A bill setting up obligations of a contract with a state and
charging that they were impaired by subsequent state legislation
held to present a controversy under the Constitution,
conferring jurisdiction upon the district court and warranting a
direct appeal under § 238, Jud.Code. P.
251 U. S.
237.
There is a distinction between a statute that has the effect of
violating or repudiating a contract made by a state and one that
impairs its obligation.
Id.
Appellant contracted with the State of Washington to excavate
certain waterways in Seattle Harbor for a certain compensation,
using excavated material in filling in adjacent state lands, upon
which he was to have a lien to secure the compensation; but, after
long delays without substantial performance by the contractor, an
act was passed to abandon the project and vest the title to the
lands in a municipality.
Held that the obligation of the
contract was not thereby impaired.
Id.
An appropriation of private property for a public purpose by an
act of a state legislature is not violative of the Fourteenth
Amendment if a general law permits the owner, upon giving security
for costs, to sue the state in her courts and provides that any
judgment for his damages and costs shall be paid out of the state
treasury. P.
251 U.S.
238.
In the federal equity practice, the defense of laches need not
be set up by plea or answer, but may be taken advantage of either
by demurrer or upon final hearing. P.
251 U. S. 239.
226 F. 287 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 251 U. S. 234
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellant filed his bill in equity for an injunction to restrain
the enforcement of an act of the Legislature of the State of
Washington, approved March 11, 1913 (Sess.Laws, p. 195), entitled
"An act vacating a portion of Smith's Cove waterway, in the City of
Seattle, and vesting the title of the vacated portion in the port
of Seattle," upon the ground (a) that it impaired the obligation of
an existing contract between him and the state, in violation of
§ 10 of article 1 of the Constitution of the United States,
and (b) that it deprived him of property without due process of
law, contrary to § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment. The district
court, on final hearing, dismissed the bill (226 F. 287), and the
case is brought here by direct appeal under § 238, Judicial
Code because of the constitutional questions.
The facts, shortly stated, are as follows: under an act of the
legislature approved March 9, 1893 (Sess.Laws, p. 241), which made
provision for the excavation by private contract of waterways for
the uses of navigation, complainant and another party to whose
rights he has succeeded obtained a contract with the state, acting
by the Commissioner of Public Lands, which was approved by the
Governor on March 7, 1896. It provided for the excavation by
complainant of Smith's Cove waterway, in Seattle Harbor, extending
from the outer harbor line through the intervening tide lands to
the head of Smith's Cove, the excavated material to be used for
filling in and raising above high tide the adjacent tide and shore
lands belonging to the State of Washington. For doing this, he was
to be entitled to compensation equivalent to the cost of the work
plus 15 percentum and interest, for which he was to have a lien
upon the tide and shore lands so filled in. The state agreed to
hold these lands subject to the operation of the contract pending
its execution, and
Page 251 U. S. 235
subject to the ultimate lien of the contractor thereon, and that
it would perform by its authorized agents all things required by
the Act of 1893 to be performed by the state. The contract provided
for and specified the character of the bulkheads and retaining
walls to be used, reserving, however, to the Commissioner of Public
Lands the right to modify these plans and specifications as to
"shape, form, and character of material" as might appear necessary.
The contract required complainant, at his own cost, to excavate
also a waterway to extend from the north end of the Smith's Cove
waterway across the peninsula separating the cove from Salmon Bay,
such excavation to be made under the direction and in accordance
with the plans of an engineer to be designated by the Governor of
the state or the Secretary of War of the United States, and, when
excavated, to be owned, possessed, and controlled by the United
States or by the state, free of cost to them, if the right of way
and the privilege of excavating across the peninsula should be
accorded to the contractor free of cost or if fair compensation
should be made to him therefor. Work was to be commenced within
sixty days and completed within two years from the date of
approval.
On May 4, 1896, complainant entered upon performance of the
contract and commenced driving piles for the construction of a
bulkhead. Almost immediately he was notified by the Commissioner of
Public Lands that the latter elected to exercise the right, as
provided by the contract, to change the form of bulkhead. This had
the effect of requiring a suspension of work until modified plans
and specifications for the bulkheads should be prepared.
Complainant did suspend the work, and it never was resumed
thereafter. There were negotiations and correspondence between him
and the Commissioner of Public Lands looking to the preparation of
the modified plans and specifications, but they resulted in
nothing.
Page 251 U. S. 236
Each party seems to have insisted that it was the duty of the
other to furnish them.
Complainant contends that he was at all times ready and prepared
to carry out the contract on his part, but was prevented from doing
so by acts and omissions of the state and its representatives,
including the failure to furnish plans for the modified form of
bulkhead and a failure to furnish complainant with a right of way
across the peninsula between the head of Smith's Cove and Salmon
Bay. Defendants contend that repeatedly, and in particular in the
month of November, 1898, complainant was notified that his plans
were wholly inadequate and would be insufficient for the purpose
for which the retaining wall was designed, and that, on the latter
occasion, he was notified to submit proper plans and specifications
and to commence operations within ten days after their
approval.
While the excavation project thus remained in suspense, and
pursuant to an act authorizing establishment of port districts,
approved March 14, 1911 (Sess.Laws, p. 412), the port of Seattle
was established as a municipal corporation, with territorial limits
including Smith's Cove waterway, Salmon Bay, and the intervening
peninsula. This act conferred extensive powers for the regulation,
control, and improvement of the harbor and navigable and
nonnavigable waters within such district in the interest of the
public.
