The findings of a special master appointed, with consent of
parties, to take the testimony and report it with his findings of
fact and conclusions of law for the advisement of the district
court, are not conclusive, but subject to review by that court upon
exceptions.
Where a master, so appointed, had heard the issues fully and
admitted all proffered evidence, and the exceptions to his findings
raised no serious questions of fact, this Court found it
unnecessary to remand the case to the district court because the
latter, erroneously, declined to pass upon the exceptions, but,
having before it the evidence and all matters necessary for
judgment, proceeded to do what that court should have done --
considered the report, passed upon the exceptions, and made such
decree as was deemed equitable.
Where a city was peculiarly dependent upon the continued use of
the plant of a water company whose franchise had expired, the
situation negativing the idea that other means were presently
procurable or in contemplation for supplying the water vital to the
community, and an ordinance was passed which, by its enacting
provisions, not only fixed the rates which the company might charge
in future but, in addition, provided for collecting charges
semi-annually in advance for various uses which could not be
discontinued on brief notice, required installation of meters for
all prospective users, to be paid for monthly, and of hydrants to
be ordered thereafter by the city upon extended as well as existing
mams at an annual rental, and imposed fines upon the company or its
agents for any violation of the ordinance,
held that these
provisions were inconsistent with declarations in the preamble
characterizing the company as a tenant by sufferance and
disclaiming any intention to recognize its right to
Page 246 U. S. 179
occupy the streets or continue the service, and that the
ordinance should be construed liberally, so as to preserve the
substantial rights of both parties,
viz. as recognizing
the city's dependence on the plant, as conferring, impliedly,
whatever privileges might be necessary to enable the company to
continue serving the public, as in effect requiring it to furnish
water, and in terms forbidding it from exceeding the specified
rates, and so as granting a new franchise of indefinite duration,
terminable either by the city or by the company at such time and
under such circumstances as would be consistent with the duty owed
by both to the inhabitants.
In view of the new rights so conferred upon the company, its
plant employed in supplying the city with water must not be valued
as "junk," but as property useful and in use in the public service,
in determining whether the rate fixed by the ordinance allow an
adequate return.
Nor is this question of value greatly affected, if at all, by
the fact that there is neither right nor obligation to continue the
use perpetually, or for any long period that may be defined in
advance.
In valuing the plant of a public service company as a basis for
determining the adequacy of rates fixed by a city, it is proper to
estimate land at present market value, and structures at
reproduction cost less depreciation.
Also the "going concern value," due to the fact that the plant
is assembled and established, doing business and earning money, is
a property right which should be considered in such determinations,
and estimated in each case upon the circumstances therein
presented.
What rate of compensation may be regarded as adequate depends
greatly upon circumstances and locality. In this case, where the
net annual return obtainable under the ordinance rates was but 4.3%
(approximately), of the value of the plant, excluding certain
disputed water rights, in a city where the prevailing rate of
interest for secured loans on business and residence properties was
6%, with higher rates for loans less secured,
held that
the return was clearly insufficient, and that the ordinance
amounted to a taking of the company's property without due process
of law.
Whether, in Colorado, a company under franchise contract to
furnish water for a city becomes the owner of water rights which it
originates by diverting water from natural streams and supplying it
to the consumers under short license contracts not decided.
Modified and affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 246 U. S. 180
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
We have here an appeal and a cross-appeal from a final decree
made in a suit in equity brought by the Denver Union Water Company
against the City and County of Denver and the members of its
council and other public officials, for the purpose of restraining
the enforcement of an ordinance passed March 3, 1914, fixing the
rates for water permitted to be charged thereafter by the company,
upon the ground that they did not afford a fair and reasonable
compensation, based upon the value of the property of complainant
necessarily used in the service, and hence amounted to a taking of
private property without due process of law within the meaning of
the Fourteenth Amendment. The City and County of Denver is a
municipal corporation having broad powers of self-government,
including the power on the part of five percent of the electors to
initiate an ordinance by petition. For convenience it will be
referred to as the city.
