after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in its original petition relied on a charter from the legislature of Louisiana, which granted to it the' exclusive privilege of supplying the city of New Orleans and its inhabitants with water from the Mississippi River, but provided that the city council should not be thereby prevented from granting to any person •“ contiguous to the river ” the privilege of laying pipes to the river for his own use. The only matter complained of by the plaintiff, as impairing the obligation of the contract contained in'its charter, was an ordinance of the city council, granting to the Louisiana Sugar Refining Com *27 pany permission to lay pipes from the river to its factory, which, the plaintiff contended, was not contiguous to the river.
The Louisiana Sugar Refining Company in its answer alleged that its factory was contiguous to the river, that it had the right as a .riparian proprietor to draw water from the river for its own use, that its pipes were being laid for its own- use only, that the plaintiff had no exclusive privilege that would impair such úse of the water by the defendant company, and that the rights and privileges claimed by the plaintiff would constitute a monopoly and be therefore null and void.-
The evidence showed that the pipes of the defendant company were being laid exclusively for the use of its factory, and that no private ownership intervened between it and the river but only a' public street, and a broad quay or levee, owned by the city and open to the public, except that some large sugar sheds, occupied by lessees of the city, stood upon it, and that the tracks of a railroad were laid across it.
The grounds upon which the Supreme Court of Louisiana gave judgment for the defendants appear by its opinion, which, under the practice of that state, is strictly part of the record, and has always been so considered by this court on writs of ejror, as well under the Judiciary Act of 1789, which provided that
“
no other error shall be assigUed or regarded as a ground of reversal than such as appears on the face of the record,” as under the later acts, in which that provision is omitted. Acts of September 24,1789, c. 20, § 25, 1 Stat. 86; February 5, 1867, c. 28, § 2, 14 Stat. 386; Rev. Stat. § 709;
Almonester
v. Kenton,
That opinion, as printed in
The Constitution of Louisiana of 1879 does provide, in article 258, that “ the monopoly features in the charter of any corporation now existing in the State* save such as may be corn tained in the charters of railroad companies, are hereby abolished.” But the opinion of the Supreme Court of the State shows that it thought it unnecessary and “ entirely out of place” to consider the effect of that provision upon the exclusive privilege of the plaintiff; and' it was not suggested, either in the petition for the writ of error, or in the assignment of errors, or in any of the briefs filed in this court, that any effect was given by the judgment of the State court to that provision of the Constitution of the State.
The only grounds, on which the plaintiff in error attacks the judgment of the State court, are that the court erred in its construction of the contract between the State and- the plaintiff, contained in the plaintiff’s charter; and in not adjudging that the ordinance of the city council, granting to the defendant company permission to lay pipes from its factory to the river, was void, because it impaired the ■ obligation of that contract.
The arguments at the bar were principally directed to the question whether upon the facts proved the factory of the defendant company was contiguous to the river. But that is *29 not a question which this court upon this record is authorized to consider.
This being a writ of error to the highest court of a State, a federal question must have been decided by that court against the plaintiff in error; else this court has no jurisdiction to review the judgment. As was said by Mr. Justice Story, fifty years ago, upon a full review of the earlier decisions, “ it is sufficient if it appears by clear and necessary intendment that the question must have been raised, and must have been decided in order to have induced the judgment,” and “it is not sufficient to show that a question might have arisen or been applicable to the case, unless it is further shown, on the record, that it did arise, and was applied by the State court to the case.”
Crowell
v. Randall,
In order to come within the provision of the Constitution of the United States which declares that no State shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts, not only must the obligation of a contract have been impaired, but it must have been impaired by a law of the State. The prohibition is aimed at the legislative ppAver of the State, and not at the decisions of its courts, or the acts of adininistratiAm or executive boards or officers, or the doings of corporations or individuals.
This court, therefore, has no jurisdiction to revieAv a judgment of the. highest court of a State, on the ground that the obligation of a contract has been- impaired, unless some legislative act ofthe State has been upheld by the judgment sought to be reAÚeAved.' The general rule, as applied to this class of cases, has been' clearly stated in two opinions of this court, delivered by Mr. Justice Miller. “ It must be the Constitution or some law. of the State, Avhich impairs the obligation of the contract, or Avhich is otherwise in conflict Aidth the Constitution of the United States; and the decision ,of the State court must sustain the laiv or constitution of the State, in the matter in Avhich the conflict is supposed to exist; or the case for this court does not arise.”
Railroad Co.
v. Rock,
As later decisions have shoAvn, it is not strictly and literally true, that a ktnv of a State, in order to come within the constitutional prohibition, must be either in the form of a statúte enacted by the legislature in the ordinary course of legislation, or in.the form of a constitution established by the people of the State as their fundamental kw.
*31
In
Williams
v.
Bruffy,
So a by-law or ordinance of a municipal corporation may be such an exercise of legislative power delegated by the legislature to the corporation as a political subdivision of the State, having all the force of law within the limits of the municipality, that it may properly be considered as a law, within the meaning of this article of the Constitution of the United States.
