270 Mo. 193 | Mo. | 1917
Lead Opinion
— This is a proceeding by mandamus which comes to us on the writ of error of relator who was cast below, to compel defendants, who are defendants in error here, to audit and pay a certain account alleged to be due plaintiff in error for water delivered to State Hospital No. 2, of which defendants in error compose the board of managers.
The facts are few and simple. Those upon which the case turns, run thus: Relator, St. Joseph Water Company, is a public service corporation, organized under the laws of the State of Missouri. In the year 1900 an ordinance was passed, ratified by an election and accepted by said St. Joseph Water Company (hereinafter for brevity called relator), whereby the latter agreed to furnish water for a term of twenty years to the city of St. Joseph and to those of the inhabitants thereof who use water in specified large quantities, at the rate of six cents per'thousand gallons. (Certain more definite details of this franchise contract will be hereafter set forth). In the year 1905 relator entered into a contract with said hospital, of which, as stated, respondents composed the board of managers, wherein it was agreed that connections should be made with the mains of the hospital by a water main of relator and water furnished to the hospital for a term expiring December 31, 1915, at the price of ten cents per thousand gallons. More certain and definite details of this contract, which was by relator in all things performed, will be hereafter specifically set out. At the time of the making of the contract between relator and the hospital, the grounds and buildings of the latter were situated outside of and about one mile from the city limits of the city of St. Joseph. In 1909, four years after the making of the contract by relator with the said hospital to furnish the
Upon relator’s filing in the circuit court of Buchanan County its petition aptly setting forth all of the above facts and more, an alternative writ of mandamus was issued, which likewise set forth all of said facts aptly. ■To this alternative writ defendants demurred, which demurrer, being by the court and the parties treated as a motion .to quash the writ, was sustained, and plaintiff sued oat its writ of error, and the case is now here for ruling upon the sole question of the correctness of the action of the court nisi in sustaining said demurrer.
Under the terms of the franchise contract made between relator and the city of St. Joseph, which is a city of the second class, it was agreed that relator shall maintain five hundred fire hydrants in said city, for which the city agreed to pay an annual rental of $40 each; that relator shall maintain twenty-six public drinking fountains, for which the city shall annually pay the re
The private contract above referred to and entered into between relator and the predecessors of defendants as members of the board of managers of said hospital, provided in pertinent substance that a six-inch main should be laid from the then end of relator’s water mains on Brady Street, for a certain described distance, and that thereafter an eight- or ten-inch main should be laid to connect with the six-inch main on the grounds of the hospital; that the hospital should do all excavating and refilling of the trenches necessitated, while relator was to furnish all material and labor in laying said main; that upon the grounds of said hospital a six-inch meter should b.e furnished and set, which meter should have by-passes and gate-valves for the purpose of permitting the passing by of water free without measuring same through said meter, 'and inferably for fire protection purposes in said hospital. Relator also agreed to extend its mains into the hospital grounds and to erect thereon between five and ten fire hydrants, according- as the hospital necessities might eventually require, and to lay in said hospital grounds, if necessary, three thousand feet of pipe.
It is averred in the petition and in the alternative writ that all of these things were done; that relator expended in the extension of its mains the distance of a mile, which was necessary, and in constructing its branch line. and mains and in putting in the hydrants on the grounds of said hospital, the sum of more than $12,000; that in said extension of relator’s mains relator was compelled to and did build a branch main, which it is
It is further alleged that in the ordinance which was approved on'the 6th day of July, 1909, by which the limits of the said city were extended so as to include the grounds and buildings of said hospital, no provision was made for regulating the rates or the supply of water to said hospital; nor has any such provision so regulating such water supply, or the rates to be charged said hospital tbei'efor, ever been made by any ordinance, or in any other manner, nor has any way been provided for compensation to relator for any loss or impairment of its, contract obligation aforesaid, with said hospital.
