delivered the opinion of the court.
- This is a suit brought by the City..of Madison to recover the cost of asphalt pavement between the rails of the defendant’s track and one foot on the outside of them, for a certain .distance along University Avenue in that City. The declaration, after stating the ordinances under which the defendant and its predecessors had built and operated the street railway concerned, sets out an ordinance of June 11, 1910, requiring the defendant, under a penalty, to do the work above described. The defendant answered that-to make it pay the cost would, deprive it of its property and-contract rights under its franchise without due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, contrary to the Constitution of the United States. The judge before whom the case was'tried found that the designated space had become so out of repair as to'interfere with travel and that the crushed stone then used was not a proper pavement, and would interfere with the asphalt laid' down by the City, and gave judgment for the plaintiff. The Supreme Court accepted the defendant’s position, that its charter was a contract, but met the argument based upon it by' a construction that warranted the later ordinance, and judgment for the plaintiff was affirmed. 156 Wisconsin, 352.
As our opinion is that the judgment should be affirmed, we shall not dwell upon- a motion to dismiss made by the defendant in error. The court expressly upheld the"later ordinance, and whether that ordinance can be upheld without impairing the obligation -of the admitted contract of the charter is a Federal question none the less that the answer depends upon the construction of the instrument, Even if the opinion below be read as asserting that the duty existed by the charter alone irrespective of the later ordinance, still as the ordinance was set up and relied upon in the declaration and was present im
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pelling, so far as might be, the decision, reached and was given efféct by that decision, we should not dismiss The cáse.
Terre Haute &c. R. R.
v.
Indiana,
Up to 1892 the defendant’s franchise was held under a charter that, after providing for the disposition to be made of snow on the track, continued: “And said com-, pany shall keep the space between the rails and for the distance of one'foot on the outside side of the rails in proper repair so as not to interfere with travel over the same,’ and shall keep the same in proper order as to cleanliness at its own cost and expense.” The charter then went on to provide that whenever a street in which were tracks should be paved or macadamized, the railway company should pave or macadamize the above-mentioned •space and keep it in equally good and corresponding condition. In 1892, a new ordinance was' passed authorizing the company to build and operate a road in the City and to use electricity as a motive power upon its tracks then or thereafter authorized afid constructed. It had the above-quoted provision as to keeping the space in repair, and the grant was made ‘subject to such reasonable rules and regulations respecting such streets and highways and operation of cars as the said council may from time to time enact,’ but the ordinance did not repeat the provision as to paving. The Supreme Court held that, the requirement to keep the space in repair was enough, and, by a diminished majority, that the ordinance of 1910 fell within the. reasonable rules and regulations that the company was bound to obey.
If there had been no ordinance of 1910, but the suit
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had been brought simply upon the alleged duty under the charter of 1892, and the City had recovered as it might have upon the present interpretation of that instrument, there would have been no question for this c'ourt.
Fisher
v.
New
Orleans,
Judgment affirmed.
