56 F. 339 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1893
The grounds of the demurrer which has been interposed to the bill in this case are — Eirst, that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit, or of the parties to it; and, second,- that the bill is without equity.
For the purposes of the present decision the allegations of the bill are, of course, to be taken as true. It appears therefrom that the defendant corporation is a municipal corporation created by an act of the legislature of the state of California, entitled “An act to incorporate the town of San Buenaventura,” approved March 10, 1866, (St. 1866, p. 216,) by which the officers of the town wei’e made to consist of a board of five trustees to be elected by the qualified voters of the town, a treasurer, a clerk, a marshal, a surveyor, and an attorney. It. was provided by the act that the board of trustees should have power to make regulations for securing the health, cleanliness, and good order of the town; to provide for the extinguishment of fires; and to supply the town with fresh water*. This act was subsequently amended, but in no particular important to be noticed here.
At the time of the incorporation of the town it had no system of water supply, nor had it any such system when, on the 7th day of December*, 1868, there was presented to the board of trustees a petition by Jose de Arnaz, Victor Ustassaustegui, and Francisco Molleda, asking for an exclusive privilege, for the term of 50 years, to supply the town with water for household, municipal, and irrigation purposes, and for the extinguishment of fires, upon terms and conditions upon which those parties then offered to construct a water system to supply the town with water; Upon the receipt of the petition the board of trustees, in order to better inform themselves as to the expediency of granting it, appointed three disinterested citizens of the town as commissioners “to examine into the better way and utility of bringing water into said town,” with instructions to report to the hoax'd on the 12th day of December, 1868, in respect to the advisability of granting to the petitioners the lights and franchises asked for.
On the 12th day of December, 1868, the board of trustees met in their council chamber in the town, pursuant to adjournment, at which time and place they proceeded to examine into the matter of the petition of Ai*naz and his associates. The report of the commissioners, which was favorable to the granting of the petition, ivas received and examined, and after due considei*ation of the matter the board agreed to enter into an agreement with Arnaz "and his associates, granting to them the franchise, rights, and privileges, subject to the terms and conditions of a contract to be drawn and executed by the respective parties. Subsequently, and at a regular
“Section 1. The Board oC trustees oí Hie town of San Buenaventura grant irom This date die exclusive privilege of supplying water to the said town unto Jose do Amaz, Victor list assails togui, aud Francisco Molloda, for tiu* term of fifty years, counting from this date; find the president and secretary of said hoard are ordered to sign a legal contract with the said interested parties, conceding- to them the said privilege for the said term of fifty years, according to a resolution passed hy this board, and entered on the minutes of our proceedings, the 12th day of December, A. T). 1868.”
On the same day, to wit, January 4, 186!), there was executed by and on behalf of the respective parties the contract in writing, by which .Arnaz and his associates agreed to cause a dam to be built, at a proper point in the San Buenaventura river, and by means of a flume, ditch, or pipe, at their option, within two years from the; date of the contract, to introduce a sufficient supply of water for the use of the town, and hy which the town, in consideration of the risk and expense to be incurred by Arnaz and his associates in the undertaking, granted to them, their successors and assigns, the free use of the streets and public grounds of the town for the laying of the necessary pipes, “exclusively,” provided that Arnaz aud Ms associates should furnish a sufficient supply of water for public use in case of fire, without charge, and for such public fountains as may be established by the authorities of the town, at such rates as may be agreed upon between the respective parties; “also, that the parties of the first part [Arnaz and his associates] shall have the unrestrained right to establish such rates for the supply of wafer to private persons as they may deem expedient, provided that such rates be general.” It was further provided in and by the contract that the; town should have the right, at the termination of 50 years, to purchase the works erected by Árnaz and his associates, or their assigns, at a fair valuation, and that, within the term of 1 year from the date of the contract, Arnaz and Ms associates should commence the erection of the necessary works, and finish the same within 2 years from the date of the contract.
