As respects grants to municipalities of governmental authority
-- and such is the authority to regulate the rates charged to a
city and its inhabitants by a gas company -- the power of the
states is not restrained by the contract clause of the
Constitution. P.
250 U. S.
397.
A city contended that, at the time when it granted a franchise
to a gas company to use the streets and supply gas to the city and
its inhabitants, the city alone had authority to regulate the
charges and service thereunder within its municipal limits, that
the legislature could not transfer that authority to a state
commission consistently with the state constitution, and that, in
consequence, a later act of the legislature, and an order of the
commission thereunder changing the service and increasing the
rates, impaired the obligation of the franchise contract between
the city and the company.
Held that no question was
presented under the contract clause affording this Court
jurisdiction to review a judgment against the city by the state
supreme court. P.
250 U. S.
396.
Writ of error to review 166 P. 1058 dismissed.
Page 250 U. S. 395
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
A city in Oklahoma is complaining here of an order of the
corporation commission of the state, made in 1917, regulating the
rates and service of a gas company engaged in supplying natural gas
to the city and its inhabitants. The company has a franchise,
granted by the city in 1909, which entitles it to have its
pipelines in the streets and alleys of the city and provides that
the gas shall be supplied at flat or meter rates at the option of
the consumer, and that the rates shall not be in excess of fixed
standards.
When the franchise was granted, there was a provision in the
state constitution, Art. XIII, § 7, reading:
"No grant, extension, or renewal of any franchise or other use
of the streets, alleys, or other public grounds or ways of any
municipality shall divest the state, or any of its subordinate
subdivisions, of their control and regulation of such use and
enjoyment. Nor shall the power to regulate the charges for public
services be surrendered, and no exclusive franchise shall ever be
granted."
And there also was a statutory provision, Rev.Stats. 1903,
§ 398; Rev.Laws 1910, § 593, declaring: "All such grants
shall be subject at all times to reasonable regulations by
ordinance as to the use of streets and prices to be paid for gas or
light."
In 1913, the state legislature adopted an act providing that the
corporation commission
"shall have general supervision
Page 250 U. S. 396
over all public utilities, with power to fix and establish rates
and to prescribe rules, requirements and regulations, affecting
their services."
Laws 1913, c. 93, § 2. It was under this act, and after a
full hearing on a petition presented by the gas company, that the
order in question was made. The order abrogates all flat rates,
increases the meter rates, requires that the gas be sold through
meters to be supplied and installed at the company's expense, and
recites that the evidence produced at the hearing disclosed that
the franchise rates had become inadequate and unremunerative and
that supplying gas at flat rates was productive of wasteful use. On
an appeal by the city, the supreme court of the state affirmed the
order. 166 P. 1058.
The city contended in that court -- and it so contends here --
that, at the time the franchise was granted, it alone was
authorized to regulate such charges and service within its
municipal limits, that the legislature could not transfer that
authority to the Corporation Commission consistently with the
Constitution of the state, and that, in consequence, the act under
which the commission proceeded and the order made by it effected an
impairment of the franchise contract between the city and the gas
company in violation of the contract clause of the Constitution of
the United States. Or, stating it in another way, the contention of
the city was and is that the authority to regulate the rates and
service, which concededly was reserved at the time the franchise
was granted, was irrevocably delegated to the city by the
constitution and laws of the state, and therefore that the exertion
of that authority by any other state agency, even though in
conformity with a later enactment of the legislature, operated as
an impairment of the franchise contract.
Dealing with this contention, the state court, while fully
conceding that the earlier statute delegated to the city the
authority claimed by it, held that this delegation was
Page 250 U. S. 397
to endure only "until such time as the state saw fit to exercise
its paramount authority," that, under the state constitution, the
legislature could withdraw that authority from the city whenever in
its judgment the public interest would be subserved thereby, and
that it was effectively withdrawn from the city and confided to the
corporation commission by the Act of 1913. The claim that this
impaired the franchise contract was overruled.
