187 P. 617 | Or. | 1920
Lead Opinion
“First. Did the City of Hillsboro have authority to make the contract?
“Second. Was the contract involved herein a matter in which the general public is concerned, or in other words, is it a rate-making contract?
"“Third. Was the contract involved in this case made by the city in its governmental capacity, or in its proprietary capacity?
“Fourth. If this contract was entered into. by the city in its proprietary capacity, has the Public Service Commission authority to interfere with it?”
As. regards the first of these questions, it may be remarked that the defendants do not seriously question the fact that, when the franchise was granted by the city and accepted by the public service corpo
The remaining questions are so interdependent as to be beyond the reach of a practicable separate consideration. Counsel for plaintiff argues that the power to provide a water system is not governmental, but strictly proprietary, and cites in support of this premise, Tone v. Tillamook City, 58 Or. 386 (114 Pac. 938). In that case, Mr. Justice McBride, for the court, say's:
“The power to provide a water system is not governmental nor legislative in its character, but strictly proprietary, and the city, when engaged in prosecuting such an improvement, is clothed with the same liabilities as a private citizen.”
In support of this doctrine the opinion from which we quote cites the frequently approved case of Esberg Cigar Co. v. Portland, 34 Or. 282 (55 Pac. 961, 75 Am. St. Rep. 650, 43 L. R. A. 445). Both of these cases are clearly distinguishable from the present controversy, by the controlling fact that in each of them the municipality was the owner of the water system, and was engaged in operating it for profit, and in neither case did the city occupy the position of a customer. The distinction between such a case and one in which the city, like its inhabitants, is a customer, is expressly recognized in the statute creating the public service commission, in Section 1 of which we find this language:
“No plant owned or operated by a municipality shall be deemed a public utility under or for the purposes of this act”: Laws 1911, p. 483.
It does not follow, therefore, that every contract for securing the service of a public necessity is exclusively proprietary in its nature. The two-fold
“No uniform rule can be applied to all the circumstances in which the municipality acts under power to furnish water or light, or to contract therefor. Thus, when it is sought to charge the municipality, with responsibility for property destroyed through failure to exercise its power to furnish water for fire protection or for negligence in the exercise of the power, it has been repeatedly said that the grant of power must be regarded as exclusively for public purposes, and as belonging to the municipal corporation, when assumed, in its public, political or municipal character. ' Similarly, in granting a franchise or privilege, or giving its consent to a public service corporation to use the streets and highways of the municipality for the purpose of laying its mains, its pipes, etc,, the municipality exercises a delegated legislative power derived from the state, and cannot be regarded as acting solely in its so-styled private and proprietary capacity, although the object of the exercise of the power may be to enable the grantee of the franchise or privilege to perform a contract to furnish the municipality and its’ inhabitants with water or light.”
In the present case, the contract upon which plaintiff relies grants to the defendant corporation a franchise or privilege to lay its mains, pipes, etc., in the streets and highways of the city, to enable it to furnish the municipality and its inhabitants with water. In addition to this,' it provides that for the first five years, the defendant corporation shall serve the city’s fire hydrants at the rate of $1 per hydrant per month, and that thereafter such service shall be supplied without charge. Does the latter feature inject into the contract the element of rate-making, in which the public has an interest? If it does, then
In seeking to determine whether or not this is a rate-making contract, we may not lose sight of the fact that the defendant corporation has dealt with the city for the exclusive purpose, so far as this case is concerned, of selling and delivering water to the municipality and its inhabitants. It is not particularly interested in the use to which the water may be put, and, indeed, it is necessarily applied to an infinite variety of uses. One customer, conducting a livery-stable, uses it for watering his horses and washing the stains of travel from his vehicles; another, being a florist, employs it in supplying his tender plants with needed moisture; another conducts a large hotel with hot and cold water in every room, for the convenient use of his guests; a large manufacturing plant is equipped with an elaborate system of pipes and hose for the purpose of eliminating, to as great an extent as possible, the fire hazards of his business, while still another, the municipality itself, being supplied with fire engines, hose-carts and other equipment, establishes large hydrants at convenient stations for the purpose of using water in suppressing conflagrations. The city is therefore as much a customer as any of the others. The public service corporation which is to supply the water for these varied needs must receive a fixed compensation from each customer who avails himself of the service. And the determination of what shall be paid by each is just as much an act of rate-making in one instance as in the other. In the case of Sand
In Salem v. Salem Water, Light & Power Co., 255 Fed. 295 (166 C. C. A. 465), the franchise ordinance contained a clause to the effect that—
The water company should not charge at any time * 'higher rates for water than is customarily allowed for water in towns or cities of like population on the Pacific Coast; but the Salem Water Company, its successors or assigns, shall not at any time charge more than one dollar and eighty-two cents ($1.82) per month for each hydrant or cistern actually supplied. And the right is hereby reserved, by the City of Salem to continue or discontinue to connect or disconnect any or all hydrants or cisterns connected, or which may hereafter be connected with said works; and the City of Salem shall not pay for said hydrants or cisterns while the same are disconnected or discontinued.”