Within a year after the execution of the; contract, Arnaz and his associates, under and by virtue of it, constructed a dam in the Han Buenaventura river, and constructed ditches leading therefrom, by means of which they diverted the water of tlie river, and conducted it to the town, and therein built and constructed conduits in the streets of the town, and therefrom supplied the inhabitants with water, and provided water for the use of the town, and for the extinguishment of fires, and within two years after the date of
On the 15th day of January, 1870, the complainant, the Santa Ana Water- Oompány, was incorporated under an act of the legislature of the state of California entitled “An act for the incorporation of Water Companies,” approved April 22, 1858, (St. 1858, p. 218,) and ever-since then has been, and now is, a corporation existing and doing business in California, and having its principal place of business in the town of San Buenaventura; and, to this corporation, Arnaz and Ms associates, on or about the 26th day of January, 1871, sold and assigned their dams, ditches, conduits, water rights and privileges, and all their right, title, and interest in and to the waterworks and system by which the town of San Buenaventura was then supplied with water, together with all the rights, privileges, and franchises obtained and held by them under and by virtue of the aforesaid contract with the town. On or about the 28th day of October, 1872, the board of trustees of the town passed an ordinance approving and ratifying the transfer of the property and rights from Arnaz and his associates to the complainant corporation, sections 1 and 2 of which ordinance are as follows:
“Section 1. All the rights and privileges heretofore granted unto the said Ámaz, Usíassaustegui, and Moheda be, and the same are hereby, continued and granted the Santa Ana Water Company, for fifty years from and after January 4, A. D. 1869.' The transfer and assignment by said Arnaz, Ustas-sáustegui,- and Moheda of said water company is hereby ratified and approved. Sec. 2. The Santa Ana Water Company is. héreby granted the exclusive right and privilege of laying all such main and service pipes in and through the several streets of the town of San Buenaventura, by such means and in such manner' as said water company shah elect, for the purposes set forth in.the certificate of incorporation of said company, and all other lawful purposes, for the said term of years: provided, however, that the main -water pipe be laid in the main street of the town of San Buenaventura on or before July 1, 1873, — and to make, hold, and maintain such aqueducts, darns, ditches, flumes, and reservoirs, for the purposes aforesaid within said town, as- shah be necessary: provided, that just compensation shall be 'made to the owners of private property taken by said company for such public- use in the-manner prescribed by law, if the parties cannot agree on the value of the same; and, for the protection of the property and works of said company, no person shah, without authority from said company, cut, tap, or otherwise interfere with, any water pipes, ditch, flumes, or reservoirs of said company, or bathe or wash, therein, or cut or injure any shade trees planted or-to be planted near the same for protection.”
By. an act of tbe< legislature of tbe state of California entitled “An'act to’ reincorpórate and extend tbe limits of tbe' town of San .Buenaventura, in tbe county of Ventura, state of California, and also to change tbe name of Canada street, in said town, to tbat of Ventura avenue,” approved March 29, 1876, (St. 1875-76, p,' 534,) tbe ordinance last mentioned was approved and ratified. By abaci of tbe legislature of tbe state of California entitled “An
Complainant was incorporated for the purpose of supplying the town of San Buenaventura, and its inhabitants, with pure, fresh water, for municipal, household, domestic, and other purposes, and since the year 1871 has been continuously, and is now', doing so. It has purchased and obtained extensive* riparian rights in and to the waters of the San Buenaventura river, acquired lands, rights of way, and reservoir sites, has built reservoirs, constructed ditches, purchased and laid into a complete system for distribution many miles of mains, pipes, and lateral connections, by means of which it has supplied the town and its inhabitants wiih water. In acquiring its rights, and in the construction and establishment of its plant, it lias expended the sum of $163,000, and the property it has so acquired and built up is of the value of §200,000. lii order to procure the funds for the extension and enlargement of the waterworks, and to provide for the natural growth of the town, and the increase in the number of inhabitants, and to provide the increased supply of water necessary therefor, complainant has, during the five years last past, been compelled to borrow, and has borrowed, in addition to amounts of money furnished by the stockholders of the complainant, over §40,000, to secure the payment of 'which, and the interest thereon, complainant has mortgaged all of its property, rights, and franchises, which mortgage is now a subsisting lien thereon.
