The Legislature of Kentucky, by an act passed in 1834, created
the Covington and Lexington Turnpike Road Company with authority to
construct a turnpike from Covington to Lexington. One section
prescribed the rates of tolls which might be exacted; another
provided
"that if at the expiration of five years after the said road has
been completed, it shall appear that the annual net dividends for
the two years next preceding of said company, upon the capital
stock expended upon said road and its repairs, shall have exceeded
the average of fourteen percent per annum thereof, then and in that
case, the legislature reserves to itself the right, upon the fact
being made known, to reduce the rates of toll, so that it shall
give that amount of dividends per annum, and no more."
In 1851, two new corporations were created out of the one
created by the act of 1834, one to own and control a part of the
road and the other the remaining part, and each of the new
companies was to possess and retain "all the powers, rights and
capacities in severalty granted by the act of incorporation, and
the amendments thereto, to the original company." In 1865, an act
was passed reducing the tolls to be collected on the Covington and
Lexington turnpike. In 1890, another act was passed largely
reducing still further the tolls which might be exacted.
Held:
(1) That the new corporations created out of the old one did not
acquire the immunity and exemption granted by the act of 1834 to
the original company from legislative control as to the extent of
dividends it might earn.
(2) That the statute of Kentucky passed February 14, 1856,
reserving to the legislature the power to amend or repeal at will
charters granted by it, had no application to charters granted
prior to that date.
(3) That an exemption or immunity from taxation is never
sustained unless it has been given in language clearly and
unmistakably evincing a purpose to grant such immunity or
exemption.
(4) That corporations are persons within the meaning of the
constitutional provisions forbidding the deprivation of property
without due process of law as well as a denial of the equal
protection of the laws.
(5) That the principle is reaffirmed that courts have the power
to inquire whether a body of rates prescribed by a legislature is
unjust and unreasonable and such as to work a practical destruction
of rights
Page 164 U. S. 579
of property, and if found so to be, to restrain its operation,
because such legislation is not due process of law.
(6) That the facts stated make a
prima facie case
invalidating the act of 1890 as depriving the turnpike company of
its property without due process of law. Where a defense arises
under an act of Congress or under the Constitution, the question
whether the plea or answer sufficiently sets forth such a defense
is a question of federal law, the determination of which cannot be
controlled by the judgment of the state court.
(7) That when a question arises whether the legislature has
exceeded its constitutional power in prescribing rates to be
charged by a corporation controlling a public highway, stockholders
are not the only persons whose rights or interests are to be
considered, and if the establishment of new lines of transportation
should cause a diminution in the tolls collected, that is not, in
itself, a sufficient reason why the corporation operating the road
should be allowed to maintain rates that would be unjust to those
who must or do use its property, but that the public cannot
properly be subjected to unreasonable rates in order simply that
stockholders may earn dividends.
(8) That the constitutional provision forbidding a denial of the
equal protection of the laws, in its application to corporations
operating public highways, does not require that all corporations
exacting tolls should be placed upon the same footing as to rates,
but that justice to the public and to stockholders may require in
respect to one road rates different from those prescribed for other
roads, and that rates on one road may be reasonable and just to all
concerned, while the same rates would be exorbitant on another
road.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The General Assembly of Kentucky, by an Act approved May 24,
1890, made it unlawful to demand, charge, collect, or receive tolls
in excess of the rates specified in that act for travel on that
portion of the Covington & Lexington Turnpike Road which was
then maintained.
Page 164 U. S. 580
The company announced its purpose to disregard the provisions of
the act and to charge such tolls as were prescribed by the prior
statutes. Thereupon the appellees living on or near the line of the
turnpike road and accustomed to travel on it daily with animals and
vehicles, brought this suit for an injunction restraining the
appellant from exacting tolls in excess of those fixed by the act
of 1890.
A temporary injunction in accordance with the prayer of the
petition was granted, and the company filed its answer. A demurrer
to the answer was sustained. An amended answer was then tendered by
the defendant, but the court would not allow it to be filed, and by
final order made the injunction perpetual. That judgment was
affirmed by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky. 20 S.W. 1031.
The principal questions are: 1. Whether the act of 1890 impairs
the obligation of any contract that the turnpike company had with
the state touching the matter of tolls. 2. Whether, independently
of any question of contract, the act made such a reduction in tolls
as to amount to a deprivation of the company's property without due
process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States. 3. Whether the act is repugnant
to the clause of the federal Constitution forbidding the denial by
the state to any person within its jurisdiction of the equal
protection of the law.
As these questions were properly raised by the pleadings and
were decided adversely to the company, the jurisdiction of this
Court to review the final judgment of the Court of Appeals of
Kentucky cannot be doubted.
