In a case governed by Judicial Code, § 266, where the
jurisdiction of the district court is invoked upon constitutional
questions, this Court, upon appeal from an order denying
preliminary injunction, has jurisdiction to review the whole case.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Garrett, 231 U.
S. 298.
Extension of the power of the Corporation Commission to the
regulation of water systems belonging to individuals, as provided
in the Public Service Corporation Act of Arizona (Rev.Stats., 1913,
Title 9, c. XI), is permitted by the Constitution of Arizona, Art.
XV.
In the absence of an authoritative decision of the supreme court
of the state to the contrary, a contemporaneous construction of the
state constitution by an act of the legislature which is
reasonable, in itself, and designed to accomplish the obvious
purpose of the constitutional provision in question should be
followed by this Court.
Art. IV, pt. 2, § 13, of the Arizona Constitution,
requiring that acts of the legislature shall embrace but one
subject and matters properly connected therewith, which subject
shall be expressed in the title, is sufficiently complied with by
the Arizona Public Service Corporation Act,
supra,
although that act applies to individuals as well as corporations,
while its title refers to corporations and makes no mention of
individuals.
One who uses his property in supplying a large community with
water thereby clothes such property with a public interest and
subjects the business to public regulation.
Where it is conceded that the purpose of a water system is to
supply water to the residents and inhabitants of a particular
townsite, though not to outsiders or the public generally, the mere
fact that the lots of the townsite were originally purchased from
the owner of the water system with the oral understanding that
water could be secured from that system for use on the lots has no
tendency to support the claim that the system furnishes water only
to particular individuals
Page 244 U. S. 40
in pursuance of private contract made with such lot purchasers,
and is hence devoted exclusively to private use.
The fact that service is limited to a part of a town does not
prevent a water system from being a public utility.
Water rates fixed by a state commission upon a basis of a net
annual return of 10% of the value of the property employed,
allowing an annual depreciation charge of 3%,
held not
confiscatory, the valuation of the water system and estimate of
operating expenses having been made by the state commission and
concurred in by the district court after careful inquiry by both,
the evidence presented to this Court being conflicting, and the
district court having appropriately protected the complaining party
by providing that application for injunction may be renewed after
one year if the rates appear too low.
218 F. 111 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE Brandeis delivered the opinion of the court:
In 1909, Ida A. Van Dyke and her husband organized a corporation
under the name of the Miami Townsite Company, to acquire a tract in
Gila County, Arizona, and establish a town thereon. A large part of
Miami is now located on that land. In order to supply residents and
others thereon with water for domestic, commercial, and fire
purposes, the Van Dykes introduced a water system which developed
rapidly. In October, 1913, the Arizona Corporation Commission, a
public service commission
Page 244 U. S. 41
with the usual powers of regulation, instituted before itself a
proceeding to have the rates charged by the water system declared
excessive, and to have reasonable rates established. The Van Dykes,
who were duly served, filed a "plea in bar," alleged that the plant
was the individual property of Ida A. Van Dyke; that the business
was operated by her with her husband as manager, and not by a
corporation, and denied not only the validity of the order, but
also the jurisdiction of the Commission over them. The objection to
the jurisdiction was overruled, and the Commission proceeded to a
hearing on the merits at which the Van Dykes offered no evidence.
On May 1, 1914, after an elaborate report, an order was entered
greatly reducing the water rates. The Van Dykes promptly filed a
motion for a rehearing, which was denied. Thereupon they applied to
the Commission to stay the operation of the order pending
proceedings for review in the state court. This application also
was denied. Then they filed, in the District Court of the United
States for the District of Arizona, this suit against the members
of the Commission, the attorney general of the state, and the
county attorney, to enjoin the enforcement of the order and the
prosecution for penalties for failure to observe the same, and to
have the order itself cancelled.