The tell alleges that to give complainant a, just and reasonable compensation for the service rendered, to provide for the necessary and usual wear and tear and repairs, to maintain and operate its plant, and to give to its stockholders a just and reasonable return upon the capital invested, complainant should make its rates and charges for water supplied to the town and its inhabitants so as to produce a present income of §25,000 per annum. That pursuant to the provisions of an act of the legislature of the state of California entitled "An act to enable the board of supervisors, town council, board of aldermen, or other legislative body of any city and county, city or town, to obtain data and information from any corporation, company, or person supplying' water to such city and county, city or town, requiring such board, ¡own council, or other legislative body, to perforin the. duties prescribed by section 1 of: article 14, of (he eons til htion, and prescribing, .the performance or nonperformance of. such duties,” approved , March 7, 1881, (St. 1881, p. 54.) the board of S rustees requested complainant to furnish, to the..board, in the month of January,. 1.892, .the detailed and verified statement prescribed. in . sec lion, :2 :of, that act of
“Receipts.
From water rates ...$12,054 82
From all other sources. 1,001 69
Total receipts for year.. $13,116 51
“Disbursements.
For interest on indebtedness. $ 2,468 16
For taxes . T86 39
For operating expenses and repair. 4,203 60
For dividends to stockholders.. 5,500 00
$12,958 15
Expended in construction in extending system. 1,688 99
Disbursements over receipts . 1,530 83”
That on or about the 15th day of February, 1893, the defendant board of trustees of the town assumed to pass, and did pass, an ordinance purporting to fix the maximum rates for supplying water to the town and its inhabitants, which should be charged by complainant for the year beginning July 1, 1893, and ending June 30, 1893, a copy of which ordinance is annexed to, and made a part of, the bill. That according to the best information and belief of the complainant the amount of money that will be required during the year beginning July 1, 1893, and ending June 30, 1893, to meet and pay the interest on its bonded and other indebtedness, state, county, and municipal taxes, the necessary repairs to maintain its property in good order and condition, and to provide for its operating and other necessary expenses, will exceed the sum of $9,000. That if the rates for supplying water to the town and its inhabitants are to be made as in the last-mentioned ordinance specified, the aggregate amount of money that could be collected from the town and its inhabitants for that year would not amount to over $8,500, — an amount insufficient to provide for the cost of maintenance, taxes, and operating expenses, — and that, upon the basis of the rates for supplying water specified in the ordinance, complainant would be deprived of all net income, or power to pay its stockholders any dividend upon its capital stock, and the owners of the stock would be deprived of all income and revenue from their said property.
Section 1 of article 14 of the present constitution of California, adopted in 1879, is as follows:
“Tlio use; of all water now appropriated, or that may hereafter be appropriated, for sale, rental, or distribution, is hereby declared to be a public, use, and subject to the regulation and control of the si at*;, in the manner to be prescribed by law: provided, that the rates or compensation to be collected by any person, company, or corporation in this state for the use of water supplied to any city and county, or city or town, or the inhabitants thereof, shall he fixed, annually, to' the board of supervisors, or city and county or city or town council, or other governing body of such city and county, or city or town, by ordinance or otherwise, in the manner that other ordinances or legislative acts or resolutions are passed by such body, and shall continue in force for one year, and no longer. Such ordinances or resolutions shah be passed in the month of February of each year, and take effect on the first day of duly thereafter. Any board or body failing to pass the necessary ordinances or resolutions fixing water rates, where necessary, within such time, shall be subject to peremptory process to compel action, at the. suit of any party interested, and shall be liable to such further processes and penalties as the legislature may prescribe. Any person, company, or corporation collecting water rates in any city and county, or city or town, in this state, otherwise than as so established, shall forfeit: the franchises and waterworks of such person, company, or corporation to the city and county, or city or town, where the same are collected, for the public use.”
