Leadville Water Co. v. City of Leadville

22 Colo. 297 | Colo. | 1896

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the .court.

It seems to be conceded that the contract, as set out in the complaint, if it can be construed as constituting an agreement upon prices for the use of water, is within the power of the city to make. No question is raised by either party as to the reasonableness or enforceability of that part thereof which provides the test or the method the city shall employ in fixing the schedule of rates. The contention of the appellant is that this ordinance is void for the following reasons:

First. There is no legislation in this state giving to a municipal corporation, in the absence of a contract to that effect, the power to prescribe rates to be charged by a water *301company. Under subdivision 69 of section 4403, 2 Mills’ An. Stats., when the right to build waterworks is granted by a municipality to a private corporation, the former may authorize the latter to charge and collect from individual consumers only such water rent as may be agreed upon between said corporation building said works and said city. There having been no agreement made between the plaintiff and the defendant in this case for such rates, the ordinance purporting to fix this schedule of rates is ultra vires the city, and therefore void.

Second. Assuming, for the purposes of the argument, that the contract mentioned in the complaint is an agreement between the city and the Water Company which gives to the former the power to fix rates, provided only they are not less than the rates in towns and cities in this state similarly situated, this ordinance violates the terms of the contract in that the rates, as fixed therein, are less than those in such similarly situated towns.

Third. Irrespective of, and notwithstanding, the statutes of this state, the contract between the parties, and the ordinance which is a part' thereof, and which was passed in pursuance of the statute, the city has not the power to fix for the Water Company rates so low that the income of the company to be derived therefrom would be insufficient to pay .the actual expenses necessary to operate the works, interest on the bonded indebtedness of the company, and a reasonable interest, or some income, on the original investment; the argument being that if the city could do so, it would practically have the power to take from the Water Company its property without due process of law. The claim is that the rates fixed by this ordinance are so unreasonably oppressive and unjust that the revenue which the Water Company would derive therefrom would be not only inadequate to pay such expenses, interest and income, but that in order to pay such expenses and interest, and not considering the question of income at all, the stockholders of the company *302will be compelled to pay out of their own resources large sums of money to make up the deficit.

From the form of the complaint it would seem that the plaintiff is attempting to state but one cause of action, made up of three separate and distinct grievances, logically referable to the three separate statements of which mention has just been made.

Unquestionably, the statute cited provides that such water rents may be collected by the Water Company as are agreed upon between the plaintiff and the city. As by contract a particular method is provided, it is contended by the appellant that the city has no right to prescribe water rents in the absence of such agreement, or, at least, in the absence of an honest, but unsuccessful, attempt by it to come to such an agreement with the Water Company upon a schedule of rates.

We do not concede the correctness of this as a legal proposition ; but, if it is true, it does not avail appellant, for the contract set out in the complaint constitutes an agreement between the company and the city that these water rents shall be whatever the city may, by ordinance, from time to time, designate, provided only that'they shall not be less than in towns and cities in the state similarly situated to the city of Leadville.

We are, however, clearly of the opinion that the allegations of the complaint as to a breach by the defendant of this contract are not good. Upon this branch of the case, the plaintiff asks the court to enjoin the municipal authorities from enforcing this ordinance on the ground that its schedule of rates is less than in towns and cities in this state similarly situated to Leadville, whereas by the contract between the city and the Water Company these rates were not to be less than in such towns.

Therefore, it is incumbent upon plaintiff, when it asks for such extraordinary relief, in some manner to show to the court that there is a substantial difference between the water rates as fixed and as they should be fixed; and it is not enough merely to allege that such rates do not correspond, *303without showing to the court wherein, or to what extent, there is a difference to justify the interposition of a court of equity; nor is it enough to apprise the defendant so that it may intelligently prepare its defense.

But the most substantial defectin the complaint, and the one upon which the decision here might be safely and solely rested, is in the allegation with reference to similarly situated towns. It is merely by way of recital that Pueblo, Central City and Aspen, being towns of this state similarly situated, the rates as fixed by the defendant are less than the rates in such towns.

At common law the rule was unquestioned, and under the code procedure is almost universal, ■ that allegations by way of recital are insufficient, and objection thereto may be taken advantage of by a general demurrer. There is a case to which our attention has been called, — that of Treadway v. Wilder, 8 Nev. 91, followed by Winter v. Winter, 8 Nev. 129, —which seems to hold that such objection must be specifically pointed out in the demurrer, or, if not, that it is waived; but this is contouy to all the other authorities, so far as our examination has extended. In his work on Remedies and Remedial Rights, sees. 449 and 450, Mr. Pomeroy refers to these cases with his emphatic disapproval, stating that the doctrine announced is erroneous. To the same effect, also, are: Bliss on Code Pleading (3d ed.), sec. 318, and cases cited; Shafer v. B. R. & A. W. M. Co., 4 Cal. 294; Hall v. Williams, 13 Minn. 260; Jackson School Tp. v. Farlow, 75 Ind. 118; I. B. & W. Ry. Co. v. Adamson, 114 Ind. 282.

The reason given for this rule is that an allegation by way of recital cannot be denied, and no issue concerning it can ever be raised.