It is necessary to a clear understanding of the issues presented
that reference be made to the enactments preceding the statute of
1890.
The Covington & Lexington Turnpike Road Company was
incorporated by an Act approved February 22, 1834, with authority
to construct and permanently maintain a turnpike road from
Covington, Kentucky, through Williamstown and Georgetown, to
Lexington in that state.
By the nineteenth section of that act, the company was
Page 164 U. S. 581
authorized to collect certain specified tolls. It is contended
that the twenty-sixth section is a part of the defendants' contract
with the state. That section provided:
"That if, at the expiration of five years after the said road
has been completed, it shall appear that the annual net dividends
for the two years next preceding of said company upon the capital
stock expended upon said road and its repairs shall have exceeded
the average of fourteen percent per annum thereof, then and in that
case, the legislature reserves to itself the right, upon the fact's
being made known, to reduce the rates of toll so that it shall give
that amount of dividends per annum, and no more."
Acts of Kentucky 1833, pp. 537, 548.
By an Act approved February 23, 1839, amendatory of the act of
1834, the road then having been constructed from Covington to
Williamstown, it was provided:
"§ 1. That the stockholders is the Covington and Lexington
Turnpike Road Company, residing south of Williamstown, in Grant
County, and anywhere between that place and Georgetown, may elect a
separate board of directors, to consist of the same number as
authorized by the original charter, and the directors chosen by
them shall have the control and shall superintend the construction
of that part of the road to be located and constructed between
Georgetown and Williamstown."
"§. 2. That the stockholders in said road residing north of
Williamstown shall have power also to elect a separate board of
directors, for the purpose of controlling and superintending that
portion of the road extending from Williamstown to Covington, and
each board so chosen shall exercise separate control over its own
portion of the road, but nothing herein shall be construed to
divide and separate the stock in said road, but the same shall
continue joint and common to all the stockholders, after the
completion of said road."
Acts of Kentucky 1838-1839, p. 371. This amendment, it is
admitted, was accepted by the turnpike company.
Subsequently, by the second section of an Act approved March 22,
1851, it was provided:
"§ 2. That so much of the second section of said act to
amend the charter of the Covington and Lexington Turnpike
Page 164 U. S. 582
Road Company [meaning the act of 1839] as declares that the
stock in said road shall continue joint and common to all the
stockholders after the completion of said road is hereby repealed,
and the stockholders whose stock is now under the control and
management of the board of directors having control of the road
north of Williamstown shall be and are hereby constituted a
separate and independent company, under the name and style of the
Covington and Lexington Turnpike Road Company, who shall be and
forever remain separate and independent of that portion of said
company owning the stock in the road now constructed south of
Williamstown, and the stockholders whose stock is now under the
control and management of the board of directors having the control
and construction of the road south of Williamstown shall be and are
hereby constituted a separate and independent company under the
name and style of the Georgetown and Dry Ridge Turnpike Road
Company, who shall be and forever remain separate and independent
of that part of said company owning the stock in the road north of
Williamstown, and that neither of said companies thus formed shall
be held as in anywise responsible for the doings or actions of the
other; but each shall have the exclusive ownership and control of
that portion of road which they have respectively made, or, under
the provisions of this act shall make, and shall have full power
and authority to elect its own president and directors, to declare
its own dividends and pay the same to its own stockholders,
each company possessing and retaining all the powers, rights
and capacities in severalty granted by the act of incorporation,
and the amendments thereto, to the original company, and
subject to all the restrictions to which said company is subject,
not inconsistent with the provisions of this act, and that neither
company shall be in any wise liable for the debts or contracts of
the other now in existence, or which may be hereafter made or
contracted."
Acts of Kentucky 1850-51, p. 479.
It is claimed that the words in this section,
"possessing and retaining all the powers, rights and capacities
in severalty granted by the act of incorporation and the
amendments
Page 164 U. S. 583
thereto, to the original company"
embraced, or carried into the charters of the two corporations
created by this act the immunity or exemption given by the
twenty-sixth section of the above act of 1834 from legislation that
would preclude the company from earning as much as fourteen percent
upon its capital stock.
The separate and independent company created by the last-named
act as the Covington & Lexington Turnpike Road Company is the
defendant in this suit. To it was committed the control of that
portion of the road lying north of Williamstown. The act of 1851
further provided that it should be in force as soon as a majority
of the stockholders of each company assented to its provisions.
Such assent was duly given by the stockholders.
