after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff’s first contention is that there is no statute of Ohio authorizing any city, in which there are already gasworks in full and complete operation, to erect gas-works, or to levy a tax for that purpose. If this were conceded, we should feel obliged — the plaintiff and defendant both being corporations of Ohio — to reverse the judgment, and remand the cause with directions to dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction in the Circuit. Court. The jurisdiction of that court
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can be sustained only upon , the theory that the suit is one arising under the Constitution of the United States. But the suit would not be of that character, if regarded as one in which the plaintiff merely sought protection against the violation of the alleged contract by an ordinance to which the State has not, in any form, given or attempted to give the force of law. A municipal ordinance, not passed under supposed legislative authority, cannot be regarded as a law .of the State within the meaning of the constitutional' prohibition against State laws impairing the obligations of contracts.
Murray
v.
Charleston,
What, then,, we must inquire, is the scope and effect of section 2486 ? This precise question has been determined by the Supreme Court of Ohio in
State
v.
City of Hamilton,
Accepting, as we do, this decision of the highest court of
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the State as correctly interpreting the legislative will, and, therefore, assuming that the legislature intended by section 2486 to confer authority upon the city of Hamilton to erect gas-works at its expense, whenever deemed by it expedient or for the public good to do so, the next contention of the plaintiff is that such legislation is within the constitutional inhibition of state laws- impairing the obligations of contracts. This view is inadmissible. The statutes in force when the plaintiff became a corporation did not compel the citjr to use the gaslight furnished by the plaintiff. The city was empowered to contract with the company, for lighting streets, lanes, squares, and public ¡places within its limits, but it was under no legal obligation to make a contract of that character, although it could regulate, by ordinance, the price to be charged for gaslight supplied by the.plaintiff and used by the city or its inhabitants. It may be that the stockholders of the plaintiff supposed, at the time it' became incorporated, and when they made their- original investment, that the city would never do what ^evidently is contemplated by the ordinance of 1889. And it may be that the erection and maintenance of gas-works by the city at the public expense, and in competition with the plaintiff, will ultimately-impair, if not destroy, the value of the plaintiff’s works for the purposes for which they were established. • But such considerations cannot control the determination of the legal rights of the parties. As said by this court in
Curtis
v. Whitney,
• This conclusion is required by-'.other considerations. By the constitution of Ohio, adopted in 1851, it was declared-that “no special privileges- or immunities shall.ever be granted,
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that may not be altered, revoked, or repealed by the general ássembly; ” that
“
the general assembly shall pass, no special act conferring corporate powers; ” and that “ corporations may be formed under general laws; but all such laws may, from tipie to time, be altered' or repealed.” Sec. 2, Art. 1; Secs. 1, 2, Art. 13. If the statute under which the plaintiff became incorporated be. construed as giving it the exclusive privilege, so long as it met the requirements of law, of supplying gas-light to the city of Hamilton and its inhabitants by means of pipes laid in the public ways, there is no escape from the conclusion that such a grant, as respects, at least, its exclusive character, was subject to the power of the legislature, reserved by the state constitution, of altering or revoking it. This reservation of power to alter or revoke a grant of special privileges necessarily became a part of the charter of every corporation formed under the general statute providing for the formation of corporations. A legislative grant to a corporation of special privileges, if not forbidden by the constitution, may be a contract; but where one of the conditions of the grant is that the. legislature may alter or revoke it, a law altering or revoking, or which has the effect to alter or revoke, the exclusive character of such privileges, cannot be regarded as one impairing the obligation of the contract, whatever may be the motive of the legislature, or however harshly such legislation may operate, in the particular case, upon the corporation or parties affected by it. The corporation, by accepting the grant subject to the legislative power so reserved by the constitution, must be held to have assented to such reservation. These views are supported by the decisions of this court. In
Greenwood
v.
Freight Co.,
We perceive no error in the record in respect to the Federal question involved, and the judgment must be
Affirmed.
