271 S.W. 1106 | Tex. | 1925
Defendant in error, F.G. Geller, alleging himself to be an elector, voter, and citizen of the City of Dallas, Texas, and a patron of the Dallas Railway Company, brought this suit in the District Court of the Forty-fourth Judicial District of Texas at Dallas, seeking to enjoin plaintiff in error, Dallas Railway Company, from raising the charge or fare for carrying its passengers over its lines of street railway from the five cent rate to a six cent rate, as was provided and authorized in an ordinance passed by the Board of Commissioners of the City of Dallas on June 24, 1922.
In 1917 the plaintiff in error had received a franchise from the City of Dallas to operate its lines of street railway upon and over the streets of the City of Dallas. The ordinance by which said franchise was granted in 1917 was submitted to and approved by the electors of the City of Dallas under the referendum provision *487 of the City charter. The franchise so granted prescribed a schedule of rates for the carriage of passengers, and designated five cents as the maximum fare to be charged.
It is the contention of defendant in error, Geller, that the said franchise of 1917 was and is a contract, such as can not be altered or changed by the City under its powers to fix, change, or regulate the schedule of rates for public service corporations, but binds plaintiff in error during the life of the franchise to a five cent rate, and that the ordinance of 1922 granting plaintiff in error permission to charge a six cent fare is invalid on account thereof. He further contends that before said ordinance changing, regulating, and increasing the rate should take effect, it must be approved by vote of the electors under the referendum provision of the city charter in accordance with the petition filed by the requisite number of electors as prescribed by said charter.
On hearing, the trial court sustained plaintiff in error's general demurrer and special exceptions, and dismissed the case.
The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District held that the ordinance involved in this case was one regulating the rate schedule, that the schedule of rates was subject to constant regulation by the governing body of the municipality granting it, and that the ordinance changing the rate schedule was not void, but held it inoperative until approved by the electors of the City of Dallas under the referendum provision of the City's charter. The court, speaking through Chief Justice Sargeant, held that the franchise ordinance of 1917 was not a fixed contract binding for the life of thefranchise. but one regulating a rate schedule which is subject torevision from time to time by the legislative branch of the municipality, and cites Sec. 17, Art. 1 of the Constitution of Texas; San Antonio Tr. Co. v. Altgelt,
Perhaps the City Attorneys, Amici Curiæ, are unduly or unnecessarily alarmed, construing, as they do, the opinion of the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals to hold that a municipality cannot make contracts that are binding upon public service corporations.
In the first case cited the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District said:
"The Legislature has the power to regulate the rates of fare of a street railway company in the absence of any provision in its charter relinquishing that right (Wood on Railroads (Miner's Ed.) 1658; Nellis, St. Railroads, 40), provided, however, the rates established are not so unreasonable as to practically destroy the value of *488 the property of the corporation, and thereby depriving it of its property without due process of law, and denying it equal protection of the law. * * * This right under the present Constitution, cannot, as we have seen, be relinquished by a provision in the company's charter."
The Supreme Court of the United States in
"Assuming, but not deciding, that the ordinance of March 16, 1899, extending the franchise of the San Antonio Street Railway, and imposing certain limitations, constituted a contract protanto, the question still remains whether the provision `that said street railway companies shall charge five cents fare for one continuous ride over any one of their lines, with one transfer to or from either line to the other,' constituted a contract with respect to which no further legislation upon that subject could be enacted without impairing its obligation. Even if construed as a contract, it was still subject to the provisions of the constitution of 1876, which in section 17 of the bill of rights declared that no irrevocable or uncontrollable grant of special privileges or immunities should be made; but that all privileges granted by the legislature or created under its authority shall be subject to the control thereof.
With this construction as limited and defined in the cases last cited, we are in accord. We incline to the view that the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals intended to go no further than to hold, in accord with the above mentioned case of San Antonio Tr. Co. v. Altgelt,
This holding in this case in no wise contradicts the holding in the case of Mayor et al. v. Houston Railway,
The right or power to further control or regulate the grant in regard to the rate schedule is a reservation to the municipality, and not an inhibition to contract; and where a franchise is accepted by a grantee, this reservation provided in the law becomes a part of the contract.
The matter of changing, fixing, or regulating the charges, fares, or rates of a public service company or corporation, and of determining *489
what the compensation for such service should be and its reasonableness, is both legislative and judicial in character, and in its nature one which is at least impracticable, if not impossible, for the public at large, the voters, to pass on. They cannot have or digest the information, data, and facts necessarily incident and essential to the forming of a correct, accurate, and fair judgment upon the subject. Southwestern Tel. Tel. Co. v. City of Dallas,
Further, we think it clear that the charter provisions themselves reserve from referendum the fixing and regulating of the schedule of rates. That the fixing and regulating of the schedule of rates was not to be subject to referendum is clearly shown in that paragraph of the City charter relating to that subject. Paragraph 7 of Section 8 of Article 2 declares:
"The right is hereby delegated to the City of Dallas, actingthrough its Board of Commissioners, to determine, fix and regulate the charges, fares or rates of any person, firm or corporation enjoying or that may enjoy a franchise or exercising any other public privilege in said City and to prescribe the kind of service to be furnished by such person, firm or corporation, and the manner in which it shall be rendered, and from time totime alter or change such rules, regulations and compensation.The Board shall make rules and regulations granting a fairhearing to persons or corporations to be affected by said regulations, and no change in regulations shall be adopted except after notice to the persons affected and after a fair hearing shall be granted them; that in adopting such regulations and infixing or changing such compensation, or determining thereasonableness thereof, no stocks or bonds authorized or issued by any corporation enjoying a franchise shall be considered unless upon proof that the same have been actually issued by the corporation for money paid and used for the development of the corporate property, labor done or property actually received in accordance with the laws and constitution of the State applicable thereto; and in order to ascertain all facts necessary for aproper understanding of what is or should be a reasonable rate or regulation, the Board of Commissioners shall have full power toinspect books and compel attendance of witnesses as provided in sub-section 6 hereof and may prescribe all penalties named in sub-section 6 for a failure or refusal to attend and testify or produce books." * * * (Italics ours).
Under proper construction of the charter the City of Dallas does not provide for referendum on rate schedules. True, the referendum provision is broad, and provides generally for referendum of ordinances, but that provision must be construed in connection with *490 the plain and specific provision relating to the fixing and regulating of rate schedules so as to give effect to its plain specific requirements.
It is hardly necessary to repeat, analyze, or emphasize the provisions of the above paragraph. It is clearly provided that the City shall act through the Board of Commissioners in determining, fixing, and regulating the charges, fares, and rates, and in prescribing the kind of service to be furnished; that the Board shall make rules, and grant a fair hearing; that the Board of Commissioners shall be empowered to inspect books, hear testimony (and for that purpose have power to compel attendance of witnesses), and to ascertain all the necessary facts about the properties and the conditions of the service for a proper understanding of what is or should be a reasonable rate. It would be to abrogate this provision of the charter to require that these matters be referred to a vote of the electors of the City.
In construing and applying both the provisions of the charter, the one providing for the referendum and this provision relating to rate schedules, effect should be given to both, especially where to do so does no violence to either but gives effect to the clear intendment of the charter and avoids an absurdity. See the opinion of this Court in the case of Southwestern Tel. Tel. Co. v. City of Dallas,
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed, and that of the District Court is affirmed.