CITY OF TACOMA v. TAXPAYERS OF TACOMA ET AL.
No. 509
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued April 30, 1958.—Decided June 23, 1958.
357 U.S. 320
John S. Lynch, Jr. and E. P. Donnelly, Assistant Attorney General of Washington, argued the cause for respondents. Mr. Lynch filed a brief for the Taxpayers of Tacoma, Washington, respondents. With Mr. Donnelly on a brief were John J. O‘Connell, Attorney General, and Philip R. Meade, Assistant Attorney General, for the State of Washington et al., respondents; and joining them in this brief were the States of Iowa, by Norman A. Erbe, Attorney General; Michigan, by Paul L. Adams, Attorney General; Montana, by Forrest H. Anderson, Attorney General; Nevada, by Harvey Dickerson, Attorney General; New Mexico, by Fred M. Standley, Attorney General; Vermont, by Frederick M. Reed, Attorney General; Virginia, by A. S. Harrison, Jr., Attorney General; and Wisconsin, by Stewart G. Honeck, Attorney General, and Roy G. Tulane and James H. McDermott, Assistant Attorneys General.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the latest episode in litigation beginning in 1948 which has been waged in five tribunals and has produced more than 125 printed pages of administrative and judicial opinions. It concerns the plan of the City of Tacoma, a municipal corporation in the State of Washington, to construct a power project on the Cowlitz River, a navigable water of the United States, in accordance with a
The question has arisen under the following circumstances and proceedings. Having earliеr filed its declaration of intention to construct the project,3 the City of Tacoma, a “municipality”4 in the State of Washington, on December 28, 1948, filed with the Commission, under
The Mossyrock development was proposed to be located at Mile 65 and to consist of a concrete dam across the Cowlitz rising 510 feet above bedrock (creating a reservoir covering about 10,000 acres extending 21 miles upstream) and an integral powerhouse containing, initially, three generators each of 75,000-kilowatt capacity and provisions for a fourth generator of like capacity.
The Commission ordered a public hearing to determine whether the license should issue, and gave notice of the hearing to the Governor of the State of Washington. In response, the Attorney General of the State filed an intervening petition, in the names of the State‘s Directors of Fisheries and of Game, alleging in substance that the State‘s Departments of Fisheries and of Game are subdivisions of the sovereign State, and that the respective Directors are charged with the duty of enforcing its laws concerning the conservation of fish and game; that the dams and fish-handling facilities proposed by the City would destroy fishery resources of the State; that construction of proposed dams would violate
Upon the issues thus framed a hearing, consuming 24 days, was conducted by a Commission examiner, throughout which the Attorney General of the State, by his designated assistant, actively participated in opposition to the application, and the Special Assistant Attorney General, appointed for the purpose stated, also participated in the proceedings before the Commission. Thereafter the Commission, on November 28, 1951, rendered its opinion,8 findings,9 and order granting the license.10 Re City of
Pursuant to § 313 of the Act,
tors of Fisheries and of Game, petitioned for review of the Commission‘s order by the Court of Appеals for the Ninth Circuit. The City intervened. The State there challenged the Commission‘s authority to issue the license principally upon the grounds that the City had not complied with applicable state laws nor obtained state permits and approvals required by state statutes;11 that “Tacoma, as a creature of the State of Washington, cannot act in opposition to the policy of the State or in derogation of its laws” (emphasis added); and that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the Commission‘s findings and order. The Court of Appeals, holding that “state laws cannot prevent the Federal Power Commission from issuing a license or bar the licensee from acting under the license to build a dam on a navigable stream since the stream is under the dominion of the United States” and that there was ample evidence to sustain the Commission‘s findings and its order, affirmed. Washington Department of Game v. Federal Power Comm‘n, 207 F. 2d 391, 396. (Emphasis аdded.) The State then petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari which was denied. 347 U. S. 936.