The next statute, in point of time, relating to the Covington
& Lexington Turnpike Road Company was that of December 11,
1865, amending the charter of that company. That act provided that
the company might charge tolls on their road as prescribed in that
act, "instead of the rates now allowed by law." Private Acts of
Kentucky 1865, p. 2. The rates so prescribed were, it is alleged,
different from and lower than those prescribed by the original
charter of 1834.
The petition alleged that the defendant submitted to the
regulation of its tolls, as indicated by the act of 1865, "and
consented to and accepted said act, and has ever since acted
thereunder, and exacted the rates of toll therein specified." The
answer, touching this point, avers:
"It [the defendant] admits also the passage of the Act by the
General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky mentioned in said
petition as having been approved December 11, 1865, and entitled
'An act to amend the charter of the Covington and Lexington
Turnpike Road Company,' which provided other and different rates of
toll from those authorized to be collected by the Act of February
22, 1834, above mentioned, which Act of December 11, 1865, this
defendant accepted and has acted under, but it denies that it
submitted to the regulation of its tolls by the General Assembly of
the commonwealth of Kentucky then or at any time, but says that it
accepted said act and has acted
Page 164 U. S. 584
thereunder of its own volition, and that the acceptance of said
act was voluntary on the part of said corporation, its
stockholders, and directors."
By the sixth section of an Act of the General Assembly of
Kentucky, approved February 13, 1872, it was provided that the
trustees of the Cincinnati Southern Railway, whose line extended
across Kentucky, might
"also, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining said line
of railway, occupy of use any turnpike or plank road, street, or
other public way or ground, or any part thereof, upon such terms
and conditions as may be agreed upon between said trustees and the
municipal or other corporations, persons or public authorities
owning or having charge thereof. . . . If no agreement can be made
for the right to use or occupy and road, street, or ground that may
be necessary, the said trustees may take and appropriate said
rights in the manner provided in the next section."
The trustees of the last-mentioned company gave the defendant
notice that they required that portion of its turnpike road
extending from the line between Scott and Grant Counties to within
about a mile of Walton, in Boone County, Kentucky, a distance of
about thirty miles. Thereupon the defendant sold to the Cincinnati
Southern Railway its road between Williamstown and Walton, in
length twenty-two miles, for the consideration of $100,000, which
sum was distributed among the stockholders of the turnpike company,
each stockholder receiving $22 on each share of stock, which was in
excess of its real or market value. Since the above sale, the
defendant has exercised and maintained control only over that
portion of its road between Walton and Covington, a distance of
eighteen miles.
Then came the Act of May 24, 1890, to which reference has
heretofore been made.
In our consideration of the questions presented by the record,
we lay aside the statute of Kentucky passed February 14, 1856,
providing that
"all charters and grants of or to corporations or amendments
thereof, and all other statutes, shall be subject to amendment or
repeal at the will of the legislature
Page 164 U. S. 585
unless a contrary intent be therein plainly expressed,
provided that whilst privileges and franchises so granted
may be changed or repealed, no amendment or repeal shall impair
other rights previously vested,"
and which also provided that that act "shall only apply to
charters and acts of incorporation to be granted hereafter." Acts
of Kentucky 1855, p. 15, c. 148. The provision in the general
statutes of Kentucky, which took effect on the 1st day of December
1873, is that
"all charters and grants of or to corporations or amendments
thereof enacted or granted since the 14th of February, 1856, and
all other statutes shall be subject to amendment or repeal at the
will of the legislature unless a contrary intent be therein plainly
expressed,
provided that whilst privileges and franchises
so granted may be changed or repealed, no amendment or repeal shall
impair other rights previously vested."
Gen.Stat.Kentucky 1888, p. 861, c. 68, § 8. It is clear
that the statute of 1856 had no application to charters and grants
of or to corporations and amendments thereof enacted or granted
prior to February 14, 1856, but only to charters and acts of
incorporation granted after that date. It therefore has no
application to the act of 1851, granting to the Covington &
Lexington Turnpike Road Company "the powers, rights and capacities"
given by the act of 1834. Nor is there any ground for holding that
the turnpike company was brought by the act of 1865 under the
operation of the general statute reserving to the legislature the
right to amend or repeal charters of or grants to corporations.
That act did nothing more than reduce the rates of toll to be
charged. It did not create a new corporation, nor give any
additional franchises or privileges to the company. The mere
collecting of tolls in conformity with such rates does not show
that the company assented to the exercise by the legislature, at
will, of the power to amend or repeal its charter. Whatever
authority, therefore, the General Assembly had, by statute, to
regulate the tolls of the plaintiff in error arose from its general
power to regulate the affairs of a corporation which came into
existence by its authority, and which owned and controlled a
highway established for public
Page 164 U. S. 586
use.