An answer having been filed, putting the cause at issue, the
district court, by consent of parties, appointed a special
master,
"with all of the powers conferred upon the master under the
rules of practice for the courts of equity of the United States,
and subject to the further orders of this Court, . . . for the
purpose of taking all testimony in the suit and reporting to the
court said testimony, his findings of fact and such conclusions of
law as he may deem essential to the proper advisement of
Page 246 U. S. 181
the court."
After a full hearing, he made an elaborate report sustaining
complainant's main contention. The city and the Public Utilities
Commission, defendants, filed numerous exceptions to his findings
and conclusions, raising questions respecting certain elements that
entered into his valuation of complainant's plant. Complainant,
while declaring that it did not consent to a review of the report
so far as it was conclusive under the order of reference, filed
exceptions, subject to such ruling as the court might make
respecting its reviewability. Upon these exceptions, the cause came
on to be heard, whereupon the court, being of the opinion that,
under the terms of the order appointing the special master, his
findings of fact were not open for its consideration, and that no
material questions of law were raised that could be considered
without an examination of the facts, ordered that the exceptions of
both parties be struck out, confirmed the master's report, and
passed a final decree in favor of complainant in accordance with
his findings. Defendants appealed to this Court, presenting
assignments of error based upon the overruling by the district
court of their exceptions to the master's report. Complainant filed
a cross-appeal presenting assignments of error for consideration
only in the event that defendants' assignments of error, or some of
them, should be sustained.
In our opinion, the district court erred in declining to pass
upon the questions raised by the exceptions. Although no opinion
was filed, the ruling appears to have been based upon the theory
that, because the order of reference was made by consent of
parties, the conclusions of the master were not open to question.
Kimberly v. Arms, 129 U. S. 512,
129 U. S. 524,
and
Davis v. Schwartz, 155 U. S. 631,
155 U. S. 633,
155 U. S. 636,
are cited in support, but they are distinguishable. In the former
case, the reference, made by consent of the parties, authorized the
master to hear the evidence and decide all the issues between them,
and it
Page 246 U. S. 182
was because of this that the court held the findings were not
merely advisory, as in the ordinary case, but were to be taken as
presumptively correct,
"subject, indeed, to be reviewed under the reservation contained
in the consent and order of the court, when there has been manifest
error in the consideration given to the evidence, or in the
application of the law, but not otherwise,"
and that the findings ought to have been treated as "so far
correct and binding as not to be disturbed unless clearly in
conflict with the weight of the evidence upon which they were
made."
Davis v. Schwartz is to the same effect. In the
present case, the consent given to the order of reference was
conditioned by the terms of the order itself, which, as we have
seen, limited the functions of the master to the taking of
testimony and reporting it to the court, together with his findings
of fact and conclusions of law for the advisement of the court.
The error of procedure, however, does not necessitate sending
the case back to the district court. The issues were fully heard
before the master, all proffered evidence was admitted, the
exceptions taken to his findings raise no serious questions of
fact, we have before us in the record the evidence and all other
materials necessary for judgment, and will simply proceed to do
what the district court ought to have done, namely, consider the
report and pass upon the exceptions, and make such decree as is
equitable in the premises.
It was admitted before the master, and is not here controverted,
that the company is the sole owner of the waterworks, plant, and
system in question, including lands, diversion works, reservoirs,
filters, conduits, distribution works, and other apparatus, and is
serving the city and its inhabitants with water, that no other
waterworks or system of distribution exists in the city, and that,
although the city has power to construct a system of its own
(subject to a limit of cost that will be mentioned below),
Page 246 U. S. 183
it has not commenced to do so. It was, however, contended by
defendants in the answer and upon the hearing before the master --
and the contention is here renewed -- that as to such of the
company's water diversion rights as had been acquired by it or its
predecessors by original appropriation and user (as distinguished
from those acquired by purchase), the right to the water itself was
not the property of the company, but of the city, and this upon the
theory that, under the law of appropriation as it obtains in
Colorado, the right of diversion belonged to those for whose use
and benefit the appropriation was made, the company being entitled
to compensation only for its services as carrier in distributing
the water by means of the physical system owned by it.