Both plaintiffs and defendants are citizens and residents of
Arizona. Jurisdiction of the federal court was invoked solely on
the ground that the order of the Commission, if enforced, would
deprive plaintiffs of their property in violation of the 14th
Amendment, and that the penalties prescribed by the Arizona statute
for failure to obey the order are so severe as to prevent resort to
the remedies therein provided for testing in the state courts the
validity of the orders. An interlocutory injunction was applied
for, and the case was heard before three judges under § 266 of
the Judicial Code. The jurisdiction of the court was sustained
under the rule declared
Page 244 U. S. 42
in
Ex Parte Young, 209 U. S. 123, but
the court refused relief against the order reducing water rates,
saying:
"The evidence submitted by the complainants does not afford this
court a satisfactory basis on which to adjudicate the question of
the value of the property used as a water plant, and therefore the
court cannot say that the rates prescribed by the Corporation
Commission are confiscatory, and there is no basis on which an
order could be made declaring them illegal. If hereafter it shall
appear that, under actual operation of the plant under these rates,
the return allowed by such Corporation Commission operates as a
confiscation of the property of complainant Ida A. Van Dyke, she
may, at the expiration of one year, again present her evidence to
the court and obtain appropriate relief on the facts then
presented."
"The court will retain jurisdiction of the case, with permission
to complainant Ida A. Van Dyke, if so advised, after the expiration
of one year, to renew her application for an injunction against the
rates established by the Corporation Commission as confiscatory. In
the meantime, the rates established will remain in force."
From an order entered in accordance with this opinion, the Van
Dykes appealed, and this Court has jurisdiction to review the whole
case.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Garrett,
231 U. S. 298.
The errors alleged are, in substance, as follows:
First. That the Arizona Constitution and Public Service
Corporation Act were constituted and applied to subject property
owned and operated by a natural person to regulation as a public
service corporation.
Second. That a water system established for the purpose
of furnishing water only to purchasers of lots from the Miami
Townsite Company was treated as a public water system.
Third. That the rates fixed are confiscatory.
These alleged errors will be considered in their order.
Page 244 U. S. 43
1.
Whether the Arizona Corporation Commission had
jurisdiction to regulate a water system owned by an
individual.
Arizona was admitted as a state February 14, 1912, and on that
date its Constitution, which had been adopted December 9, 1910,
took effect. By Article XV, it created (§ 1) a Corporation
Commission with full power to establish reasonable rates in the
public services, and declared (§ 2) that corporations engaged
in furnishing water "shall be deemed public service corporations."
The Arizona Public Service Corporation Act (Ariz.Rev.Stats. 1913,
Tit. 9, c. XI) provides that the term "public service corporation"
shall include "water corporation," § 2278(z); that
"water corporation' shall include 'every corporation or person .
. . owning, controlling, operating, or managing any water system
for compensation within the state,"
§ 2278(x); that the term "person" includes an individual,
§ 2278(d), and that the term "water system" shall include all
property used in the supply or distribution of water "for
municipal, domestic, or other beneficial uses," § 2278(w). It
is clear that the legislature intended that the powers of the
Corporation Commission should extend to plants owned and operated
by individuals, and that the language used by it was adequate to
express that intent. But it is insisted that provisions of the
Arizona Constitution forbid the grant of such a power by the
legislature, and the question resolves itself into this: are the
terms "corporation" and "public service corporation" in Article XV
of the Constitution used in the limited sense of incorporated
companies, or do they include all public utilities, both
incorporated and unincorporated, and whether they be firms or
individuals?
Article XV, entitled, "The Corporation Commission," consists of
nineteen sections, [
Footnote 1]
and confers broad powers of
Page 244 U. S. 44
regulation. The character of the service -- that is, whether it
is public or private -- and not the character of the ownership
determines ordinarily the scope of the power of regulation. The
need of such regulation and the manner of exercising it are the
same whether a public utility is incorporated or not, and the
purpose of a public service commission could easily be frustrated
if concerns owned by individuals were excluded from its operation.
The district court accordingly declined to give a technical
meaning
Page 244 U. S. 45
to the term "public service corporation," and interpreted it in
the broad popular sense as embracing all public utilities. That
construction is in line with numerous decisions holding that
statutes imposing certain liabilities on "railroad corporations"
embrace all railroads, whether individually or corporately owned.
