254 F. 597 | N.D. Ohio | 1918
(after stating the facts as above).
It follows from the foregoing that there is no obscurity as to the rights of the company, or as to the limitations of the city’s power of action, or as to the duty of the court when its authority is invoiced by either party. The law is definitely and finally settled. The court can do nothing more than to refuse any relief to the street railroad company if the council tells it to get off the streets. It can do nothing less than to tell the city that it must allow to be collected a compensation for service which meets the conditions above established, so long as it permits the railroad to operate at all. There is no third course which the court can take, unless the parties agree.
This is the bald situation in Toledo, a situation which is the logical and necessary result of a failure to agree upon a franchise contract. The city has narrowed its range of control by permitting the franchise, to expire. What it might do in enforcing a franchise contract, it can - not, do itself now, and has no right to ask the same of a court. Now, the city is hampered by economic conditions which it absolutely must regard in order to act lawfully. If the city council should now undertake its privilege and duty to fix rates and regulations for street car service, it must make such conditions conform to the economic burdens now borne by the company; otherwise, its action would be subject to overthx-ow by the courts on constitutional grounds. This is the compelling force of all judicial action on the subject. This power of the court has for a corollary the authority to say, when its jurisdiction is involved, whether a rate demanded by the company shall stand until the city acts. Dawful action thereon thereafter taken by the city would supersede the court’s decree, which, obviously, would have but a temporary office. It is unreasonable to say that the city, by neglecting its obvious duty, could compel the company to leave so embarrassing a
On the motion for temporary injunction, two queries are before the court for answer: First, is the rate of fare which the company asserts it must now charge the rate which, in all probability, it has the right to ask, for the time being, in order to secure the return to which the authorities above' cited say it is entitled ? and, second, do the facts indicate a probable cause for asking this court to protect it in its demand? We are-hearing a motion for a temporary injunction, decision of which involves the exercise of a discretion as tire probabilities appear. We take up the questions in this apparently illogical order because, if the company shows a compelling probability that it should have what it demands, the fact that the city, charged by law with the duty of first passing upon those demands, deliberately ignored the plain force of the facts upon which the company relies, has some influence in determining whether or not the court should act. Official arbitrariness is not an infrequent cause of official oppression, and its presence is frequently an augury that rights which should be officially protected may be officially neglected, or even invaded.
The court is very strongly impressed by the testimony heard that the rate of.fare which the company demands is necessary, at present, at least, if the company is to receive what the law says it should have. This is not the occasion when it should be determined what the fair valuation of the company’s investment in its street car service is. We have no full data on which a judgment on that question can be definitely predicated. This much is entirely clear, however: That the valuation upon which what the Supreme Court calls a fair return should be calculated is probably very much more than $8,000-000. Taking it at this figure, however, which the testimony indicates to be an estimate much below the minimum even, the company is lawfully entitled to a rate of fare which will meet its current expenses and provide for it a return above mere operating expenses of at least
We are unable to see any right in the mayor to ask the company to submit to an experiment which present conditions show will be a losing one. From his testimony, and the arguments submitted in behalf of the city, it does not appear that he had any confidence that this rate was adequate; for he says that, in fixing upon it, he was moved hy the theory that the car rider, the car men and the car company each must sacrifice something in the present emergency. But the mayor of Toledo has no right to demand of this franchiseless company that it render service to the city at a sacrifice, nor has he the right to say to the employes of the company that they must work for less wages than their services are fairly worth. He ignores the fact that it is no sacrifice for the car riders of the city to pay any rate of fare which is what the service to them actually costs, and the economic truths that they should pay what the service to them costs, that the car men are. entitled to a reasonable wage, and that the car company is entitled lo a compensation which will allow it to live. No one has the right, whether an official or not, to ask either the car men or the car company to make “sacrifices” that the car riders may get service at less than cost, and, of course, the court can listen to no such proposition as that to support an insistence that an inadequate rate should be imposed.
The Supreme Court of the United States in one of the cases cited by the city (Wilcox v. Consolidated Gas Company, 212 U. S. 19-41, 29 Sup. Ct. 192, 53 L. Ed. 382, 48 L. R. A. [N. S.] 1134, 15 Ann. Cas. 1034), as well as in another case in the same volume (Knoxville v. Water Company, 212 U. S. 1, 29 Sup. Ct, 148, 53 L. Ed. 371), recognizes that the proof of the inadequacy of a rate proposed by the city may be so clear and convincing that a federal court is warranted in enjoining its imposition in advance of putting it in operation. That is the state of the evidence here on the question of the necessity of the company’s rate. The evidence comes from reliable sources, the most important being the city’s own out-of-town expert. For the purpose of the motion, then, for a temporary injunction, we find no difficulty in holding that it is probably necessary for the company to charge the rate demanded.