The report of the special master shows what is not disputed --
that his investigation of the matters referred to him was most
painstaking and thorough. In estimating the value of the company's
property, he adopted the following method, with the practical
consent of the parties: lands and water rights were appraised at
their present market values; estimates of the cost of reproducing
the structures were made, and, from this cost, allowance for
accrued depreciation was deducted so as to determine the reasonable
value of the structures in their present condition, and in
estimating the cost of reproduction it was assumed that the work
would be done under contract after fair competitive bidding, and
with reasonable costs for engineering and superintendence in
addition to the contract cost. Separate consideration was given to
the various tracts of land owned by the company, and the various
water rights, diversion works, reservoirs, conduits, distribution
pipes, personal property, and other items constituting the plant.
He found the plant to be in excellent condition, supplying water
abundantly in excess of the needs of the community and under a
proper pressure, and found its entire value to be $13,415,899, in
which
Page 246 U. S. 184
only elements seriously questioned by the city were: (a) the
disputed water diversion rights, which he held to be the property
of the company and valued at $1,998,117, and (b) an item of
$800,000 for "going concern" value, allowed by the master upon the
ground that the company had "an assembled and established plant
doing business and earning money," according to the principle laid
down by this Court in
Des Moines Gas Co. v. City of Des
Moines, 238 U. S. 153,
238 U. S. 165.
He made no allowance for franchise value or for any permanent right
to maintain the waterworks in the streets of the city, but he did
value the plant as capable of use and actually in use in the public
service, and found that a new plant capable of serving the public
with like efficiency could not be built for $13,415,899 -- a
finding to which no exception was taken. The master further found
that the net earnings of the company under the ordinance of 1914,
after making proper allowances for operating expenses, taxes, and
depreciation, would be $488,820, or only 3.64% of the reasonable
value of the plant, while the prevailing rate of interest for
secured loans on business and residence properties in Denver was
about 6%, with higher rates for loans less adequately secured.
Defendants now insist that the company is occupying the streets
and performing its service merely at sufference; that its rights
arose solely out of a franchise ordinance adopted in 1890 and which
expired in 1910, and that the city now has the right to exclude the
company from its streets, and hence the right to fix the terms upon
which it shall continue to do business, and that the value to the
company of the property under these circumstances is what it would
bring for some other use in case the city should build its own
plant -- in other words, as to a large part of the property, "junk
value." Of course, it is a necessary corollary that the company may
discontinue its service at will.
Page 246 U. S. 185
We are unable to regard the case as capable of being thus
disposed of upon the basis of "junk value" for complainant's
property.
In the first place, no such question is presented either by the
pleadings, the master's report, the exceptions, or the assignments
of error. The bill averred that complainant was
"entitled to have its property devoted to the public use of
supplying the City and County of Denver and its inhabitants with
water remain unimpaired in value, and to receive for the water
supplied and services rendered a reasonable return upon the value
of the property so devoted to said uses, and a sufficient amount to
protect said property against depreciation and other impairments of
value."
The answer admitted complainant's ownership of the system of
waterworks (except that as to certain of the water rights it was
denied upon legal grounds that have been indicated), and admitted
that
"complainant is entitled to have its property devoted to the
public use of supplying the City and County of Denver and its
inhabitants with water remain unimpaired in value, so far as its
actual use in supplying the City and County of Denver and its
inhabitants with water is concerned, and to receive for the
services rendered in supplying such water a reasonable return upon
the value of the property devoted to such use, and a sufficient
amount to protect said property against depreciation and other
impairments of value in connection with such use and such water
service."
The answer further alleged that the rates fixed by the ordinance
of 1914
"are fair, reasonable, just, and will produce for complainant a
fair, reasonable, and adequate return upon the capital actually
invested by complainant in its water system and carrying
service."