For instance, the power of determining what persons and property shall be taxed belongs exclusively to the legislative branch of the government, and, whether exercised by the legislature itself, or delegated by it to a municipal corporation, is strictly a legislative power.
United States
v.
New Orleans,
But the ordinance now in question involved no exercise of legislative power. The legislature, in the charter granted to the plaintiff, provided that nothing therein.should “be so construed as to prevent the city council from granting to any person or persons, contiguous to the river, the privilege of laying
*32
pipes to the river, exclusively for his or theif own use.” The legislature itself-thus defined the class of persons to whom, and the object for which, the permission might be granted. All that was left to the city council was the duty of determining what persons came within the definition, and how and where they might be permitted to lay pipes, for the purpose of securing their several rights to draw water from the river, without unreasonable interfering with the convenient use by the public of the lands and highways of the city. The rule was’ established by the legislature, and its execution only committed to the municipal authorities. The power conferred upon the city council was not legislative, but administrative, and might equally well have been vested by law in the mayor alone, or in any other officer of the city.
Railroad Co.
v.
Ellerman,
The cases of
New Orleans Waterworks
v. Rivers,
The difference in the extent of the jurisdiction of this Court on writ of error to the highest court of a State, and on appeal from a Circuit Court of the United States — as affected by the ground of the decision of .the court below — is illustrated by the cases of contracts payable in Confederate currency, or made in consideration of loans of Confederate currency, during the war Of the rebellion, and by the cases of promissory notes given before that war for the price of 'persons sold as slaves.
In
Thorington
v.
Smith,
In actions brought upon promissory notes given for the purchase of slaves before the war, .the same distinction has been maintained. The Constitutions adopted in 1868, by the States of Arkansas, Georgia and Louisiana respectively, provided that the courts' of the State should not enforce any contract for the purchase or sale of slaves.’ In
Osborn
v. Nicholson,
These cases are quite in harmony with the line of cases, beginning before these were decided, in which, on a writ of error upon a judgment of the highest court of a State, giving effect to a statute of the State, drawn in question as affecting the obligation of a previous contract, this court, exercising its paramount authority of determining whether the statute upheld by the State court did impair the obligation of the previous contract, is not concluded by the opinion of the State court as to the validity or the construction of that contract, even if contained in a statute of the State, but detennines for itself what that contract was. Leading cases of that class are
Bridge Proprietors
v.
Hoboken Co.,
The distinction between the two classes of cases — those in which the State court has, and those in which it has not,.given effect to the statute drawn in question as impairing the obligation of a contract — as affecting the consideration by this court, on writ of error, of the true construction and effect of the previous contract, is clearly brought out in
Kennebec Railroad
v.
Portland
Railroad,
• The result of the authorities, applying to cases of contracts the settled rules, that in order to give this court'jurisdiction of a writ of error to a State court, a federal question must have been, expressly or in effect, decided by that court, and, therefore, that when the record shows that a federal question and another question were presented to that court and its decision turned on the other question only, this' court has no-jurisdic-. 'tion, may be summed up as follows: When the State court decides against a right claimed under a contract, and there was ho law subsequent to the contract, this court clearly has no jurisdiction. When the existence and the construction of a contract are undisputed, and the State court upholds a subsequent law, on the ground that it did not impair the obligation of the admitted contract, it is equally clear that this court has jurisdiction. When the State court, holds that there was a contract conferring certain rights, and that a subsequent law did not impair those rights, this court has jurisdiction to consider the true construction of the supposed contract, and, if it is of opinion that it did not confer the rights affirmed by the State court, and therefore its obligation was not impaired by the subsequent law, may on that ground affirm the judgment. So, when the State court upholds the subsequent law, on the ground that the contract . did not confer the right .claimed, this court may inquire whether the supposed contract did give the right, because, if it did, the subsequent law cannot be upheld. But when the State court gives no *39 effect to the subsequent law, but decides, on grounds independent of that law, that the right claimed was not conferred by the contract, the case.stands just as if the subsequent law had not been passed, and this court has no jurisdiction.
In the present case, the Supreme Court of Louisiana did not, and the plaintiff in error does not pretend that it did, give any effect to the provision of the Constitution of 1879 abolishing monopolies. Its judgment was based Avholly upon the general laiv of the State; and upon the construction and effect of the charter from the legislature to the plaintiff company, and of the license from the city council to the defendant company, and in no degree upon the Constitution or any law of the State subsequent to the plaintiff’s charter. The case cannot be distinguished in principle from the cases above cited, in Avhich writs of error to State courts haAre been dismissed for Avant of jurisdiction. As was said in Bank of West Tennessee v. Citizens’ Bank of Louisiana, above cited, “The result in this case Avould have been necessarily the same if the Constitution had not contained the provision in question.”
Writ of error dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
