The following opinion was filed January 11, 1921:
The complaint discloses the fact that the city of Superior has determined to take over, the plant, property, and equipment of the Water Company, and the real question in controversy is whether the compensation to be paid by the city is to be determined in the manner provided in the franchise-ordinance or. pursuant to the provisions of the-public utility laws, secs. 1797m — 1 to 1797m — 109, Stats.
The original franchise was granted by the village of Superior to the Superior Water Works Company, plaintiff’s assignor, by an ordinance passed and adopted October. 15, 1887. In and by the terms of that ordinance it was provided •that “should said village refuse to grant to the said Superior Water Works Company, its successors or assigns, the right to continue and maintain said system of waterworks for another term of thirty years, upon the same terms and conditions as may exist between the said village or city and the said Superior Water Works Company, at the expiration of the first thirty years, in and upon the public grounds and streets of said village, and to supply the said village and the inhabitants thereof with water on reasonable terms, then and in such case the village shall purchase from said Superior Water Works Company, its successors or assigns, said system of waterworks, and the property connected therewith, at a fair valuation as provided in sec. 13.”
After the incorporation of the city of Superior this franchise-ordinance was amended by an ordinance passed 'and adopted by the common council of the city of Superior under date of October 1, 1889, set forth in the statement of facts. This ordinance released and relieved the city of Superior from the duty of procuring the right of way across Minnesota Point in order to enable the Water Company to extend its pipes and mains into Lake Superior, and bound the Water Company to obtain at its own expense an adequate supply of good and wholesome water, from said lake. It also amended sec. 13 so as to provide that, in case of the taking over of the plant, property, and equipment of the Water Company, the city should pay therefor an amount of which the net earnings of said Water Company for the year next preceding the purchase thereof by said city shall be five per centum, to be determined in the manner provided in and by the terms of the amending ordinance.
The effect of this ordinance was to amend the original franchise-ordinance. Thereafter, the franchise of the Water Company was evidenced by -the original franchise-ordinance of the village of Superior, as amended by the ordinance of October 1, 1889. Thereafter, the franchise of the Water Company provided that in case of the purchase by the city of the plant, property, and equipment of the Water Company the city should pay compensation therefor to be determined in the manner provided in the franchise, which was the manner provided for in the amendment.
“When an amendment to a statute is adopted, there are not two separate enactments, the old and the new, but by their union, there is produced one law, namely, the statute as amended.” Black, Interp. of Laws (2d ed.) 574. The amendatory ordinance was merged in and became a part of the original franchise, and the right of the Water Com
It is well settled in this state that an ordinance of this kind constitutes a legislative franchise emanating from the state to the corporation. The common council acts as the agent of the state, and the privileges conferred by its ordinance are as much a legislative franchise as if it had been granted hy an act of the legislature. State ex rel. Att’y Gen. v. Madison St. R. Co. 72 Wis. 612,
We now come to consider the question of the effect of the enactment of the public utility law (secs. 1797m — 1 to 1797m- — 109, Stats.) upon respondent’s franchise. That law was originally enacted by ch. 499 of the Laws of 1907.
Respondent contends that the legislature had no power to arbitrarily deprive it of the franchise conferred upon it by the village and city ordinances heretofore mentioned, and that, not having voluntarily submitted to the provisions of the public utility law, it is not bound thereby. The public utility law has been under consideration by this court a number of times (Manitowoc v. Manitowoc & N. T. Co.
Concededly the power of the state to work this substitution of franchises rests upon the reserved power of the constitution, found in sec. 1, art. XI, which reads as follows:
“Corporations without banking powers or privileges may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act, except for municipal purposes, and in cases where, in the judgment of the legislature, the objects of the corporation cannot be attained under general laws. All general laws or special acts enacted under the provisions of this section may be altered or. repealed by the legislature at any time after their passage.”
