227 F. 708 | N.D. Cal. | 1915
The bill seeks a final decree avoiding an order of the defendant Commission, made in the exercise of power conferred by the Public Utilities Act of the state (Stats, of Cal. [Ex. Sess.] 1911, p. 18), fixing plaintiff’s water rates, on the ground that such rates are confiscatory and will take plaintiff’s prop-' erty without due process of law; and it asks for an injunction enjoining enforcement of the order pendente lite. The defendant has moved to dismiss the bill on the ground that the action is prematurely brought.
Section 66 of the Public Utilities Act provides that after any order or decision by the Commission any party pecuniarily interested may apply to the Commission for a rehearing in the matter, and that:
“No cause of action arising out of any order or decision of the Commission shall accrue in any court to any corporation or person unless such corporation or person shall have made, before the effective date of said order or decision, application to the Commission for a rehearing.’’
The bill fails to disclose that any application was made for a rehearing in the present case, and it was conceded at the argument that no such application had been interposed.
This is rested, not only upon well-settled principles of equity jurisprudence, but upon the dictates of comity as well; that where a state has provided, as is its right, a complete legislative scheme for the fixing of rates, those rights should not be interfered with, nor the proceedings of the state arrested, until the last legislative step has been taken, and it may definitely be seen whether the act of the state as a finality ignores or infringes upon the rights of the complaining party; that until such time it cannot be said that the state authorities have violated those rights, or refused to observe them, and until that stage is reached it is not within the province of the federal courts to interfere. As aptly and tersely put by the Chief Justice in his concurring opinion:
“The transaction must be complete, and jurisdiction, cannot be rested on hypothesis. A fortiori, this must be so where federal courts are ashed to interfere with the legislative, executive or judicial acts of a state, unless some exceptional and imperative necessity is shown to exist, which cannot be asserted here. Moreover, tills is demanded by comity, and what comity requires is as much required in courts of justice as in anything else. * * * And as applied to federal interference with state acts, the observance of this rule of comity should be regarded as an obligation. It is recognized as such by section 720 of the Revised Statutes.”
These considerations have application and controlling effect in the present case. It can with no more propriety be said here that the proceedings of the state commission were complete without an op
Nor can it make any difference in the present inquiry if,' as contended by the plaintiff, the Utilities Act, properly construed, gives the Commission power to order a rehearing upon its own motion. It is not required to take any such step, while the act expressly provides that the order shall not be deemed final or actionable until an application for a rehearing has been made by the party aggrieved and action had thereon. It is further said, in effect, that an application for rehearing is not effectual tO' arrest the taking effect of the order, since under section 66 of the Utilities Act such application does not automatically suspend its operation, and that therefore, notwithstanding such application, it would be within the power of the Commission, by a failure or refusal to act upon it until after the date of the taking effect of its oirder, to defeat plaintiff’s rights and render it subject to the terms of the order, with its pains and penalties, without an opportunity to have it judicially reviewed. - But obviously there is nothing of substance in this suggestion. The Commission is expressly given power to suspend its order pending a rehearing, and it is to be presumed that it would do so in any case where required to maintain the status quo. It certainly will not be presumed that it will so undertake to palter with the rights of a party as to jeopardize his remedy, nor could it do so with success. It is not within the power of the state to defeat tire right of a party to have such an order judicially reviewed after it has reached a justiciable stage. This principle is emphasized in the Prentis Case. If, therefore, in a case where the party has presented his petition for rehearing, thus doing all that he can or is required to do to protect his rights, those rights should be threatened through the failure or refusal of the Commission to act, it cannot be doubted that a court of equity would deem the case one ripe for its interposition.
There is nothing in Detroit & Mackinac R. R. Co. v. Michigan Railroad Commission et al., 235 U. S. 402, 35 Sup. Ct. 126, 59 L. Ed. 288, just decided (December 14, 1914), tending to affect or modify these views.
The motion to dismiss is granted, without prejudice, however, to the right of the plaintiff to renew its application here, .should the circumstances require.
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