In a suit by a public utility corporation to enjoin enforcement
of rates claimed to be confiscatory, the municipality is the proper
party to be made defendant, and as such it can represent all
parties interested. The only mode of judicial relief against
unreasonable rates is by suit against the governmental authority
which established them or is charged with the duty of enforcing
them.
It is not competent for each individual having dealings with a
regulated public utility corporation to raise a contest in the
courts over questions which can be settled in a general and
conclusive manner.
Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. v.
Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418.
Where a telephone company has sued the municipality to enjoin
rates as confiscatory and an injunction has been granted upon the
company paying into a fund the excess collected from the
subscribers, the
Page 231 U. S. 647
municipality is the proper party to represent all the
subscribers on a reference to determine the amount of refund to
which each is entitled after the rates have been held not
confiscatory and the injunction dissolved.
Under such conditions, a single subscriber cannot represent all
the subscribers as a class, and the court is not compelled under
Equity Rule 38 to allow him to intervene.
In this case, the court below having acted within its discretion
in refusing a petition for leave to intervene, mandamus to compel
it to grant the petition is refused.
The facts, which involve the right and power of a municipality
to represent the residents and citizens having contracts with a
public utilities corporation in a suit brought by such corporation
to enjoin as confiscatory rates established by ordinance of the
municipality, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This petition was argued and submitted with No. 11, Original,
and prays a mandamus issue commanding respondent to vacate the
order made March 10, 1913, in the suit then and now pending,
brought by the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company against
the City of Louisville, insofar as it denied to petitioner the
right to sue for all subscribers of the Telephone & Telegraph
Company similarly situated with petitioner, who paid the Telephone
& Telegraph Company, during the pendency of the injunction
against a certain rate ordinance enacted
Page 231 U. S. 648
by the city, sums in excess of the rates fixed in the ordinance,
and commanding him to enter an order permitting petitioner to sue
for and represent and act in behalf of such subscribers with
respect to the restitution of the sums so collected.
If this cannot be done, then petitioner prays for a rule on said
judge to show cause why a mandamus shall not issue to grant
petitioner an appeal prayed for from the order of March 10, 1913,
and refused by him.
The petition recites the proceedings in the district court
substantially as they are recited in the petition in
In re City
of Louisville. It adds these details: that, while the
injunction was in force, at least 8,000 of the subscribers of the
Telephone Company paid for its service sums in excess of the
amounts fixed by the ordinance; that the amounts paid by them
ranged from $5 to $100, the majority of the payments being less
than $20. The total amount so paid will exceed $100,000. None of
the subscribers were parties to the litigation, and petitioner, on
September 28, 1912, presented and asked to have filed a bill of
intervention in the cause, and that it might be permitted to sue
for and represent all of the subscribers who had so paid the
Telephone Company. The petition was refused.
That, on February 15, 1913, and after the new equity rules had
been promulgated by this Court, petitioner again moved for leave to
file its bill of intervention and for leave to sue in behalf of all
of such subscribers. The motion was denied.
A petition for an appeal was presented and denied on April 18,
1913.
That, during the time the Telephone Company collected rates from
its subscribers in excess of the new ordinance rates, some of the
subscribers had business telephones on a direct line, and some on a
party line; some had residence telephones on a direct line and
others on a party line. All
Page 231 U. S. 649
of the subscribers who paid the excess rates paid them under
identically similar circumstances, and in the same situation with
respect to their right to have the Telephone Company restore the
excess. The petitioner had a telephone on a party line, and more
than 3,000 of the subscribers of the company had the same kind of
telephone.
That the effect of the order of the court is to deny the right
of the subscribers to be represented in the cause upon the
correctness of the master's report, which will be filed in the next
thirty days, and their rights will be finally adjudicated without
allowing them to appear or have their day in court. There are 8,000
subscribers thus situated who have no adequate remedy against the
action of the court but mandamus.
