1. A judgment of a state supreme court which does not terminate
the litigation between the parties in such manner that, should
there be an affirmance here, the court below would have nothing to
do but to execute the judgment it had rendered, is not a final
judgment for the purpose of review in this Court, even though it be
regarded by the state court as settling the law of the case. P.
262 U. S.
436.
2. Upon review of a judgment of a state supreme court, its
decision upholding the power of a municipality of the state, under
the local constitution and laws, to enter into a rate contract with
a street railway company is controlling upon this Court. P.
262 U. S.
437.
3. But, in deciding constitutional questions presented, this
Court will determine for itself whether there is in fact a contract
and, if so, the extent of its binding obligations, but will lean to
an agreement with the state court. P.
262 U. S.
438.
4. A street railway company cannot avoid the obligation to abide
by maximum rates fixed by a valid contract with a town by showing
that they have become confiscatory. P.
262 U. S.
438.
5. A state statute extending the corporate limits of a town and
construed by the state supreme court as having the effect of
rendering applicable to the added territory maximum street railway
rates fixed by an earlier contract between the town and the street
railway company impairs the obligation of the contract by adding to
its burdens. P.
262 U.S.
439.
6. In the absence of any showing that the classification is in
fact unreasonable and arbitrary, a statute which empowers a
commission to revise the rates of street railway companies as they
may be fixed by future contracts with municipalities, but not those
fixed by contracts existing when the statute passed, cannot be said
to violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
as applied to a company whose contract is thus excepted and
prescribes a maximum rate which the company claims to be
inadequate. P.
262 U.S.
439.
7. An order of a state commission requiring a street railroad
company to continue issuance of transfers and to provide
additional
Page 262 U. S. 433
seating capacity and trailer cars
upheld against
constitutional objection in view of obligations imposed by a
contract between the company and a municipality and the powers of
the commission. P.
262 U.S.
439.
153 Ga. 329 reversed; certiorari denied.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia affirming a
decree for the Town of Decatur in its suit to enjoin the plaintiffs
in error from increasing the fare on a street car line in violation
of a contract.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error, plaintiff below, brought suit against
the power and electric companies, defendants below, to enjoin them
from increasing the rate of fare on a line of street railway
between Decatur and the City of Atlanta. Hackman and others
intervened, asserting that they resided near Atlanta and used
certain car lines of defendant going to and from Atlanta, upon
which a seven-cent fare was exacted, and that the contract,
hereinafter referred to, giving residents of Decatur a lower rate
of fare, constituted an illegal discrimination against them and
against the localities where they lived. They did not allege that
the seven-cent fare was unreasonable, nor did they seek any change
in that rate, but merely joined with defendants in praying that the
contract be held void and of no effect.
The electric company was the owner and the power company the
lessee of the lines involved. About the year 1902, the electric
company owned three lines between
Page 262 U. S. 434
Atlanta and Decatur. Desiring to abandon the most northerly of
these lines, the company began to tear it up. Thereupon, suit was
brought for an injunction. The controversy was adjusted by an
agreement between the company and the Town of Decatur by which the
company was allowed to remove its line and an ordinance was enacted
carrying the agreement into effect. This ordinance, which was
formally accepted, bound the company
"to never charge more than five cents for one fare upon its main
Decatur line . . . for one passenger and one trip upon its regular
cars from the terminus of said line in the City of Atlanta to the
terminus of the same in the Town of Decatur, or from the terminus
of said line in the Town of Decatur to the terminus of the same in
the City of Atlanta, . . ."
and
"to grant one transfer ticket upon the payment of one full fare
for the purpose of giving one continuous ride from any point within
the Town of Decatur . . . to any point within the City of Atlanta
on any of its lines in said city, and vice versa."
In pursuance of this agreement, the company tore up, removed,
and abandoned the northerly line, and has never since restored
it.
The company maintained a five-cent fare until October, 1920, at
which time it gave notice that the fare would be increased to seven
cents. Prior thereto, an application of the company to the Railroad
Commission of Georgia for permission to make this increase had been
denied on the ground that, because of the contract, the commission
was without jurisdiction. The company then sought by mandamus to
compel the commission to assume jurisdiction of the question, but
the application was denied by the trial court, whose ruling was
affirmed by the supreme court of the state insofar as it related to
the line covered by the contract. The present suit against the
defendants was predicated upon the foregoing facts. The contentions
of the defendants were that the execution of the contract
Page 262 U. S. 435
was beyond the powers of the town; that permission to remove and
abandon the northerly line furnished no consideration for it; that
it constituted an attempt to fix fares outside the corporate limits
of the town; that, since it was entered into, these limits had been
twice extended so as to include a portion of the main line outside
the corporate limits when the contract was entered into, and that
the contract could not be applied to this additional territory
without impairing its obligation in violation of the Constitution
of the United States. They further contended that, in any event,
the five-cent fare should be limited to passengers entering cars at
the termini of the line in Atlanta and Decatur, and not to those
entering at intermediate points, and that, because of changed
conditions since the contract was made, the five-cent fare was
confiscatory. Upon an application made by the defendants after the
disposition of the mandamus proceeding, the Railroad Commission had
fixed a seven-cent fare on lines not covered by the contract, and
required the defendants to furnish, during rush hour periods,
additional seating capacity, and, on the main Decatur and College
Park routes, to operate trailers during such rush hours. The
commission had also ordered that no change should be made in the
existing rules and practices of the company as to transfers.
