158 Ind. 425 | Ind. | 1902
The appellant filed a complaint in the court below charging, in substance, that on the 5th day of] May, 1899, the appellee was a street railroad corporation organized under the laws of this State, and was then engaged' in operating an electric street railroad upon the streets of the city of Indianapolis; that on said day appellant entered one of appellee’s street cars so operated, for the purpose of being conveyed therein as a passenger; that appellee tendered three cents, as his fare, to the conductor of said car, but that the latter refused to receive the same, and demanded that appellant should pay a fare of five cents, or surrender a ticket that the company sold at the rate of six tickets for twenty-five cents, or twenty-five tickets for $1; that appellant refused so to do, and was ejected by the conductor from said car, to> appellant’s damage, etc. Appellee demurred to this complaint. Its demurrer was sustained. Appellant excepted to the ruling, and assigns error thereon in this court.
Appellant’s counsel state in their brief: “The real question — the entire question before the court — may be said to be the constitutionality of the act of 1899, under which
As the complaint in this case does not allege that the appellee was not acting under a contract made with said city pursuant to Acts 1899, p. 260, §5458c et seq. Burns 1901, it must he presumed that the requirement of appellee’s conductor was lawful, unless said act is unconstitutional, as claimed by appellant’s counsel. The section of the State Constitution that they especially claim the act violates is §23 of article 1. That section is as follows: “The General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen, or class of citizens, privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.”
Before further discussing the law applicable to this particuar case, we announce certain propositions upon which the authorities do not divide: (1) Every ultimate reasonable doubt as to the validity of a statute is to be solved in its favor. “It is not on slight implication and vague conjecture, that the legislature is to be pronounced to have transcended its powers, and its acts to be considered as void. The opposition between the constitution and the law should be such that the judge feels a clear and strong conviction of their incompatibility with each other.” Marshall, C. J. in Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch 87, 128, 3 L. Ed. 162. (2) If a statute is within the legislative power, the court cannot set up its judgment as to whether the power has been wisely or unwisely exercised. It is its duty in such cases, not to obstruct, but to enforce the legislative will. (3) If an act admits of two interpretations, one of which will bring it within, and the other presses it beyond the constitutional authority of the General Assembly, that interpretation will be adopted which will make it possible to uphold the act, because a presumption will not be indulged that the lawmaking power intended to violate the fundamental law, unless that conclusion is forced upon the court by unam
Counsel for appellant say: “We do not deny the power of the legislature to authorize a grant that must of necessity be monopolistic in its nature, otherwise railway franchises could not be granted at all.” It is, of course, competent for the General Assembly to make provision by law whereby, in the grant of -a street railroad franchise, there may pass with the grant the exclusive right of the grantee to operate cars over the particular space occupied by its tracks during the existence of its franchise; otherwise the grant might be of little or no value. But the conclusion of counsel for appellant that the law in question is of a monopolistic character is based on the assumption that it was so framed that only the appellee company could obtain the franchise that the act purported to authorize the city to grant.
Appellant’s counsel state that the appellee was incorporated subsequent to the year 1890, and that, at the time of the enactment of the act of 1899, appellee was operating under a franchise that it had been held by the Supreme Court of the United States would expire on January 18, 1901. Of course we are not judicially advised of this; but as the act in question, in its earlier sections, seems to assume the existence of a street car franchise, held under said city, that was soon to expire, we are content, for the purposes of this opinion, to assume the existence of the facts so stated.
The act is a very long one, and it would greatly prolong this opinion to state all of its provisions in detail. In substance, the act provides that it “may be lawful” for any city having a population in excess of 100,000 persons by
Does such a statute amount to a grant by the General Assembly of a privilege or immunity in violation of §23 of article 1 of the State Constitution % Waiving any matter of technical construction with reference to this provision, we hold that it does not. The city was merely empowered, in its discretion, to extend appellee’s franchise, or it might, at a particular period before the expiration of the time that such franchise would expire, let a contract of franchise upon public competition, or it might during any of said time have exercised the authority that the General Assembly expressly reserved to it to grant a franchise, if it could take effect m praesenti, for the use of its streets by virtue of §9. There is nothing in the claim that no other company but appellee could make a contract by which it could charge in excess of three cents as fare. The act was intended as a readjustment of the whole street ear situation in Indianapolis, at least as applied to any company entering into a contract with the city by virtue of said act. A careful study of the act has convinced us that its sole effect, in so far as it relates to the relations of the city to street railroad companies, was to make it possible, under specified limitations, to make a contract for a street railroad franchise that was not hampered by the provisions of the so called three cent fare law of 1897. In this view it is quite plain that the act was not a grant to the appellee, but was merely a restoration to the city of its former power to enter into contracts for the grant of street railroad franchises.