Is the second support ol the motion made in the evidence? Does the evidence suggest a probable cause for the intervention of this court to restrain oppressive action on part of the city or its officers? To an
But, to meet the morally just demands of its men, concededly the company must enhance its revenue. The mayor recognized that fact, for he proposed to indorse an increase of fares, and, upon the question of how to meet the serious emergency confronting the company, the only disagreement between it and the city authorities was as to the extent the increase should go. The company, not being controlled by franchise limitations, was not obliged to consult the city in fixing fare. As a matter of courtesy, or expediency, or both, it did invoke the city’s co-operation, only to meet an ultimatum from the-mayor which amounted to a threat. Of course, the mayor did not formulate his threat in definitely concise and unmistakable language; but that his attitude- was one of hostility to the company, conveying a definite impression that he would go to any length possible to compel the company to meet his ultimatum, however embarrassing that would be, no moderately acute mind can fail to conclude from the testimony and evidence in this record. He plainly intimated that he would stand irrevocably upon the proposition of a maximum fare of eleven tickets for fifty cents, to the end of vetoing any legislation more favorable to the company than that. The mayor, through his veto power, is able to nullify five-sixteenths of the legislative authority of the city.
With the history of this controversy as it is in this record, to which we shall hereafter allude briefly, it would be a credulous person indeed who would assume it to be possible to get 11 councilmen to override the mayor’s veto of an ordinance fixing fares at more than the mayor’s figure, if, indeed, the council could be induced to pass any ordinance at all. In addition to the threat of a veto, if the counsel should act beyond the mayor’s limit, the company was given to know that if it got into deep trouble with its employés, and gave thereby the mayor any excuse to appeal to some other authority to secure unembarrassed street car service, such excuse would be promptly accepted. Substantially, as the evidence shows, the mayor of the city, upon whom, with the council, rested just as great a responsibility for the settlement
“Act against our arbitrary will at the peril of some proceeding instituted in the name of the city, which will result in taking from yon the management, of your company.”
It is difficult to understand just what Mayor Schreiber meant when he said with vehemence to the representatives of the men and to the company, in effect, that, whatever might be the outcome of the controversy between the company and its employés, the street cars would run. It is inconceivable that he intended to use the power of the city to compel the dissatisfied employés to remain on the cars, and it is equally inconceivable that he intended any other action of a character friendly to the company. To assume that he would do anything more than he was most obviously compelled to do by way of helping the company would be to ignore the official record he has made in the past of hostility to it, of which the testimony concerning his present attitude as mayor gives no indication of repentance. Of course, it is not to be assumed that he had in mind anything that would be void of the color of legal justification. There is nothing, however, is this case to assure this court that he would have approached the executive prob - lems confronting him in a spirit other than hostile toward the company, had the company’s troubles resulted in its inability to maintain service. Of course, whatever he proposed to do was under color of his office, which fact meets the contention that the company’s complaint .is against individuals, and not against the city.
Some significance, as indicating the character of the mayor’s appreciation of his responsibilities, may be attached to this paragraph in the city’s answer, which is subscribed by Mr. Schreiber himself as one of the counsel for the city:
“This defendant [the city of Toledo] denies that the same [the operalion of city street car system] is a vital necessity to the citizens and residents of said city, and denies that any interruption in the operation of the street car system of said company would work great and irreparable harm to said company, or to the citizens and residents of the city of Toledo as a whole, or to the interest of the United States.”
We must assume that the mayor means here what he says, and therefore it is justifiable to think that this formal expression of his idea, deliberately placed in the city’s defense to the present issue, indicates the degree of serious consideration he would give to a matter affecting the street car company and its public service. This averment in the answer suggests either a judgment on the part of the chief executive concerning the relationship to the city of its only organized means of intercommunication with which there must he an almost unanimous disagreement on the part of those who are alive to the city’s welfare, or a hostility to the • street car company so contemptuous and besetting as to render impossible to him a fair consideration of its problems. Whatever may be the'reason for this remarkable statement, it serves to interpret the mayor’s attitude toward the company’s problems, and justifies an impression that a full measure of proper appreciation of them, and of the importance of a solution of them, with equal regard
We prefer to believe that, if once the question were put up to the mayor, he would do something to keep transportation going at all hazards, and that the remarkable statement above quoted justifies a feeling, only, that in so doing he might be substantially inconsiderate of the plain rights of the company. Whatever may have been in his mind when he said emphatically that under any circumstances the street cars would run, it seems that it must have been one or both of two ideas of extraordinary procedúre, rather than that which the law, as well as common sense, plainly indicates to be the proper method, namely, a harmonious co-operation between the company and the city, through official action in which the uppermost thought would be the securing of justice, both to the car riders and the company, and whereby the latter might maintain its system under reasonable and fair regulations, and the former would pay for the service what its rendition reasonably costs. He may have thought, in the event of the failure of the. company to maintain full service, to invoke the assistance of a state court. In fact, many things in evidence suggest that that was in his mind. Probably, with the record here as the city itself has allowed it to be made and to remain, such a course would have resulted in a conflict of courts, in which the advantage would be with the federal court; but even a futile attempt of this sort is capable of involving the company in embarrassment, to prevent which a court of equity might interfere.