Thereafter, by the statute that is now under attack (Sess.Laws
1913, p. 195), it was enacted that the northerly part of the
Smith's Cove waterway should be vacated and the title thereto
vested in the port of Seattle. Complainant was fully advised of
this legislative measure, even prior to its enactment.
After it took effect, which was in June, 1913, the port
commission took possession of the waterway, exercised control over
it, and did a considerable amount of excavation,
Page 251 U. S. 237
filling, and bulkhead construction, having spent large sums of
money therein between the taking effect of the act and November 14,
1914, when the bill of complaint was filed.
Coming to the questions raised upon the present appeal, the
averments of the bill setting up the alleged obligations of
complainant's contract with the state, and the contention that they
were impaired by the Act of 1913, presented a controversy under the
Constitution of the United States, and (a sufficient amount being
involved) conferred jurisdiction upon the federal court
irrespective of the citizenship of the parties, and at the same
time warranted a direct appeal to this Court under § 238,
Judicial Code.
Greene v. Louisville & Interurban R.
Co., 244 U. S. 499,
244 U. S.
508.
The merits remain for determination.
Upon the first constitutional point, it is important to note the
distinction between a statute that has the effect of violating or
repudiating a contract previously made by the state and one that
impairs its obligation. Had the Legislature of Washington, pending
performance or after complete performance by complainant, passed an
act to alter materially the scope of his contract to diminish his
compensation or to defeat his lien upon the filled lands, there
would no doubt have been an attempted impairment of the obligation.
The legislation in question had no such purpose or effect. It
simply, after seventeen years of delay without substantial
performance of the contract, provided that the project should be
abandoned and title to the public lands turned over to the
municipality. Supposing the contract had not been abandoned by
complainant himself or terminated by his long delay, its obligation
remained as before, and formed the measure of his right to recover
from the state for the damages sustained.
Brown v.
Colorado, 106 U. S. 95,
106 U. S. 98;
St. Paul Gaslight Co. v. St. Paul, 181 U.
S. 142,
181 U. S.
148-150;
Dawson v.
Page 251 U. S. 238
Columbia Trust Co., 197 U. S. 178,
197 U. S. 181;
Lord v. Thomas, 64 N.Y. 107;
Caldwell v.
Donaghey, 108 Ark. 60, 64.
We deem it clear also that the Act of 1913 had not the effect of
depriving complainant of property without due process of law, in
contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment. Assuming he had property
rights and that they were taken, it clearly was done for a public
purpose, and there was adequate provision for compensation in
§§ 886-890, Rem. & Bal.Code of Washington, which
entitle any person having a claim against the state to begin an
action thereon in a designated court upon the mere giving of
security for costs, whereupon service of the complaint is to be
made upon the Attorney General and Secretary of State, the action
is to proceed in all respects as other actions, with a right of
appeal to the supreme court, and, in case of a final judgment
against the state, a transcript of it is to be furnished to the
Auditor of State, who is required thereupon to "audit the amount of
damages and costs therein awarded, and the same shall be paid out
of the state treasury." If his claim has not been barred by
limitation of time, this statute constitutes an adequate provision
for assured payment of any compensation due to complainant without
unreasonable delay, and hence satisfies the requirement of due
process of law as clearly as if the ascertainment of compensation
had preceded the taking.
Bragg v. Weaver, ante,
251 U. S. 57.
The district court, besides finding complainant's case to be
otherwise without merits, held in effect that he was barred from
relief in equity by laches, because, after the taking effect of the
Act of 1913, he stood by for more than a year and permitted the
port commission to enter upon extensive improvements and expend
large moneys on the waterway and adjoining lands before he began
his suit. The only answer made to this is that the defense of
laches was not pleaded. But, in the equity practice of the
courts
Page 251 U. S. 239
of the United States (excepted from the Conformity Act,
see Rev.Stats. §§ 913, 914), laches is a defense
that need not be set up by plea or answer. It rests upon the long
established doctrine of courts of equity that their extraordinary
relief will not be accorded to one who delays the assertion of his
claim for an unreasonable length of time, especially where the
delay has led to a change of conditions that would render it unjust
to disturb them at his instance. It is for the complainant in his
bill to excuse the delay in seeking equitable relief, where there
has been such, and if it be not excused, his laches may be taken
advantage of either by demurrer or upon final hearing.
Maxwell v.
Kennedy, 8 How. 210,
49 U. S. 222;
Badger v.
Badger, 2 Wall. 87,
69 U. S. 95;
Marsh v.
Whitmore, 21 Wall. 178,
88 U. S. 185;
Sullivan v. Portland, etc., R. Co., 94 U. S.
806,
94 U. S. 811;
National Bank v. Carpenter, 101 U.
S. 567;
Lansdale v. Smith, 106 U.
S. 391;
Hammond v. Hopkins, 143 U.
S. 224,
143 U. S. 250;
Galliher v. Cadwell, 145 U. S. 368,
145 U. S.
371-373;
Hardt v. Heidweyer, 152 U.
S. 547,
152 U. S. 559;
Abraham v. Ordway, 158 U. S. 416,
158 U. S. 420;
Willard v. Wood, 164 U. S. 502,
164 U. S. 524;
Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Austin, 168 U.
S. 685,
168 U. S.
696-698.
Decree affirmed.