13 S.E.2d 48 | N.C. | 1941
BARNHILL, J., concurring.
CLARKSON, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
SEAWELL, J., dissenting. The chronology of this case, since the former appeal, follows:
I. At the May Term, 1940, Guilford Superior Court, judgment of modification and affirmance, dated 23 May, was duly entered in conformity to the opinion of the Supreme Court rendered 17 April and reported in
II. On 27 May, petition to rehear the case was filed in the Supreme Court and denied 12 June.
III. Thereafter, on 15 July, 1940, the board of power commissioners of the city of High Point adopted two resolutions:
1. The first being entitled, "A Resolution Repealing a Resolution Adopted by the Council of the City of High Point on March 20, 1939, Entitled `A Resolution Accepting License for the High Point Hydroelectric Project Issued Pursuant to Order of the Federal Power Commission on March 10, 1939.'"
The purpose of this resolution is to free the city from its agreement to abide by the conditions imposed in the license issued by the Federal Power Commission for the construction, operation and maintenance of the project. Pursuant thereto the Federal Power Commission was requested to vacate its order of 10 March, 1939, authorizing the issuance of the license, and, also, that the city be permitted to withdraw its original application therefor. Accordingly, on 25 October, 1940, the Federal Power Commission adopted a resolution vacating its order of 10 March, 1939.
2. The second being entitled, "A Resolution to Amend and Reenact a Resolution Adopted by the City Council of the City of High Point *59 March 20, 1939, Entitled `A Resolution to Amend a Resolution Adopted April 27, 1938, Entitled "A Resolution Authorizing the Construction of Hydroelectric Plant and System by the City of High Point for the Use of the City and Consumers in the City, and Authorizing the Issuance of Revenue Bonds to Finance a Part of the Cost."'"
The end sought to be accomplished by this resolution is to relieve the city from the effects of the amendatory resolution of 20 March, 1939, placing the project under the provisions of the Revenue Bond Act of 1938, ch. 2, Public Laws, Extra Session, 1938, and to declare its intention of proceeding under the original resolution of 27 April, 1938, as amended and reenacted by the resolution of 15 July, 1940, thus predicating the issuance of the proposed revenue bonds on authority of the city charter and the Revenue Bond Act of 1935, ch. 473, Public Laws 1935, and seeking to obviate the need of a certificate of convenience and necessity required by the Revenue Bond Act of 1938.
IV. At the August Term, 1940, Guilford Superior Court, with the foregoing resolutions as bases for their motion, the city of High Point and its officers, parties defendant herein, applied to the court for a modification of the judgment and restraining order previously entered in the cause.
This application was allowed, and from the judgment entered thereon the Adams-Millis Corporation et al., plaintiffs by intervention, and the Duke Power Company, intervening plaintiff, entered exceptions and gave notice of appeal.
At the same time, the court dismissed the rule for contempt — previously issued on affidavit of J. W. McGuinn, plaintiff — and based its ruling on the findings incorporated in the judgment of modification. Similar entries, as above, were noted, and appeals taken from this ruling. This proceeding is supplemental and summary in character. By motion after judgment the defendants have applied for vacation or modification of the decree entered in the Superior Court of Guilford County at the April Term, 1939, enjoining the defendants from proceeding with the construction of a hydroelectric power plant and system at Styer's dam site on the Yadkin River, in Yadkin County, *60 about 25 miles from the city of High Point. On appeal to this Court, the order of the Superior Court was modified and affirmed. Judgment on the certificate was duly entered at the May Term, 1940, Guilford Superior Court. The present motion was made at the August Term, following.
Due to the unusuality of the questions presented, the matter was thoroughly pounded and hammered at the bar. In addition, the parties have filed elaborate briefs. The restraining order heretofore entered in the cause is sought to be relaxed or obviated on account of certain changes or modifications made in the enterprise.
First. At the threshold of the hearing, the court was met with a challenge of its power to modify the judgment previously entered in the cause.
If we concede, for the moment, the authority of the board of power commissioners to adopt the resolutions of 15 July, 1940, it would seem that the court was justified in undertaking to modify the restraining order, in one particular at least, for these resolutions were intended to effect substantial changes in the enterprise. The changes sought to be accomplished were, not only from fact to fact — from interstate to intrastate commerce, but also from law to law — from Federal to State authority, and from one State statute to another. Capps v. R. R.,
The parties are in sharp disagreement in respect of the authority of the board of power commissioners to adopt the resolutions of 15 July, 1940. In the court below the case was made to turn on the existence of this power. The appellants insisted then, and insist now, that no such power is vested in the board, and that without it, the resolutions are unavailing. It will be noted that the two resolutions are not alike either in kind or purpose.
