A decree of the district court to the effect that a contemplated
issue of bonds, the issuance of which the bill sought to enjoin as
wholly illegal, was illegal at that time, leaving open the question
of whether it might be legal at a subsequent time,
held,
under the circumstances of this case, to be a final decree from
which an appeal could be taken to the circuit court of appeals.
Although the original bill depended solely upon diverse
citizenship, independent grounds of deprivation of federal rights
which existed prior to the filing of the bill may be brought into
the case by amended bill, and if so, the jurisdiction of the
district court does not rest solely on diverse citizenship, and the
judgment of the circuit court of appeals is not final, but an
appeal may be taken to this Court.
Macfadden v. United
States, 213 U. S. 288.
While the enforcement of the rule of
res judicata is
essential to secure the peace and repose of society, it is equally
true that to enforce the rule upon unsubstantial grounds would work
injustice.
Page 231 U. S. 260
A decree is to be construed with reference to the issue it was
meant to decide; its nature and extent is not to be determined by
isolated portions thereof, but upon the issue made and what it was
intended to accomplish.
A decree in a former action between a municipal water company
and the municipality that the former had an exclusive contract for
a specified period and that the latter could not issue bonds for
the purpose of establishing a municipal water supply to be
forthwith put into operation, rendered while the franchise had a
long period to run,
held in this case not to be
res
judicata as to the right of the municipality to issue bonds
within a short time prior to the expiration of the franchise for
the purpose of erecting waterworks which were not to be put into
operation until after the expiration of the existing franchise.
203 F. 1023 reversed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court of
appeals from judgments of the circuit court of appeals and the
extent to which a former judgment is
res judicata of the
right of a municipality to issue bonds for establishing a water
supply in view of existing contracts with a water works company,
are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit originated in the District Court of the United States
for the Southern District of Mississippi, where an injunction
restraining the appellants from constructing a waterworks system
during the term of a certain franchise previously granted by the
City of Vicksburg was allowed upon the complaint of W. A. Henson,
receiver of the
Page 231 U. S. 261
Vicksburg Waterworks Company, one of the appellees herein (whom
we will hereafter call "the receiver"), and the decree upon appeal
was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
(203 F. 1023), from which affirmance this appeal is taken.
The case, as made out in the district court and shown by the
record, appears to be:
The receiver alleged that, in 1886, the city, under authority of
an act of the legislature, by ordinance granted to Samuel R.
Bullock & Company a franchise to furnish the city with water
for a term of thirty years; that he had succeeded to the rights and
interests of Bullock & Company; that he was paying taxes upon
the property of the Vicksburg Waterworks Company, and was entitled
to the rights and privileges of a taxpayer; that, in 1900, the City
of Vicksburg attempted to abandon the contract and to build and
operate a waterworks system of its own, and that, in a suit
instituted in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Southern District of Mississippi, such action had been enjoined;
that, by the final decree therein, it was, among other things,
ordered "that the defendant refrain from constructing waterworks of
its own until the expiration" of the franchise, and that, upon
appeal to this Court, such decree was affirmed. The pleadings,
final decree, and opinion of this Court in the former case and the
franchise of 1886 were introduced into the record in this case as
exhibits, and, to save repetition, reference is made to the
franchise as quoted in
185 U. S. 185 U.S.
65, to the opinion in
202 U. S. 202 U.S.
453, and the outline of the pleadings in that case as set forth in
those reports.
The receiver alleged further that the city had since made
efforts to free itself from the franchise, and specified various
suits and negotiations to that end; that, early in 1912, the
appellants, by resolution and election, undertook to authorize the
sale of bonds for the construction of a waterworks plant, which was
not to be operated until
Page 231 U. S. 262
after the expiration of the franchise; that he would be
compelled to pay taxes upon such bonds, and that the issuance and
sale of the bonds and construction of the plant would depreciate
the value of the Waterworks Company's property; that the city was
commencing the construction of a plant too long before the
expiration of the franchise; that the purpose of the city was
really to depreciate the value of the Waterworks Company's plant so
that the city might buy it at a price materially less than its
actual value, and that the bond election, for several reasons,
which the receiver stated, under the statutes and Constitution of
Mississippi, and because of fraud, was of no effect, and the
receiver offered to sell the plant at any time upon appraisement.