The trial court made an interlocutory order granting a
preliminary injunction, which was affirmed on writ of error by the
state supreme court. 152 Ga. 143. Thereafter, the case having been
remanded, defendants were allowed to amend their answer and
cross-bill in several particulars. A general demurrer to these
amended pleadings was sustained in part, and a jury, impaneled to
try the remaining issues, found for the plaintiff by direction of
the court, upon which a final decree was entered. A second writ of
error from the state supreme court followed. That court held that
its judgment upon the first
Page 262 U. S. 436
writ of error became the law of the case and was
res
judicata. and therefore precluded a further review, and the
decree of the trial court was affirmed. 153 Ga. 329. Deprivation of
rights under the federal Constitution was duly and properly
asserted. The case is here on writ of error. From motives of
caution, defendants also filed a petition praying the issuance of a
writ of certiorari, consideration of which was postponed to await
the hearing on the writ of error.
Preliminarily, defendant in error insists that the decision of
the state supreme court on the first writ of error affirming the
interlocutory order of the trial court was a final adjudication
from which a writ of error from this Court might have been sued
out, and hence that we are precluded from considering the present
writ of error.
Rio Grande Railway v. Stringham,
239 U. S. 44, is
cited and relied upon, but that case furnishes no support to the
contention. There, the trial court had adjudged the title to a
piece of land to be in the defendant. Upon appeal, the state
supreme court reversed this judgment and remanded the case with
directions to enter judgment awarding plaintiff title to a right of
way over the land. The trial court followed this direction.
Plaintiff again appealed, insisting, as it had done before, that it
had title in fee simple, but the appellate court declined to
consider the question, holding that the former decision concluded
the court as well as the parties. This Court held that, as the
judgment on the first appeal disposed of the whole case on the
merits and directed that judgment should be entered, it left
nothing to the judicial discretion of the trial court, and was
therefore final. Here, the first writ of error was not from a final
judgment, but from an interlocutory order granting a temporary
injunction. That it did not finally dispose of the case is clear,
since the trial court thereafter allowed amendments, ruled on a
demurrer, impaneled a jury, directed a verdict, and entered a
Page 262 U. S. 437
final decree, and it was upon this decree that the second writ
of error was brought. We are not unmindful of the ruling of the
appellate court to the effect that the issues were, in fact
disposed of on the first writ of error and its powers brought to an
end, but, whatever may be the view of that court in respect of its
own power to again consider the issues, the judgment now under
review is the only one this Court can consider as final for the
purpose of exercising its appellate jurisdiction.
Great Western
Telegraph Co. v. Burnham, 162 U. S. 339,
162 U. S. 343;
United States v. Denver & Rio Grande R. Co.,
191 U. S. 84,
191 U. S. 93;
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. McCabe, 213 U.
S. 207,
213 U. S. 214;
Zeckendorf v. Steinfeld, 225 U. S. 445,
225 U. S. 454.
While prior decisions on the subject of what constitutes a final
judgment are not entirely harmonious, the rule is established that,
in order to give this Court appellate jurisdiction, the judgment or
decree
"must terminate the litigation between the parties on the merits
of the case, so that, if there should be an affirmance here, the
court below would have nothing to do but to execute the judgment or
decree it had . . . rendered."
Bostwick v. Brinkerhoff, 106 U. S.
3, and cases cited.
We hold, therefore, that the writ of error was properly brought,
and come to a consideration of the substantive matters
presented.
