161 P. 391 | Or. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
The decree appealed from is predicated upon the argument that the Public Service Commission was without power to permit the telephone company to charge urban customers more than the rates named in the franchise, which the city had granted prior to the creation of the Public Service Commission. Before proceeding with the discussion, attention will be called to some of the provisions of the legislation which was designed to clothe the commission with authority to fix the rates to be charged for telephone service. An act to define public utilities and to provide for rate regulation was passed by the legislative assembly in
“Every municipality shall have power — (1) To determine by contract, ordinance or otherwise the quality and character of each kind of product or service to be furnished or rendered by any public utility furnishing any product or service within said municipality and all other terms and conditions not inconsistent with the act upon which such public utility may be permitted to occupy the streets, highways or other public property within such municipality and such contract, ordinance or other determination of such municipality shall be in force and prima facie reasonable. Upon complaint made by such public utility or by any qualified complainant as provided in Section 41, the commission shall set a hearing as provided in Section 42 and if it shall find such contract, ordinance or other determination to be unreasonable, such contract, ordinance or other determination shall be void. Provided, however, that no ordinance or other municipal regulation shall be reviewed by the commission under the provisions of this section which was prior to such review enacted by the initiative or which was prior to such review referred to and approved by the people of said municipality or while a referendum thereon is pending.”
In brief, the facts present a situation where the legal voters of the city amended their municipal charter and conferred upon the common council authority to grant franchises in the streets for public benefits; the council exercised this chartered power, and granted a franchise to a telephone company, the rates to be charged to be fixed by the terms of the franchise; subsequently
The ultimate question for decision is whether the Public Service Commission was lawfully empowered to specify rates different from those fixed by the terms of the franchise. Throughout the discussion it must be borne in mind that the state, acting through the Public Service Commission, is a party to this suit, and consequently judicial precedents, arising out of controversies between none but the immediate parties to a franchise, are not controlling here. Moreover, the present juncture does not call for a decision of the relative rights of the grantor and grantee of a franchise as between themselves. Furthermore, the very purpose of this litigation is to determine whether the state has in fact empowered Woodburn to fix a schedule of rates which the state could not afterward change, and hence we must also distinguish all those judicial utterances which followed a finding that the state had actually conferred upon a city the power unalterably to fix the rates to be charged by the grantee of a franchise.
“The state’s power to regulate by compulsion the charges of public service corporations is one of such vast and increasing importance to the public that the courts will not attribute to the state the intention to part with it or to delegate it unless the intention is clearly and unmistakably expressed.”
Unless the right to exercise the police power of regulating rates is referable to an unmistakable grant, the prices specified in the franchise are not exempted from interference by the legislative assembly. The city is relying upon Article XI, Section 2, of the state Con
“Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by the legislative assembly by special laws. The legislative assembly shall not enact, amend, or repeal any charter or act of incorporation for any municipality, city, or town. The legal voters of every city and town are hereby granted power to enact and amend their municipal charter, subject to the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon. * * ”
Much of the printed brief submitted for the Public Service Commission is devoted to an argument that the legislative assembly is not prohibited from enacting any general law, though it has the effect of amending city charters. The instant controversy, however, does not make it necessary to determine whether the legislative assembly is prohibited from passing general, as well as special, laws which affect city charters; and hence, waiving the question and without attempting to foreclose debate, it will be assumed that this investigation is governed by the prevailing opinion in Kalich v. Knapp, 73 Or. 558 (142 Pac. 594, 145 Pac. 22, Ann. Cas. 1916E, 1051), where a majority of the court ruled that the legislative assembly is prohibited by Article XI, Section 2, of the state Constitution from amending city charters by special or by general laws.
In Coleman v. La Grande, 73 Or. 521, 525 (144 Pac. 468, 470), this court ruled that:
“By granting and reserving to the people of municipalities the power to enact and amend their charters and adopt local or special laws, the state has not surrendered her sovereignty to the municipalities. Within their boundaries cities are clothed with power to regulate matters purely local. However, a city is not constituted as a sovereignty as regards all matters of legislation, but is still to a certain extent a mere agency of the state of which it is a part. Beyond such municipal boundaries and in matters of general concern not pertaining solely to local municipal affairs, cities are amenable to the general laws of the state, which do not infringe upon the right of cities to local self-government. This is so whether such laws are enacted by the legislature or by the people of the state at large.”
“The general powers of a municipality or of any other political subdivision of the state are not sufficient”: Home Telephone Co. v. Los Angeles, 211 U. S. 265 (53 L. Ed. 176, 29 Sup. Ct. Rep. 50); Milwaukee Elec. Ry. v. Wisconsin R. R. Com., 238 U. S. 174 (59 L. Ed. 1254, 35 Sup. Ct. Rep. 820).
The power to regulate rates does not appertain to-the government of a city; it is not municipal in character; nor is it even an incident to a grant of authority to enact or amend a charter for a city or town: State ex rel. Webster v. Superior Court, 67 Wash. 37 (120 Pac. 861, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 78, L. R. A. 1915C, 287). The language appearing in State ex rel. Garner v. Missouri & K. Telephone Co., 189 Mo. 83 (88 S. W. 41), is peculiarly applicable here, and for that reason we quote-extensively from the reported opinion:
“Until the adoption of our Constitution in 1875 all cities in the state derived their charter powers from the General Assembly, and therefore whatever was contained in a city charter had the full force of a legislative enactment. But under that Constitution cities-of certain descriptions were authorized to frame their own charters. A charter, framed under that clause of the Constitution within the limits therein contemplated has a force and effect equal to one granted by an act of the legislature. But it is not every power that may be essayed to be conferred on the city by*127 such a charter that is of the same force and effect as if it were conferred by an act of the General Assembly, because the Constitution does not confer on the city the right * * to assume all the powers that the state may exercise within the city limits, but only powers incident to its municipality, yet the legislature may, if it should see fit, confer on the city powers not necessary or incident to the city government. There are-governmental powers, the just exercise of which is essential to the happiness and well-being of the people of a particular city, yet which are not of a character essentially appertaining to the city government. Such powers the state may reserve to be exercised by itself, or it may delegate them to the city, but until so delegated they are reserved. The words in the Constitution, ‘may frame a charter for its own government, ’ mean may frame a charter for the government of itself as a city, including all that is necessary or incident to the government of the municipality, but not all the power that the state has for the protection of the rights and regulation of the duties of the inhabitants in the city, as between themselves. # * The regulation of prices to be charged by a corporation intrusted with a franchise of a public utility character is within the sovereign power of the state that grants the franchise or that suffers it to be exercised within its borders, and that power may be, with wisdom and propriety, conferred on a municipal corporation, but it is not a power appertaining to the government of the city, and does not follow as an incident to a grant, of power to frame a charter for a city government”
The power to fix rates by compulsion as distinguished from the power to fix rates by agreement is no.t granted to cities or towns, nor is the right of the legislative -assembly to legislate upon that subject ■curbed, by Article XI, Section 2, of the state Constitution because in its essence it is neither a municipal power nor an incident to a pure municipal power, and
The city has limited the inquiry to the question of whether the commission possessed the necessary power to change rates, and hence we are not now concerned with the amount or reasonableness of the rates. Our conclusion is that the Public Service Commission, as the representative of the state, had lawful authority to change the telephone rates.
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed and the suit is dismissed. Bevebsed. Sun Dismissed.