166 Ky. 730 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing as to the City of Princeton and affirming as to R. W. Lisanby.
Princeton is a city of the fourth class. On the 8th day of October, 1896, the council of the city adopted a resolution directing its clerk to cause advertisement to be made for sealed bids for the sale of a franchise to furnish the city with electric lights for a period of ten years, the bids to be received on the 22nd day of October, thereafter. The bid of Eddins and Boyce was accepted, and it was thereafter granted to them by an ordinance, which, we assume, was duly adopted. On account of the conclusions we have reached, and which will be apparent from what is hereinafter said, it is not necessary to consider the various reasons which are urged by appellants, contending that the ordinance which granted the franchise is void.
The appellants contend that this franchise, if valid, expired on the first day of January, 1907, and the appellee contends that it did not expire until the first day of January, 1917, and this is the only question which we deem necessary to be determined with reference to the alleged franchise.
The resolution directing the clerk to advertise for sale the franchise described it as a “franchise for furnishing the city with electric lights for a period of ten years.” The preamble of the ordinance which granted the franchise recited that the clerk had been directed to advertise for a sale of the franchise for ten years, and that he had acted in accordance with the direction. The first clause of the ordinance is as follows:
■ “The said J. T. Eddins and R. B. Boyce are hereby granted the exclusive right or franchise to manufacture and sell electric light within the corporate limits of the City of Princeton, Ky., for public, private, and commercial use, for and during the period of ten years, from and after January 1st, 1897.”
“No county, city, town, taxing district, or other municipality shall be authorized or permitted to grant any franchise or privilege, or make any contract in reference thereto, for a term exceeding twenty years. Before granting such franchise or privilege for a term of years, such municipality shall first, after due advertisement, receive bids therefor publicly, and award the same to the highest and best bidder; but it shall have the right to reject any and all bids." * * *
The purpose of “due advertisement" provided for is to give information to all, who may desire to. become purchasers of the franchise, and to enable them to make' bids therefor, and to secure the municipalities against the loss of valuable rights for mere paltry considerations. It is to give information to ail. who have an interest in the privileges to be sold, of what is proposed to be done, that citizens of a municipality may protect their rights in such matters in any proper way that necessity may create. The sale to the highest and best bidder is to enable the municipality to receive the value of the privilege to be granted away, and to prevent municipal councils from granting valuable rights and privileges to favorites without any sufficient consideration. It follows, as a natural sequence, that the only thing which can be lawfully sold is the thing which has been advertised for sale. A city council, after, having advertised the sale of a franchise, with the right to exercise it for ten years, could not receive a bid and grant a valid franchise to exercise the privilege designated for fifteen or any other number of years. To attempt to do so would be the attempt to grant the right to exercise the privilege, with
A reading of the ordinance granting the franchise from January 1st, 1897, until January 1st, 1907, and the ordinance granting a franchise to be exercised from January 1st, 1907, until January 1st, 1917, conclusively shows that neither the council of the city nor the appellee construed or understood the first named ordinance as granting a franchise for any longer period" than until January 1st, 1907. At the time of the adoption of the last named ordinance, a resolution of the council is as follows:
“By ordinance, the Princeton Electric Light and Power Co. was granted an extension of ten years from Jan. 1st, 1907, on their franchise, by unanimous vote of the council.”
Section 1st of the ordinance recites:
“That, whereas, the franchise heretofore granted by the City of Princeton to J. T. Eddins and R. B. Boyce * * * to manufacture and sell electric light within the corporate limits of the City of Princeton will expire January 1st, 1907, etc.”
In the same section of the ordinance are the words: “Are hereby granted the exclusive right to manufacture and sell electric light and electric power, or either, for public or commercial use * * * for and during the ten years from and after January 1st, 1907, etc.” Pending the negotiations for the attempted granting of the franchise, the proceedings of the council show the report of a committee, which recommended “letting another franchise for ten years from Jan. 1st, 1907, when old electric or present franchise expires; ’ ’ and, further, the appointment of a committee, “with authority to close contract for lights and extend franchise for ten years from expiration of present one, with said electric light company. ’ ’ All of this makes exceedingly plain the construction put upon the proceedings by the parties themselves, at the time, as to number of years the franchise granted in 1896 was to extend, and when it should expire.
The ordinance directing the advertisement for sale of a franchise to furnish light and power from January 1st, 1917, until January 1st, 1927, was adopted in the year-1912. The conditions and requirements under which the-franchise proposed to be sold, was to be exercised, was-described as the same then enjoyed by the appellee under the franchise it then held. The appellee then did not hold any franchise, but the nature and character of the franchise was to be sought in the void ordinance of 1906. It did not have so much as a contract with the-city, since the manner of its making was in direct conflict with the constitutional requirement. The appelleewas the only bidder for the franchise proposed to be
Putting aside any objection to the franchise attempted to be granted in 1912, on account of the want
The appellee has been operating, at least, since January 1st, 1907, without any franchise and without any valid contract with the city so to do. The appellant, city, together with other relief, seeks to recover from appellee the sum of $7,942.50, which is made up of sums of money paid to appellee by the city, during five years last past, for lights and power furnished the city, and alleged to be over and above what such lights and power so furnished were reasonably worth, and rent for the use of the streets by its poles and wires during the same time. The ordinance of 1906, which attempted to grant a fran
There was no legal obligation upon the part of appellant, city, to pay the sums to the appellee, which it now seeks to recover from it, and could not have been coerced to do it. The council had the power to create a binding obligation upon the city to pay for the lights and power, if it had gone about doing so in the manner provided by law. The proof fails to show, that the sums charged and paid were unreasonable, or in excess of the value of the services rendered the city for which the sums were paid. The city received the benefits and voluntarily paid for them. The payments were not induced by fraud nor made under any mistake, which is alleged or appears upon the record. The payments were made, as.-'we presume, upon resolutions of the council, which acted upon a full knowledge of the facts. Because the city would not be compelled at law to pay for the lights and power furnished it by appellee, if sought to be coerced to do so, it does not follow as a natural sequence, that it can recover of the appellee the sums paid, under the conditions detailed above, in a court of equity. The city, resisting a claim made against it under a void contract, or an obligation sought to be placed upon it through an unauthorized assumption of power by its -officers, is in a different attitude from what it is, when it comes into court asking relief. When it seeks equitable relief, it must comply with the ancient rule and ‘ ‘ do equity. ’ ’ This principle was adhered to in the recent case of Miles Auto Co. v. Dorsey, 163 Ky., 692. In the case at bar there seems to be an absence of any ground for equitable relief against appellee for the recovery of the sums sued for.
While' the appellee has not a franchise to use the streets and public ways for the extending of its wires, erection of poles, and other apparatus placed in and along the streets, the proceeding under which it came into the city and its streets amounts to a license to do so, and it is not a mere trespasser. The city has the power to revoke the license, and it seems has done so. A
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed upon the appeal of the City of Princeton, and affirmed upon the appeal of R. W. Lisanby, and the cause is remanded with directions to proceed in conformity with tbis opinion.