In a late case, — The City of Des Moines v. Des Moines Water Works Co., 64 N. W. Rep. 269, — an ordinance which provided that the water company should have the right to charge the citizens for such water as may be supplied them “ as much and no more than the average price paid therefor in other cities of the United States having efficient wa*304terworks operated by private companies,” was held to be unenforceable because it was unreasonable, indefinite and impracticable. In connection therewith, a clause providing for an arbitration for fixing the schedule of rates in case the city and the waterworks company disagreed, was also held void, because the arbitrators under the ordinance were to fix the rates, not with a view to their reasonableness, but simply were to ascertain and prescribe such rates as were in the original ordinance provided for the water company. We must not be understood as intimating that the ordinance there construed is, in legal effect, the same as. the clause in this contract under discussion. There may be such differences as that the rule in the one case is inapplicable to the other.

We are not, however, called upon to determine the reasonableness or enforceability of that clause of this contract prescribing the method for fixing a schedule of rates, for the Water Company itself predicates its right to relief, and its whole case is based upon the right which it has under this contract to have the city prescribe as rates to be charged by it of individual, citizens the same rates, of the equivalent of such rates, as are in force in similarly situated towns and cities; and up to the present time the city has not questioned the reasonableness or attacked the validity of the contract. There will be time enough to pass upon this question when one of the parties to this controversy raises it.

The second proposition may be briefly dismissed with the statement that the assumption .of fact therein made is unfounded ; because, according to the complaint itself, an agreement between the city and the Water Company for the fixing of prices has been made, which, in argument, by counsel on both sides, is conceded.

The third proposition, standing by itself and entirely disconnected from other allegations of the complaint, would present a more serious difficulty. In the present state of the pleadings, we must assume that there is an enforceable contract between the city and the Water Company for the ascer*305tainment of water rents. The plaintiff, however, while insisting upon its contract rights, apparently also relies upon the distinct proposition that it is not within the power of the city council arbitrarily to fix rents for its service without regard to their reasonableness.

Certainly, in the absence of a valid contract to the contrary, this is the law to which many cases, particularly from the federal courts, might be cited. Corporations or individuals exercising public franchises or performing public services, unless there is a contract otherwise providing and which exempts them from the operation of the general rule, are subject to the power of the legislative department of the government to regulate their compensation for such services.

There is, however, a limitation to this general doctrine, necessarily implied, which is that such compensation must be reasonable, and it is a proper subject of judicial inquiry and determination, and under the guise of regulation must not be so inadequate as practically to result in confiscation of propert}', or to take property without due process of law. The case of C. M. & S. P. Ry. Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418, is a leading case upon this point. See, also, Water Works v. San Prancisco, 82 Cal. 286.

When, however, as in the case at bar, the parties by mutual arrangement prescribe the mode whereby this compensation is to be determined, if the method selected is reasonable and practicably definite and not unconscionable, we fail to perceive why either party may not as against the other insist upon its enforcement. Indeed, that is just what the plaintiff attempts to have done in this case, but, as we have already determined, through a defect in its pleading there is no allegation that defendant has violated its contract. Until it appears to the court that this contract for some good reason is not enforceable, the Water Company is not in a position to call upon the courts to determine the reasonableness of the rates as fixed by this ordinance, while at the same time it insists upon its right to an enforcement of a contract which, for aught that appears, has been complied with by the de*306fendant in the adjustment of rates. It would be inequitable to permit the Water Company to press both these claims, inconsistent as they may be, at one and the same time in one suit.

Besides this, if appellant were relying solely upon its constitutional rights, unaffected bjr contract, the complaint is insufficient to show, upon plaintiff’s own basis of estimate, that the rates in this ordinance are unreasonable; for it does not clearly appear that the cost or value of the plant is what plaintiff computes it. But, aside from this, the plaintiff seems to have omitted from the calculation of revenue the rents which it receives from the city for the supply of water for.municipal purposes proper. What the aggregate of these rentals is, is not shown; neither is there any complaint that the compensation therefor is inadequate.

If, moreover, it is inconsistent with the truth for the plaintiff to aver that there are in this state towns and cities similarly situated to the city of Leadville in the respect contemplated by this contract, and, on the contrary, the facts are that there are no such towns or cities; or, if there are such, then that such municipalities have not by ordinance fixed water rates, or that there are not in force in such municipalities water rents or rates which the individual consumers are required to pay; or that, for some reason, not thus far appearing in the pleadings, the methods prescribed by the contract for ascertaining the rents is not practicable or enforceable, another and entirely different question might arise. In the first three of these hypothetical cases, the conditions having failed which the parties to the contract contemplated, and, in the latter, ibe methods which were made the measure or the test to be followed by the city, and with which the city must comply, in fixing the prices, proving impracticable, the courts might be called upon to determine just what power the city has in fixing rates, or to pass upon the reasonableness of an ordinance adopted by the city purporting to fix «such rates. But such a case is not now before us, and we must not be under*307stood as expressing an opinion or laying down any rules as applicable to the facts of any case except the case at bar as presented by the record.

■ The judgment of the district court should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.

Affirmed.

midpage