We are not disposed to question the authority of the board in so far as the first resolution is concerned. Its only purpose is to rescind the prior acts of the city council in applying for, accepting and agreeing to abide by the conditions imposed in the license issued by the Federal Power Commission for the construction, operation and maintenance of the contemplated project. As these acts were ultra vires in the first instance, it ought not to take any great amount of power to disavow them. Having authority to act in the premises, it would seem that the first resolution was within the board's determination. Nor is the debate as to the ultimate effect of this resolution particularly germane in view of the previous holding that the city is without authority to accept the Federal license and to agree to abide by all the conditions imposed therein. *61 Sufficient unto the future are the problems thereof. The resolution is one of compliance and not one of circumvention.
The second resolution, however, presents a matter of different substance.
The character of the project was fixed by resolution of the council of the city of High Point on 27 April, 1938, as amended by the supplemental resolution of 20 March, 1939, which amendatory resolution brought it within the terms of the Revenue Bond Act of 1938, necessitating a certificate of convenience and necessity from the Public Utilities Commissioner.
Thereafter, on 4 April, 1939, the board of power commissioners of the city of High Point was created by Act of Assembly, ch. 600, Public-Local Laws 1939, and vested with full municipal authority over the project then established. The act provides that from and after 1 May, 1939, the city council "shall no longer exercise the powers or authority theretofore vested in them with respect to the said electric light, heat and power plant and system"; and that "all the powers and duties of the City of High Point, . . . with respect to the . . . electric light, heat and power plant and system of said city pursuant to the resolution adopted by the Council of the City of High Point on April twenty-seventh, one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight, and amendments thereto, shall be vested in and exercised by the Board of Power Commissioners."
It will be observed that at the time of the creation of the board of power commissioners the municipality was proceeding under the Revenue Bond Act of 1938. This required a certificate of convenience and necessity from the Public Utilities Commissioner for the project in question. The purpose of the second resolution adopted by the board of power commissioners on 15 July, 1940, is to take the project from under the provisions of this act and to free it from any and all supervision on the part of the Public Utilities Commissioner. This would seem to be at variance with the grant of power which the General Assembly vested in the board of power commissioners of the city of High Point. At the time of the grant, certificate from the Public Utilities Commissioner was required and the grant is with specific reference to this requirement. The project entrusted to the board of power commissioners was the one established "pursuant to the resolution" adopted by the council of the city of High Point on 27 April, 1938, "and amendments thereto." Can the board, by later resolution, thus free itself from the supervision imposed by one of these valid amendments? The supervision attached prior to the creation of the board and subsisted at the time of its creation. It is not thought that in a matter of this kind, the law-making body intended to vest uncontrolled power in a board which is itself *62 beyond the reach and voice of the electorate, as is the project also. The idea of supervision may have arisen from the Federal requirement. If a Federal license when a navigable stream is involved, why not a State certificate when nonnavigable waters are touched? At any rate, it was not perceived by the General Assembly that a municipality of the State would welcome Federal domination and control and eschew all State supervision. It is axiomatic that municipal corporations, being creatures of the State, endowed for the public good with a portion of its sovereignty, must at all times remain amenable to its will.
Moreover, it is provided in the act creating the board of power commissioners, "Nor shall this act affect pending litigation." The present litigation was pending at the time of the passage of the act, and it was held on the former appeal that the city could not lawfully proceed with the undertaking without first obtaining a certificate of convenience and necessity from the Public Utilities Commissioner of the State of North Carolina. It follows, therefore, that this is still an essential requirement of the law. If the act itself is not to "affect pending litigation," what shall be said of a resolution adopted under and by virtue of the act which has as its purpose the affectation of pending litigation? The resolution appears to be one of circumvention rather than one of compliance.