It is contended by relator that the effect of the ordinance of the city of St. Joseph which extended the city .limits so as to include the grounds and buildings of said hospital with which relator had a ten-year private contract, in the light of the construction placed on said ordinance, when same is read in connection with the provisions of the ordinance granting relator a franchise, is to impair and abrogate said contract between relator and said hospital, which said abrogation is contrary to and in violation of both article 5 and section 1 of article 14 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. Wherefore, relator prayed for the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandamus, and an alternative writ 'having issued as stated, defendants demurred thereto, which demurrer being treated by the court nisi and the parties hereto as a motion to quash the alternative writ, was sustained, and the case is before us on appeal to contest the correctness of the ruling of the lower court in said behalf. The question agreed to be in issue as well as such other facts as may serve to illuminate that question, will be set forth in requisite detail in our opinion.
The question at issue is plain and concise, and upon the facts conceded can be fully ruled. That it is a nice and most" difficult one is in no way attributable to the form in which it is presented. It would have been as nice a one' if it had come up in an action for breach of contract, or indebitatus assumpsit, so we will not of our volition debate a question not mooted, but take the case as we find it; since the applicability of the remedy chosen, if the law upon the facts otherwise allow, is not. questioned.
Approaching this question with full knowledge that the case of State ex rel. St. Joseph Waterworks Co. v. Geiger, 246 Mo. 74, held otherwise, we are yet constrained to disagree from the views taken by this Court in Banc in that case, and to hold that such a contract is not abrogated- The holding in the Geiger case was largely bottomed upon a quotation from the excellent work on corporations of the late Judge Thompson, wherein but a part of what the learned writer there’said is quoted. Italicising for emphasis and distinction what is omitted from this writer, we quote in full:
“Until the Legislature or other body having the right to prescribe the rates to be charged by corporations, whose business is affected with a public interest, has exercised this power, the rates are the subject of contract between the corporation and its patrons. And this is the case where the Constitution makes it the duty of the Legislature to prescribe reasonable maximum rates, but the Legislature has 'failed to do • so. Since, however, the franchise is taken subject to regulation by the State in the exercise of its police power, the conclu*203 sion seems a sound one that the corporation cannot enter into a binding contract with a patron extending beyond the time when the Legislature or municipal council duly empowered thereto may fix the rates. It is plain that a public-service corporation able to forestall legislative action by contract for a limited time could do so for so long a time as to render futile any legislative control. It has been held, however, in a case where a water company’s franchise fixed the rates for service, omd an ordinance conferred on the company the privilege of laying mains in additions outside the city limits, that independent contracts to furnish water to persons in these outside districts at higher rates were neither abrogated nor affected by the subsequent incorporation of these districts into the city proper.” [3 Thompson on Corp. (2 Ed.), sec. 2953.]
We find no manner of fault with this excerpt, but merely content ourselves by saying that the portion of it quoted in the Geiger case does not apply in our opinion to the facts in the instant case, and' by undertaking to show with the requisite quantum of deference, that it did not apply in that case. With the additional portion italicised by us and now for the first time in this behalf quoted, we of course find no fault, for it states, we submit, the applicable' rule concisely, clearly, plainly.
We concede as a premise, that a city of the second class, such as St. Joseph is, may change and regulate, raise and lower water rates. In fact, when relator was granted, pursuant to a vote, the franchise contract evidenced by the ordinance of the year 1900, the below statute governing cities of the second class was and long had been in force therein, to-wit:
“The common council shall have the exclusive right to erect, maintain and operate waterworks within the limits of the city, and to regulate the same; to prescribe the rates at which water shall be charged to the inhabitants of such city when taken from said works, and acquire, by purchase, donation or condemnation, suitable grounds within or without the city, upon which to erect waterworks, and the right of way to and ’ from said*204 works, also the right of way for laying water pipes within the limits of said city, all,of which shall he done in such manner' as prescribed by ordinance: Provided, that the mayor and council may, in their discretion, grant the right to any person or persons to erect waterworks and lay down pipes for the use of said city and its inhabitants upon such terms as the common council may by ordinance prescribe: Provided, that such right shall not extend for a longer period than twenty years, and shall not be granted nor shall be renewed unless by the consent of a majority of the qualified voters of said city, to be ascertained at an election held for such purpose: Provided, that when water shall be taken by individuals from any waterworks not owned by such city, the mayor and common council shall have the right, by ordinance, from time to time, to fix the rates to be charged therefor.” [Sec. 9081, R. S. 1909.]