Ruggles v. Illinois, 108 U.
S. 526,
108 U. S. 531;
Railroad Commission Cases, 116 U.
S. 307,
116 U. S. 325;
Dow v. Beidelman, 125 U. S. 680,
125 U. S. 688;
Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Co. v. Kentucky,
154 U. S. 204,
154 U. S.
215.
Was the Covington and Lexington Turnpike Road Company entitled,
under its charter, to be exempt from legislation that would prevent
it from earning at least fourteen percent "upon the capital stock
expended upon said road and its repairs," as prescribed in the act
of 1834?
The act of 1834 having given to the original corporation an
exemption or immunity from legislation that would prevent it from
earning as much as fourteen percent upon the capital stock expended
upon its road and for repairs, the contention of the defendant is
that this exemption or immunity passed to the two corporations
created by the act of 1851, and which, by the terms of that act,
succeeded "to all the powers, rights, and capacities" granted by
the act of 1834 to the original corporation. This view was properly
rejected by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky. It was well said by
Judge Pryor, speaking for that court, that
"the liability and duties owing the state and the public by the
one corporation had been severed by the act of 1839, and by the act
of 1851, two new corporations were created, with the rights and
powers of the one entirely distinct from the other, and no means of
ascertaining what percent the old corporation would have made upon
its stock. In fact, the old corporation was extinct, and to hold
that the new corporations were exempt from legislative interference
would be to restrain the exercise of legislative power by
implication when a reasonable construction of the new grants must
lead to a different conclusion."
These principles are in entire accord with the settled doctrines
of this Court. When a corporation succeeds to the rights, powers,
and capacities of another corporation, it does not thereby or
necessarily become entitled to an exemption from taxation. An
exemption or immunity from taxation so vitally affects the exercise
of powers essential to the proper conduct of public affairs and to
the support of government that immunity or exemption from taxation
is never sustained
Page 164 U. S. 587
unless it has been given in language clearly and unmistakably
evincing a purpose to grant such immunity or exemption. All doubts
upon the question must be resolved in favor of the public. There
are positive rights and privileges, this Court said in
Morgan
v. Louisiana, 93 U. S. 217,
without which the road of a corporation could not be successfully
worked, but immunity from taxation is not one of them. In a recent
case,
Norfolk & Western Railroad v. Pendleton,
156 U. S. 667,
156 U. S. 673,
we had occasion to say, in harmony with repeated decisions,
that
"in the absence of express statutory direction or of an
equivalent implication by necessary construction, provisions in
restriction of the right of the state to tax the property or to
regulate the affairs of its corporations do not pass to new
corporations succeeding, by consolidation or by purchase under
foreclosure, to the property and ordinary franchises of the first
grantee,"
and that this was a
"salutary rule of interpretation, founded upon an obvious public
policy, which regards such exemptions as in derogation of the
sovereign authority and of common right, and therefore not to be
extended beyond the exact and express requirements of the grant
construed
strictissimi juris. Morgan v.
Louisiana, 93 U. S. 217;
Wilson v.
Gaines, 103 U. S. 417;
Chesapeake
& Ohio Railway v. Miller, 114 U. S.
176."
The same principles should be recognized when the claim is of
immunity or exemption from legislative control of tolls to be
exacted by a corporation established by authority of law for the
construction of a public highway. It is of the highest importance
that such control should remain with the state, and it should never
be implied that the legislative department intended to surrender
it. Such an intention should not be imputed to the legislature if
it be possible to avoid doing so by any reasonable interpretation
of its statutes. It is as vital that the state should retain its
control of tolls upon public highways as it is that it should not
surrender or fetter its power of taxation. We admit there is some
ground for the contention that, by the grant in the act of 1851 to
each of the two corporations named in it of "the powers, rights,
and capacities" granted to the corporation of 1834, the
legislature
Page 164 U. S. 588
intended to exempt the new corporations, as it did the original
one, from all legislation that would prevent them from earning as
much as fourteen percent on the capital stock expended on their
respective roads and for repairs. But, as the act of 1851 may not
unreasonably be interpreted as intended only to pass to the new
corporations such powers, rights, and capacities as were necessary
to the successful working of the respective roads, and not an
exemption from legitimate and ordinary legislative control of their
affairs and business, it must, in the interest of the public, be so
interpreted. It is settled law that in grants by the public,
nothing passes merely by implication, and if a contract with a
state relating to the exercise of the franchises is susceptible of
two meanings, "the one restricting and the other extending the
powers of a corporation, that construction is to be adopted which
works the least harm to the state."