The receiver prayed that the appellants be enjoined from issuing
bonds for the construction of a waterworks system and from taking
any further steps toward the building of such plant during the term
of the franchise, for the reason that the matter of construction of
the plant during such time was
res judicata, and that such
construction would violate the franchise, and, further, that the
bond election was void. The receiver also prayed for an injunction
restraining the appellants from letting contracts for the laying of
certain water mains in violation of the franchise and of the decree
in the former suit.
The appellants denied that the decree in the former case
precluded the question raised here, and that the construction by
the city of its own waterworks system would violate the terms of
the franchise; that the receiver was, or was entitled to the rights
and privileges of, a taxpayer, and alleged that the statement by
the receiver of the dealings and negotiations between the city and
the Waterworks Company was irrelevant and false. They also denied
that the receiver or the Waterworks Company, as a taxpayer, would
be affected by the bond issue, and alleged that, if the issuance of
the bonds and construction
Page 231 U. S. 263
of the plant should depreciate the property of the Waterworks
Company, it would be something for which it would not be
responsible. They further denied that the steps taken by the city
were premature, in view of the long time that must elapse before
the expiration of the franchise, and that the city did not intend
to build a plant, and alleged that the purpose of the Waterworks
Company was to compel the city to buy its plant at an exorbitant
price, and they denied that the bond election was void. The
appellants further alleged that, if the decree should be construed
as contended for by the receiver, the court below, as a court of
equity, would not at that time give the decree that effect, for the
reason that the situation of the parties was so changed as to make
it inequitable to prohibit the appellants from taking the action
sought to be enjoined; that the receiver, by permitting the city to
lay certain mains, had conceded the appellants' right to construct
a waterworks plant, and was estopped from contesting such right;
that the receiver and the Waterworks Company actively participated
in the election, conceding appellants' right to build its own
waterworks system, and therefore were estopped from asserting the
contrary; that the receiver, by conceding appellants' right to
construct its plant, itself construed the decree as only enjoining
competition, and that the court should give effect to the decree as
construed by the parties, and that the decree did not attempt to
enjoin the sale of bonds, and that that is all that is sought to be
restrained by this suit. The appellants also denied that the
letting of contracts for laying mains would violate either the
decree or the franchise.
Upon petition, Lelia Boykin, a taxpayer of the City of
Vicksburg, the other appellee herein, was, upon order, admitted as
a party to the suit, and by proper pleadings, issues were made with
reference to her as such taxpayer.
Upon final decree the court held that the receiver was
Page 231 U. S. 264
entitled to the relief prayed for, and ordered that the
appellants be enjoined from constructing a system of waterworks and
from disposing of the bonds covered by the suit during the term of
the franchise, and in its opinion the court based its decision upon
the decree made by it and its affirmance in 202 U.S., and decided
that the matter was
res judicata. Upon appeal to the
circuit court of appeals, the decree of the district court was
affirmed upon the ground that the decree and affirmance in the case
in 202 U.S. constituted an estoppel. The case was thereupon brought
here upon appeal, the assignments of error asserting that the
circuit court of appeals erred in affirming the decree of the
district court, in holding that the decree affirmed in 202 U.S. was
an estoppel, and that the appellants had no right to build a
waterworks system before the expiration of the franchise, and in
not deciding that the receiver was estopped to assert that
appellants did not have such right.