The Public Service Commission upon a hearing found that the charge of $1.82 per hydrant put an undue burden upon the other water users, and ordered the rate increased to $2.50 per hydrant. The city refused to pay the increased rate, and the water company began an action to recover. In the opinion the court says:
*329 “It is said, however, that these cases are to be distinguished, in that here the right to obtain hydrant service at rates not to exceed those specified in the franchise was held by the city purely in its proprietary capacity. But as the municipal corporation is but a political subdivision of the state, and exists by virtue of the exercise of the power of the state through its legislative department, it is our opinion that the city had no absolute property right to demand continued hydrant service at a given rate as against the right of the state to modify such rates of service with the consent of the water company, notwithstanding the fact that as to the water company itself the contract might be unalterable except with its consent.”
Winfield v. Public Service Commission, 187 Ind. 53 (118 N. E. 531), was a case wherein a city had granted to a telephone company a franchise which specified the maximum rates to be charged for service and provided for free telephone service in specific offices and departments, to the number of 21. Thereafter the Public Service Commission increased the maximum rates and deprived the city of its free service. There, as here, the power of the commission to interfere with the franchise contract was challenged. Upon this point the court says:
“It is claimed by appellants, in substance, that Section 8938, to say the least, is an express recognition of the powers of the city or town to contract in its own interests, and that the general public is not concerned nor its welfare involved in the question as to what, if any, compensation the city receives for the privilege or franchise granted. In so far as such contract providing for free telephone service to the city deprives the utility company of revenue needed to maintain its operating facilities, or cause the company to charge other patrons more than otherwise would be charged in order that the needed*330 revenues may be acquired, it may be well said that the general public is intérested.”
In addition to these authorities, we note a long line of decisions by the Public Service Commissions of the several states, all of which treat the municipality as being no less a customer than any of the inhabitants of the city.
The Maine Commission, In re Wiscasset Water Co., P. U. R. 1916D, 927, said:
“Many people think that if a water company can be induced or forced to make a low price to a town for water to be used for fire protection, or give water for other municipal purposes, the town and its citizens have been financially benefited. This is now regarded as a proven fallacy. Each water company must receive for its aggregate service to the whole public an amount sufficient to pay all its fixed charges and expenses, and something’ more as a fair return on capital invested. If it renders its service to a certain group free or at less than cost, it must charge its remaining customers an amount greater than would be the case if all contributed equally.”
In Ben Avon Borough v. Ohio Valley Water Co., P. U. R. 1917C, 390, 417, the Pennsylvania Commission says:
“There is no service rendered by the Respondent that does not require on its part some expense. To be more specific, the respondent is at some expense for all the water supplied by it, and as all the cost and expense including maintenance, depreciation and operation, together with a fair return on its property, .must be paid, it becomes apparent that if some receive free service then the cost of such free service, is a loss to the company unless it falls upon those who do pay.”
Again, in the same case, we find this language:
“There is in every municipality a large amount of property subject to general taxation which does not pay for any water service, and j^et this same prop*331 erty is receiving the general benefit of the service rendered to such municipality by the public utility, while the cost thereof is placed upon private consumers.”
To substantially the same effect are the following: Hollister v. Hollister Water Co. (California), P. U. R. 1915D, 626; Sandpoint v. Sandpoint Water & L. Co. (Idaho), P. U. R. 1915F, 445, 460; Lincoln v. Lincoln Water & L. Co. (Illinois), P. U. R. 1917B, 176; Re Atlantic County Elec. Co. (New Jersey), P. U. R. 1918B, 589; Smith v. City Water Co. (Wisconsin), P. U. R. 1916B, 1068; In re Warwood Water & L. Co. (West Virginia), P. U. R. 1917C, 329; In re Fire Dept. of South Bend (Indiana), P. U. R. 1915A, 538.
We have cited these cases solely for the light they may throw upon the question as to whether or not the franchise contract involved in the instant case is a rate-making contract in which the general public has an interest. In our judgment they are sound in their reasoning and logical in their deduction. We conclude, therefore, that the franchise ordinance in the case at bar does involve the subject of rate-making and is not exclusively a proprietary matter.
