This is an appeal from an order of the trial court temporarily restraining appellants, the mayor and board of commissioners of the city of Dallas, from observing or acting under the provisions of an ordinance granting and regulating the use of the city’s streets by motor busses, commonly known as jitneys. The following general statement of facts disclosed by the record is necessary. Other specific facts will be noted when necessary in discussing the issues presented. Under the authority conferred by the Legislature, the city first undertook to regulate the jitney traffic by ordinance of July 31, 1915. Further regulation was had by ordinance of April 19, 1916. On January 5, 1917, another regulatory ordinance was passed and all former ordinances repealed. On February 5, 1917, the last ordinance was declared void by the judge .of the Forty-Fourth district court and the city restrained from enforcing or observing it. On April 3, 1917, the electorate of the city, under the initiative and referendum provisions of the charter, by decisive majority adopted an ordinance regulating jitneys. On June 19,1917, the judge of the Fourteenth district court in the instant case declared that ordinance void, and restrained the city and its officers from enforcing or observing it. As indicated, it is from the action in the present case that this appeal is taken. The salient provisions of the initiative ordinance necessary to be stated are these: A motor bus is defined to be any automobile,. automobile truck, or trackless motor vehicle engaged in the business of carrying passengers for hire over designated streets and routes within the city of Dallas. License for such vehicles to engage in such business is authorized upon payment of a *208 license fee of $25 for each car so engaged, and a fee of $10 for each operator, and provides for the employment of an automobile inspector who is required to inspect and certify the car to be safe before license may issue. Licenses may not issue to an applicant until he has contributed $50 to, a fund intended to indemnify persons negligently injured by such busses while operated by licensees, and until said fund reaches $5,000. Busses may, in a limited way, detour from fixed routes of service for the convenience of passengers. Licensees are compelled to operate over their designated routes only for a period of 8 hours in 24, though they may voluntarily operate continuously. They are not required to operate on Sundays. Licensees are subjected to examinations concerning their physical fitness. Licenses may be transferred. Speed and number of passengers are regulated, and provision is made for remodeling cars in order to increase the seating capacity. Passengers may occupy rear doors when safe fastenings are provided. They may not occupy running boards. Pare shall be 5 cents between termini. Violation of the provisions of the ordinance is declared a misdemeanor punishable by fine of not less than $1, nor more than $50. The indemnity fund is created by requiring each licensee to contribute thereto $50 before his license is issued. The fund is required never to be less than $5,000. It is not required to be more. If it reaches the sum of $25,000 it shall never be less, but if it exceeds the latter sum the surplus may be returned to those entitled to it under the act. Any person injured while upon a licensed jitney operated by a licensee while upon his designated route, may, when his claim is established in a court of competent jui-isdiction, recover as much as $2,-500 from said fund, if it cannot be made from the defendant, upon motion thereafter to be filed in court. If the indemnity provision shall be declared invalid, other provisions of the ordinance are nevertheless to be in force, and licenses shall issue upon compliance therewith. Any other facts necessary to be stated will be referred to in our discussion of the issues presented in the brief. Nor will we discuss seriatim the points presented by counsel, but, in lieu, discuss as such the issues raised.
Accordingly, the first issue tó be considered is that which challenges appellees’ right to maintain the suit on the ground that appel-lees have no interest in the subject-matter thereof. Appellees’ reply to the contention is that a corporation lawfully authorized by a municipality to use its streets as a common carrier of passengers has such an interest therein as enables it to complain of competitors illegally using same. In connection with the contentions noted, it is shown by the record that appellees are private corporations authorized to and which are operating street railways upon the streets of Dallas under authority of valid franchise grants from the city of Dallas, and by which they are required to pay the cost of paving between their rails and two feet on the outside thereof, as well as the cost of maintaining and repairing same. Each company is a large taxpayer. The motor bus referred to in the ordinances has reference, as we have said, to the jitney, which is also a common carrier of passengers in competition with appellee in, the city of Dallas. The city enrolled the ordinance after its adoption by the people, and was proceeding or threatening to proceed to observe and enforce its provisions, when the suit was filed. Appellants, under the first issue, discuss, in substance, two points: (1) Appellees’ want of such interest in the subject-matter as would authorize them to sue at allj and (2) conceding the interest, their right to challenge the validity of the ordinance in a suit against the city.
