1. A law authorizing suits in behalf of the state for the
assertion of its title to property does not impair any contract
rights that a party thus proceeded against may have in the subject
matter. P.
269 U. S.
68.
2. Consequently an adjudication for the state is not reviewable
in this Court by the defendant on the ground that the statute
authorizing the suit violated the contract clause of the
Constitution.
Id.
Writ of error to review 156 Ga. 409 dismissed; certiorari
denied.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia affirming a
decree denying the claim of the Telegraph Company to an easement of
way in railroad property owned by the state, and enjoining the
Company to remove its wires, poles, and structures. Certiorari also
was applied for, and denied.
Page 269 U. S. 68
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by the State of Georgia and the Nashville,
Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway for a decree enjoining the
Western Union Telegraph Company from occupying or using any part of
the right of way of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, a road
built and owned by the state and let by it to the railway company
that joins with it as a plaintiff in this suit. The telegraph
company claims a perpetual right of way over the state owned road
by virtue of three alleged contracts. The trial court decided that
the telegraph company had no right in the premises, ordered it to
remove its wires, poles, and structures from the plaintiff's right
of way within twelve months from the final determination of the
cause, and enjoined it from occupying or using the right of way
after that time. This decree was affirmed by the Supreme Court of
Georgia by an equally divided court. 156 Ga. 409. The case is
brought here by writ of error on the ground that the statutes
warranting these proceedings impaired the obligation of the alleged
contracts. There is also a petition for a writ of certiorari filed
out of caution, but the only federal question is that raised by the
writ of error, and therefore the petition for a writ of certiorari
is denied.
The first, and in this case the only, question to be decided is
whether the statutes relied upon have been given an effect
impairing the obligation of any contract that the telegraph company
may have. The statutes are an Act of November 30, 1915, and one of
August 4, 1916, amending the former. The Act of 1915 provided for
the letting of the Western & Atlantic Railroad and created a
Commission to determine, among other things, the extent and
character of every use of the right of way by anyone other than the
lessee, and the authority for the same. The Commission was to
prepare bills for the General Assembly
Page 269 U. S. 69
carrying into effect any recommendation that it might make with
respect to what steps should be taken to assert the title of the
state to any part of the right of way or the road that might be
adversely used. By the amendment, the Commission was given power to
deal with encroachments on the way and to determine whether they
should be moved and discontinued, and to take such action as it
deemed proper to cause the removal, and to that end
"the Commission is authorized and empowered to institute and
prosecute, in the name and behalf of the State of Georgia, such
suits and other legal proceedings as it may deem appropriate in
protection of the state's interest, or the assertion of the state's
title."
Acts Ga.1916, p. 146. Under this statute, the Commission,
reciting that it was advised by its counsel that the occupation of
the way by the telegraph company was without lawful authority,
resolved that the counsel be instructed to institute suit for the
removal of the encroachment in the name of the state, provided that
the lessees should join in the suit and pay the costs. Thereupon
this proceeding was begun.
This is all, and it is not enough to give the telegraph company
a standing here. The statutes do not prejudge the telegraph
company's case, or any case. They do not purport to subject the
company to any prohibition or command, or to determine or qualify
the company's rights; they do not attempt to delegate power to do
so to the Commission. They do not even point out the telegraph
company. So far as material to this case, they simply authorize the
Commission to inquire, and in case it finds any encroachment that
it believes unlawful, to sue. In
Columbia Ry., Gas &
Electric Co. v. South Carolina, 261 U.
S. 236, the state law undertook to treat what this Court
held to be only a covenant as a condition subsequent and as having
entailed a forfeiture. The suit was brought upon this statute, and
a judgment rendered for the state in its courts was held to have
given effect to the
Page 269 U. S. 70
statutory attempts to enlarge the obligations of the railway
company under a grant from the state. The difference between that
case and this is plain. A mere authority to test disputed rights by
a suit does not impair the obligation of a contract upon which a
defendant relies. When a claim is set up under a contract, the
Constitution does not forbid litigation to decide whether one was
made or what it means.
St. Paul Gaslight Co. v. St. Paul,
181 U. S. 142,
181 U. S. 149;
Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co. v. Columbus,
203 U. S. 311,
203 U. S. 321;
Des Moines v. Des Moines City R. Co., 214 U.
S. 179;
South Covington & Cincinnati Street R.
Co. v. Newport, 259 U. S. 97,
259 U. S.
99-100.
The statutes in question are still more remote from those which,
while valid on their face, are construed by the state courts to
apply to a matter not subject to state control.
Dahnke-Walker
Milling Co. v. Boundurant, 257 U. S. 282.
Here, there was no attempt to control otherwise than by the result
of a suit in which the telegraph company could set up all its
alleged contracts and protect all its constitutional rights. The
plaintiff in error shows no law impairing the obligation of
contracts, and therefore no ground for coming here.
See Cross
Lake Shooting & Fishing Club v. Louisiana, 224 U.
S. 632,
224 U. S. 639;
Tidal Oil Co. v. Flanagan, 263 U.
S. 444,
263 U. S.
452.
Writ of error dismissed.