Follоwing that opinion the City, on June 21, 1955, accepted bids for a block of its revenue bonds totaling $15,000,000, and on the next day it awarded contracts for construction of the Mayfield Dam aggregating $16,120,870. Two days later, June 24, 1955, the Directors “acting for and on behalf of the State” moved in the Superior Court for, and obtained, ex parte, an order enjoining the City, pending determination of the suit, from proceeding to construct the Cowlitz project or to sell any of its revenue bonds. That order was modified on June 30, 1955, to permit such construction work as would not in any manner interfere with the bed or waters of the Cowlitz River. Promptly thereafter the City began construction of the project, within the limits of the injunction, and had expended about $7,000,000 thereon to the time the work was comрletely enjoined as later stated.
On July 27, 1955, Tacoma amended its complaint merely to assert the intervening facts that the Commis-
Tacoma appealed, and the Taxpayers, the State and its Directors cross-appealed, to the Supreme Court of Wash-
At the outset respondents ask dismissal of our writ on the ground that the case is moot. They argue that it is evident the Cowlitz project cannot be completed by December 31, 1958, which is the date now stated in the license for its completion. There is no merit in this con-tention because § 13 of the Fedеral Power Act,
We come now to the core of the controversy between the parties, namely, whether the license issued by the Commission under the Federal Power Act to the City of Tacoma gave it capacity to act under that federal license in constructing the project and delegated to it federal eminent domain power to take, upon the payment of just compensation, the State‘s fish hatchery—essential to the construction of the project—in the absence of state legislation specifically conferring such authority.
It is no longer open to question that the Federal Gov-ernment under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution (
“(b) Any party to a proceeding under this chap-ter aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission in such proceeding may obtain a review of such order in the United States court of appeals for any circuit wherein the licensee or public utility to which the order relates is located . . . by filing in such court, within 60 days after the order of [the] Commission upon the application for rehearing, a written petition praying that the order of the Com-mission be modified or set aside in whole or in part. A copy of such petition shall forthwith be served upon any member of the Commission and thereupon the Commission shall certify and file with the court a transcript of the record upon which the order com-plained of was entered. Upon the filing of such transcript such court shall have exclusive jurisdic-tion to affirm, modify, or set aside such order in whole or in part. No objection to the order of the Com-mission shall be considered by the court unless such objection shall have been urged before the Commis-sion in the application for rehearing unless there is reasonable ground for failure so to do. The finding of the Commission as to the facts, if supported by substantial evidence, shall be conclusive. . . . The judgment and decree of the court, affirming, modify-ing, or setting aside, in whole or in part, any such order of the Commission, shall be final, subject to review by the Supreme Court of the United States upon certiorari or certification as provided in sec-tions 346 and 347 of Title 28.”
16 U. S. C. § 825l (b) . (Emphasis added.)
This statute is written in simple words of plain mean-ing and leaves no room to doubt the congressional purpose
The State participated in the hearing before the Com-mission. It there vigorously objected to the issuance of the license upon the grounds, among others, “[t]hat the reservoirs which would be created by the proposed dams would inundate a valuable and irreplaceable fish hatch-ery owned by the State” and, hence, necessarily require the taking of it by the City under the license sought; that the City had not complied with the applicable laws of the State respecting construction of the project and perform-ance of the acts necessarily incident thereto (note 11); and that the City was not authorized by the laws of the State to engage in such business. The Commission re-jected these contentions of the State and made all the findings required by the Act to support its order granting thе license (note 9) including the finding that:
“The Applicant . . . has submitted satisfactory evidence of compliance with the requirements of all applicable State laws insofar as necessary to effect the purposes of a license for the project;17 and it is a municipality within the meaning of Section 3 (7) of the Act.”18
Thereafter, the State, following the procedures pre-scribed by § 313 (b), petitioned the proper Court of Ap-peals for review of the Commission‘s findings and order. After full hearing, that court rejected all contentions there raised by the State, did not disturb any of the Commis-sion‘s findings, and affirmed its оrder without modification. Washington Department of Game v. Federal Power Comm‘n, 207 F. 2d 391. It made particular mention of, and approved, the Commission‘s finding, as rephrased by the court, that the City had submitted “such evi-dence of compliance with state law as, in the Commis-sion‘s judgment, would be ‘appropriate to effect the purposes of a Federal license on the navigable waters of the United States.’ ” Id., at 396.