The master's report shows that no question was made before him
but that the plant should be valued as a plant in use, except as it
was contended that the item of $800,000 for going concern value
ought to be eliminated on the
Page 246 U. S. 186
ground that such an element of value, admittedly existent in a
"purchase case," could not be considered in a "rate case," and on
the further ground that the company's franchise had expired. This
latter point was made the basis of one of the exceptions. Aside
from this, the exceptions were devoted mainly to the contention,
already mentioned, that the company's water rights, other than
those which had been purchased, were the property not of the
company, but of the city. It was at no time contended that any
element of value except "going concern value" ought to be excluded
because of the expiration of the franchise. Defendant's assignments
of error are based upon the exceptions, and raise no other
question.
But, supposing the question were properly raised, we are
convinced that, by the true intent and meaning of the ordinance of
1914, new rights were conferred upon the company of such a nature
that, in considering the effect of the provisions limiting rates,
the plant must be valued not as "junk," but as property useful and
in use in the public service.
It is true the title and preamble of the ordinance contain
indications of a purpose to treat the company as a mere tenant by
sufferance of the streets, but its enacting provisions do not carry
out this purpose, and the measure must be construed as a whole, in
the light of the circumstances existing at the time of its
adoption, and with proper regard for the consequences that would
result from giving to it the meaning contended for by the city.
Under the ordinance of 1890, the company had a franchise which
expired April 10, 1910, at which time the city had an option either
to purchase the works at an appraised valuation or to renew the
contract for a period of twenty years. After its expiration,
litigation ensued as a result of which this Court held, in May,
1913, that the city was under no obligation to accept either
option, and that its failure to renew the contract did not amount
to an election
Page 246 U. S. 187
to purchase the plant.
Denver v. New York Trust Co.,
229 U. S. 123,
229 U. S. 138.
Meanwhile, fruitless negotiations were conducted looking to a
purchase of the plant by the city, but leaving the parties far
apart upon the question of valuation. The city, on May 17, 1910,
adopted a charter amendment whereby it created the Public Utilities
Commission, directed that an offer of $7,000,000 be made for the
property of the company, and provided that, in case of its
rejection, steps should be taken to construct a water system owned
and operated by the city at a cost not to exceed $8,000,000. The
water company rejected the offer of $7,000,000, but the city did
not commence -- has not yet commenced -- the construction of its
own water system. The company continued to supply water to the city
and its inhabitants at the rates charged during the continuance of
the ordinance of 1890. In August, 1913, after our decision in the
case just mentioned, the city and the Public Utilities Commission
appointed a commission of three to inspect, examine, and report
upon complainant's water system, and, after an investigation during
which complainant gave this commission every reasonable opportunity
for inspection and examination of its records and data, the
commission, on January 14, 1914, made a unanimous report to the
effect that complainant's system was in excellent working
condition, adequate for supplying the city's present needs, and
worth, exclusive of going concern value or water rights, something
over $10,000,000, and declaring that it would take five years,
without allowance for delays in legal proceedings, for the city to
construct a new system of its own, and would cost $12,750,000.
After this report, and on February 17, there was submitted to the
electors and taxpaying electors of the city a contract by which the
city was to purchase complainant's water system and properties at a
price to be fixed by appraisers, including the Public Utilities
Commission, who were to act for the
Page 246 U. S. 188
city, which contract complainant agreed to accept and abide by
if favorably voted on by the taxpaying electors. It was rejected.
Prior to the first of February, the ordinance now in question,
greatly reducing the rates, was prepared at the instance of the
Public Utilities Commission, circulated as an initiated bill under
the appropriate provision of the city charter, received the
signatures of more than five percent of the electors, but only
5,593 in all,
* was filed with
the city clerk about a week after the election just mentioned, was
introduced in the city council, published once, and passed by the
council on March 3 without amendment and without hearings, that
body having acted either in the belief that, since the measure was
presented with the signatures of a sufficient number of the
citizens, it was mandatory upon the council to pass it or else that
they had no other option except to refer it to a vote of the
people, which was not done.
See Speer v. People, 52 Colo.
325, 343. We remark upon the legislative procedure simply because
of its bearing upon the interpretation of the measure, which, as we
shall see, lacks certainty in its enacting clauses.
The practical situation existing at the time of its enactment is
sufficiently clear from what has been said. The answer admits the
averment of the bill that complainant has been and is compelled to
continue to serve the city and its inhabitants with water because
there is no other supply of water available, and a cessation of its
service would result in great suffering, damage, and loss of life.