In this view of the matter, it seems unnecessary to discuss the authority of the court to entertain the defendants' application for modification of the judgment. The authority may be conceded, in proper instances, upon a clear showing of changed conditions meriting relief.Wilson v. Comrs.,
Speaking to a similar situation in Lowe v. Prospect Hill CemeteryAss'n., supra, Holcomb, C. J., delivering the opinion of the Court, said: "It is obvious that the defendants are in these subsequent proceedings concluded by the original decree as to all matters urged as a defense in that action, as well (as) any defense which might have been presented to defeat the plaintiff's demand for a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from doing the things therein prohibited. From the consequence of the decree, as to all such matters, neither of the parties can now escape. Our present consideration of the case is limited to an *63 inquiry as to whether, because of subsequent changes in the situation of the parties and of facts since arising creating different conditions, the defendants ought in equity to be relieved from the force and effect of a just and valid decree entered against them."
Second. From what is said above, it appears that the question of issuing revenue bonds under the city charter and the Revenue Bond Act of 1935 has been rendered largely academic. It may be added, however, that this, too, was the subject of consideration on the former appeal. Reference was then made to the discussion of the subject in the first Williamson case,
Conceding that by amendments to the city charter, chs. 65 and 561, Public-Local Laws of 1937, the city of High Point is authorized to issue within a period of four years from 15 February, 1937, revenue bonds under the terms of the Revenue Bond Act of 1935 "for any purpose which said city is now authorized by the Municipal Finance Act or any other law to finance by the issuance of bonds," in the absence of a more definite expression, it is not thought that this would extend the provisions of the act to undertakings not originally intended to be covered by its terms, and forsooth in conflict therewith. It was said in the first Williamson case,supra, that in this act, "the right of acquisition, purpose of operation, and manner of financing an undertaking are linked together, and limit the extent of the undertaking." The act expired by its own limitation, and was continued for the benefit of the city of High Point for a period of four years from 15 February, 1937, and this, we apprehend, for undertakings originally within the purview of the act. Kennerly v. Dallas,
By the Revenue Bond Act of 1935, the municipalities of the State were authorized, for a limited time, to construct, improve and extend self-supporting undertakings, "within the municipality," and to finance them with funds derived from the sale of revenue bonds, payable solely out of the revenues of the undertaking. No certificate of convenience or necessity was required under the provisions of this act, except the approval of the Local Government Commission.
By the Revenue Bond Act of 1938, the municipalities of the State were again authorized, for a limited time, to construct, improve and extend "revenue-producing undertakings" of various kinds, including hydroelectric plants or systems, "wholly within or wholly without the municipality, or partially within and partially without the *64 municipality," and to finance them with funds derived from the sale of revenue bonds, payable solely out of the revenues of the undertaking.
Because of the extension of authority contained in this later act, it was provided that "no municipality shall construct any systems . . . useful in connection with the generation . . . of electric energy for lighting, heating and power, for public and private uses, without having first obtained a certificate of convenience and necessity from the Public Utilities Commissioner" (with exception not now pertinent).
It was insisted on the original hearing, on the former appeal and in the petition to rehear, that by amendments to its charter the city was authorized to proceed in the premises under the terms of the Revenue Bond Act of 1935, and to issue revenue bonds, payable solely out of the revenues of the undertaking, without first obtaining the certificate of convenience and necessity required by the Revenue Bond Act of 1938. The conclusion reached was, that the certificate should first be obtained. The judgment of the Superior Court on the motion to vacate the injunction is apparently at war with the decision in this respect.
Third. On the showing made at the hearing as appears from the first resolution of 15 July, 1940, the trial court was justified in dismissing the rule for contempt under authority of what was said in the secondWilliamson case,
It results, therefore, that the defendants have not yet complied with the law as it is written in respect of the undertaking in question, if it is to be financed without resort to taxation.
It should be remembered that the city of High Point is here proceeding with a project, not in the exercise of its general municipal powers, but pursuant to special legislative authority. The legislation is new and not altogether free from ambiguity. The undertaking is likewise out of the ordinary. Liability to taxation has sought to be avoided. Difficulties have been encountered. It is agreed on all hands, however, that the defendants are authorized to proceed only as the law prescribes.
Finally, it may be useful to recall that the case is controlled by the record as presented and the law as it is written. Neither is to be ignored or disregarded. Equity still follows the law. Attention is also again directed to the fact that matters heretofore determined are not to be relitigated in this subsequent proceeding. Much of what is said in favor of a different conclusion seems to overlook this circumstance and to proceed upon the assumption that the board of power commissioners can pull itself up by its own boot straps into a field of municipal activity broader than the one established by the act of its creation — a premise not heretofore regarded as sound. Briggs v. Raleigh,
Error and remanded.