In a suit brought by a gas company against a city to enjoin the
enforcement of an ordinance rate alleged to be confiscatory, this
Court, by its former decision (
250 U. S. 250 U.S.
256), affirmed, with modifications, the decree of the district
court dismissing the bill, and issued its mandate, reciting the
decision and directing "that such execution and proceedings be had
in said cause as according to right and justice . . . ought to be
had, the said appeal notwithstanding."
Held:
(1) That the court below had jurisdiction, through a special
master, to ascertain the amounts collected by the company from its
customers in excess of the ordinance rate, pending the litigation,
and to require repayment thereof, with interest, in accordance with
the terms of a bond that the company filed in the cause in order to
obtain a supersedeas, with continuance of injunction, pending its
appeal. P.
256 U. S.
516.
(2) That the absence of the customers as parties was no obstacle
to such enforcement of their equitable rights, represented in the
litigation by the city and recognized and protected by the bond. P.
256 U. S.
517.
(3) That the fact that the affirmance modified the lower court's
decree so as to dismiss the bill without prejudice to the filing of
another in case changed conditions should render the rate
confiscatory did not restrict the lower court's jurisdiction to the
overcharges made before its decree was entered, since the ordinance
rate remained presumably valid until proven otherwise in a new
suit, and the bond required repayment of all overcharges collected
while the company had the benefit of the injunction pending the
appeal. P.
256 U. S.
518.
Rule discharged.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 256 U. S. 513
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Following our decision in
Lincoln Gas & Electric Light
Co. v. Lincoln, 250 U. S. 256, our
mandate went down to the District Court of the United States for
the District of Nebraska, reciting our determination that its
decree of September 23, 1915, should be modified as indicated in
the opinion, and as so modified should be affirmed with costs, and
proceeding as follows:
"You therefore are hereby commanded that such execution and
proceedings be had in said cause as according to right and justice
and the laws of the United States ought to be had, the said appeal
notwithstanding."
Upon the filing of this mandate, the district court, on January
6, 1920, entered an order modifying its decree of September 23,
1915, as particularly required, and at the same time made an order
retaining jurisdiction for the purpose of requiring the company to
make refund and restitution to consumers of gas for all amounts
collected over and above the legal rate pending the litigation,
with interest, in accordance with the terms of a bond that the
company had filed in the cause in order to obtain a supersedeas,
with a continuance of injunction, pending its appeal from the
decree of September 23, 1915. An appeal from the order retaining
jurisdiction, taken by the company to this Court, was dismissed
because the order lacked finality. 253 U.S. 477. The mandate upon
the dismissal again commanded the district court:
"that such proceedings be had in said cause, as according to
right and justice and the laws of the United States ought to be
had, the said appeal notwithstanding."
This having gone down, the court appointed a master with
direction to examine the books and accounts of the company and
prepare an account of the amounts paid by consumers in excess of
the ordinance rates during the pendency of any restraining order or
injunction in the
Page 256 U. S. 514
cause, with other provisions not necessary to be mentioned.
The company applied to this Court, obtained leave for the
purpose, and filed a petition for a writ of mandamus to command the
judge of the district court to nullify and revoke the
above-mentioned orders and refrain from assuming jurisdiction over
the cause as aforesaid. An order to show cause was is sued, proper
return thereto made by the judge, and the matter has been
argued.
From the petition and return, the following additional
particulars appear: the original suit was commenced December 27,
1906, in the United States circuit (now district) court by the
company against the city and its officials as defendants seeking
(among other things) to enjoin the enforcement of an ordinance
regulating the price to be charged for gas. At the outset, a
restraining order was obtained, and this was followed by a
temporary injunction, continued in force until final decree, and
afterwards, pending an appeal to this Court (
223 U. S. 223 U.S.
349), under a bond conditioned to account for overcharges if the
rate ordinance should be sustained. After this first appeal, the
litigation was continued until September 23, 1915, when the
district court made a final decree sustaining the rate ordinance
and dismissing the bill. An application for allowance of an appeal
to this Court, with a supersedeas to keep the injunction in effect,
was granted November 22, 1915, upon approval of a supersedeas bond
tendered by the company for the purpose, in the penal sum of
$575,000, to be paid to the clerk of the district court for the
benefit of all gas consumers who had purchased gas from the company
during the pendency of the action from its commencement, and all
consumers who should purchase gas thereafter until the final
determination of the suit, with a condition reciting the decree of
September 23, 1915, and the temporary injunction theretofore
granted to restrain the putting into effect
Page 256 U. S. 515
of the rate ordinance, and providing that, if the company should
prosecute its appeal to effect, or, failing to make its appeal
good, should answer all costs and damages and refund all
overcharges collected from gas consumers above the price fixed by
said ordinance, and should pay to the clerk of the district court
or his successor in office, for the benefit of all whom it might
concern and in particular for the benefit of all consumers entitled
to refunds, all overcharges collected since the granting of the
original injunction, together with interest thereon, when the
several parties lawfully entitled and the amount of refund due to
each should have been ascertained in the action in such manner as
the court should direct, the determination to be binding upon all
parties to the bond, then the obligation should be void, otherwise
to remain in force.
This appeal resulted in our decision of June 2, 1919, affirming
the decree with two modifications, one of which related to an
occupation tax that was under attack in the same suit, but is not
now material; the other was to cause the dismissal of the suit as
to the rate ordinance to be without prejudice to the commencement
of a new action thereafter to restrain enforcement of the ordinance
if it could be shown to be confiscatory in its effect under the new
conditions.