The city is located in a semi-arid region, and is and for nearly a
half century has been absolutely dependent upon the continued
operation of complainant's system. The termination of the legal
franchise in 1910 did not absolve the city from its duty to the
inhabitants. At the time of the enactment of the ordinance of 1914,
the company's plant had been in use for four years since the
expiration
Page 246 U. S. 189
of the former franchise; the city, while endowed with the power
to construct a system of its own, but only if it could be done at a
cost not exceeding $8,000,000, had not yet commenced the
construction of such a system, had just been officially advised
that one could not be constructed for less than $12,750,000, and
nevertheless had rejected a proposition to purchase complainant's
system at an appraised value.
It is in the light of all these circumstances that the
provisions of the ordinance of 1914 must be read. There is a
preamble reciting that, since 1910, the company had been without
franchise, and a mere tenant by sufferance of the streets, and
that, while it had been supplying the city and its inhabitants with
water, it had done so "at rates that are excessive and that should
be reduced and regulated accordingly," and there is a declaration
that the enactment is made without recognizing the company's right
to occupy the streets or to continue its service, but for the
purpose of regulating and reducing its charges "during the time it
shall further act as a water carrier and tenant by sufferance of
said streets." But the enacting provisions, in the terms employed
and by necessary intendment, are inconsistent with these
declarations, and must be taken to override them. The first section
establishes, as the maximum charges permitted to be made by the
company, a detailed schedule of "semiannual water rates payable in
advance on the first day of May and November of each year." The
various uses are specified, and many of these are of kinds that
cannot be discontinued on brief notice. There is a special rate for
irrigation by the season, May 1 to November 1. There is a provision
for meter rates, payable monthly, with a clause requiring the
company to install a meter for any person desirous of using water
by meter. Section 2 provides that for hydrants, including "those
which may thereafter be ordered by the council to be set upon
existing mains or upon extensions
Page 246 U. S. 190
thereof," the city shall pay annual rentals. And § 4
imposes fines upon the company and its agents for any violation of
the ordinance.
Of course, these provisions are of themselves inexplicit, but in
attributing a meaning to them, the choice is between a liberal
construction that preserves the substantial rights of both parties
and a strict construction highly penal and destructive in its
effect upon both. The subject matter was a prime necessity of life,
for which there was no substitute available. The very act of
regulating the company's rates was a recognition that its plant
must continue, as before, to serve the public needs. The fact that
no term was specified is, under the existing circumstances, as
significant of an intent that the service should continue while the
need existed as of an intent that it should not be perpetual.
Without attributing to the initiators and to the city council a
purpose to subject the inhabitants to grave danger of disease or
worse, we cannot read the enacting provisions as leaving the
company actually without the right to maintain its plant in the
city thereafter, for necessarily this would leave it at liberty to
discontinue the service at will. The alternative, which we adopt,
is to construe the ordinance as the grant of a new franchise of
indefinite duration, terminable either by the city or by the
company at such time and under such circumstances as may be
consistent with the duty that both owe to the inhabitants of
Denver. It recognizes the dependence of the city upon this plant,
by necessary implication confers upon the company whatever
privileges may be necessary to enable it to continue serving the
public, in effect requires it to furnish water, and in terms
prohibits it from exceeding the specified rates.
In this situation, there can be no question of the company's
right to adequate compensation for the use of its property
employed, and necessarily employed, in the public
Page 246 U. S. 191
service; nor can it be doubted that the property must be valued
as property in use. It involves a practical contradiction of terms
to say that property useful and actually used in a public service
is not to be estimated as having the value of property in use, but
is to be reckoned with on the basis of its "junk value." Nor is the
question of value for present purposes greatly affected, if at all,
by the fact that there is neither right nor obligation to continue
the use perpetually, or for any long period that may be defined in
advance. The reason is not obscure: the cost and detriment to a
property owner attributable to the use of his property by the
public, and the value of the service rendered by the property to
the public, are measured day by day, month by month, year by year,
and are little influenced by the question how long the service is
to continue. The cost of the service includes the use of the plant,
but ordinarily not its destruction, except through the slow
processes of wear and tear and obsolescence, for which graduated
depreciation allowances are made. The whole calculation is a matter
of income, not capital, accounting, and the cost and value of the
use of a given property for a stated period is the same whether the
use is to be continued after the expiration of the period or not.
