142 Ga. 841 | Ga. | 1914
The Union Dry Goods Company, a mercantile corporation, doing business in the City of Macon, contracted with the Georgia Public Service Corporation to supply it with electrical power and light upon stipulated rates for the period of five years. At the time of the making of this contract there was neither statute nor rule of the Railroad Commission regulating rates for the service contracted for. After the contract had run for more than a year (both parties complying therewith) the public-service company applied to the Railroad Commission of Georgia (having jurisdiction of electric-light and power companies) for an- increase in rates. The commission published an order declaring that the schedules of rates therein contained, until the further order of the commission, shall be the maximum schedules of rates to be charged by the Georgia Public Service Corporation for the classes of service indicated. The maximum rates of these schedules are in excess of the rates fixed in the contract between the dry goods company and the public-service company. The public-service company demanded payment of the dry goods company at the maximum rate fixed in the commission’s order for service rendered since its promulgation; and the dry goods company seeks to enjoin the public-service company from discontinuing its service unless the difference between the contract rate 'and that demanded, be paid for the service specified in the contract. An interlocutory injunction was refused.
It appears that the commission also had under consideration, at the time the application of the Georgia Public Service Corporation was pending, the petition of the Macon Railway and Light Company for authority to increase lighting and power rates in the City of Macon. Contemporaneously with the filing of the commission’s order fixing a schedule of rates to be charged in the City of Macon, the commission filed an opinion, in which it was stated that the prescribed rates were just and reasonable, and that any outstanding contracts for rates lower than those prescribed must be abrogated, or the public generally put upon the same basis. The commission’s opinion was entitled in the name of the Macon Railway and Light Company; but as it referred to the schedules of rates applicable to
■ Counsel for the plaintiff in error argue that the commission’s order is not to be construed as fixing minimum rates, and hence it should not be given the effect of abrogating, or of giving the Georgia Public Service Corporation the power to abrogate, the lower rates of the contract, which were lawful when the contract was made. The commission was petitioned for an increase of rates for lighting and power service in the City of Macon. It fixed certain rates as reasonable. It is true that such rates were declared to be maximum. Nevertheless the power and light companies were authorized to exact the maximum rate, and the effect is the same as if the commission had simply declared that the rates were reasonable. We think that the scope of the order was to prescribe the rates specified in the schedule as just and reasonable.
We now approach the crux of the whole proposition: viz., the effect of the order prescribing a higher rate as reasonable upon the lower rate.stipulated in the contract. In most of the cases of challenge against the right of a State or of Congress to alter a rate fixed by contract of the parties, the point was raised by a common carrier, in protest against the lowering of the contract rate by the legislature or body to which the power of rate regulation was dele
At common law, if public-service corporations served all at reasonable rates, they performed their obligation; but modern industrial conditions demand the further requirement that they shall
It is urged" that the act of 1907 (Acts 1907, p. 72), conferring power on the Eailroad Commission to fix the rates of electric power and light companies, and the order of the commission, are void as being in opposition to the clauses of the Federal constitution prohibiting the passing of any ex post" facto law, or law impairing
It is further insisted that sections 5 and 6 of the act of 1907, as codified in the Civil Code of 1910, §§ 2662, 2663, are unconstitutional, as being opposed to art. 1, sec. 4, par. 1, of the constitution of the State of Georgia, which declares that “Laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State, and no special law shall be enacted in any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law. No general law affecting private rights shall be varied in any particular case by special legislation, except with the free consent, in writing, of all persons to be affected thereby;” the contention being, that at the time of the passage of the act of 1907 there was a general law (Civil Code (1910), § 2216) defining the common powers of all corporations, and authorizing them to hold property and to do all such acts as are necessary for the purposes of their organization, and a genera] law (Civil Code (1910), § 2234) permitting corporations creating electricity to make contracts, lease power, etc., to any person or corporation; and that sections 5 and 6 of this act would contravene these general sections, for the reason that they would curtail the power of this class of corporations in making contracts and holding , property necessary to 'the purpose of their organization, and would not curtail the like rights and powers, under the general law, of those corporations which are not made subject to the jurisdiction of the Eailroad Commission of Georgia. There is no merit in this contention. The power of the State to establish a railroad commission and to prescribe regulations for persons or corporations engaged in the service of the public is too well established to require demonstration. Such laws are in exercise of the police power, and do not run counter to general legislation pertaining to other matters.
Judgment affirmed.