148 Mo. 637 | Mo. | 1899
The plaintiff and the defendant are corporations under the laws of Missouri, each owning and operating a street railway in St. Louis. The defendant corporation owns a line with a double track on Grand avenue in' said city between Lucas and Finney avenues, a distance of some fifteen hundred feet, and operates its cars thereon by overhead electric trolley. The plaintiff, on the other hand, is authorized by an ordinance of the city to construct its tracks on Grand Avenue until it reaches that portion of the street occupied by defendant’s tracks, and is authorized to connect its tracks with defendant’s at the intersection of Grand and Finney avenues and use the same to Lucas Avenue.
The city of St. Louis is governed in its municipal affairs by a charter adopted on the twenty-second day of October, 1876, by the voters of said city. • It was framed by authority
The tenth article of the charter relates to and defines the authority of the city over street railroads. It gives the municipal assembly of said city power by ordinance to determine all questions with regard to street railways, whether such questions involve the construction of such railroads, granting the right of way, or regulating and controlling them after their completion, and provides, among other things (sec. 1), that thereafter “no street railroad shall be incorporated or built in the city of St. Louis except according to the above and other conditions in this charter.” By the sixth section of said article 10 it was, expressly provided that “any street railroad company shall have the right to run its cars over the track of any other street railroad company, in whole or in part, upon the payment of just compensation for the use thereof, under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by ordinance, and it shall be • the duty of the municipal assembly to immediately pass such ordinances as may be necessary to carry this provision into effect.”
The Constitution of Missouri, article XII, section 20, further provides that “no .law shall be passed by the General Assembly granting the right to construct and operate a street railroad within any city, town, village or on any public highway, without first acquiring the consent of the local authorities having control of the street or highway proposed to be occupied by such street railroad; and .the franchises so granted shall not be transferred without similar assent first obtained.”
The municipal assembly afterwards passed an ordinance, number 12,652, in obedience to section 6, article 10, of the charter, which authorized any street railroad company to run.
“Sec. 2. When any street railroad company shall desire to operate a line of street cars over the track of any other street railroad company, or part thereof, as provided in the first section of this ordinance, and agreement can not be had between such companies as to the compensation to be paid by the company so desiring, said compensation shall be ascertained by a commission of three disinterested freeholders of the city of St. Louis, to be chosen and appointed in the following manner, to wit: The company desiring to use said track may make written application to -that effect to the mayor of said city, accompanied by plans and specifications showing the extent of the track it desires to use, first giving ten days’ notice in writing to • the ralroad company whose track it is designed to- use, for the time and purport of such application. On receipt of the same, with evidence of notice as aforesaid, the mayor shall forthwith give notice to each of said companies to report to him in writing within ten days thereafter the name and address of one disinterested freeholder of the city of St. Louis to act as its chosen commissioner. Upon the expiration of the ten days aforesaid the mayor shall forthwith appoint a third disinterested freeholder of the city of St. Louis to act as commissioner, and* shall also appoint one such freeholder to represent either of such companies which shall have refused or neglected to appoint a commissioner within the time aforesaid. Thereupon the mayor shall forthwith give notice to the commissioners so appointed of their appointment and shall turn over to them all papers in his possession relating to the matter in controversy, and in case of vacancy in such board of commissioners, caused by death or refusal to serve of any*643 of said commissioners, or for any other cause whatsoever, the mayor shall appoint a commissioner to fill such vacancy. All the commissioners provided for under the provisions of this ordinance shall be freeholders, resident of the city of St. Louis, and shall not be interested in any manner as stockholders, bondholders, lienholders, or officers or employees'of either of the street railroad companies in question. When appointed, said commissioners shall proceed to determine the compensation to be paid and the time and manner of its payment; provided that in case one or more street railroad companies shall thereafter be authorized to operate, and do cause to be operated, a line of street railroad cars upon said track, the compensation paid by the company or companies already occupying said track may upon application of either of said companies to the mayor, be reviewed and readjusted by a commission of three disinterested freeholders, chosen and appointed in the manner herein prescribed. And either party may apply for a readjustment ,of the terms of compensation once in each period of two years to be determined as herein prescribed.”
The plaintiff corporation having, as already said, obtained permission by ordinance to run its cars on defendant’s tracks, instituted this proceeding to have the compensation which it should pay defendant fixed in accordance with ordinance number 12,652. Commissioners were appointed as required by the ordinance and a majority made a report awarding the defendant company $5,297.60 per annum, payable in quarterly instalments by the Grand Avenue company. The award further specified that the Lindell company should have the right of way, keep the tracks in repair and renew the same and should make the connections between the tracks of the Grand Avenue Railway Company and its own, using however the material to be provided by the Grand Avenue Railway Company, the Grand Avenue Company paying the Lindell for doing the work. The Lindell was required to
Both parties filed, exceptions. The papers were duly filed in the circuit court, and both sides prayed the circuit court to review the award and make such orders as right and justice might require, and for a new appraisement. A jury was waived and the cause heard by the circuit court.