A copy of the complaint in intervention is attached to the
petition. It sets out the facts as in the petition, but more in
detail, with additions in an attempt to show a common interest in
all of the subscribers to the right of petitioner to appear for
itself and for them. It prays that petitioner be made a party to
the cause for itself and the other subscribers; that the Telephone
Company, upon the coming in of the master's report, pay into the
court the sums collected in excess of the ordinance rates, with
interest at six percent to be distributed for the benefit of those
concerned. The bill of intervention was permitted to be filed so
far as to permit petitioner to assert its own claim, but so far as
it prayed to be permitted to act or claim for any other but itself,
its prayer was denied, with the privilege, however, to renew the
same upon making it appear to the court that it had authority from
"other specifically named claimants" to act for them.
The basis of petitioner's contention is that it has a common
interest with the other subscribers of the Telephone Company, and
may therefore intervene for itself
Page 231 U. S. 650
and for them. Equity Rule 38 is cited to sustain the contention.
Petitioner is not seeking, however, as it says, "for itself or for
anyone the recovery of a specific portion of the fund." The
alternative of this would seem to be the assertion of a right to
intervene and become a party to all the controversies upon which
the fund may depend, and this may mean either in conjunction with
the city or independently of it, and, it may be, in exclusion of
it. It is said that the city is acting only for the good of the
public, but that that is not "the criterion to determine whether
the parties in interest have the representation to which they are
entitled." It is further said that however earnest the city may be
to obtain restitution to the subscribers of the Telephone Company,
it might not appeal from an adverse ruling. Who is going to
represent the subscribers, it is asked, upon the question of fees
to the master and the costs, and the costs on appeal, and who raise
the question of interest? This enumeration presents the purpose of
the petition for intervention. In other words, the apprehension is
expressed and made a basis of the petition for leave to intervene
that the city, which has so far conducted the litigation, and with
success, may or will relax its attention and energy to the
detriment of petitioner and the other subscribers of the company.
This does not present a very strong plea against the discretion the
court exercised, supposing the court had discretion to grant or
refuse the petition.
It is contended, however, that the court had no discretion but
to grant the petition, and that Equity Rule 38 was peremptory of
the right of petitioner. It recognizes the principle, it is
said,
"that the rights of persons should not be passed upon unless
such persons are before the court, or are represented by someone
who is interested similarly
Page 231 U. S. 651
with them."
And cases are cited which, it is urged, also recognize and
illustrate the principle.
We have given due consideration to the cited cases and the
argument of counsel, and we are of opinion that the district court
did not exceed its discretion in making the order under review. The
city was the proper party to make defendant in the suit as
representative of all interested, and so throughout the whole
proceedings. If we may suppose in a case like the present one there
can be a distinction between the public interest and private
interest, the subscribers of the company being the public, the
representation of both interests was adequately fulfilled. It was
in consequence of the motion of the city that the telephone company
agreed to keep account of charges in excess of the ordinance rates,
and, if they should finally be decided to be illegal, to pay into
court the excess sums for distribution among its subscribers. It
was the representative of all interests to provide for the creation
of the fund; it is properly the representative of all interests to
see to its proper distribution. This is a necessary deduction from
the cases. It is the universal practice, sustained by authority,
that the only mode of judicial relief against unreasonable rates is
by suit against the governmental authority which established them
or is charged with the duty of enforcing them. As was said by Mr.
Justice Miller in
Chicago, Mil. & St. P. Railway Co. v.
Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418,
134 U. S. 460,
it was not competent for each individual having dealings with the
regulated company "to raise a contest in the courts over the
questions which ought to be settled in this general and conclusive
way." The rule has been repeated in subsequent cases.
Indeed, what issue is involved except that of the main suit --
the character of the rates -- that needs the intervention of
petitioner? As to who are subscribers of the company, there can be
no controversy, nor as to the amounts to be returned to them. Both
names and amounts could be,
Page 231 U. S. 652
indeed had been, ascertained by the master under an order made
upon motion of the city. Petitioner, however, was not able to
produce authority from any subscriber to appear for him,
notwithstanding the order of respondent permitted petitioner to
renew its motion whenever it should "be made to appear to the court
in any appropriate way that other specifically named claimants"
desired petitioner to act for them. And yet, against these facts,
against, as counsel for respondent says, the possibility of a
presumption that the other subscribers of the telephone company do
not desire petitioner to represent them, it prays a mandamus to
compel such representation.
We cannot yield to the prayer.
Rule discharged.