Thus, it appears that, during the entire course of this
protracted litigation (except for a period when the company put the
prescribed rate into effect as a test), the operation of the
ordinance was suspended at the instance of the company upon terms
obliging it and its surety to refund all overcharges should it fail
to make good its attack upon the established rate, and binding it
to abide by the determination of the court in the same cause as to
the amounts due, and pay the entire amount thus ascertained, with
interest, to the clerk of the court for the benefit of the
consumers. According to the company's
Page 256 U. S. 516
own statement, its books showing the accounts between it and its
customers during the period from 1906 to 1920 contain more than
25,000 accounts, which are involved and complicated by other
charges, so that an examination of them would involve much time and
expense.
The principal contention upon which the petition for mandamus is
rested is that, under our mandate following the decision of June 2,
1919, and the more recent one on dismissal of the subsequent
appeal, no jurisdiction was conferred upon the district court to
take any action except to affirm its decree of September 23, 1915,
dismissing the bill of complaint, after modifying the decree in the
two particulars specified. It is said that, after an appeal, the
court below has jurisdiction to proceed only in conformity with the
direction of the mandate of the appellate court. This may be
conceded. But here, our mandate expressly commanded
"that such execution and proceedings be had in said cause as
according to right and justice and the laws of the United States
ought to be had, the said appeal notwithstanding."
Of course, whatever proceedings were taken thereafter in the
same cause would be
further proceedings, and the absence
of the particular word "further" from the mandate is of no
consequence. Emphatically, the command called for proceedings in
the nature of execution according to right and justice and the laws
of the United States. The necessary meaning is that the court below
should proceed to carry our decision into full effect according to
right and justice, and manifestly this could not be done without
proceeding to enforce the supersedeas bond according to its terms.
The bond recognized that the city and its officials, who were the
nominal parties defendant, were in a broad sense the
representatives of the consumers, the parties actually concerned.
It recognized that they were required to pay a rate for gas higher
than the city
Page 256 U. S. 517
ordinance had determined to be just and reasonable; that these
excess charges were being exacted pending the suit, in order that
the company might be secure in the event that it should prevail,
and,
per contra, that they ought to be refunded with
interest in the event that it should fail. It recognized that the
consumers were so many in number, and the difficulty of sustaining
their individual claims through separate suits would be so great,
that to remit them to such suits would be a virtual denial of
justice. And it recognized that to ascertain what should be due to
them, to see to its collection from the company in case of its
failure to make good its attack upon the ordinance, and to cause
distribution to be made among the several claimants was essential
to the doing of complete equity, and therefore a natural incident
to the jurisdiction of the court in the main cause. To retain
jurisdiction for the purpose of requiring that restitution be made
according to the terms of the bond was and is a necessary part of
the duty of the district court under the mandate.
The case is within the principle of
Arkadelphia Co. v. St.
Louis Southwestern Ry. Co., 249 U. S. 134,
249 U. S.
143-147.
The contention that the jurisdiction fails because the consumers
were not parties to the record, nor in privity with the parties,
and the company prayed no relief against them, is transparently
unsound. The ordinance was intended to limit the gas rate for the
benefit of the consumers; suit was brought against the municipality
and its officers as the public representatives of the interests of
the consumers; the restraining order and temporary injunction were
intended for the very purpose of enabling the company to exact,
pending the suit, rates in excess of those limited by the
ordinance; the equitable duty to refund excess charges if the suit
should fail was a duty owing to the consumers, and the form of the
supersedeas
Page 256 U. S. 518
bond recognized all this, and was particularly designed for
their protection.
Nor is there substance in the contention that the jurisdiction
does not extend to overcharges subsequent to September 23, 1915.
The thought suggested is that the adjudication of the validity of
the ordinance did not extend beyond the date of the final decree;
that, thereafter, changed conditions, increased costs, and other
circumstances referred to by us in
250 U. S. 250
U.S. 268 may have rendered the limited rate noncompensatory, and
the ordinance therefore confiscatory, and that at least the
company, before being called upon to make restitution, ought to
have a hearing upon this question as to the period subsequent to
September 23, 1915. The contention overlooks the effect of the
ordinance, which is presumptively valid, and has continuing force
unless and until set aside by judicial decree as the result of an
investigation, in which the burden of proof is upon the company;
that the decree of September 23, 1915, is conclusive evidence that
the company has made such an attempt and has failed, and that the
ordinance rate not only is lawful and binding, but will so continue
unless and until the company, under the "without prejudice" clause,
shall begin a new suit and maintain its contention that the rate
through changed conditions has become noncompensatory.
See
Missouri v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. Co.,
241 U. S. 533,
241 U. S. 539.
The contention also overlooks the fact that the bond itself was
given subsequent to the decree appealed from, in terms for the
benefit not only of gas consumers who theretofore had purchased gas
from the company, but of those who should purchase thereafter at
any time before the final determination of the suit. The specific
obligation thus assumed requires it to refund all overcharges
collected in excess of the ordinance rate, so long as it had the
benefit of the injunction pending the appeal, and the jurisdiction
of the district court to see
Page 256 U. S. 519
that the excess charges are refunded has corresponding
extent.
We have said enough to demonstrate the existence of the
jurisdiction of the district court and its scope. Other points are
raised, but they relate not to the question of jurisdiction, but to
the mode in which the jurisdiction ought to be exercised. If they
have substance -- as to which we make no intimation -- they will be
subject to review in the appropriate method after the conclusion of
the proceeding.
Rule discharged.