Three propositions are urged for reversal.
I. The defendant insists that the circuit court was without jurisdiction in the matter.
More specifically stated the contention is, that the charter of the city of St. Louis could not confer upon the circuit court the power to hear and determine the just compensation which the plaintiff company should pay the defendant company for the use'of its tracks.
Section 22 ■ of article VI of the Constitution of Missouri ordains that “the circuit court shall have jurisdiction over all criminal cases not otherwise provided for by law; exclusive original jurisdiction in all civil cases not otherwise provided for; and such concurrent jurisdiction with and appellate jurisdiction from inferior tribunals and justices of the peace as is or may be provided by law.”
This is not a new question in this court. It was raised, discussed and decided by this court in the case of The Union Depot Railroad Company v. The Southern Railway Company, 105 Mo. 562, at the April term, 1891, of this court.
In that case it was held that where a street railway company accepted the provisions of the charter of St. Louis which provided that any street railroad company shall have the right to run its cars over the track of any other such company by paying just compensation therefor, such acceptance created a contract between the city and such company, and it was
That decision was reached after the fullest argument and most mature consideration, both in Division, and by the Court in Banc, Judge Sheewood dissenting. Since that time the same charter and ordinance provisions came before Division No. 2 of this court, and was enforced, Judge Sheewood concurring, so that the decision may be said to have received finally the concurrence of all the judges who sat' in the first case. [Grand Avenue Railway Co. v. People’s Railroad Co., 132 Mo. 34.]
When it is considered that the people of the State have •confided the subject-matter of street railways in her streets .and highways, exclusively to the city, that such control and regulation is a matter strictly within municipal regulation, the ordinances of a city, adopted in pursuance of its charter, .granted by the State, have the force and effect of laws within said city, and are binding upon all persons who come within the scope of their operation, so long as they axe not in conflict with the Constitution and are in harmony with the general laws and policy of the State; and as we find nothing in this •ordinance which militates against the Constitution or general laws of the State, we see no reason for departing from the judgment announced in the Union Depot Railroad Co. v. The Southern Railway Co., 105 Mo. 562.
This court in St. Louis v. Foster, 52 Mo. loc. cit. 515, speaking of city charters, quoted Judge Soott’s language in Taylor v. Carondelet, 22 Mo. 112, with approval, as follow’s: “Their charters are their constitutions, which authorize
The ascertainment of the compensation to be paid by one company to another under the charter and ordinance in this case, is merely incidental to the paramount right and duty of the city, as a municipality, to provide for the welfare and good government of the community by facilitating the transit of the public over its thoroughfares. It simply provides that either or both parties if dissatisfied with the award for compensation may take the matter into the circuit court, a tribunal already established by the Constitution, and having inherent powers to determine controversies of this character, either originally or in its appellate jurisdiction from inferior tribunals “provided by law.”
We hold the ordinance in question is a provision “by law” in the meaning of the Constitution.
We adhere to the decision in Union Depot Railroad Co. v. Southern Railway Co., 105 Mo. 562, subsequently reaffirmed in Grand Avenue Railway Co. v. People’s Railroad Co., 132 Mo. 34.
II. The next material contention is that the circuit court erred in holding that just compensation for the use of' defendant’s tracks was made by allowing one-half the expenses of repairs and maintenance, one-half of the annual' taxes and interest at six per cent per annum, and one-half of “the original cost” of construction of the tracks used by plaintiff.
This was the ruling in Grand Avenue v. People’s Railway, 132 Mo. 34. This.assignment of error is not supported by the record.
III. Finally error is charged to have been committed in requiring the Grand Avenue company to keep the switchmen who make the connections at Finney and Lucas avenues. Both parties concede that the charge of paying these switch-men under the ordinances was properly devolved upon the Grand Avenue company. From this point, however, there is a wide divergence in the contentions of counsel.
The ordinance, section 1298, provides: “The company using the tract or parts of the track of another company under the provisions of this and the next five sections shall run its cars while on said track at the same rate of speed as the cars of the company owning said track and shall construct and keep connections with the track of that company, so as not to hinder or delay the cars of the company owning the track.”
Learned counsel for defendant insists that because in the ownership of its tracks it has a paramount right therein to that of plaintiff, it should be allowed to select and control these switchmen, on the principle that with the higher right .goes the higher responsibility and it should be accompanied with the higher authority.
On the other hand counsel for the plaintiff argues from the. requirement of the ordinance requiring plaintiff company to construct and keep its connections with defendant’s tracks, that as the law placed both the responsibility of making the ■connections and keeping them upon plaintiff, it justly gave it •also the concomitant power and control.
No other objections being urged against the decree and' no error appearing in those assigned, the judgment is affirmed.