It is elemental that relator contracted with the city of St. Joseph with full imputed knowledge of, and subject in all ways to all of the powers and restraints connoted by the above section, and that it is bound thereby just as fully as if these provisions were written at large in its franchise contract with the city of St. Joseph. Having contracted in the light of the city’s power of regulation, no reduction of rates would amount to a violation of the obligation of a contract, so far as this question goes as between the relator and the city, or as between relator and any private consumer residing in such city, and standing as regards relator, in exact equality with other consumers in the city. Illustrating this rule and sharply illuminating the extent of our concession, as to its far-reaching character, we note that in a case of seeming hardship it has even been applied in a criminal prosecution by the highest court in the land. [Armour Packing Co. v. United States, 209 U. S. 56.] In that case plaintiff in error, the Packing Company, being indicted for accepting a rebate from a common carrier, pleaded in defense the binding obligation of a contract for a rate less than the existing published tariff, which contract was made prior to the establishment, under au
Likewise, it was held in the case of Des Moines v. Des Moines Waterworks Co., 95 Iowa, 348, where a public utility company had a contract for water service with both a city and an, adjoining town, that upon the extension of the city limits over the town, the rates of the city applied to the inhabitants of the town and the contract of the utility company with the absorbed town for a different rate was abrogated. The books are fairly full of cases like the above (People ex rel. Chicago v. Chicago Tel. Co., 220 Ill. 238; Peterson v. Tacoma Ry. & Power Co., 60 Wash. 406; Detroit v. Detroit United Ry. Co., 173 Mich. 314), wherein we submit, however, a palpable difference is manifest distinguishing the above class of cases from the instant one. One or two cases have been found wherein a similar rule was made upon a state of facts so different from the facts held in judgment in the Des Moines case, as possibly to call for a different rule, or a different reason for a similar rule. [Indiana Ry. Co. v. Hoffman, 161 Ind. 593, and cases following it and cited in L. R. A. 1916 — A, 1072.]
But be this as may be, we think it manifest that hone of these cases rule the instant one upon the facts up for judgment. We have set them out at so great length merely to emphasize and make plain the differences existing between them and the case at bar. We are not called on to criticise any of these cases; they seem to have been justly ruled, and we may nontent ourselves by distinguishing them. We can even find a fairly conclusive and satisfying reason for the difference in the rules applied. For the above were cases wherein the public utility had franchise contracts with both the annexed and annexing municipality. There' existed there
The holding announced in the case of Rogers Park Water Co. v. Fergus, 178 Ill. 571, laying down the rule governing applicatory .rates in territory theretofore within a town which has been annexed to a city having a different rate, seems to be bottomed on correct principles; to nicely state the rule, and to put it upon reasoning at once logical and fair, and to be in consonance with other rules which affect and modify the situation. The above case held that the annexation of a town to a city, which city possessed statutory power to regulate rates of public utilities, authorized such city to reduce the rates which were being charged in the absorbed town, pursuant to a contract with the latter having thirty years to run, below the rates specified in such contract. In reaching this ruling the Supreme Court of Illinois said that the town ordinance fixing for thirty years the rate to be charged did not constitute an irrevocable contract, and that it was not a property right, but that by it the inhabitants of the town were only bound (in any event, ivhether annexed or not, it might well have added) to pay the rate fixed by the thirty-years ordinance, so long only as such rates, for that they had become unreasonable, might not be reduced by another ordinance. 'This case was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States. [Rogers Park Water Co. v. Fergus, 180 U. S. 624; Freeport Water Co. v. Freeport, 180 U. S. 587.]
But it is clear to us that the instant case does not, upon its .plain facts, fall within the rule so clearly laid down above, nor do the principles announced rule it. On the contrary this ease falls within the principle enunciated in the case of Denver v. Denver Union Water Co., 41 Colo. 77, wherein it was expressly ruled that the annexation to the city of territory outside the city limits did not have the effect of abrogating individual contracts made by the water company before annexation, with private consumers residing in such annexed territory. This view is likewise in full accord with the rule deduced by
There is manifestly not much force in the reasoning — as a basis for the rule of abrogation — that since, in all ordinary matters and things, the ordinances of an annexing town or city are at once and automatically extended to and over the annexed territory, it follows that a rate-ordinance inevitably and without exceptions doth the like. Such a rule, we concede (St. Louis Gaslight Co. v. St. Louis, 46 Mo. 121; 28 Cyc. 215), exists and makes the annexing city’s ordinances to apply automatically and immediately to the annexed territory, save and except in such matters wherein application of the rule would affect existing private contracts by impairing or abrogating them. [Cloverdale Homes v. Cloverdale, 62 So. 712.] An ordinance which would by the construction put on it have the effect to annul an existing private contract (which contract was not when made subject to regulation by the rate-making power) would be void because violative of the provision of the organic law forbidding the passage of a law violating the obligation of contracts. The ordinance itself would not of course be wholly void, but touching -its application to those inimically affected by such a construction it would be void and -non-operative in the particular aspect by which it made nugatory an existing and otherwise valid contract.
