bessemer City Water Works,
Decree reversed.