It is not contended, nor could it well be, that any private
right of the city was infringed, but only that a power to regulate
in the public interest theretofore confided to it was taken away
and lodged in another agency of the state -- one created by the
state constitution. Thus, the whole controversy is as to which of
two existing agencies or arms of the state government is authorized
for the time being to exercise in the public interest a particular
power, obviously governmental, subject to which the franchise
confessedly was granted. In this, no question under the contract
clause of the Constitution of the United States is involved, but
only a question of local law, the decision of which by the supreme
court of the state is final.
"Municipal corporations are political subdivisions of the state,
created as convenient agencies for exercising such of the
governmental powers of the state as may be entrusted to them. For
the purpose of executing these powers properly and efficiently,
they usually are given the power to acquire, hold, and manage
personal and real property. The number, nature, and duration of the
powers conferred upon these corporations and the territory over
which they shall be exercised rests in the absolute discretion of
the state. Neither their charters, nor any law conferring
governmental powers, or vesting in them property to be used for
governmental purposes, or authorizing them to hold or manage such
property, or exempting them from taxation upon it, constitutes a
contract with
Page 250 U. S. 398
the state within the meaning of the federal Constitution."
Hunter v. Pittsburgh, 207 U. S. 161,
207 U. S.
178.
In
Dartmouth College v.
Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518,
17 U. S.
629-630,
17 U. S.
659-664,
17 U. S. 668,
17 U. S. 694,
it was distinctly recognized that, as respects grants of political
or governmental authority to cities, towns, counties, and the like,
the legislative power of the states is not restrained by the
contract clause of the Constitution, and in
East
Hartford v. Hartford Bridge Co., 10 How. 511,
51 U. S. 533,
where was involved the validity of a state statute recalling a
grant to a city, theretofore made and long in use, of power to
operate and maintain a ferry over a river, it was said that the
parties to the grant did not stand
"in the attitude towards each other of making a contract by it,
such as is contemplated in the Constitution, and as could not be
modified by subsequent legislation. The legislature was acting here
on the one part, and public municipal and political corporations on
the other. They were acting, too, in relation to a public object,
being virtually a highway across the river, over another highway up
and down the river. From this standing and relation of these
parties, and from the subject matter of their action, we think that
the doings of the legislature as to this ferry must be considered
rather as a public law than as contracts. They related to public
interests. They changed as those interests demanded. The grantees
likewise, the towns being mere organizations for public purposes,
were liable to have their public powers, rights, and duties
modified or abolished at any moment by the legislature. . . .
Hence, generally, the doings between them and the legislature are
in the nature of legislation, rather than compact, and subject to
all the legislative conditions just named, and therefore to be
considered as not violated by subsequent legislative changes."
In
New Orleans v. New Orleans Waterworks Co.,
142 U. S. 79, where
a city, relying on the contract clause, sought a review by this
Court of a
Page 250 U. S. 399
judgment of a state court sustaining a statute so modifying the
franchise of a waterworks company as to require the city to pay for
water used for municipal purposes, to which it theretofore was
entitled without charge, the writ of error was dismissed on the
ground that no question of impairment within the meaning of the
contract clause was involved. Some of the earlier cases were
reviewed, and it was said (p.
142 U. S.
91):
"But further citations of authorities upon this point are
unnecessary; they are full and conclusive to the point that the
municipality, being a mere agent of the state, stands in its
governmental or public character in no contract relation with its
sovereign at whose pleasure its charter may be amended, changed, or
revoked without the impairment of any constitutional obligation,
while, with respect to its private or proprietary rights and
interests, it may be entitled to the constitutional protection. In
this case, the city has no more right to claim an immunity for its
contract with the Waterworks Company than it would have had if such
contract had been made directly with the state. The state, having
authorized such contract, might revoke or modify it at its
pleasure."
The principles announced and applied in these cases have been
reiterated and enforced so often that the matter is no longer
debatable.
Covington v. Kentucky, 173 U.
S. 231,
173 U. S. 241;
Worcester v. Worcester Street Ry. Co., 196 U.
S. 539,
196 U. S. 548;
Braxton County Court v. West Virginia, 208 U.
S. 192;
Englewood v. Denver & South Platte Ry.
Co., 248 U. S. 294,
248 U. S.
296.
Writ of error dismissed.