1. The principal question, and the one to which the briefs and
arguments are mainly directed, is whether the agreement between the
plaintiff and the electric company was within the powers of the
town, and is now valid and subsisting. This contract has been
before the Supreme Court of Georgia in the course of the litigation
on three distinct occasions: 149 Ga. 1; 152 Ga. 143, and (the
instant case) 153 Ga. 329. That court, in carefully considered and
well reasoned opinions, sustained the authority of the municipality
and upheld the contract as valid and subsisting. Defendants contend
that the authority
Page 262 U. S. 438
to fix rates devolved by the state constitution upon the General
Assembly, and therefore that the Town of Decatur was without power
to enter into a contract on that subject. When the contract was
made, the General Assembly had never exercised this authority, and
the state supreme court held that there was nothing in the
Constitution of the state which precluded the municipality from
contracting as to fares, and that, while the matter was one falling
within the police power, whose exercise could not be abridged by
contract, it was competent for the municipality to enter into such
a contract where the state had not exercised and was not seeking to
exercise its police power over the subject, and that this contract
would remain effective until there should be conflicting
legislative action.
See Milwaukee Elec. Ry. v. Wisconsin R. Co.
Comm'n, 238 U. S. 174,
238 U. S. 183.
This conclusion, involving as it does a construction of the state
constitution and laws and powers of state municipalities, is
controlling upon this Court, as it has decided many times.
See
for example, Old Colony Trust Co. v. Omaha, 230 U.
S. 100,
230 U. S. 116;
Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U.
S. 400,
111 U. S. 410;
City of Richmond v.
Smith, 15 Wall. 429,
82 U. S.
438.
On the other hand, in deciding the constitutional questions
presented, this Court will determine for itself whether there is in
fact a contract and, if so, the extent of its binding obligations,
but will lean to an agreement with the state court.
Tampa Water
Works v. Tampa, 199 U. S. 241,
199 U. S.
242-243, and cases cited;
Freeport Water Co. v.
Freeport City, 180 U. S. 587,
180 U. S. 595;
Detroit v. Detroit Citizens' St. Ry. Co., 184 U.
S. 368,
184 U. S. 386;
Milwaukee Electric Ry. v. Wisconsin R. Co. Commission,
supra. And, considering the question in this light, we see no
reason to differ with that court in its view of the validity and
binding quality of the contract. The contract being valid, we are
not concerned with the question whether the stipulated rates are
confiscatory.
Southern
Page 262 U. S. 439
Iowa Co. v. Chariton, 255 U. S. 539,
255 U. S. 542;
Paducah v. Paducah R. Co., 261 U.
S. 267.
2. Treating the contract as valid, it is insisted that its
obligation is impaired by the statutory extension of the limits of
the town and the action of the court in holding the five-cent fare
applicable in the added territory. While the statute does not refer
to the contract or in terms make the rates applicable in the
annexed territory, the necessary result of the decision of the
state courts is to give it that effect, and in that way the
statute, in the respect complained of, does substantially impair
the obligation of the contract by adding to its burdens.
Detroit United Railway v. Michigan, 242 U.
S. 238,
242 U. S.
247-248;
Columbia Railway, Gas & Electric Co. v.
South Carolina, 261 U. S. 236.
3. The state statute of August 23, 1907, Civil Code, §
2662, extends the power of the Railroad Commission to street
railroad companies, but contains a proviso to the effect that it
shall not be construed "to impair any valid, subsisting contract
now in existence between any municipality and any such company." It
is insisted that this proviso brings about an arbitrary
classification, in violation of the equal protection clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, because it subjects future contracts to the
power of the Commission while exempting existing contracts
therefrom. But it is not shown that the classification in fact is
unreasonable and arbitrary, and, under the decisions of this Court,
we cannot say that it is obnoxious to the constitutional provision.
Arkansas Natural Gas Co. v. Arkansas Railroad Commission,
261 U. S. 379, and
cases cited.
4. We cannot agree with the contention of defendants that the
order of the commission directing that no change be made in the
matter of the issuance of free transfers is open to constitutional
objection. The order of the commission
Page 262 U. S. 440
went no further than to direct a continuance of a practice
which, so far as the record discloses, was not beyond the terms of
the contract providing specifically for such transfers.
Neither are we able to say that the order of the commission
directing the defendants to provide additional seating capacity on
some of its lines and trailers upon the line covered by the
contract was beyond its ordinary power to require adequate service.
There is nothing in the contract with which the order conflicts,
and such service naturally would seem to be implied, in the absence
of a provision to the contrary.
5. Other contentions advanced by defendants we find so clearly
lacking in merit that we dismiss them without special
consideration.
It results from the foregoing that the judgment below, insofar
as it makes applicable the contract rates within the annexed
territory, cannot be sustained. The contract rates apply only to
the Town of Decatur, as it existed when the contract was made. To
apply them to additional territory is to impose a burden upon
defendants outside the contract. We find no other error, but, upon
the ground stated under paragraph 2, the decree of the state
supreme court is reversed and the cause remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
Writ of certiorari denied.