It was to carry out those provisions of the constitution that the legislature of the state passed the act approved March 7, 1881, and it was in pursuance of these constitutional and statutory provisions that the ordinance complained of was enacted.
It is clear that if the contract entered into between the town and Arnaz and his associates, purporting to confer upon them and their assigns the exclusive privilege of supplying the town and its inhabitants with water for 80 years from the date of its execution, and to secure to them “the unrestrained right to establish such, rates for the supply of water to private persons as they may deem expedient, provided that such rates be general,” was a valid contract, and passed by assignment, to the complainant corporation, the obligation of that contract was protected by the constitution of the TJnited States against impairment by any act of the state, constitutional or statutory. New Orleans Gas Co. v. Louisiana Light, etc., Co., 115 U. S. 650, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 252; Waterworks Co. v. Rivers, 115 U. S. 674, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 273. The acts complained of were done under and pursuant to a provision of the state constitution, supplemented by state legislation. Whether or not
The provisions of the constitution of California in respect to the formation of corporations, and the organization of cities and incorporated villages in existence at the time of the incorporation of the town of San Buenaventura, and at the time of the making of the contract between that town and Arnaz and his associates, and at the time of its assignment to the complainant corporation, were as follows:
“Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created bj special act, except for municipal purposes. All general laws and special acts passed pursuant to this section may be altered from time to time, or repealed.” Section 31, art. 4, Const. 1849.
“It shall be the duty of the legislature to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit, so as to prevent abuses in assessment and in contracting debts by such municipal corporations.” Section 37, Id.
■Pursuant to these provisions of the constitution of the state the legislature of California passed an act, approved March 10,1866, incorporating the town of San Buenaventura, by the twelfth section of which, the board of trustees of the town was given power, among other things, to provide for the prevention and extinguishment of fires,-and to supply it with freshwater. By the fourteenth section of the act it was declared that the trustees “shall have no power to borrow money, nor to contract any debts or liabilities which shall, in the aggregate, exceed the sum of four hundred dollars, unless it shall first appear by the returns of the treasurer that there is actually in the treasury money, not otherwise appropriated, sufficient to meet and pay such liabilities.” The power conferred by the legislature upon the board of trustees of the municipality to provide for the prevention and extinguishment of fires, and to provide the town with fresh water, necessarily carried with it the implied power to make any and all proper contracts to accomplish those ends. There was no constitutional inhibition against such grant of power, and it was therefore not only within the province of the legislature to make the grant, but, having deemed it wise to make of the town a municipal corporation, it was appropriate, and, indeed, necessary, that provision either be made directly by the legislature for the supply of the town and its inhabitants with fresh water, or that such power be delegated to the governing body of the municipality; which was done in and by the twelfth section of the act. That the législature contemplated that the power thus conferred upon the municipality should be exercised by means of a contract or contracts is shown by the fact that the town itself was, by the fourteenth section of the act incorporating it, denied the power to borrow money or to contract any debts or liabilities exceeding in the aggregate four hundred dollars, unless there should be in the treasury money, not otherwise appropriated, sufficient to pay such liabilities, and by the further fact that there were then existing laws enacted by the legislature, as will presently be shown,
The complainant was organized, as lias been said, under the provisions of an act of the legislature of California, approved April 22, 1858, which was a, general law passed for the incorporation of water companies. That act declared ¡hat any company organized under it should furnish pure, fresh water to the inhabitants for family uses, so long as the supply permitted, at reasonable rates, and without distinction of persons, upon proper demand therefor, and should furnish water, to the extent of its means, to the city and county, “in case of fire or other great necessity, free of charge.” The act further declared that the rates to be charged for water should be determined by a board of commissioners, to be selected as follows: Two by the city and county, or city or town, authorities, and two by the water company, and, in case the four could not. agree to the valuation, then and in that case the four should choose a fifth person, and he should become a member of the board, and, if the four commissioners could not agree upon a fifth, then the sheriff of tin* county should ax>point him, and that the decision of a. majority of the board should determine the rai.es to be charged for water for one year, and until new rates should be estábil sited. The act also declared that the corporation should have the right', subject to the reasonable direction of the city or town authorities as to the mode and manner of exercising’ it, to the use of so much of the streets, ways, and alleys of the municipality as might be necessary for laying its pipes lor conduct,ing water.