A motion was made to dismiss the appeal, first upon the ground
that the decree was not final in the district court, and hence was
not appealable to the circuit court of appeals because it left
undisposed of one of the substantial issues in the case. That
contention arises from this alleged situation: the pleadings of the
receiver, as well as the petition filed by the intervener, Lelia
Boykin, attacked the right to issue the bonds in question upon a
ground independent of the former adjudication -- namely, because
the election at which the bonds were authorized to be issued was
illegal for the reason that the city failed to make the statutory
publication of the election, and that the curative act was
unconstitutional for the reason that the city had exceeded the
limit of indebtedness allowed under chapter 142 of the Laws of
Mississippi for 1910, the exception in such act being
unconstitutional, and for the reason that the bond election was
held under an ordinance purporting to amend the charter of the
city, which ordinance
Page 231 U. S. 265
was itself void, and for fraudulent and corrupt practices and
for unlawful registration. This ground of attack, the appellees
say, went to the right to issue the bonds to build a waterworks
system at any time, and rendered them invalid, whether undertaken
to be issued before or after the expiration of the Bullock
franchise, and that such is the case is said to appear from
reference to the final decree which was entered in the suit. The
decree enjoined the appellants from building or constructing a
system of waterworks or any part thereof within the city until
after the 18th day of November, 1916, the date of the termination
of the Bullock franchise, and it further provided:
"It is further ordered and decreed that the defendant, the Mayor
and Aldermen of the City of Vicksburg, be and is hereby enjoined
from disposing of the issue of four hundred thousand dollars
($400,000) of bonds mentioned and described in the pleadings with a
view of constructing a waterworks system, or any part thereof, in
said city during the life of the said franchise -- that is, between
now and the 18th day of November, 1916."
So much of the decree as relates to the bonds, it is contended,
leaves open the right of the city to issue them after the
expiration of the Bullock franchise, although they were attacked as
being wholly illegal and the city wanting authority to issue them
at any time.
It is true that the original bill contained allegations which
went to the validity of the issue of bonds, if the same were
proposed to be issued after the expiration of the Bullock
franchise, as well as before the expiration of that time, and the
prayer of the original bill, among other things, asked for an
injunction restraining the defendant city from issuing the bonds or
taking any action to that end by virtue of the election. In the
amended and supplemental bill filed in the case, however, not only
allegations by way of amendment were made, but the case was
restated at great length, and the prayer of the bill asked upon
Page 231 U. S. 266
final hearing for
"a decree against the said defendant, holding the said bond
election void and without effect, and the said defendant without
power to issue and float said bonds for the purpose of building a
waterworks plant during the life of the Bullock franchise, and for
an injunction against the said defendant restraining it from
issuing bonds under the said election, and from taking any further
steps looking to the building of a waterworks plant during the life
of the said Bullock franchise,"
and for general relief. When Lelia Boykin intervened, she filed
a petition averring that she was the owner of real estate in and a
taxpayer of the City of Vicksburg, and a citizen and resident of
Georgia, adopting the allegations of the original bill and amended
and supplemental bill, except so much thereof as set up the former
adjudication in favor of the Waterworks Company, and joining in the
original complainant's prayer for relief, and also asking for
general relief.
It may be true that there were allegations in the pleadings
which permitted or required a consideration of the law under which
the bonds were to be issued for the purpose of erecting a
waterworks system, and which were independent of the alleged claim
of
res judicata, but the record and proceedings make it
evident that the court and the parties concerned treated the bill
as an attack upon the right of the city to proceed to build a
waterworks system before the expiration of the Bullock franchise,
although to be operated thereafter. The opinion of the court and
the decree show that the court so regarded it, and no objection to
this disposition of the case was made by any of the parties, and,
when the case reached the circuit court of appeals, a motion was
made to dismiss upon the ground that the proceeding was merely
ancillary to the decree of the court, affirmed in this Court (
202 U. S. 202 U.S.
453), enjoining the city from constructing and operating a plant of
its own during the term of the franchise.