Respondent contends that this provision of the constitution has no application to the ordinance constituting its franchise, and that it does not confer power upon the legislature to alter or amend the same. Its contention is that the only general laws or special acts which could be enacted under the provisions of this section are those under which a corporation is formed or created, hence it is only laws for the formation of corporations which may be altered or repealed. Counsel points a distinction between what he calls a corporate franchise, that is, a franchise granting corporate existence and which is not the property of the corporation, and a franchise acquired by a corporation after corporate existence commenced, that it may part with or be deprived of without affecting its corporate existence and which may survive the death of the corporation. As we shall have occasion frequently to refer to these different classes of franchises as we proceed, we shall, for brevity, refer to the former as the primary, and to the latter as the
Counsel for respondent rests his contention that this reserved power is limited to the alteration or repeal of the primary franchise of a corporation upon a consideration and analysis of the literal terms of sec. 1, art. XI. While we are not disposed to disparage or question the legitimacy of counsel’s logic, we must decline to follow him into an inviting field of inquiry. We think the time has long since passed when the consideration of this clause in this respect may be considered an original proposition. This clause of our constitution received consideration at a very early day, and its scope and purpose was declared in the early decisions of this court, ranging from the third to the thirty-fifth Wisconsin Reports. It was considered in two cases in the third Wisconsin (Madison, W. & M. P. Co. v. Reynolds, 287; Pratt v. Brown, 603), but six years after the adoption of the constitution. It was also under consideration in Nazro v. Merchants’ Mut. Ins. Co.
In Madison, W. & M. P. Co. v. Reynolds,
In Pratt v. Brown,
In Nazro v. Merchants' Mut. Ins. Co.
Kenosha, R. & R. I. R. Co. v. Marsh,
In Whiting v. S. & F. du L. R. Co.
In State v. Milwaukee G. L. Co.
In Chapin v. Crusen,
In West Wis. R. Co. v. Trempealeau Co.
“The object and historical origin of the provision in the constitution of this state are matters known to all professional men. They were, through this paramount authority, to retain and secure to the state full power and control over*274 corporate franchises, rights and privileges which it might grant, — a power and control which the state was in a measure deprived of by the federal constitution, as that instrument had been interpreted in the celebrated Dartmouth College Case. With the grant of exemption from taxation was annexed the reservation that such grant might' be altered or revoked by the legislature at any time after its passage. It was a qualification of the grant, and the subsequent exercise of the reserved power cannot be regarded as an act impairing the obligation of contracts.”
In Att’y Gen. v. Railroad Cos.
“And, by force of the constitutional power reserved and of the uniform construction and application of it, the rule in the Dartmouth College Case, as applied to corporations, never had place in this state, never was the law here. The state emancipated itself from the thraldom of that decision in the act of becoming a'state; and corporations since created here have never been above the law of the land.”
The early judges who thus discussed, considered, and applied this clause of our constitution were of a time when the decision of the Dartmouth College Case was still a subject of criticism and resentment. The reserved power was an invention of their generation, and they understood well its purposes. Prompted by the suggestion of Mr. Jus
The supreme court of the United States has been liberal in its construction of similar provisions reserving to the states power to alter or amend corporate charters, as a consideration of the following cases decided by that court
The disposition of the federal supreme court to construe all such reservations to give effect to the evident spirit and purpose thereof is indicated in Railroad Co. v. Georgia,
“No such right was negatived in the charter granted to the plaintiffs in error. Consequently the franchise was held subject to a power in the state to withdraw it, and subject to be changed, modified, or destroyed at the will of its grantor or creator. These provisions of the code became, in substance, a part of the charter. . .•. It is quite too narrow a definition of the word 'franchise/ used in this statute, to*277 hold it as meaning only the right to be a corporation. The word is generic, covering all the rights granted by the legislature. As the greater, power includes every less power which is a part of it, the right to withdraw a franchise must authorize a withdrawal of every and any right or privilege which is a part of the franchise.”
It is apparent that a narrow or literal construction of the reservation provision found in this statute of the state of Georgia would have limited the reserved power to the franchise to be a corporation; but, without hesitation, the court pronounces that “too narrow a definition of the word 'franchise/ ” and very readily construes it to apply to what we here term the secondary franchise of a corporation. In doing so the court simply gave effect to the general understanding concerning the purpose and scope of such reservations, and such is the spirit in which the reserved power of our own constitution was construed by early decisions of this court.
While there has been no general discussion of the nature and scope of the reserved power in the decisions of this court subsequent to Att’y Gen. v. Railroad Cos.
In State ex rel. Cream City R. Co. v. Hilbert,
In Ashland v. Wheeler,
In Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Milwaukee,
“It may be laid down as established beyond reasonable controversy that railroad corporations are subject to all such reasonable regulations as may from time to time be prescribed by legislative authority, pursuant to the police power incident to the sovereignty of the state, and are also subject to the power reserved under the constitution, to alter or amend corporate charters.”