Although the company has the right to cease at once its service and take up its tracks (Cleveland Street Railway Company v. City of Cleveland, 204 U. S. 116, 27 Sup. Ct. 202, 51 L. Ed. 399), it is probable that the, national emergency would impel presidential seizing of the street car system for operation, to protect war industries, and the mayor might have had this course in mind also, and to apply to the federal executive to that end. This action, which the company could not well oppose, would obviously be detrimental to its interests, provided that it wanted to maintain its system itself, and assuming that, if a fair treatment under the law were accorded to it by the city, it could carry on its service. An attempt in this way, by the city’s action under these circumstances, to take the management of the system away from the company, might call for the intervention of a court of equity.
Neither of these courses could be invoked by the mayor without contravening the constitutional rights of the company, unless the company, because of its own deficiency of resource, was in default of its duty to the public. The city officials cannot be permitted to maneuver and jockey questions affecting the company with which they should deal fairly and impartially and fully, and then, because; their official neglect, or worse, brings the company into unmerited embarrassment, seize upon that situation as an excuse to take away from it the control of its affairs. Courts are not so impotent as to be incapable of furnishing relief against such a situation. Whether or not tihe mayor’s attitude 'was seriously threatening can only be cor
Four years have not yet passed since the company found itself compelled to carry millions of passengers free, because the present mayor of Toledo had been one city official to assure the car-riding public that three cents was a rate so entirely adequate as to be almost sacred, and that to demand more was to attempt extortion, and because the then city officials were indicating official protection to the dupes of the three-cent propaganda should the latter “stand on their rights” to ride for a rate which the city, later, confessed to be palpably confiscatory. The court cannot be obtuse to the impression that there remains yet enough of this unreasonable sentiment to add almost an intolerable burden to the company, if it should attempt to exercise its plain rights, unsupported, even if not definitely antagonized, by the mayor. With the author of the Schreiber three-cent ordinance and the measure demanding $250 per day street rental in the may- or’s chair, fulminating an ultimatum that a rate must be adhered to as impracticable now as three-cent fare was in 1913, it is not to be wondered that the company feared that its rights were to be disregarded by the city, and that it was at the peril of some action under color of office, which, at the least, would appeal to the imagination of that portion of the public which may yet feel, as it has been wrongly educated to feel, that antagonizing the street railway company is the highest form of official service, and which would, consequently, embarrass the company precisely as it was unfairly dealt with by the citv four years ago.
This court is prepared to say that there is power in a court of equity to enjoin acts, lawful even, by the mayor of Toledo, the results of which would work inequity to the street railway company; that it can by its decree confine the parties to this case to that orderly procedure in the determination of their relations to each other which the law clearly points out. The city of Toledo is in this case, and has been for more than two years, with an application to the court for the security of an unembarrassed street car service in the city of Toledo, and with that application still pending, and the city here in that attitude, we do not propose to let its representatives in this emergency be free to take any extraordinary steps which will surely and necessarily embarrass the company in the performance of its plain duty to serve the public. However the mayor might act, whatever was in his mind when he said that the street cars would run in any event, no action he could take but would be within the condemnation of a court of equity, as a plain invasion of the equities of the company, unless it was either the securing by legislation from the council that which would permit the company to serve the public and at the same time to live as a business proposition or a direction to get off the streets.
We do not propose to permit an order to run out of this court which will restrain the city authorities of Toledo from the perform-
It is not the law, although so stated in the brief of the city, that the council may prescribe conditions which, if unacceptable to the company, involve, ipso facto, a duty upon the company to abandon its service and leave the streets. The responsibility of determining whether the public of Toledo shall be served with a street car system or not cannot be so sidestepped by the city’s officiary. In the hearing four years ago, this court decided, respecting the so-called Schreiber ordinance, that the company could reject unreasonable terms, and at the same time continue its service with the expectation of getting proper compensation, notwithstanding the hostile attitude of the city, until the city affirmatively directed the company to leave the streets as an alternative to the acceptance of unreasonable terms, and that holding finds itself amply justified by the recent decisions of the Supreme Court elsewhere referred to, particularly the case of' Cincinnati v. Cincinnati & Hamilton Traction Company. So the temporary injunction which the court proposes to grant here will leave the city absolutely unhampered to legislate upon the subject which has been neglected for so many years. It will likewise, of course, leave the company free to apply to the court for relief against unreasonable legislation, unless the city authorities are brave enough to couple with unreasonable provisions of its legislation a specific alternative that the company must accept them or quit the streets.
It is not conceded, notwithstanding the brief of the city, “that the court cannot enjoin legislative action, and it is equally clear that the court cannot judge in advance that certain legislative action, if taken, would be void.” While we are not attempting here to enjoin legislative action — just the contrary, we are trying to encourage it— yet it has been adjudicated that in extreme cases, and this is surely one, that may be done. Clearly foreshadowed legislative action of the city of Kalamazoo was enjoined by Judge Denison in Knickerbocker Trust Company v. City of Kalamazoo (C. C.) 182 Fed. 865, and much of the reasoning of that court applies here.
Much as the court regrets it, we expect this contention to remain with us until the sensible people of Toledo insist that the problem be approached from a different standpoint than that hitherto occupied generally by the city’s official representatives. No injunction will issue from this court, temporary or otherwise, which will re
A temporary injunction is to issue on the lines of the amended restraining order.