40 So. 1011 | Miss. | 1906
delivered the ojbnion of the court.
We approve the action of the chancellor in dissolving the injunction on this record. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to pass upon some of the questions argued by the briefs of counsel.
We do not hold that this injunction should have been dissolved because of res adjudícala by the record in federal court cause No. 41. The subject-matter of the controversy -was not the same as the subject of this. There it was, in the main, an attempt on the part of the city to disavow, under and by virtue of the act of 1900, its contract with the water supply company for a hydrant service. Here the controversy, in the main, is the right of the city, under the ordinances of 1903 and 1904, to demand damages on unpaid bills under certain conditions, and to regulate the rates for private consumers. Indeed, it is manifest that cause No. 41 could not have involved the
The fact that the bill in this cause was filed by individual citizens and taxpayers, and the bill in cause No. 79 was filed by the city in its corporate capacity, is immaterial. The rule is well settled that a municipal corporation represents its citizens in litigation in respect to matter of general interest as to which
It is not a matter open to serious discussion in this state, since the decision by this court in the case of Stone v. Railroad Company, 62 Miss., 607 (52 Am. Rep., 193), decided at the April term, 1885, and before the act of 1886 (Laws 1886, p. 694, ch. 358), amending the charter of Vicksburg, was enacted, that a quasi public corporation may have a contract right to fix rates within a certain designated maximum, and that the rates so fixed are matter of contract guaranteed by the contract clauses of the United States constitution. In that decision the court was manifestly directing its observations to the binding character of the rates as between the company and the shippers; otherwise, the decision was practically meaningless and without point. The philosophy of the situation is simple. Granting that the company is lawfully invested with authority to fix its rates, then such rate being so fixed by'it within the maximum limit allowed by the charter, or allowed by the duly authorized ordinance, is by the courts presumed to be reasonable; and it is not permissible for each individual citizen, in every controversy that may arise, to have that question, once passed upon by the lawfully constituted public authorities charged with power in the premises, reojDened and litigated anew. In what we have said we do not intend to suggest any opinion or decision on .the question as to whether sec. 13 of the ordinance of 1886, whereby the city undertook to authorize the water company to fix its water rates, was legal and constituted a valid authority to that company or not. That is one of the principal questions which the federal court must determine in the litigation now pending before it. Bor the reasons stated, its determination is not necessary here; nor would it be proper, in view of the comity which is always scrupulously observed in cases of conflicting jurisdiction or efforts to create a conflict in jurisdiction between the sí ate and the federal courts.
In the brief of counsel for the appellee it is claimed that we should reverse the decree of the chancellor below in so far as it fixes the attorney’s fee on the dissolution of the injunction at $100; but we cannot act on that matter. There is no cross appeal. Bush v. Nance, 61 Miss., 237. We observe in the record what purports to be an assignment of cross-error filed with the chancery clerk on the 10th of February,' 1906. But this document so filed does not meet the requirements of the practice in respect to cross appeals.,
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.
Chief Justice Whitfield, being akin to one of the parties recused himself and Edward Mayes, Esq, a member of the supreme court bar, was appointed and presided in this case in his place.