As to the first point “subject-matter,” as-applied to legal proceedings, is defined to be the “cause; the object; the thing in dispute.” Bouvier. Those elements in this suit are the right of those complying with the provisions of the ordinance to engage in the jitney traffic upon the city’s streets and the right of the city to enforce and observe such provisions. Have appellees any interest in that right? While the public interest, as argued by counsel, is ordinarily greatest, it is equally true that the holder of a valid franchise authorizing the use of the public streets has also an important interest therein; undoubtedly such an interest as entitles him to defend any invasion of his layvful franchise rights by the city or another. Such is obviously true of any franchise or privilege granted lawful^. Franchises, whether corporate entities or public grants, are property. Their invasion is an invasion of property rights. As a consequence, if the acts here complained of in law constitute an invasion of appellees’ franchise, an interest in the subject-matter is shown, in that connection it is claimed by appellees that the ordinance is void, which brings us to the question whether it is an invasion of a valid franchise for the municipality, to permit others to engage in a similar competing business under void authority. It has been decided by our Supreme Court that the owner of an unlicensed ferry, where licenses are required by law, may be restrained by his competitor, who is licensed, from engaging in the business on the ground that the licensed ferryman is entitled to protection against unlawful competition. Tugwell v. Eagle Pass Ferry Co.,
Allen v. Clausen,
In Millville Gaslight Co. v. Vineland Light & Power Co., 72 N. J. Eq. 305,
In the case of Atlanta Ry. & Power Co. v. Atlanta Rapid Transit Co.,
It is said that:
“The grantee of a valid franchise, according to what seems to be the better rule, may enjoin interference with its property rights by a competitor which has not obtained a valid grant of the right to use the streets.” McQuillin, Mun. Corp. vol. 4, § 1771.
A similar declaration is found in Dillon, Mun. Corp. (5th Ed.) § 1771, with a broader discussion of the fundamentals of the rule.
It is thus obvious that not only the current of authority, but the better reason as well, supports the right to challenge such grants as we have been discussing in the manner done in this suit, in fact we are unable-to escape the fact that the Tugwell Case is controlling. We accordingly hold that there was no error in the action of the district judge in holding that appellees were entitled to maintain this suit on the ground that they were interested in the subject-matter.
“In American law a franchise is defined as a special privilege conferred by the government on individuals and corporations, and which does not belong to the citizens of a country generally by common right. * * * The term franchise includes the term privileges, but a privilege is not necessarily a franchise.” McQuillin, Mun. Corp. vol. 4, § 1614, p. 3360.
As said at another' point, a franchise is property, or, as said by the writer just quoted, “an incorporeal hereditament.” The right to use the streets under the ordinance in question is at most, we believe, a permissive privilege. Certainly, it is not as is a franchise a vested property right. As a consequence, the section not only reserves to the commissioners the right to pass all regulatory ordinances affecting franchise holders, but to pass all such ordinances affecting those exercising any other public privilege. To hold less would be to construe as meaningless the term “public privilege.”
Further, it is declared in the telephone case, supra, that the authority conferred by subdivisions 7 and 27 of section 8 of article 2, of the charter, is to be exercised only by the board of commissioners. The language used is that:
“There can be no doubt that the authority to so regulate the business named in said sections may be exercised by the board of commissioners.”
Thus to the board of commissioners it appears is reserved all the power conferred by said sections. That power as contained in section 7 is, in substance, to pass all ordinances fixing and regulating the charges, *213 Caves, or rates of those enjoying a franchise or other public privilege. Such power as contained in section 27 is, in substance, to pass all ordinances fixing and regulating the price of water, gas, and electric lights, and the fares, tolls, and charges of local telephones, of public carriers and hacks, whether transporting passengers, freight, or baggage, and generally to fix and regulate the rates, tolls, charges, and service “of all public utilities of every kind.” It would seem idle to argue that the vehicles described in the ordinance under discussion are not included in the sweeping provisions of the two sections. The licensees in using them upon the public streets as carriers of passengers are certainly exercising that character of public privilege referred to in subdivision 7. They are certainly public utilities and public carriers as described in section 27.
For obvious reasons we have refrained from any discussion of the policy of granting or denying to the electorate the powers claimed in this proceeding. That is a political question for determination by the Legislature. We have confined ourselves solely to a construction of the grant, and conclude from the language used and the construction placed thereon by the Supreme Court that the powers attempted to be exercised by the voters were reserved by the Legislature to the board of commissioners, and that as a consequence the ordinance is void.
The judgment is affirmed.
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