In Woodburn v. Public Service Commission, 82 Or. 114 (161 Pac. 391, Ann. Cas. 1917E, 996, L. R. A. 1917C, 98), we have conclusively determined that whenever a city enters into a franchise agreement with a public utility involving rates for service, the law reads into such a contract a stipulation by the city, that the state may at any time exercise its police power and change such rates. It follows that the judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing.
(192 Pac. 390.)
“However, a city is not constituted as a sovereignty as regards all matters of legislation, but is still to a certain extent a mere agency of the state of which it is a part.”
This language was approved by Mr. Justice Harris in Woodburn v. Public Service Commission, 82 Or.
Neither is it denied that the state by express terms may, either directly or by authorizing a municipal corporation so to do, renounce for a reasonable period its authority to supervise or change rates for public service granted by a regularly promulgated franchise. The argument of counsel seems to concede that formerly the state had a right to regulate rates for public service, but that in this state, since the adoption of the amended form of Article XI, Section 2, known as the home rule amendment, that power has been utterly destroyed, and vested entirely in local municipalities in cases where they choose to contract for any public service. As illustrating our conception of his contention, we we take this excerpt from the brief of counsel, commenting upon Salem v. Salem Light & Power Co., 255 Fed. 295 (166 C. C. A. 465):
“The judge who wrote that opinion did not know of the home rule amendment; he did not know that the cities of Oregon exist by virtue of the Constitution of the state, and not by the state, acting through its legislative department.”
“That the plaintiff was at all dates and times herein alleged, and now is, a municipal corporation duly incorporated, organized, and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Oregon.”
On demurrer this must be taken as true in point of fact. The constitutional provision referred to, so far as applicable to the case in hand, reads thus:
“Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by the legislative assembly*336 by special laws. The legislative assembly shall not enact, amend or repeal any charter or act of incorporation for any municipality, city or town. The legal voters of every city and town are, hereby granted power to enact and amend their municipal charter, subject to the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon.”
In the same Constitution we read, in Article IY, Section 1:
“The legislative authority of the state shall be vested in a legislative assembly, consisting of a Senate and House of Eepresentatives, but the people reserve to themselves power to propose laws and amendments to the Constitution and to enact or reject the same at the polls, independent of the legislative assembly, and also reserve power at their own option to approve or reject at the polls any act of the legislative assembly.”
It is hornbook learning that the legislative assembly of the state may enact any law it chooses, subject only to the restraint of the Constitution of the state or of the United States. In other words, the organic law is a restraining, not an enabling, act. The home rule amendment, as regards the legislative assembly, merely restricts its power, so that it cannot create corporations of any kind by special laws, and especially cannot enact, amend, or repeal any particular charter for any single municipality, city or town; but its power to affect municipalities of all kinds by general laws remains unimpaired. This is the doctrine taught by State ex rel. v. Astoria, 79 Or. 1 (154 Pac. 399), and Rose v. Port of Portland, 82 Or. 541 (162 Pac. 498).
The law-making power vested in the legislative assembly by Article IY, Section 1, as expressed in general laws, still exists with all its original force, so
Again, given a city or town and legal voters therein, their activities in forming or amending a municipal charter are circumscribed by the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon. Manifestly, they are subordinate instrumentalities of government. They are “subject to the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon.” To be subject to the Constitution is to be controlled by all that the legislative assembly lawfully may do under that Constitution, and, as we have seen, the legislature is simply excluded from the enactment of special laws affecting single municipalities. Its power to promulgate general laws which are binding upon all cities and towns is still unimpaired. The state has not yet disintegrated into a collection of petty municipalities. It is still the paramount unit of government established by the people.
“The constitutional prohibition upon state laws impairing the obligation of contracts does not restrict the power of the state to protect the public health, the public morals, or the public safety, as the one or the other may be involved in the execution of such contracts. Rights and privileges arising from a contract with a state are subject to regulations for the protection of the public health, the public morals, and the public safety, in the same sense, and to the same extent, as are all contracts and all property, whether owned by natural persons or corporations.”
Again, in Vicksburg v. Vicksburg Waterworks Co., 206 U. S. 496 (51 L. Ed. 1155, 27 Sup. Ct. Rep. 762, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes),’ where the city“ attempted to repudiate its contract with the company for water service under a legislative act, the court construed the enabling statute to be one in which the legislature had renounced the right of the state to regulate rates for a certain period. But it quoted with approval this language of the Mississippi Supreme Court in Stone v. Yazoo etc. Ry. Co., 62 Miss. 607, 642 (52 Am. Rep. 193):
“A grant in general terms of an authority to fix rates is not a renunciation of the legislative control, so as to secure reasonable rates. Such a grant evinces merely a purpose to confer power to exact compensation which shall be just and reasonable. It is only where there is an unmistakable manifestation of the purpose to place the unrestricted right in the corporation to determine rates of compensation that the power of the legislature afterwards to interfere can be denied. It is not to be presumed that the right of legislative control was intended to be renounced. Every presumption is against that. If the grant can be interpreted without ascribing to the*339 legislature an intent to part with any power, it will be done. Only what is plainly parted with is gone.”