If the period is extended, compensation for the use is extended
proportionately.
What we have said establishes the propriety of estimating
complainant's property on the basis of present market values as to
land, and reproduction cost, less depreciation, as to structures.
That this method was fairly applied by the special master hardly is
disputed by appellants, except as they contest the items allowed
for "going concern value" and for the water rights acquired by
complainant and its predecessors by original appropriation. With
respect to the former item, we adhere to what was said in
Des
Moines Gas Co. v. Des Moines, 238 U.
S. 153
Page 246 U. S. 192
238 U. S.
165:
"That there is an element of value in an assembled and
established plant, doing business and earning money, over one not
thus advanced is self-evident. This element of value is a property
right, and should be considered in determining the value of the
property, upon which the owner has a right to make a fair return
when the same is privately owned although dedicated to public
use."
As was then observed, each case must be controlled by its own
circumstances. In the present case, the master expressly declared
that his detailed valuation of the physical property and water
rights included no increment because the property constituted an
assembled and established plant, doing business and earning money,
and a careful examination of his very elaborate report convinces us
that this is true. The amount allowed by him on this account is not
open to serious question from the standpoint of appellants.
The only remaining question of serious moment is the allowance
of $1,998,117 for the value of water rights acquired by original
appropriation, as distinguished from acquisitions by purchase.
The master found that these appropriations were made at times
when the company or its predecessor held franchise contracts with
the city calling for a supply of water to the inhabitants; that
these contracts were limited to short periods, while the use by
private consumers was under simple permits or licenses for periods
of six months at rates paid in advance, and under expressed
conditions that terminated their right to use the water on
violation of the reasonable rules of the company. The parties agree
that such a diversion and beneficial use of the unappropriated
water of a natural stream is sufficient to initiate and perfect a
right to continue to use beneficially the volume of water so
appropriated. Complainant contends, and the master held, that the
ownership of the
Page 246 U. S. 193
appropriation under such circumstances may be fixed by contract
between the one who diverts and the one who beneficially applies
the water, and that, under the circumstances of the case, upon a
proper application of the rule adopted by the Supreme Court of
Colorado in
City of Denver v. Brown, 56 Colo. 216, the
water rights in question were owned by complainant.
Appellants contend that, under the Constitution of Colorado,
Art. 16, § 5, and under the law as established by repeated
decisions of the supreme court, the right to the use of water is
not permitted to be acquired by appropriation from the natural
streams for purposes of sale or rental; that there is no ownership
of the water or right to the use of it except by those actually
applying it to a beneficial use; that not only must application to
a beneficial use be united to diversion in order to render the
right of appropriation complete, but that, where a carrying company
diverts water for the beneficial use of others, it acts as the
agent or
quasi-trustee of the consumers for the protection
of their rights, and is not itself the owner of the rights of
diversion.
In support of this view,
Wheeler v. Northern Colorado
Irrigation Co., 10 Colo. 582;
Farmers' High Line Canal
& Reservoir Co. v. Southworth, 13 Colo. 111;
Combs v.
Agricultural Ditch Co., 17 Colo. 146;
Wyatt v. Irrigation
Co., 18 Colo. 298;
White v. Highline Canal Co., 22
Colo.191;
Farmers' Independent Ditch Co. v. Agricultural Ditch
Co., 22 Colo. 513;
Wright v. Platte Valley Irrigation
Co., 27 Colo. 322, and some other cases are cited, it being
insisted that they establish the rule contended for and that their
authority is not overthrown, but, on the contrary, recognized, by
City of Denver v. Brown, 56 Colo. 216. The question is one
of great consequence, and is not free from difficulty. It ought not
to be passed upon unless the exigencies of the case require it.