Moreover, in its briefs in the Court of Appeals, the State urged reversal of the Commission‘s order on the grounds that the City “has not shown, nor could it show, that [it] has availed itself of . . . any right to take or destroy the property of the State of Washington [and that] Tacoma, as a creature of the State of Washington, cannot act [under the license] in opposition to the policy of the State or in derogation of its laws.” (Emphasis added.) In rejecting these contentions—that the City does not have “any right to take or destroy property of the State” and “cannot act” in accordance with the terms of its federal license—the Court of Appeals said:
“Again, we turn to the First Iowa case, supra. There, too, the applicant for a federal license was a creature of the state and the chief opposition came from the state itself. Yet, the Supreme Court permitted the applicant to act inconsistently with
the declared policy of its creator, and to prevail in obtaining a license. “Consistent with the First Iowa case, supra, we conclude that the state laws cannot prevent the Fed-erаl Power Commission from issuing a license or bar the licensee from acting under the license to build a dam on a navigable stream since the stream is under the dominion of the United States.” Id., at 396. (Emphasis added.)
We think these recitals show that the very issue upon which respondents stand here was raised and litigated in the Court of Appeals and decided by its judgment. But even if it might be thought that this issue was not raised in the Court of Appeals, it cannot be doubted that it could and should have been, for that was the court to which Congress had given “exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify, or set aside” the Commission‘s order. And the State may not reserve the point, for another round of piecemeal litigation, by remaining silent on the issue while its action to review and reverse the Commis-sion‘s order was pending in that court—which had “exclu-sive jurisdiction” of the proceeding and whose judgment therein as declared by Congress “shall be final,” subject to review by this Court upon certiorari or certification. After the Court of Appeals’ judgment was rendered, the State petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari which was denied. 347 U. S. 936.
These were precisely the proceedings prescribed by Congress in § 313 (b) of the Act for judicial review of the Commission‘s findings and order. They resulted in affirmance. That result, Congress has declared, “shall be final.”
But respondents say that the Court of Appeals did not decide the question of legal capacity of the City to act
“However, we do not touch the question as to the legal capacity of the City of Tacoma to initiate and act under the license once it is granted. There may be limitations in the City Charter, for instance, as to indebtedness limitations. Questions of this nature may be inquired into by the Commission as relevant to the practicability of the plan, but the Commission has no power to adjudicate them.” Id., at 396-397.
We believe that respondents’ construction of this lan-guage is in error. The questioned language expressly refers to possible “indebtedness limitations” in the City‘s Charter and “questions of this nature,” not to the right of the City to receive and perform, as licensee of the Federal Government under the Federal Power Act, the federal rights determined by the Commission and dele-gated to the City as specified in the license. That this was the meaning of the court, if its meaning might other-wise be doubtful, is made certain by the facts that the court did not disturb a single one of the Commission‘s findings; affirmed its order without modification; and said, in the sentence immediately preceding the ques-tioned language: “Consistent with the First Iowa case, supra, we conclude that the state laws cannot prevent the Federal Power Commission from issuing a license or bar the licensee from acting under the license to build a dam on a navigable stream since the stream is under the dominion of the United States.” Id., at 396. (Emphasis added.)
The final judgment of the Court of Appeals was effec-tive, not only against the State, but also against its citi-zens, including the taxpayers of Tacoma, for they, in their
We conclude that the judgment of the Court of Ap-peals, upon this Court‘s denial of the State‘s petition for certiorari, became final under § 313 (b) of the Act, and is binding upon the State of Washington, its Directors of Fisheries and of Game, and its citizens, including the tax-payers of Tacoma; and that the objections and claims to the contrary asserted in the cross-complaints of the State, its Directors of Fisheries and of Game, and the Taxpayers of Tacoma, in this bond validation suit, were impermis-sible collateral attacks upon, and de novo litigation be-tween the same parties of issues determined by, the final judgment of the Court of Appeals. Therеfore, the judg-ment of the Supreme Court of Washington is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.
I join the Court‘s opinion, but deem it appropriate to state my understanding of what the Court has held. The Court of Appeals in the earlier proceeding had jurisdic-tion to determine whether state or federal law governed Tacoma‘s power to condemn the State‘s hatchery, and that issue itself was a federal question. Section 313 (b) of the Federal Power Act therefore foreclosed relitigation
