Under ,an ordinance of the City of Lexington, Kentucky, adopted in January, 1927, the Central Kentucky Natural Gas Company purchased a franchise for the distribution and sale of gas to consumers in that city. The contract with the city proyided that the company should promulgate the rates which it proposed to charge and that, if the city deemed them to be excessive, proceedings should be instituted before the Railroad Commission of the State in order to have just and reasonable rates prescribed-. It was also stipulated that pending the proceedings before the commission, and any subsequent proceedings in court, the company should have the right to charge specified temporary rates, provided that a certain- amount collected under such rates should be impounded pending the final fixation of rates, whereupon *539 the sums impounded, with interest accumulations, should be distributed under the order of the commission, or of the court, to the company or to its several customers as the final determination should direct.
■ The company promulgated a schedule of rates which the city assailed as excessive and ,a portion of the amounts collected was impounded. In 1929, the Commission made an order prescribing rates and this order was attacked by the company in a suit in the District Court of the United States. By an interlocutory injunction that court enjoined further proceedings under the order and appointed as receiver the custodian of the fund which had been- impounded by the commission, directing him to hold any fund required by the franchise contract to be impounded sübsequently. On final hearing, the court held the prescribed rate to be confiscatory, but finding that a certain higher rate would be reasonable, directed that a permanent injunction should issue restraining the imposition of the prescribed rate, upon condition that the company file its consent that the fund impounded from the rate collected in excess of that deemed by the court to be reasonable should be distributed.- 'As the company declined so -to consent, a final decree was entered denying a permanent injunction and directing the distribution of the impounded fund. :
This .Court reversed the decree, holding that on the basis of the conclusion of the District Court that the rate prescribed by the commission was confiscatory, that court should have granted appropriate relief without condition, leaving the commission free to exercise its authority to- fix a reasonable rate, and the court should have relinquished its control over the impounded fund by directing the receiver to retain it in his capacity as custodian appointed by the commission.
Central Kentucky Natural Gas Co.
v.
Railroad Commission,
The present suit was then brought by the company against the city in the circuit court of the State for a declaration of the rights of the company and for a determination of the validity of Resolution No. 74 and Ordinance No. 271. Another suit was filed by J. M. Wright (appellant .here) in the state court, setting up the adoption of the original franchise ordinance in 1927 and its acceptance by the.city, and that he was a consumer of gas, and seeking a mandatory injunction directing the company to furnish gas to him at a specified rate until the procéedings before the Railroad Commission had been finally determined. The two cases were consolidated. Later, J. M. Wright and F. A. Forsythe (the other appellant here) were permitted to file an intervening petition in the company’s suit against the city, setting forth their interest as consumers. The circuit court held Resolution No. 74 invalid in its entirety, because (1) it undertook to'distribute, without the approval of the court, the fund in which it held the consumers had a vested right, (2) one'S. B. Featherstone, who had been a party plaintiff on behalf of himself and all other consumers in earlier proceedings in the state court and before the Railroad Commission, ■ had not agreed to the resolution, and (3) *541 the city was without power to agree upon a distribution of the impounded fund and could only agree on a rate, after .which the duty would devolve upon the court and the commission to distribute the fund in accordance with the rate fixed.
That decision was reversed by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky,
The case comes here on appeal. Appellants, consumers of gas, contend that the obligations of the original franchise contract have been impaired by the attempted compromise in violation of the contract clause of the Federal Constitution and that appellants have been deprived of vested property rights in the impounded fund without' due process of law contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment. On examining the franchise contract and the proceedings for the impounding of amounts collected from consumers
(Appleby
v.
New York City,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