In State v. Railway Cos.
In Manitowoc v. Manitowoc & N. T. Co.
The only suggestion coming from any member of this court, from the beginning of state government down to the present time, that the reserved power does not extend to the secondary franchises of a corporation, is found in an independent opinion, in the nature of an erratum, filed by Mr. Justice Marshall in the case of Calumet S. Co. v. Chilton,
In State ex rel. Att'y Gen. v. Portage City W. Co.
In Pittsburg T. Laboratory v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co.
The question presented in the Linden Land Company Case, supra, was this: An ordinance of the city of Milwaukee granted to a street railway company the right to lay its tracks upon certain streets in the city of Milwaukee. The validity of this ordinance was challenged because it granted corporate powers or privileges which, as it was claimed, could be granted only by general law, by reason of sec. 31, art. IV, of the state constitution prohibiting the legislature from enacting any special or private laws for granting corporate powers or privileges except to cities, and sec. 32,
Unless it be kept in mind that secs. 31 and 32 of art. IV of the constitution were added by amendment adopted in 1871, some confusion is likely to arise in reading the provision of sec. 31 in conjunction with sec. 1, art. XI, of the constitution. Sec. 31 was not in the constitution as originally adopted. Sec. 1, art. XI, was the only provision therein relating to the formation of corporations without banking, powers. It provided that “corporations without banking powers or privileges may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act, except for municipal purposes, and in cases where, in the judgment of the legislature, the objects of the corporation cannot be attained under general laws. All general laws or special acts enacted under the provisions of this section may be altered or repealed by the legislature at any time after their passage.”
The query naturally arises, What was the effect of the adoption of sec. 31 of art. IV upon the power reserved in sec. 1 of Art. XI? That question arose in Att'y Gen. v. Railroad Cos.
“We shall not stop to dwell here on the importance of the reserved power. We may do that later, in a more appro*282 priate connection. We shall only assume here that it is a power of great significance and gravity; of such moment, that it is impossible to believe that the legislature and the people intended to surrender or impair, it; very hard to believe that they suffered themselves to surrender or impair it, by implication, in an amendment designed for quite a different purpose, quite consistent with the reserved power.”
And there the phrase in the amendment “to grant corporate powers and privileges” was held to mean “in prin-cipio donationis, and equivalent to the phrase ‘to grant corporate charters.’ This is implied not only by the word ‘grant,’ but also by the word ‘corporate.’ A franchise is not essentially corporate; and it is not the grant of franchise which is prohibited, but of corporate franchise; that is, as we understand it, franchise by act of incorporation.” When these excerpts from Att’y Gen. v. Railroad Cos. are read in connection with the further extended discussion of the reserved power therein contained, to which we have heretofore adverted, we think there can be no doubt that it was there held that the amendment of 1871 had no effect whatever upon the reserved power, and that its original force and vigor remained unimpaired. The effect of the amendment as well as its purpose was to require the formation of corporations under general laws. Other franchises, such as the right to build dams, construct reservoirs, use public streets, etc., might thereafter as before be bestowed upon them by special act. This was the holding in the Linden Land Company Case, supra (
In re Southern Wis. P. Co.
The case of La Crosse v. La Crosse G & E. Co. 145 Wis.
“The entirety was a state grant and so under legislative control like any other corporate state franchise.”
And further:
“Whether mere contractual features, as between the state or any instrumentality used by it in conferring special privilege, and its grantee, inhering in the privilege itself, the franchise not being corporate, are within the reserved power to alter, amend, or repeal under sec. 1, art. XI, of the constitution, need not be discussed for the reason stated. What the plaintiff did, if anything of a contractual nature, since it appertained to the franchise itself, the state did. What the two real parties to the transaction mutually did, obviously, they could mutually undo.”
And here is the language upon which counsel for respondent so strongly relies:
“Though we thus leave a subject treated in the briefs of counsel, with passing notice, it is not to be taken as doubting the state of the law on the question. One needs, in respect to it, to distinguish between corporate franchises; in the sense of the right to corporate existence, and corporate franchises, as the term is often, not very accurately used; in the sense of, a privilege owned by a corporation in its proprietary capacity; a thing granted which when accepted is .property, — may be acquired or parted with as any other property might, barring special legislative restrictions.*284 (Citing.) The distinction has not always been appreciated (citing) ; and remarks with reference thereto in cases cited above and comparison therewith of Ashland v. Wheeler,88 Wis. 607 ,60 N. W. 818 , and the language of and precise subject dealt with in sec. 1, art. XI, of the constitution.”