In the case entitled Spring Valley Waterworks v. Schottler, 110 U. S. 347, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 48, the question arose whether the right conferred upon water companies organized under that act to participate in the fixing of the rates to he charged for water furnished by them constituted a contract protected by the constitution of the United States against impairment by subsequent action of the state. The court held that the provision in the statute of 1858 in respect to the fixing of water rates was but one of the corporate privileges granted by (he state; that if was part and parcel of the charter of the corporation, and nothing else, and therefore fell within the
“T)ie organization of the Spring Talley Company was not a business arrangement between tlie cicy-and tbe company, as contracting parties, but tbe creation of a new corporation to do business within the state, and to be governed as a natural person or other corporations were or might be. Neither are the charter rights acquired by the company under the law to be looked upon as contracts with the city and county of San Francisco. The corporation was’ created by the state. All its powers came from the state, and none from the city and county. As a corporation it can contract with the city and county 'in any way allowed by law, but its powers and obligations, except those which grow out of contracts lawfully made, depend alone on the statute under which it was organized, and such alterations and amendments thereof as may from time to time be made by proper authority. The provision for fixing rates cannot be separated from the remainder of the statute by calling it a contract. It was a condition attached to the franchises conferred on any corporation formed under the statute, and indissolubly connected with the reserved power of alteration and repeal.”
It will be observed that while tbe court beld that each and every right conferred by tbe statute under which tbe company was incorporated- was a part and parcel of its charter,.and that only, and therefore subject to alteration or repeal, tbe right of any company to contract with tbe city or town in any way allowed by law was expressly recognized and declared. It has already been seen that in tbe act incorporating tbe town of San Buenaven-tura tbe legislature conferred upon tbe board of trastees of tbe town tbe power to provide for the prevention and extinguishment of fires, and to provide for tbe supplying of tbe town and its inhabitants with fresh water, and that tbe only limitation upon that power was that tbe board should have no power to borrow money, or to contract debts or liabilities, to exceed in tbe aggregate $400, unless there should be at tbe time money in tbe treasury, not otherwise appropriated, sufficient to pay such debts or liabilities. Not only was this no limitation upon tbe power of the board of trustees to contract with other parties for the introduction, at their expense, of water into tbe town; but, practically, it made it a matter of necessity for the board to make some contract with some individual, individuals, or corporation to that end, since it was denied tbe power to incur any debts or liabilities exceeding-in tbe aggregate $400, without tbe money in band to pay them.
Arnaz~ and his associates were individual citizens. They were not in any way bound to enter into tbe contract with the board of trustees of the town. By tbe exercise of none of its prerogatives as a governing power could tbe municipality compel them to do so. The contract required their assent, as well as that of tbe board of. trustees. Of course, in entering into it, they did so subject to existing laws; but no then existing law has been pointed out, reserving to tbe state or the municipality the power to fix the water rates the town, through its board of trustees, contracted should be fixed by Arnaz and bis associates. A statute of tbe state, approved May 3, 3852,- (St. 1852, p. 171,) providing for tbe incorporation of water companies, declared, in its third section:
*349 “Tliis act shall not giro to any company the right to supply any city with water unless it shall he previously authorized by an ordinance, or unless it he done in conformity with a contract entered into between the city and tlie company. Any contracts hereafter so made shall he valid and binding "in law, hut shall not' taire from tlie city the right to regulate the rates for water, nor shall any exclusive rigid he granted, by contract or otherwise, tor a term exceeding twenty years.”