Page 231 U. S. 267
The decree was final as to the city's right to do what it was
then proposing to do -- to issue bonds and erect a system of
waterworks to be used after the expiration of the Bullock
franchise. The decree as rendered prevented the city from doing
this. There was no reservation of the right to a further decree as
to the legality of the bonds, and no retention of jurisdiction
after the decree for any purpose. Neither in the circuit court of
appeals nor in the district court was there any attempt to require
the court to consider the case in its further aspect, but, as we
have said, both courts and all parties treated the case as
presenting a controversy concerning the right of the city to
proceed, as it was about to do, to sell the bonds and build a plant
before the expiration of the franchise in question. The record thus
considered, we think there was a final decree in the district court
from which an appeal could be taken to the circuit court of
appeals.
The further contention is made that the jurisdiction of the
circuit court of appeals was final because the jurisdiction of the
district court as originally invoked depended solely upon diverse
citizenship. But it appears that, when the amended and supplemental
bill was filed, there were added to the ground of original
jurisdiction allegations concerning the proper construction of the
contract rights of the receiver, which attacked the proposed action
of the city on the ground that it would be destructive of
constitutional rights. We think those allegations brought into the
case a ground of jurisdiction independent of diversity of
citizenship. They were grounds which existed before the suit was
begun, which might have been averred in the original bill, and
which were brought into the case by the amendment. We think,
therefore, that the jurisdiction of the district court did not rest
solely upon diversity of citizenship, but upon the additional
ground of deprivation of federal right. In this view, the decision
of the circuit court of appeals is not final, and an appeal may
Page 231 U. S. 268
be taken to this Court.
Macfadden v. United States,
213 U. S. 288.
Coming to the question whether the former decree disposed of the
rights of the parties, as was held in the court below, which
judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals, it is
undoubtedly true that a right, question, or fact put in issue and
decided by a court of competent jurisdiction must be taken as
settling the rights of the parties in respect to such controversy,
and, while it remains undisturbed, is conclusive between them. The
enforcement of this rule has been repeatedly said to be essential
to secure the peace and repose of society, and in order that an end
may be made of controversies between parties who have once invoked
and have had the determination by competent judicial tribunal of
the matters in dispute between them. It is no less true that to
hold upon any unsubstantial ground that a controversy has been thus
concluded is to do an injustice to litigants. We must therefore be
careful to see, when the contention of former adjudication is made,
that the matter was actually presented and decided, and the rights
of the contending parties thereby concluded. We think that an
examination of the record in the former case, put in evidence in
this case, does not support the contention that the matter here in
issue was then adjudicated and determined. It is true there is some
broad language in the decree. It provided:
"Fourth. That the said defendant refrain from in any manner
accepting the benefits of or proceeding under the Act of the
Legislature of the State of Mississippi, approved March 9th, 1900,
and from issuing bonds under and by virtue of said act or any other
act or ordinance for the purpose of erecting waterworks of its own
during the period prescribed in said ordinance contract and
franchise."
"Fifth. That the said defendant refrain from constructing
waterworks of its own until the expiration of the
Page 231 U. S. 269
period prescribed in the said ordinance contract and franchise
dated 18th day of November, 1886."
The fifth paragraph, read alone, without regard to the pleadings
in the case, would broadly enjoin the city from constructing a
waterworks system of its own until the expiration of the period
named in the franchise held by the complainant. The fourth
paragraph used language in enjoining the issuance of bonds which
concluded with an injunction
"from issuing bonds under and by virtue of said act or any other
act or ordinance for the purpose of erecting waterworks of its own
during the period prescribed in said ordinance contract and
franchise."
It is also true that the court, in concluding its opinion in 202
U.S. said that it found
"no error in the decree of the circuit court enforcing the
contract rights of the complainant, and enjoining the city from
erecting its own works during the term of the contract."
It is well settled, however, that a decree is to be construed
with reference to the issues it was meant to decide.
Graham v.
Chamberlain, 3 Wall. 704,
70 U. S. 710;
Reynolds v. Stockton, 140 U. S. 254;
Vicksburg v. Vicksburg Water Works Co., 206 U.