Whatever was in the mind of the learned Justice who wrote that opinion with reference to the reserved power of the constitution, we would not be justified in seizing upon these cursory and passing remarks as an excuse for overturning or modifying the scope and extent of the reserved power as settled by the long and uniform course of the prior decisions of this court heretofore cited in this opinion.
As stated in Att’y Gen. v. Railroad Cos., supra, we regard this power as one of great significance and gravity. We believe that when it was included in the constitution it was placed there for. the purpose of reserving to the people of this state full power and control over corporations of its creation; that the purpose to be accomplished thereby was to reserve to- the state those sovereign rights of which the states had been shorn by the decision in the Dartmouth College Case, and that any construction which limits the scope of this power to a narrower field amounts to a judicial deprivation of sovereign rights which the people believed they had preserved to themselves by the terms of sec. 1, art. XI, of the constitution.
This construction implies no denial of vested or property rights in valuable privileges granted to a corporation, essentially connected with its franchise and necessaiy to its business, which conduced to an acceptance of its charter and an organization under it. Such privileges are property. But in this state they are not unincumbered property. They are incumbered with the right of the state to alter or repeal them. The title of the grantee is necessarily a qualified title, because that is the only title the state can give. The constitutional provision under consideration deprives the legislature-
The public utility law was enacted as a remedy for a well-recognized public evil. The relations existing between the respective municipalities and their public utilities were most unsatisfactory. The impotency of the municipalities to deal with them so as to secure adequate and satisfactory service for reasonable charges was abundantly demonstrated. The officers of the municipality lacked the training in the technique of the public utility business which was essential either to protect the interests of the citizens or deal justly with the public utility company. Whether the relations between the municipality and the utility company were that of open war or supine acquiescence on the part of the city to the demands of the company, mattered little to the consumer. Unreasonable demands made by the city as a result of a lack of information concerning the public utility business were as fruitless of just results as meek submission to the ultimatums of the utility.' The situation resulted neither, in justice to the consumer nor stable business conditions to the utility.
So it was determined to take from the municipalities, which were not equipped to fix standards of service which
Conceding that the public interest required it, it was competent for the legislature to repeal the franchises of all public utility corporations. Greenwood v. Freight Co. 105
A new franchise was therefore granted to the defendant in lieu of its original franchise by the enactment of ch. 596, Laws 1911. Thereafter its franchise was that of the indeterminate permit, and it was subject to the provisions of the public utility law. This also was its franchise on October 1, 1917, when it is claimed its original franchise expired. The public utility law had superseded everything of a franchise natufe embodied in the original ordinance granted to it by the village of Superior and the subsequent and succeeding amendments thereto.
We now come to the very crux of this controversy. What is the effect of that law upon the provision found in the original franchise-ordinance providing that “at the expiration of the said thirty years, should the said village refuse to grant to the said Superior Water Works Company, its successors or assigns, the right to continue and maintain said system of waterworks for another term of thirty }>-ears, upon the same terms and conditions as may exist between the said village or city cmd the said Superior Water Works Company at the expiration of the first thirty years, . . . then and in such case, the village shall purchase from said Superior Water Works Company, . . . said system of waterworks,- and the property connected therewith, at a fair valuation, as provided in sec. 13”?
Furthermore, the very law which substituted the indeterminate permit for the original franchise of the Water Company authorized the city of Superior to acquire the property thereof by eminent domain, and in thus proceeding to acquire it the city is exercising the sovereignty of the state, which was not and could not be bartered away by a municipal ordinance, or in any other manner. It is a familiar rule that all property is held subject to the right of the state to acquire it for public purposes whenever it may see fit to do so. The power of eminent domain is a sovereign power, whether exercised by the state or by an agency to whom it may be delegated. The property of the Water Company was at all times subject to this-power. The state could take it in pursuance of that power at any time, and likewise it- could authorize the city so to take it, and the exercise of the power was in no manner frustrated by the provisions found in the franchise-ordinance or in any of its amendments. The proceedings sought to be enjoined are-in effect proceedings by the state to appropriate the property for just compensation, and its right and power so to do has not and cannot be suspended.