By this act it was declared, its will he observed, that no contract entered into between a city and a company incorporated under the fita)visions of the act should “take from the city the right to regulate the rates for water." That provision had no application to Arnaz and his associates, for the reason that they were not incorporated tinder that or any other act.
The doctrine is firmly established that the state may, by contract, restrict the exercise of some of its most important powers. Many of the cases holding that doctrine are referred to in New Orleans Gas Co. v. Louisiana Light, etc., Co., supra. In that case the supreme court sustained a grant by the legislature of Louisiana of an exclusive right to supply gas to the city of Mew Orleans and its inhabitants, and held that the grant, was protected by the contract clause of the constitution of the United States against; impairment by tt subsequent change in the constitution of Louisiana. ,tn the course of its opinion the court said:
"We have seen, tlie manufacture of gas, and its distribution for public and private use by means of pipes laid, under legislative authority, 'in tlie streets and ways of a city, is not an ordinary business, in which every one may engage, but is a franchise belonging 1o the government, to be granted, for the accomplishment of public objects, to whomsoever, and upon what terms, it jileases. It is a business of a public nature, and meeds a public necessity, for which the state may malee provision. It. is one which, so far from affecting-the, public injuriously, has become one of the most important agencies of civilization, for the promotion of the public convenience and tlie public safety. It is to be presumed that the legislature of Louisiana, when granting the exclusive privileges in question, deemed it unwise to burden the public, with the cost of erecting and maintaining gas works sufficient to meet the necessities of the municipal government and the people of New Orleans, and that the public would lie best protected, as well as best served, through a, single corporation, invested with the power, and charged with the duty, of supplying gas of the requisite quality, and in such quantity as the public needs demanded. In order to accomplish that, in its .judgment, ilie public, welfare required, the legislature deemed It. necessary that some Inducement be offered to private capitalists to undertake, at their own cost, this work. That inducement was furnished, in the grant of an exclusive privilege of manufacturing and distributing gas by means of pijjes laid in the streets of New Orleans for a fixed period, during which the company would he protected against, competition from corporations or companies engaged in like business. Without that grant it was inevitable (‘idler that the cost of supplying the city and its people would have been made, in some form, a charge upon the public, or the public would have been deprived of the security in person, property, and business which comes from well-lighted streets. It is not our province to declare that the legislature unwisely exercised the discretion with which it was invested. Nor an we prepared to hold that tlie state was incapable, her authority in tlie premises not being, at the. time, limited by her own organic law. of providing for supplying gas to one of her municipalities and its inhabitants by means of a. valid contract with a private corporation of her own creation.”
Tlie subsequent case of Waterworks Co. v. Rivers, 115 U. S. 674, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 278, involved the validity and effect; of a contract, between the city of Mew Orleans and the Mew Orleans Water
. “The right to dig up and use the streets and alleys of New Orleans for the purpose of placing pipes and mains to supply tire city and its inhabitants with water is a franchise belonging to tho state, which she could grant to such persons or corporations, and upon such terms, as she deemed best for the public interests. And as the object to be attained was a pitblie one, for which the state could make provision by legislative enactment, the grant of the franchise could be accompanied with such exclusive privileges to the grantee, in respect of the subject of the grant, as, in the judgment of the legislative department, would best promote the public health and the public comfort, or the protection of public and private property. Such was the nature of the plaintiff’s grant, which, not being at the time prohibited by the constitution of the state, was a contract, the obligation of which cannot be impaired by subsequent legislation, or by a change in her organic law;” tho constitutional prohibition upon state laws impairing the obligation of contracts not, however, restricting “the power of the state to protect the public health, the public morals, or the public safety, as the one or the other may be involved in the execution of said contract,” because “rights and privileges arising from contracts with a state are subject to regulations for the protection of the public health, tho public morals, and tho irablic safety, in the same sense as are all contracts and all property, whether owned by-natural persons or corporations.”