The
Binghampton Bridges, 3 Wall. 51,
70 U. S. 75;
Ruggles v. Illinois, above cited;
Stein v. Bienville
Water Supply Co., 141 U. S. 67,
141 U. S.
80-81.
The views we have expressed find some support in the fact that,
by the act of 1865, the legislature prescribed rates of toll for
the turnpike company, without any reference to the twenty-sixth
section of the act of 1834, and the provisions of that statute were
accepted, and have ever since been acted upon by that company. So
far as the record shows, that acceptance was unconditional, and
without any reservation of a right by the company, under the
previous law, to earn as much as fourteen percent on its capital
stock. Touching this part of the case, the Court of Appeals of
Kentucky said:
"Nor ought this court, in the absence of express enactment,
after the lapse of more than half a century, with legislation not
only severing the old corporation but regulating the rate of toll
on these roads, hold that this immunity from legislative
interference was a perpetual right, in the nature of a contract,
that could not be disturbed. The stockholders have consented and
asked an entire change of the original grant and submitted to
legislation regulating their tolls, evidencing that, with their own
contention, the immunities in the act of
Page 164 U. S. 589
1834 were not regarded as forming a part of the corporate grants
subsequently made."
For the reasons stated, we are of opinion that when the act of
1890 was passed, the power of the General Assembly over the subject
of tolls to be exacted by the plaintiff in error was not impaired
or restrained by any contract with the state in reference to the
amount which the company might earn from the use of its road.
It is, however, contended that the act of 1890, by its necessary
operation, deprives the company of its property without due process
of law, in that, if tolls cannot be charged in excess of those
prescribed by that act, the company cannot possibly maintain its
road or derive any profit whatever for stockholders. This is a more
serious question than the one we have just examined, and is not so
easy of solution.
In its original answer, filed in 1890, and to which a demurrer
was sustained, the turnpike company referred to the section of the
act of 1834 reserving to the legislature the right, in a certain
contingency, to reduce rates of toll, and alleged that
"at the expiration of five years after said road had been
completed, the annual net dividends for the two years next
preceding of said defendant company upon the capital stock expended
upon said road and its repairs had not exceeded and did not exceed
the average of fourteen percentum per annum thereof, and that,
since the completion of this defendant's road the annual net
dividends of the defendant company upon the capital stock expended
upon said road and its repairs have not averaged to exceed fourteen
percentum per annum, but, upon the contrary, have averaged very
much less, and for a number of years last past the average annual
net dividends of said company have not exceeded four percentum upon
the capital stock of said company."
The company further alleged that
"its receipts from tolls for a number of years last past under
the rate of tolls prescribed by the Act of December 11, 1865,
mentioned in the petition, have averaged only about $16,000 per
annum, and that the ordinary annual expenses of operating and
maintaining its road during the same time have averaged about
$8,000
Page 164 U. S. 590
per annum; that during this and the coming year, it will be
necessary for it to incur certain extraordinary expenses in the
purchase of ground for and building a new tollhouse for the second
tollgate from Covington on its road, and in the purchase or
condemnation of ground for straightening of its road, and laying
out a side road along that portion of its road between that part of
the City of Covington known as 'Lewisburg' and the first tollgate
on its said turnpike road, which extraordinary expenses will amount
to about $4,000; that the Act of May 24, 1890, attempts to reduce
the tolls on this defendant's road about fifty percent, and that if
the same were adopted, the income of the company from tolls would
not be more than $8,000 per annum, nor more than sufficient to
enable defendant to meet the ordinary expenses of its road, and
would leave nothing with which to meet said extraordinary expenses,
and there would be no income out of which dividends could be paid
to stockholders upon the money which they had invested in the stock
of said road. This defendant also says that within the last few
years, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which has a station
on the line of this company's turnpike, and the Cincinnati Southern
Railway, which has several stations on the line of this defendant's
turnpike, have diverted a large amount of travel from said
turnpike, and have diminished this company's earning capacity very
largely, and that other railroads and electric roads touching
defendant's road and having stations thereon have been chartered
and are in contemplation, the effect and construction of which will
be to still further impair the earning capacity of this defendant
and to diminish the dividends of this defendant under the rate of
tolls in force by an Act of December 11, 1865."