Page 246 U. S. 194
We find it unnecessary to determine it. As we have shown, the
master found the value of complainant's entire plant, including
these water rights, to be $13,415,899. Deducting $1,998,117, the
entire value of the disputed rights, there remains a valuation of
$11,417,782. No part of this is seriously disputed except the item
for going concern value, upon which we already have passed. The
master found that the net earnings of the company under the
ordinance of 1914 would be $488,820. No question is made about
this, except some slight criticism of the depreciation charges that
enter into the calculation; a criticism that we cannot sustain. The
net return therefore is found to be only 4.2812% of the value of
the plant, excluding the disputed water rights; while there is no
controversy over the master's finding that the prevailing rate of
interest for secured loans on business and residence properties in
Denver is about 6%, with higher rates for loans less adequately
secured. As was declared in
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas
Co., 212 U. S. 19,
212 U. S. 48,
the question of the rate of compensation that may be regarded as
sufficient depends greatly upon circumstances and locality. In that
case, we held (p.
212 U. S. 50)
that complainant was entitled to 6% on the fair value of its
property devoted to the public use. We have no hesitation in
holding that the return yielded by the ordinance now before us is
clearly inadequate, and amounts to a taking of complainant's
property without due process of law, contrary to the provision of
the Fourteenth Amendment in that regard, even excluding from
consideration the disputed water rights.
The decree of the district court will be modified so as to
overrule, instead of striking out, the exceptions taken by
defendants to the master's report, and as so modified it will be
affirmed.
Modified and affirmed.
Page 246 U. S. 195
* The population of the city, by the census of 1910, was
213,381.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES dissenting.
This is a bill to restrain the enforcement of an ordinance of
the City and County of Denver, passed on March 3, 1914, fixing the
rates for water permitted to be charged thereafter to the city and
its inhabitants. After the coming in of the answer, the case was
referred to a special master, there was an investigation of the
usual kind, a report and afterwards a final decree for the Water
Company, vitiated by the judge's assumption that he was bound by
the master's findings of fact. But I need not dwell upon this
mistake, because, in my opinion, the decision ought to be reversed
upon a more important ground. In some instances it would be proper
to send back the case for further consideration,
Wilson Cypress
Co. v. Del Pozo, 236 U. S. 635,
236 U. S. 657;
Brown v. Fletcher, 237 U. S. 583;
Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co. v. Simon, ante,
246 U. S. 46, but
that is unnecessary when there is disclosed a fundamental bar to
the bill, and I may add that, if this be the fact, no omission to
raise the point in technical form would induce this Court to enter
a decree contrary to the manifest equities of the case. Rule
35.
The Water Company occupied the streets of Denver with its pipes
under an ordinance of April 10, 1890, and it is not denied that the
franchise granted by that ordinance had expired.
Denver v.
Denver Union Water Co., 229 U. S. 123. I
am of opinion that the ordinance complained of does not grant a new
term. Perhaps an instrument could be framed that granted while it
said that it did not. But this ordinance qualifies all that follows
by a preamble that recites that the Water Company is "without a
franchise, and a mere tenant by sufferance of the streets of the
City and County of Denver" and then,
"without in any manner recognizing said Denver Union Water
Company's right to occupy the streets of the City and County of
Denver, or to continue its service as a water carrier,
Page 246 U. S. 196
for the purpose of regulating and reducing the charges made by
it during the time, it shall further act as a water carrier and
tenant by sufferance of said streets,"
goes on to fix the rates. It seems to me plain that the rates
subsequently established, even though purporting to be monthly or
semi-annual, are established subject to the preliminary
declaration, and to the chance of the practically improbable
earlier termination of the license or tenancy at sufferance. The
ordinance does not attempt to require the Company to furnish water,
but simply fixes a limit to its charges while it does furnish it as
such tenant at sufferance. While the service continues, it is
charged with a public interest and is subject to regulation by law.
The question at the bottom of the case is what elements, if any,
the Company has a constitutional right to have taken into account
in determining whether the rates ordained are confiscatory, and,
more generally, whether it has any constitutional right at all in
the matter of rates.