The principle controlling the decisions cited is a just and plain one. The duty is imposed upon the legislative power that creates a municipal corporation to provide for the necessary elements of gas and water. It may, at its discretion, do so directly, or it may, in the absence of any constitutional inhibition, say, directly, or through the municipal corporation so created, to its individual citizens, in the language of the supreme court, (Binghamton Bridge, 3 Wall. 74:)
. “If you will embark with your time, money, and skill in an enterprise which will .accomodate the public necessities, we will grant to you, for a limited period, or in perpetuity, privileges that will justify the expenditure of your money, and tho employment of your time and skill.”
Such a grant, said the court in the case from which the quotation is taken, “is a contract with mutual considerations, and justice and gpod policy alike require that the protection of the law should be- assured to it.”
Did (heir rights in that respect vest by (he assignment in the complainant corporation? That any and every right conferred on complainant by its charter maybe altered or repealed by the slate is put at rest; by ike decision of the supreme court in Spring Talley Wa ter-works v. Beholder, supra, and is no longer ojien to" question. Pair, iliat com pa nil's incorporated under the act of April 22, 1858, for supplying cities and towns with fresh water, may contract with such cities and 'counties, or cities or towns, in any way allowed bv law. was also declared bv the same decision. In People v. Stanford, 77 Cal. 371, 18 Pac. Rep. 85, and 19 Pac. Rep. 693, the supreme court' of California, decided that that; provision of (he constitution of the state declaring that “corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act” (article 4, § 31) does not; prohibit the assignment of a franchise to a legally-organized corporation by persons having the lawful right to exercise and transfer the same; that that provision of the constitution of the state applies to the forumlion or creation of corporations, and to the powers directly conferred upon them by legislative enactment The construction placed upon the constitution of the state by the highest court in existence under it is binding; oil this court, and under the construction thus adopted by the supreme court cf California it is obvious that the complainant corporation was competent to take by assignment whatever rights the contract of January 4-, 186!), conferred upon Arnaz and Ms associates, and that were assignable by them.
The point is made on behalf of ¡he defendants that by the terms of the contract the rigid; to establish rates was a right personal to Arnaz and Ms associates. The contract does not fairly admit, of such construction. That right; is reserved to “the parties of the first, part” to the contract, which in terms provides for its assignment. The grant of (he use of the streets, etc., for the necessary purposes of the undertaking, is made to the parties of the first part, their successors or assigns; and the right is by (he coal met reserved to the town to purchase, at the expiration of 5(' years, the works erected by the parties of the first part, or their assigns, at a fair valuation. By the terms of the contract the par-lies supplying water under it; are required to furnish sufficient wafer for public use in case of (ire, without charge, and for such public fountains as should 1ml established by the authorities of the town, at rates to be agreed upon by the parties; that is to say, by the parties furbishing (he water, on the one part, and the town authorities, on the other. And to the parties of the first part- — that; is to say, to the parties furnishing the water —is given the right to establish the rates for water supplied to private per
“All the rights and privilege heretofore granted to the said Arnaz, Ustus-saustegui, and Molleda he, and the same are .hereby, continued and granted to the said Santa Ana Water Company, for fifty years from and after January 4th, A. D. 1869. Tho transfer and assignment by said Amaz, Ustus-saustegui, and Molleda of said franchise to said water company is hereby ratified and approved.”
And this ordinance of the town was approved, ratified, and continued in force by an act of the legislature of the state entitled “An act to incorporate and extend the limits of the town of San Buenaventura, in the county of Ventura, state of California, and also to change the name of Canada street, in said town, to that of Ventura avenue,” approved March 29, 1876.
Under the views above expressed it becomes unnecessary to consider the objections made to the constitutionalty of the ordinance in question, based on the ground that its enforcement would prevent the stockholders of the complainant corporation from receiving any interest or dividends on. their investments. Demurrer overruled, with leave to defendants to answer within the usual time.