The law under which the city is proceeding to acquire the plant assures the Water Company adequate compensation for its property. We must assume that that is all that the Water Company will secure for-its property if valued according to the provisions of the so-called contract. It is not alleged in the complaint that the method of valuation provided for by the public utility law will not afford the Water Company just compensation for its property, nor is it alleged that the valuation provided for in the ordinance will afford it more than just compensation. It is not alleged that it will be in any manner damaged if its property be valued in the way provided by the public utility law rather
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the complaint states no cause of action and the demurrer thereto should have been sustained.
We may say that we have not been hindered in arriving at our conclusion by that line of cases in the federal supreme court such as Detroit v. Detroit Citizens’ St. R. Co.
In concluding this opinion it is proper to say that had a different conclusion been reached upon the questions discussed it would have been necessary to consider whether the alleged contract could have been enforced against the city, in view of the fact that the state had withdrawn from the city the power to grant the franchise. It is a general rule of law that performance of contracts is excused when rendered impossible by act of law. 18 Mich. Law Review, 602, and cases there cited. The legislature had rendered it impossible for the city to renew the franchise for a term of thirty years or for any other term. Having deprived it of the power to grant the franchise, the question of whether its obligation to buy the plant, which obligation is dependent upon its failure to grant the franchise, could be enforced, would require serious consideration. This case is very analogous to Macon & B. R. Co. v. Gibson, 85
By the Court. — Order reversed, and cause remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.
The respondent moved for a rehearing.
In support of the motion there was a brief by Charles R. Fridley of Superior and FI. L. Butler of Madison, counsel for the Water Company. '
In opposition thereto there was a brief by T. L. McIntosh, attorney, and Louis Hanitch, of counsel, both of Superior.
On March 11, 1921,' an order was entered granting a rehearing upon the question set forth in the opinion filed May 31, 1921.
For. the appellants there was a brief by T. L. McIntosh, city attorney, and'Hanitch, Hartley & McPherson of Superior, attorneys, and oral argument by Mr. Louis Hanitch and Mr. McIntosh.
Charles R. Fridley of Superior and H. L. Butler of Madison, counsel for. the respondent Water Company.
The following opinion was filed May 31, 1921:
Upon motion for rehearing, attention was called to the fact that the opinion of the court did not deal with the question whether the city could, by proceedings in the nature of condemnation provided for by the public utility law, acquire that part of the Water Company’s property located in the state of Minnesota, which issue was tendered by the pleadings though not dwelt upon in the briefs or the oral argument. Apprehension was expressed on the part of the respondent Water Company that the mandate of this court directing that the demurrer to the complaint be sustained amounted to res adjudicata upon this question, even though not dealt with in the opinion. The question thus raised is an important one, which would no doubt eventually call for the decision of this court; and
“Upon any proceedings heretofore taken, or upon any proceedings authorized by law, can the city acquire, under the provisions of the public utility law, or under condemnation proceedings, or in any proceedings in the nature thereof, or in any manner, title to that portion of the property of the respondent Water Company located in the state of Minnesota?”
In response to that question the Water Company contends that the proceedings under which the city is attempting to secure title to the property of the Water Company are essentially proceedings in condemnation; that the city is not confining its efforts in such behalf to the taking of so much of the plant of the Water Company as is physically located in the state of Wisconsin, but that they extend to and include as well that portion of the plant physically located in the state of Minnesota; that the jurisdiction of this state to condemn property and thereby work a transition of title from -the Water Company to the city does not extend to property located in the state of Minnesota, and that the city should be enjoined from any further efforts to secure title to that part of the plant having its physical location in the state of Minnesota, because of such lack of jurisdiction or power on the part of this state.
In the first place, it may as well be conceded that the proceedings under which the city is attempting to acquire title to the waterworks plant are condemnation proceedings. Although the public utility law (sec. 1797m — 78, Stats.)