If it was the desire of said city, as such desire found expression through its authorized representatives, to extinguish the remaining portion of appellee’s rights under its former franchise, by entering into a new contract with it that would supersede the one that before existed, there would be no occasion to advertise and offer competition for that purpose, because no one but appellee could offer that which the city desired to acquire. It would doubtless have been a wiser law, and more in keeping with the modem view that effort should be made to obtain the best price for the right to use the public streets, if the act had provided that before contracting the city should be required to invite competition; but even without that limitation the city had full authority so to do, and if it is now perceived that it made an unwise contract with appellee, — a matter concerning which we are, of course, not judicially advised, — the blame properly rests upon the representatives of the city who made the contract.
Even if we were to grant that §§1, 2, and 9 of the act have been construed by us too broadly, still appellant must fail in this particular ground of attack, for beyond question the city was authorized to refuse to negotiate with appellee alone, and could wait until the -time fixed in §8; nine months before the expiration of appellee’s franchise, and then let a contract upon public competition. As a mere business proposition, the city, if it could not obtain satisfactory terms from appellee at the outset, could have much better afforded to bide its time than appellee, for ultimately the latter would have been compelled to sue for terms.
The act represents the legislative judgment that appellee’s then existing franchise should be merged in a new
It is next claimed that the act in question violates the following section of the State Constitution: “Corporations, other than banking, shall not be created by special act, but may be formed under general laws.” Section 13, article 11. If the appellee is a corporation organized under the laws of Indiana, as the complaint alleges, it must be presumed that it was organized under the general act for the incorporation of street railroads that became a law September 7, 1861. §4143 et seq. R. S. 1881. Section 2 of that act provides that the organization “shall be a body politic and corporate in perpetuity.” Under that act, appellee’s corporate continuity is only dependent upon §11 of the act mentioned, that provides that the “act may be amended or repealed at the discretion of the legislature.” A street railroad corporation is none the less a corporation because it does not possess a franchise. It is its right to be a corporation that gives it the capacity to acquire a franchise. In this case the
In the Bank of Commerce case it was held that an act providing for the extension of the corporate life of a corporation, created by special act before the adoption of the present Constitution, amounted to an effort to create a corporation, and was therefore in violation of that instrument, but the Navin case and the Bank of Commerce case are written upon the same lines. If the act itself conferred a new franchise upon the'company, a different question might be presented, as the Constitution cannot be evaded by the creation of a corporation by general act, and the subsequent grant to it of extraordinary powers by special act. We have not been unmindful that the act of 1897 relative to fares was an amendment of the charter of all street railroad companies operating in cities having a population of more than 100,000 persons. But, if it be objected that the act of 1899 impliedly gave the appellee a right to contract relative to fares that it did not possess after the act of 1897 became a
The act in question is not invalid, because it is not a general law. The power of the General Assembly to pass local and special laws finds its restraint in §22 of article 4 of the State Constitution. The General Assembly is by that section denied power to enact local or special laws upon seventeen subjects. The next section ordains that: “In all the cases enumerated in the preceding section, and in all other cases where a general law can be made applicable, all laws shall be general,' and of uniform operation throughout the State.” As the subject-matter of the legislation in question does not fall within said §22, it must be held, as it has been held by this court since the decision of Gentile v. State, 29 Ind. 409, that the determination of the General Assembly that a law, not relating to any of the subjects mentioned in said §22, cannot be made general is not subject to review by the courts. Clem v. State, 33 Ind. 418; State, ex rel., v. Tucker, 46 Ind. 355; Vickery v. Chase, 50 Ind. 461; Mount v. State, ex rel., 90 Ind. 29, 46 Am. Rep. 192; Kelly v. State, ex rel., 92 Ind. 236; Warren v. City of Evansville, 106 Ind. 104; Johnson v. Board, etc., 107 Ind. 15; Wiley v. Corporation of Bluffton, 111 Ind. 152; City of Evansville v. State, 118 Ind. 426, 4 L. R. A. 93; State, ex rel., v. Kolsem, 130 Ind. 434, 14 L. R. A. 566; Bell v. Maish, 137 Ind. 226; Young v. Board, etc., 137 Ind. 323; Pennsylvania Co. v. State, 142 Ind. 428; Mode v. Beasley, 143 Ind. 306; Woods v. McCay, 144 Ind. 316, 33 L. R. A. 97; City
Objection is made by appellant to some of the sections of the act that we have not mentioned, such as the grant of the right to purchase other street railroad lines in said city, etc. As it might be conceded that all of these sections were unconstitutional, yet, as enough would remain to authorize the mailing of a contract as to the rates of fare, we deem it unnecessary to decide any of such further questions. The court below did not err in sustaining the demurrer to' appellant’s complaint.
Judgment affirmed.