S. 496,
206 U. S. 507;
Haskell v. Kansas Natural Gas Co., 224 U.
S. 217,
224 U. S. 223.
In
Barnes v. Chicago, M. & St.P. Ry. Co., 122 U. S.
1, this Court, speaking by Mr.Chief Justice Waite, said
(p.
122 U. S.
14):
"Every decree in a suit in equity must be considered in
connection with the pleadings, and, if its language is broader than
is required, it will be limited by construction so that its effect
shall be such, and such only, as is needed for the purposes of the
case that has been made and the issues that have been decided.
Graham
v. Chamberlain, 3 Wall. 704. Here, the suit was by
and for creditors to set aside the mortgage to Barnes and the
foreclosure thereunder because made and had to hinder and delay
them in the collection of their debts. The decree, therefore,
although broader in its terms, must be held to mean
Page 231 U. S. 270
no more than that the foreclosure was void as to these
creditors, whose claims were inferior in right to that of the
mortgage, and that the Minnesota Company was restrained and
enjoined from asserting title as against them."
What was the situation which confronted the parties at the time
of the institution of the original suit, and what rights were the
Waterworks Company striving to protect? The company contended that
it had a franchise good for thirty years, and that this franchise
was exclusive, at least insofar as it would prevent the city from
building a waterworks system of its own and operating it in
competition with the plaintiff company and in destruction of its
rights yet to be enjoined under its unexpired franchise. At that
time, the franchise had over half its term yet to run. There was no
indication on the part of the city that it intended to build a
waterworks system of its own and then await the expiration of the
franchise before it operated such system. The city contended for
and maintained the right to erect its own system and operate it at
that time and in competition with the Waterworks Company. This
competition, it was contended, would be destructive of the rights
and property of the complainant, and virtually destroy the
exclusive privilege which the city had granted to it for the period
of thirty years. It was only after the conclusion of the litigation
that the city undertook to construct a waterworks system,
withholding operation thereof until the expiration of the franchise
belonging to the Waterworks Company. It was driven to that position
by the decree against it in the former case. The building of such
waterworks system, and not the one that it originally intended, was
only proposed by the city after it had lost the original
controversy, in which it contended for the right to erect a
competing plant, to be operated during the term of the franchise.
Reference to the original bill filed in the former case confirms
this view, where the following appears:
Page 231 U. S. 271
"By reason of said ordinance and contract [the franchise], said
city has no right within the period of thirty years to engage in
the business of supplying water to the inhabitants of said city in
competition with said Bullock & Company, or their assigns,
notwithstanding which, said act [under which the city was then
proceeding to erect a plant] authorizes and permits said city to
construct and maintain waterworks for said purpose;"
and the prayer, in part, asked that the defendant might be
"decreed from constructing or acquiring and operating a system of
waterworks in competition with your orator's waterworks." The
amended and supplemental bill read, in part, as follows:
"Therefore said city, by its contract and ordinance with S. R.
Bullock & Company and assigns, are precluded from issuing and
selling bonds to build, construct, maintain, and operate a
waterworks of its own, as provided by said legislative act and said
resolution and said election of 1900, in competition with you
orator against its own contract."
"The premises considered, your orator prays that this honorable
court will enjoin the defendant from issuing and selling said bonds
for the purpose of building and constructing waterworks of its own
in competition with your orator."
In considering the rights of the parties and the position taken
by them, this Court, in 202 U.S.
202 U. S. 453
et seq., said (p.
202 U. S. 458):
The rights of the Waterworks Company under its exclusive
contract, it alleged,
"would be practically destroyed if subjected to the competition
of a system of waterworks works to be erected by the city itself. .
. ."
"We think it would be a palpable injustice to the stockholders
to permit the competition of the city by new works of its own
which, whether operated profitably for the municipality or not,
might be destructive of all successful operation
Page 231 U. S. 272
in furnishing water to consumers by the private company."