We must assume that the Water Company may be required, within a
reasonable time, to remove its pipes from the streets.
Detroit
United Railway v. Detroit, 229 U. S. 39,
229 U. S. 46.
And, to illustrate the problem, it may be asked how a company in
that situation can assert a constitutional right to a return upon
the value that those pipes would have if there under a permanent
right of occupation, as against a city that is legally entitled to
reduce them to their value as old iron by ordering them to be
removed at once. In view of that right of the city, which, if
exercised, would make the Company's whole plant valueless as such,
the question recurs whether the fixing of any rate by the city
could be said to confiscate property on the ground that the return
was too low.
I understand that the Water Company has a right to stop
furnishing water corresponding to the right of the city to order
out the pipes. It is hard to see how property
Page 246 U. S. 197
could be confiscated by the establishment of almost any rate
when whatever value it would have over above that dependent upon
the use of the pipes would remain to the Company if it stopped
using them, and therefore was in the Company's hands to preserve.
The ordinance of the city could mean no more than that the Company
must accept the city's rates or stop -- and, as it could be stopped
by the city out and out, the general principle is that it could be
stopped unless a certain price should be paid.
Lloyd v.
Dollison, 194 U. S. 445,
194 U. S. 449;
Ashley v. Ryan, 153 U. S. 436,
153 U. S.
443-444.
See Denver v. New York Trust Co.,
229 U. S. 123,
229 U. S.
141-142. It is true that this principle has not been
applied in cases where the condition tended to bring about a state
of things that there was a predominant public interest to prevent,
but I see no ground for the application here of anything to be
deduced from
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Kansas,
216 U. S. 1;
Pullman Co. v. Kansas, 216 U. S. 56, or
Motion Picture Patents Co. v. Universal Film Manufacturing
Co., 243 U. S. 502.
It may be said that to argue from such abstract rights is to
discuss the case
in vacuo -- that, practically, the
Company cannot stop furnishing water without being ruined, or the
city stop receiving it without being destroyed. And no doubt this
is true -- but it also is true, and not quite as tautologous as it
seems, that the law knows nothing but legal rights. Something more
than the strong probability that an enjoyment will continue must be
shown in order to make an otherwise lawful uncompensated
interference with it a wrong.
See Matter of City of
Brooklyn, 143 N.Y. 596, 616. Or conversely if a legal title is
taken it must be paid for in full notwithstanding a strong
probability that the enjoyment of the property will continue long
undisturbed.
Howe v. Weymouth, 148 Mass. 605, 606, 607. So
here the mutual dependence of the parties upon each
Page 246 U. S. 198
other in fact does not affect the consequences of their
independence of each other in law. The question before us is not
what would be a fair compensation as between a necessary customer
and a necessary seller, but simply whether the property of the
company is taken without due process of law by the city's fixing
rates for a service, while it continues, that the Company may
discontinue at will and the city may order tomorrow to stop. I am
of opinion that it is not.
See Monongahela Navigation Co. v.
United States, 148 U. S. 312,
148 U. S.
340-341;
Appleton Water Works Co. v. Railroad
Commission, 154 Wis. 121, 136-137. Whatever may be the duty of
the city toward its inhabitants, that cannot enlarge its
obligations to the Company or of the Company to it after the
franchise of the latter has expired, or change the meaning of an
ordinance that to my mind is plain upon its face. I presume that,
if it be necessary the city or the legislature can take the water
works by eminent domain.
The question is different from that which would arise upon a
franchise having but a short time to run but still in force. It
might be argued that the short life was a fact to be considered, as
no doubt it would be in some connections.
See Monongahela
Navigation Co. v. United States, 148 U.
S. 312,
148 U. S. 344;
West Springfield v. West Springfield Aqueduct Co., 167
Mass. 128, 135;
Kennebec Water District v. Waterville, 97
Me. 185, 205. Or it well may be that, while a limited franchise is
in force the very fact that the Company has to rely upon the
returns during the life of the franchise to reimburse its outlay
and give it whatever profit it can make, entitles it to returns
during that period unaffected by the approach of the end. There is
no such question here.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE CLARKE concur with this
opinion.