[
Footnote 2]
It is contended that Article XIV, entitled, "Corporations Other
Than Municipal," renders this liberal construction of Article XV
inadmissible. Section 1 of Article XIV defines
"'corporation,' as used in this article . . . to include all
associations and joint stock companies having any powers or
privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or
copartnerships,"
and § 16 provides that the records of "all public service
corporations" shall at all times be subject to the inquisitorial
powers of the state. It is argued that the term "public service
corporation," thus excluding individually owned utilities, could
hardly have a different meaning in the very next article of the
constitution. But the answer is that Article XIV deals only with
the organization, incorporation, management, and powers of
technical corporations, and the definition therein of "corporation"
is, for that reason, expressly limited by the phrase "as used in
this article." This is significant, and is entirely in harmony with
the view that the term as used in some other article, having a
wholly different purpose, should bear a different and broader
construction.
Furthermore, the powers of the Arizona Corporation Commission
are not limited to those expressly granted by the Constitution.
Section 6 of Article XV authorizes the legislature to "enlarge the
powers and extend the duties of the Corporation Commission," and
the legislature, by
Page 244 U. S. 46
defining "water corporation" to include "persons" owning a water
utility, clearly extends the powers of the Commission to
individually owned concerns. So that, even if the Commission was
not originally vested by the Constitution with power over utilities
owned by individuals, it now has that power directly by legislative
enactment. In other words, the Constitution prescribed a certain
minimum of power with which the Commission was entrusted; it
authorized the legislature to enlarge from time to time the scope
of the Commission's duties, and the legislature extended them to
water concerns owned by individuals.
This construction of the Arizona Constitution by the district
court is in harmony with the contemporaneous construction evidenced
by the Public Service Corporation Act (
supra), enacted at
the first session of its legislature. In the absence of an
authoritative decision of the Arizona Supreme Court to the
contrary, this legislative construction, reasonable in itself and
designed to accomplish the obvious purpose of the constitutional
provision, ought not to be set aside by this Court.
Louisville
& Nashville R. Co. v. Garrett, 231 U.
S. 298,
231 U. S.
305.
Appellants contend also that, even if the legislature had power
to extend the jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission to water
systems owned and operated by individuals, the Public Service
Corporation Act was, in this respect, invalid under Article IV, pt.
2, § 13, of the Arizona Constitution, because this purpose was
not expressed in the title of that act. [
Footnote 3] Constitutional provisions requiring
Page 244 U. S. 47
the subject of legislative acts to be embraced in the title are
not to be given a strained and narrow construction for the purpose
of nullifying legislation. The "subject," as expressed in the
title, is the regulation of "public service corporations;" and the
provision in the act that "public service corporations" shall
include "persons" owning a public utility is a matter obviously
connected therewith.
2.
Whether the Van Dyke water system is a private
business.
The Van Dyke system appears to be the only water supply of the
inhabitants of the original Town of Miami (not including the
"additions"). The number of water takers is not shown. But it
appears that the large consumers who used meters numbered at the
time of the Commission's investigation, 675, yielding a revenue of
$11,378.10, and that the number of small takers must have been much
larger, since the revenue derived from the flat rates was
$14,517.35. "Property becomes clothed with a public interest when
used in a manner to make it of public consequence and affect the
community at large."
Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S.
113,
94 U. S. 126.
The property here in question was devoted by its owners to
supplying a large community with a prime necessity of life. That
Mr. Van Dyke pumps the water on her own land, stores it in tanks on
her own land, and thence conducts it through pipes all upon her own
land (the strips reserved in the streets for conduits being owned
by her), and delivers it to purchasers at the boundary line between
her and their properties, and that lot purchasers bought with the
understanding that they might purchase water from Mrs. Van Dyke's
water system at rates fixed by her, are
Page 244 U. S. 48
all facts of no significance, for the character and extent of
the use make it public, and, since the service is a public one, the
rates are subject to regulation.
Counsel contend that the use is not public, because water is
furnished only to particular individuals, in fulfillment of private
contracts made with the purchasers of townsite lots. But there is
nothing in the record to indicate that such is the fact. Purchasers
seem to have bought merely with the oral understanding that water
could be secured from the Van Dyke system. Affidavits filed by
appellants state expressly that their water system is operated
"for the purpose of supplying the residents and inhabitants of
said Miami town site with water, and not for the purpose of
supplying persons outside of said town site, or the public
generally, with water."