Stating the question of the power of the city to grant an
exclusive contract:
"Whether it can, in exercising this legislative power, exclude
itself from constructing and operating waterworks for the period of
years covered by the contract. . . . [P.
202 U. S.
469.] And unless the city has excluded itself in plain
and explicit terms from competition with the Waterworks Company
during the period of this contract, it cannot be held to have done
so by mere implication. . . . [P.
202 U. S.
470.] These are the words of the contract, and the
question upon this branch of the case is, conceding the power of
the city to exclude itself from competition with the grantee of
these privileges during the period named, has it done so by the
express terms used? It has contracted with the company, in language
which is unmistakable, that the rights and privileges named and
granted shall be
exclusive. Consistently with this grant,
can the city submit the grantee to what may be the ruinous
competition of a system of waterworks to be owned and managed by
the city, to supply the needs, public and private, covered in the
grant of privileges to the grantee? It needs no argument to
demonstrate, as was pointed out in the
Walla Walla case,
that the competition of the city may be far more destructive than
that of a private company. The city may conduct the business
without regard to the profit to be gained, as it may resort to
public taxation to make up for losses. A private company would be
compelled to meet the grantee upon different terms, and would not
likely conduct the business unless it could be made profitable. We
cannot conceive how the right can be exclusive and the city have
the right at the same time to erect and maintain a system of
waterworks which may and probably would practically destroy the
value of rights and privileges conferred in its grant. . . . [P.
202 U. S. 472.] We think it
was distinctly agreed that, for the term named, the right of
furnishing water to
Page 231 U. S. 273
the inhabitants of Vicksburg under the terms of the ordinance
was vested solely in the grantee, so far at least, as the city's
right to compete is concerned."
And, in 206 U.S.
206 U. S. 496,
where it was contended that the former adjudication was a bar to
the rights contended for in regulating rates, this Court, in
construing its former decision in 202 U.S., said (202 U.S.
202 U. S. 506)
that the former case settled the right of the Waterworks
Company
"under the contract to carry on its business without the
competition of works to be built by the city itself, as the city
had lawfully excluded itself from the right of competition."
It is said that, upon the argument in this Court of the case in
202 U.S., the too broad character of the decree was brought to our
attention. An examination of the briefs then filed shows that this
objection rested upon the allegation that the decree would prevent
the city from putting in hydrants and other facilities not covered
by the contract. There was no suggestion that the city would be
prevented from putting in its own waterworks for use after the
expiration of the franchise.
The nature and extent of the former decree is not to be
determined by seizing upon isolated parts of it or passages in the
opinion considering the rights of the parties, but upon an
examination of the issues made and intended to be submitted, and
what the decree was really designed to accomplish. We cannot agree
with the court below, or with the majority of the circuit court of
appeals, that the effect of the former adjudication was to preclude
the rights of the parties in the present controversy.
Upon the merits, irrespective of the effect of the former
decree, we think the object and purpose of the franchise granted to
Bullock & Company and their successors was to permit and
protect the operation of a system of waterworks to the end of the
franchise term. After that time, the city was to be free to supply
its inhabitants itself,
Page 231 U. S. 274
if it saw fit, or make other contracts with those who could
supply the wants of the city in that respect. We see no reason why
the city might not, if it so determined, make preparation for water
supply to its own citizens which would be available upon the
expiration of the contract, the contract accomplishing that purpose
until, by its terms, it had expired. To appropriately accomplish
this required time, and we think the city was within its rights,
not being obligated by any contract to purchase the works of the
Waterworks Company, the company having been content to accept the
franchise without this requirement, and was free to make other
adequate provision to meet this essential requirement of the
inhabitants of the city.
The views we have expressed require a reversal of the judgment
of the circuit court of appeals affirming the decree of the
district court. It is therefore ordered that the judgment be
Reversed and the case remanded to the District Court of the
United States for the Southern District of Mississippi for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.