"This defendant further says that the grade of the first two and
a half miles of its road leading out of the City of Covington is
very steep; that for a portion of said two and a half miles its
road is built along the side of a hill; that the entire said two
and a half miles is expensive to maintain, especially that portion
along the side of the hill, the portion of the road towards the
slope of the hill having frequently given away
Page 164 U. S. 591
and slipped, and entailed great expense upon the defendant in
the repair of the same, and that, from the nature of the soil over
and along which said portion of said road is built, said process of
sliding and giving away is liable to continue in the future, and to
entail still further expense upon the defendant. It says that the
adoption of the rate of tolls fixed by the Act of May 24, 1890,
would disable and prevent this defendant from performing the duties
that it owes to the public, and would prevent it from ever
hereafter paying any dividends to its stockholders, and that the
rate of tolls prescribed in said Act of May 24, 1890, is
unreasonable and unjust to defendant and its stockholders, and that
to permit the same to be enforced would be to destroy entirely the
value of the property of the defendant, and the value of the shares
of capital stock of the defendant held by its stockholders, and
destroy entirely the dividend-earning capacity of this defendant,
and that to permit said Act of May 24, 1890, to be enforced would
be to exercise absolute arbitrary power over the property of the
defendant and its stockholders in violation of section 2 of the
bill of rights of the Constitution of Kentucky, and would be
depriving the defendant and its stockholders of their property
without due process of law, and the taking of the same for public
use without the consent of the defendant and its stockholders, and
without just compensation's being previously made to them, and that
to permit the enforcement of said Act of May 24, 1890, is to
violate Article V of the amendments to the Constitution of the
United States, and sections 3, 12, 14, and 15 of the bill of rights
of the Constitution of the United States, and the amendments
thereto and to the Constitution of the State of Kentucky."
It was also alleged, in the original answer that under the act
of 1890, sufficient income could not be earned "to maintain the
road and provide for its ordinary expenses, without taking into
consideration any extraordinary expenses."
We have, then, the case of a corporation invested by its charter
with authority to construct and maintain a turnpike road, and to
collect tolls "agreeable" to certain named rates, and which is
required by a subsequent legislative enactment
Page 164 U. S. 592
to conform to a tariff of rates that is unjust and unreasonable,
and which also prevents it, out of its receipts, from maintaining
its road in proper condition for public use or from earning any
dividends whatever for stockholders. These facts are admitted by
the demurrer. Is such legislation forbidden by the clause of the
Constitution of the United States declaring that no state shall
deprive any person of property without due process of law? We are
of opinion that taking, as we must do, the allegations of the
answer to be true, this question must be answered in the
affirmative.
It is now settled that corporations are persons within the
meaning of the constitutional provisions forbidding the deprivation
of property without due process of law as well as a denial of the
equal protection of the laws.
Santa Clara County v. Southern
Pacific Railway Co., 118 U. S. 394;
Pembina Mining Co. v. Pennsylvania, 125 U.
S. 181,
125 U. S. 189;
Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway v. Beckwith,
129 U. S. 29;
Charlotte &c. Railroad v. Gibbes, 142 U.
S. 386,
142 U. S. 391.
And, as declared in
St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad v.
Gill, 156 U. S. 649,
156 U. S. 657,
upon the authority of previous decisions,
"there is a remedy in the courts for relief against legislation
establishing a tariff of rates which is so unreasonable as to
practically destroy the value of the property of companies engaged
in the carrying business, and that especially may the courts of the
United States treat such a question as a judicial one, and hold
such acts of legislation to be in conflict with the Constitution of
the United States as depriving the companies of their property
without due process of law and as depriving them of the equal
protection of the laws,"
citing
Railroad Commission Cases, 116 U.
S. 307,
116 U. S. 331;
Dow v. Beidelman, 125 U. S. 681;
Chicago, Milwaukee &c. Railway v. Minnesota,
134 U. S. 418;
Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway v. Wellman, 143 U.
S. 339;
Reagan v. Farmers' Loan & Trust
Co., 154 U. S. 362.
In the
Railroad Commission Cases, the Court, speaking
by Chief Justice Waite, recognized it as settled that
"a state has power to limit the amount of charges by railroad
companies for the transportation of persons and property within its
own
Page 164 U. S. 593
jurisdiction unless restrained by some contract in the charter
or unless what is done amounts to a regulation of foreign or
interstate commerce."
But it took care also to announce that
"it is not to be inferred that this power of limitation or
regulation is itself without limit. This power to regulate is not a
power to destroy, and limitation is not the equivalent of
confiscation. Under the pretense of regulating fares and freights,
the state cannot require a railroad to carry persons and property
without reward. Neither can it do that which in law amounts to a
taking of private property for public use without just
compensation. or without due process of law."
So, in
Reagan v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.,
154 U. S. 362,
154 U. S.
397-399,
154 U. S.
410-412, in which previous decisions were referred to,
the Court said that beyond doubt it was within the power and duty
of the courts
"to inquire whether a body of rates prescribed by a legislature
or a commission is unjust and unreasonable, and such as to work a
practical destruction to rights of property, and if so found to be,
to restrain its operation."