The limits-extension ordinances here is the usual one. It is intrinsically proper and seemingly beneficent. It becomes bad as against the organic law only in the event that the construction contended for by defendants is upheld. We have refused to uphold the construction which defendants urge. If we had done so, it is contended that such a construction would have involved a Federal question. As we have felt constrained upon the law and the facts to hold that the contract is valid and binding, the extension ordinance notwithstanding, and that the contract’s obligations are not annulled by the piuvisions of the ordinance, that is merely tantamount
We are not called on to consider whether a private contract for supplying water for ten years to a private consumer residing a mile from the company’s mains, wherein connection was made at an expense to the water company of more than twelve thousand dollars, at ten cents per thousand gallons, was or was not so unreasonable as to have warranted a reduction upon proper and timely application therefor. That is not this case. We are only holding here upon the case made, that the contract was upon'its face valid and binding (State ex rel. v. Geiger, 246 Mo. l. c. 100), and that it was not abrogated by the ordinance extending the city limits of the ■city of St. Joseph so as to include' the State Hospital for the Insane, and that upon the admitted allegations of the alternative writ the demurrer should have been overruled. This view results in overruling the case of State ex rel. v. Geiger, 246 Mo. 74, so far as the same may conflict with our views here.
We find no fault with the rule*, and shall not take time to either re-examine it or- quarrel with it. We may concede it for the purposes of this case, and stop to inquire neither as to its correctness nor as to the universality of its application unmodified. But the difficulty
Let it be reversed and remanded with directions to the learned trial court to overrule the demurrer to the alternative writ and to proceed with the case as counsel therein may be advised they ought to proceed, consistent
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — I dissent from the majority opinion for the following reasons:
The State Hospital No. 2, located at St. Joseph, is a public corporation of the purest character — without an element or ingredient partaking of a private character.
Under these facts, the Water Company must be considered in the light of contracting with a public institution, and one of the State — incorporated, if not for governmental, for administrative purposes — in my opinion, the former. [State ex rel. v. Geiger, 246 Mo. 74, l. c. 97.]
State Hospital No^ 2, being thus a public corporation, contracted as such with the company for water, both knowing the public character of each other, and their mutual rights, duties and obligations, as then existing or as might thereafter be created by law. So independent of the contract, after the extension of the city limits, it became the legal duty of the company to furnsh the hospital with water in the same manner and for the same rates that it furnished it to other persons within the extension. That duty was as obligatory as if a provision to that effect had been inserted into the contract itself. Such is the holding, as I understand it, of the authorities cited in the majority opinion.
Under that view of the case, the water contract, by agreement of parties, terminated and ceased to be binding and operative upon the extension of the city limits, embracing the hospital; otherwise, we must conclude and hold that at the time the contract was entered into, it was the intention of the parties that the State through said board of managers impliedly waived this valuable right to demand and receive water from the company just as other consumers had the right to do. In other words, counsel for the company contend, in effect, that after the extension of the city limits, it was under a two-fold duty, separate and independent of each other, to furnish water to the hospital, namely, a legal duty
In my opinion such a demand of the hospital would be unreasonable, unjust and oppressive, for the reason that it was clearly the intention of the parties that, when the city limits were extended so as to include the Hospital, the company should continue to furnish water through those mains, not in the performance of its contractual duties to the hospital, but in the performance of its legal duty. Otherwise, the board of managers could have the mains removed from the grounds and compel the company to lay others, under its charter obligations, which was never contemplated by either party, but both understood that as soon as the extension should be made the contract was to cease and the legal duty of the company to furnish water was to begin.
For these reasons I dissent.