In Benwood v. Public Service Commission, 75 W. Va. 127 (83 S. E. 295, L. R. A. 19150, 261), the court was treating of the precise question here involved, arising under a Public Service Commission Act in substantially the same terms as the one in this state. The court said:
“Though the grant and acceptance of the franchise, wherein certain rates were fixed, created a contract between the water company and the City of Benwood, the rates thereby fixed are nevertheless cognizable for revision by the public service commission under the broad powers delegated thereto, unless prior to the delegation of those powers the legislature had expressly delegated power to the City of Benwood which authorized the city to contract inviolably for the rates mentioned in the franchise for the period stated therein. Bate-making is a legislative act. It is inherent in and belongs primarily to the legislature. The rate-making power is a power of government — a police power of the state. The City of Benwood, at the time of the granting of the franchise, had no rate-making power that could bind the state, if the legislature of the sovereign state had not theretofore delegated the same to the city. And if such delegation or grant of rate-making power was made to the city prior to the delegation of general and state-wide powers in the same particular by the legislature to the Public Service Commission, the language relied upon as evidence of such delegation or grant to the city must be clear and express. The presumption is against exclusive delegation of the legislature’s sovereign rate-making power to a municipality. Unless there has been such delegation by clear and express terms, the power is reserved in the state, which can exercise it at such times and to such extent as may be found advisable. * *
*340 “We do not say that the contract as to rates contained in the franchises was not good as between the water company and the city as long as .the legislature did not exercise its superior and supreme power over the' subject of the rates. From the general powers to establish waterworks and to contract and be contracted with, impliedly the city had the power to contract in the matter of rates for water furnished the public as long as the legislature did not exercise the reserved power in that particular. But that implied power was inferior to the reserved power. It was subject to the right of the legislature to prescribe different rates at any time. The legislature, not having expressly delegated to the city power by which it could inviolably agree to the rates, could exercise power in that particular regardless of the franchise provisions. It had withheld supreme power unto itself. Neither by the charter nor by subsequent legislation did it delegate to the City of Benwood authority to agree unalterably as to the rates for a stipulated period.”
Answering the contention that the action of the Public Service Commission in modifying the charter rates amounted to the impairment of the obligation of a contract, the court said:
“In the light of what we have said, this position cannot be sustained.' Nothing that was binding in the contract will be impaired. By it the state was not bound. The contract related to a subject matter belonging to the state. The state had not given-the city the power or agency to contract away its right thereto for a given time. The contract, having been entered into without express legislative authority, was permissive only. It was conditioned upon the exercise of the sovereign power over the subject matter. All this the parties to the contract were bound to know when they entered into it. There can be no impairment of the contract by the act of the state in claiming its own, when it is not bound by the contract. The supervision and regulation of*341 the rates by the state, through the Public Service Commission, do not take from either of the parties to the contract any right which they had thereunder. Such supervision and regulation do not therefore impair the obligation of a contract.”
“Nothing herein shall prevent the transportation of persons or property or the production, transmission, delivery or furnishing of heat, light, water or power * * within this state, free or at reduced rates for the United States, the state, or any municipality thereof. ’ ’
This language must be read with its context. It is found in a section forbidding unjust discrimination, whereby one rate may be charged to one consumer and a greater or less rate exacted from others. The language quoted is merely an exception permitting,
“For the purpose of supplying water to the City of Hillsboro and its inhabitants, and to other towns in the Tualatin valley, * * and is now engaged as a public utility in selling water in the City of Hillsboro and said other towns in the Tualatin valley.”
The parties involved in the suit before us are, first, a municipal corporation “duly incorporated, organized, and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Oregon,” a concern “engaged' as a public utility in selling water to the general public,” and a Public Service Commission, created by the supreme power of the state to supervise and’ regulate public utilities. We have the municipal and private corporations engaged in a public service the regulation of which clearly comes within the scope of the powers of the Public Service Commission. It was part of the obligation dr binding force of the contract that the state might at any time interfere and regulate the rates of compensation for this public servicé to the end, that they should be made reasonable. The .action of, the commission under the terms of the law creating it is but the enforcement, and not the impairing, of the obligation of that contract. The com
Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.