Again:
"These cases all support the proposition that while it is not
the province of the courts to enter upon the merely administrative
duty of framing a tariff of rates for carriage, it is within the
scope of judicial power, and a part of judicial duty, to restrain
anything which, in the form of a regulation of rates, operates to
deny to the owners of property invested in the business of
transportation that equal protection which is the constitutional
right of all owners of other property. There is nothing new or
strange in this. It has always been a part of the judicial function
to determine whether the act of one party(whether that party be a
single individual, an organized body, or the public as a whole)
operates to divest the other of any rights of person or property.
In every Constitution is the guaranty against the taking of private
property for public purposes without just compensation. The equal
protection of the laws which, by the Fourteenth Amendment, no state
can deny to the individual, forbids legislation, in whatever form
it may be enacted, by which the property of one individual is,
without compensation, wrested from him for the benefit of another
or of the
Page 164 U. S. 594
public. This, as has been often observed, is a government of
law, and not a government of men, and it must never be forgotten
that under such a government, with its constitutional limitations
and guaranties, the forms of law and the machinery of government,
with all their reach and power, must in their actual workings stop
on the hither side of the unnecessary and uncompensated taking or
destruction of any private property legally acquired and legally
held. . . . If the state were to seek to acquire the title to these
roads under its power of eminent domain, is there any doubt that
constitutional provisions would require the payment to the
corporation of just compensation, that compensation being the value
of the property as it stood in the markets of the world, and not as
prescribed by an act of the legislature? Is it any less a departure
from the obligations of justice to seek to take not the title, but
the use, for the public benefit at less than its market value? . .
. It is unnecessary to decide, and we do not wish to be understood
as laying down as an absolute rule that in every case, a failure to
produce some profit to those who have invested their money in the
building of a road is conclusive that the tariff is unjust and
unreasonable. And yet justice demands that everyone should receive
some compensation for the use of his money or property if it be
possible without prejudice to the rights of others."
The cases to which we have referred related to the power of the
legislature over rates to be collected by railroad corporations.
But the principles announced in them are equally applicable, in
like circumstances, to corporations engaged under legislative
authority in maintaining turnpike roads for the use of which tolls
are exacted. Turnpike roads established by a corporation under
authority of law are public highways, and the right to exact tolls
from those using them comes from the state creating the
corporation.
California v. Central Pacific Railroad,
127 U. S. 1,
127 U. S. 40. And
the exercise of that right may be controlled by legislative
authority to the same extent that similar rights, connected with
the construction and management of railroads by corporations, may
be controlled. A statute which by its necessary operation
compels
Page 164 U. S. 595
a turnpike company, when charging only such tolls as are just to
the public, to submit to such further reduction of rates as will
prevent it from keeping its road in proper repair and from earning
any dividends whatever for stockholders is as obnoxious to the
Constitution of the United States as would be a similar statute
relating to the business of a railroad corporation having authority
under its charter to collect and receive tolls for passengers and
freight.
It is suggested by counsel for the plaintiffs that neither the
original nor the amended answer sufficiently disclosed the facts
upon which the company rested its contention as to the invalidity
of the act of 1890, and that, upon the showing made by the company,
the court, under the established rule forbidding the annulment of a
legislative enactment not clearly and palpably unconstitutional,
was not obliged to hold that act to be repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States. We do not concur in this view.
The answer disclosed what had been the average annual receipts of
the company under the act of 1865 for a number of years immediately
preceding the passage of the act of 1890, and what, during that
period, had been the average annual expenses, alleged that the
receipts for the several preceding years had not admitted of
dividends greater than four percentum on the par value of the
company's stock, that the act of 1890 reduced the tolls fifty
percent below those allowed by the act of 1865, and that such
reduction would so diminish the income of the company that it could
not maintain its road, meet its ordinary expenses, and earn any
dividends whatever for stockholders. These allegations were
sufficiently full as to the facts necessary to be pleaded, and
fairly raised for judicial determination the question -- assuming
the facts stated to be true -- whether the act of 1890 was in
derogation of the company's constitutional rights. It made a
prima facie case of the invalidity of that statute. When a
party specially sets up and claims a right or privilege under the
Constitution or laws of the United States, the question of the
sufficiency of allegations to present that issue is not concluded
by the view expressed by the state court. In
Mitchell v.
Clark, 110 U. S. 633,
110 U. S. 645,
this Court
Page 164 U. S. 596
said:
"The question whether a plea sets up a sufficient defense, when
the defense relied on arises under an act of Congress, does
present, and that necessarily, a question of federal law, for the
question is and must be does the plea state facts which, under the
act of Congress, constitute a good defense?"