And right here perhaps a word descriptive of the plant is appropriate, if not necessary, to a thorough understanding of what follows. The city of Superior is located at the mouth of the St. Louis river, at which place the river widens out and has more the appearance and characteristics of a bay than a river. This bay is commonly known as the Bay of Superior and is about a mile in width. The opposite shore of this bay is formed by a narrow strip of land called Minnesota Point, and is a part of the state of Minnesota. In order to secure a supply of pure water from Lake Superior, the Water Company, pursuant to an agreement referred to in the main opinion, extended a main across the Bay of Superior and across Minnesota Point, which is perhaps from forty to sixty.rods in width, and on out into the lake a sufficient distance to enable it to secure pure and wholesome water. It is that portion of this intake pipe, so called, which extends beyond the boundary line between Wisconsin and Minnesota and across Minnesota Point into Lake Superior that is referred to as that portion of the plant lying in the state of Minnesota.
From this it will be seen that while this intake pipe is a very essential, it is, comparatively speaking, a small, proportion of the entire' property of the Water Company. It is, however, an integral part of the plant and inseparable therefrom; that is to say, its existence was deemed essential
The Water Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Wisconsin. It has a franchise to operate a waterworks plant in the city of Superior derived from the state of Wisconsin. Every part and parcel of the property sought to be acquired by the city in the proceedings complained of is property devoted by the Water Company to the fulfilment of the duties laid upon it by its franchise. It is settled in this state that the franchise of a public utility corporation and the property devoted by it to the performance of the duties imposed upon it by the franchise constitute an entirety, and the propertjr, neither in its entirety nor in parcels, can be separated from the franchise, and that as the franchise is deemed the principal thing and is an incorporeal hereditament, the entire property assumes the character of personalty. Yellow River Imp. Co. v. Wood Co.
“This court has held that the franchise is the principal, the visible things the minor, part of an organized business*297 machine, in a corporate organization, though the franchise is seen only through the physical part and its use; that the intangible part is personal property and draws to it, and so impresses the physical thing with its own character as to give to the whole the character of personalty.”
It thus will be seen that the water plant is an entirety inseparable .and indivisible. Its principal location is in this state. It is owned by a corporation chartered in this state. It is devoted to a public use in this state, and to enable the corporation to discharge the duties assumed by it when it accepted its franchise granted by this state. It is assessed for purposes of taxation as an entirety under the laws of this state. Its value*as an entirety is taken as a basis for rate-making purposes under, the law of this state. It is difficult to conceive of property more clearly and definitely 'subjected to the jurisdiction of this state. Although a portion of it may be physically located beyond the borders of this state, nevertheless, it being deemed personal property, it has a legal situs in this state; and this is as true of any real estate or interest therein that the company may own to enable it to lay its pipe across Minnesota Point as it is with reference to any other part of the plant.
This state, therefore, has ample jurisdiction to deal with the entire property as property within this state and to take the title from the Water Company pursuant to its power of eminent domain. Should there be any difficulty in vesting the city with title to real estate on Minnesota Point, a court of equity has ample power to compel a conveyance on the part of the Water Company, which it would not hestitate to exercise in order to effectuate legislation enabling municipalities to acquire title to the public utilities rendering public service to and within such municipalities. It is well settled in this country that a court of one state may decree the foreclosure of a mortgage on property lying, partly within the state of its jurisdiction and partly in another
This view makes it unnecessary to consider many other objections made to the proceedings in the brief of the appellant Water Company.
It is contended that the proceeding is barred by numerous provisions of the federal constitution, such as art. I, sec. 10, prohibiting any state from passing laws impairing the obligations of contract, and the Fourteenth amendment, prohibiting a state from denying to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the law, and that it
The question of the power of the city to acquire and own property beyond the state as well as city boundaries is considered in the briefs, though such power is not seriously doubted. In fact the Water Company not only concedes but successfully contends that the city has such power. We think there can be no doubt of it. The city is authorized not only by its charter but by the public utility law to acquire, own, and operate a waterworks plant. If the only available or practicable supply of pure and wholesome water for a boundary-line city lies across the state boundary, the power granted generally to municipalities of this state to own and operate waterworks plants would be denied to our boundary-line cities if they could not extend pipes and mains across the boundary line to such available water supply. That a city may acquire and own property, including real estate, beyond its borders to enable it to perform its municipal functions or powers expressly conferred upon it, was settled in this state by the case of Schneider v. Menasha,
Upon this consideration of the further issue raised upon the motion for a rehearing we arrive at the conclusion that the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained, and the mandate entered herein is correct.