The offer thus is to supply all the "inhabitants" within the
given area, and that, of course, includes subvendees, tenants, and
others with whom the Van Dykes had no contract relations. The fact
that the service is limited to a part of the Town of Miami does not
prevent the water system from being a public utility.
See Del
Mar Water, Light, & P. Co. v. Eshleman, 167 Cal. 666, 681,
683.
3.
Whether the rates fixed are confiscatory.
The Commission decided that the net return to the owner upon the
value of the property employed should be at the rate of at least
ten percent, after allowing an annual depreciation charge of three
and one-half percent. Water rates prescribed on this basis
obviously cannot be held confiscatory unless either the valuation
placed upon the property used was grossly inadequate or the cost of
operation greatly underestimated. These elements are largely
matters of fact and opinion, as to which both the Commission and
the district court, after careful examination, found against the
appellants. The case is presented to us on contradictory affidavits
dealing with the items
Page 244 U. S. 49
of value which go to make up the water system. We cannot say
"that it was impossible for a fair-minded board to come to the
result which was reached."
San Diego Land & Town Co. v.
Jasper, 189 U. S. 439,
189 U. S. 442;
Knoxville v. Knoxville Water Co. 212 U. S.
1,
212 U. S. 18. And
the provision in the order of the district court by which it
retained jurisdiction of the case, with permission to Mrs. Van Dyke
to renew her application for an injunction after one year if the
rates fixed appear to be confiscatory, afforded her appropriate
protection.
The decree of the district court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS dissents.
[
Footnote 1]
Included are the following:
"Section 1. A Corporation Commission is hereby created to be
composed of three persons, who shall be elected at the general
election to be held under the provisions of the enabling act
approved June 20, 1910, and whose term of office shall be
coterminous with that of the governor of the state elected at the
same time, and who shall maintain their chief office, and reside at
the state capital. . . ."
"Sec. 2. All corporations other than municipal engaged in
carrying persons or property for hire, or in furnishing gas, oil,
or electricity for light, fuel, or power, or in furnishing water
for irrigation, fire protection, or other public purposes, or in
furnishing, for profit, hot or cold air or steam for heating or
cooling purposes, or in transmitting messages or furnishing public
telegraph or telephone service, and all corporations other than
municipal, operating as common carriers shall be deemed public
service corporations."
"Sec. 3. The Corporation Commission shall have full power to and
shall, prescribe just and reasonable classifications to be used,
and just and reasonable rates and charges to be made and collected,
by public service corporations within the state for service
rendered therein, and make reasonable rules, regulations, and
orders by which such corporations shall be governed in the
transaction of business within the state, and may prescribe the
forms of contracts and the systems of keeping accounts to be used
by such corporations in transacting such business, and make and
enforce reasonable rules, regulations, and orders for the
convenience, comfort, and safety, and the preservation of the
health, of the employees and patrons of such corporations:
Provided, That incorporated cities and towns may be authorized by
law to exercise supervision over public service corporations doing
business therein, including the regulation of rates and charges to
be made and collected by such corporations: Provided further, That
classifications, rates, charges, rules, regulations, orders, and
forms or systems prescribed or made by said Corporation Commission
may from time to time be amended or repealed by such
Commission."
[
Footnote 2]
Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. De Busk, 12 Colo. 294, 304;
Pittsburgh, C.C. & St.L. R. Co. v. Lightheiser, 168
Ind. 438;
Schus v. Powers-Simpson Co., 85 Minn. 447,
450-451;
Lewis v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 36 Mont. 207,
218.
[
Footnote 3]
The Arizona Constitution (Art. IV, Part 2, § 13) provides
that:
"Every act shall embrace but one subject and matters properly
connected therewith, which subject shall be expressed in the title;
but if any subject shall be embraced in an act which shall not be
expressed in the title, such act shall be void only as to so much
thereof as shall not be embraced in the title."
The act is entitled:
"An Act Relating to Public Service Corporations, Providing for
the Regulation of the Same, Fixing Penalties for the violation
Thereof, and Repealing Certain Acts; with an Emergency Clause."