This principle was approved in
Boyd v. Nebraska,
143 U. S. 135,
143 U. S. 180.
We decide, however, nothing more on this hearing than that, upon
the facts alleged, the demurrer to the answer should have been
overruled, and upon the completion of the pleadings, unless the
plaintiffs elected to stand by their demurrer, the parties should
be allowed to make their proofs touching the issues involved.
It is proper to say that if the answer had not alleged in
substance that the tolls prescribed by the act of 1890 were wholly
inadequate for keeping the road in proper repair and for earning
dividends, we could not say that the act was unconstitutional
merely because the company (as was alleged, and as the demurrer
admitted) could not earn more than four percent on its capital
stock. It cannot be said that a corporation operating a public
highway is entitled as of right, and without reference to the
interests of the public, to realize a given percent upon its
capital stock. When the question arises whether the legislature has
exceeded its constitutional power in prescribing rates to be
charged by a corporation controlling a public highway, stockholders
are not the only per sons whose rights or interests are to be
considered. The rights of the public are not to be ignored. It is
alleged here that the rates prescribed are unreasonable and unjust
to the company and its stockholders. But that involves an inquiry
as to what is reasonable and just for the public. If the
establishing of new lines of transportation should cause a
diminution in the number of those who need to use a turnpike road,
and consequently a diminution in the tolls collected, that is not
in itself a sufficient reason why the corporation operating the
road should be allowed to maintain rates that would be unjust to
those who must or do use its property. The public cannot properly
be subjected to unreasonable rates in order simply that
stockholders may earn dividends. The legislature
Page 164 U. S. 597
has the authority, in every case where its power has not been
restrained by contract, to proceed upon the ground that the public
may not rightfully be required to submit to unreasonable exactions
for the use of a public highway established and maintained under
legislative authority. If a corporation cannot maintain such a
highway and earn dividends for stockholders, it is a misfortune for
it and them which the Constitution does not require to be remedied
by imposing unjust burdens upon the public. So that the right of
the public to use the plaintiff's turnpike upon payment of such
tolls as, in view of the nature and value of the service rendered
by the company, are reasonable is an element in the general inquiry
whether the rates established by law are unjust and unreasonable.
That inquiry also involves other considerations -- such, for
instance, as the reasonable cost of maintaining the road in good
condition for public use and the amount that may have been really
and necessarily invested in the enterprise. In short, each case
must depend upon its special facts, and when a court, without
assuming itself to prescribe rates, is required to determine
whether the rates prescribed by the legislature for a corporation
controlling a public highway are as an entirety so unjust as to
destroy the value of its property for all the purposes for which it
was acquired, its duty is to take into consideration the interests
both of the public and of the owner of the property, together with
all other circumstances that are fairly to be considered in
determining whether the legislature has, under the guise of
regulating rates, exceeded its constitutional authority, and
practically deprived the owner of property without due process of
law. What those other circumstances may be it is not necessary now
to decide. That can be best done after the parties have made their
proofs.
It is further insisted by the company that the rates prescribed
for it by the act of 1890 are much less than those imposed by the
General Statutes of Kentucky upon other turnpike companies of the
state; consequently, that that act denies to it the equal
protection of the laws. The proposition of the defendant is that
the constitutional provision referred
Page 164 U. S. 598
to requires all turnpike companies in the state to be placed by
the legislature, when exercising its general power over the subject
of rates to be charged upon highways of that character upon
substantially the same footing. Upon this point, the Court of
Appeals of Kentucky said:
"A turnpike road leading into and connected with a populous city
like that of the City of Covington could afford to charge less
toll, by reason of the immense travel upon it, than turnpikes in
thinly settled portions of the county or state, and hence, under
former constitutions, the legislature has seen proper to regulate
the tolls as the turnpike road may happen to be located."
The circumstances of each turnpike company must determine the
rates of toll to be properly allowed for its use. Justice to the
public and to stockholders may require in respect of one road rates
different from those prescribed for other roads. Rates on one road
may be reasonable and just to all concerned while the same rates
would be exorbitant on another road. The utmost that any
corporation operating a public highway can rightfully demand at the
hands of the legislature when exerting its general powers is that
it receive what, under all the circumstances, is such compensation
for the use of its property as will be just both to it and to the
public. If the rates prescribed for the defendant in this case were
manifestly much lower, taking them as a whole, than the legislature
has by general law prescribed for other corporations whose
circumstances and location are not unlike those of the defendant, a
different question would be presented. At any rate, no case of that
kind is properly presented by the pleadings, and there is no ground
for holding that the act of 1890 denies to the defendant the equal
protection of the laws.
For the reasons we have given,
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause
is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.