1. A state may authorize a municipal corporation by agreement to
establish public service rates, and thereby to suspend for a term
of years not grossly excessive the exertion of governmental power
by legislative action to fix just compensation to be paid for
service furnished by public utilities. P.
280 U. S.
151.
2. To determine whether such authority has been given in the
case before it, this Court, in the absence of decisions of the
state courts, must construe the state laws. P.
280 U. S.
152.
3. As it is in the public interest that all doubts be resolved
in favor of the right of the state from time to time to prescribe
rates, a grant of authority to surrender the power is not to be
inferred in the absence of a plain expression of purpose to that
end.
Id.
4. The following laws of California are considered and held not
to have authorized the City of Los Angeles to fix the rates of
street car companies by contract:
(1) Civil Code, § 470 (Mar. 21, 1872). merely regulating
procedure;
id. § 497 (Stats. 1891, p. 12),
authorizing political subdivisions to grant authority for the
laying of railroads in streets "under such restrictions and
limitations" as they may provide;
Page 280 U. S. 146
id. § 501 (Stats.1903, p. 172), providing that the
rate of fare in municipalities of the first class "must not exceed
five cents." P.
280 U. S.
153.
(2) The Broughton Franchise Act (Stats. 1893, p. 288), as
amended, providing that franchises "shall be granted upon the
conditions in this Act provided, and not otherwise," and requiring
the sale of such franchises upon advertisement stating the
character of the franchise or privilege proposed to be granted, but
nowhere expressly empowering the city to establish rates by
contract, and the amendment thereof, June 8, 1915 (Stats.1915, p.
1300), which authorizes grantors of such franchises to impose such
additional terms and conditions, whether "governmental or
contractual in character," as in their judgment are in the public
interest. P.
280 U. S.
154.
(3) Provisions of the charter of the City of Los Angeles,
viz., Art. I, § 2(25), Stats.1905, p. 994, forbidding
the granting of franchises for use of public streets except by a
specified vote and for a term not to exceed 21 years and providing
that
"Every grant . . . shall make adequate provision by way of
forfeiture or otherwise to secure efficiency of public service at
reasonable rates and the maintenance of the property in good order
throughout the term of the grant;"
Art. I, § 2 (30), Stats.1911, p. 2063, empowering the city
to fix " rates . . . for the conveyance of passengers . . . by
means of street railway cars," and "To regulate, subject to the
provisions of the constitution of the state . . . the construction
and operation of street railways . . . ;" Art. I, § 2(40),
Stats.1913, p. 1633, empowering the city to grant franchises for
furnishing transportation and to prescribe the terms and conditions
of such grants and to prescribe the procedure for making them. P.
280 U. S.
155.
5. A state has power, upon the application of a street railway
company, to terminate rates of fare fixed by contract between the
company and a municipal corporation of the state. P.
280 U. S.
156.
6. Under Art. XII, § 23, of the California Constitution, as
amended November 3, 1914, and the Public Utilities Act of April 23,
1915, the Railroad Commission has exclusive authority to regulate
rates . A five-cent street railway fare, even if established by
franchise contract, maybe increased with the approval of the
Commission, and not otherwise, and it is the duty of the
Commission, upon finding that the rate is unjust or insufficient,
to determine the just and reasonable rate thereafter to be
observed. P.
280 U. S.
157.
7. The Railroad Commission, upon successive applications of a
street railway company in Los Angeles for increased fares at
first
Page 280 U. S. 147
found the existing fares insufficient and permitted a mall
increase, which the company declined, and later found the existing
fares sufficient, thus in legal effect requiring the company to
observe them.
Held that, assuming the existing fares had
been established by franchise contracts, these exercises of
jurisdiction by the Commission abrogated the contracts. Pp.
280 U. S.
156-158.
29 F.2d 140
affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court (three judges)
permanently enjoining the Railroad Commission from enforcing street
railway fares found to be confiscatory. The City of Los Angeles was
a party by intervention.
Page 280 U. S. 150
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellee operates a street railway system and motorbusses for
the transportation of passengers in the City of Los Angeles and in
other parts of the County of Los Angeles. Its cars are operated on
tracks laid in the streets under authority of 102 franchises
granted from time to time since 1886. A few were obtained from the
county; the others were granted by the city.
Seventy-three granted between November 28, 1890, and October 21,
1918, covering 113.41 miles, provide that "the rate of fare . . .
shall not exceed five cents."
Eighteen granted between March 2, 1920, and January 21, 1928,
covering 12.33 miles, provide that
"the rate of fare . . . shall not be more than five cents . . .
except upon a showing before a competent authority having
jurisdiction over rates of fare that such greater charge is
justified."
The remaining eleven, covering 10.5 miles, were granted at
various times from 1886 to 1923; none of them provides that the
fare shall not exceed five cents; but it may be assumed that, under
the provisions of the other ordinances, a fare of five cents was
made applicable over all lines. Prior to the decree in this case,
the basic fare charged was five cents.
Maintaining that its existing rates were not sufficient to yield
a reasonable return, the company, November 16, 1926, applied to the
Commission, for authority to increase
Page 280 U. S. 151
the basic fare to 7 cents in cash or 6 1/4 cents in tokens to be
furnished by the company, four for five cents. The Commission,
March 26, 1928, made a report and by an order denied the
application. A petition for rehearing was denied.
June 22, 1928, the company brought this suit to have the rates
and order adjudged confiscatory and for temporary and permanent
injunctions restraining the Commission from enforcing them. The
city intervened as party defendant. The case came on for hearing
before three judges on an application for temporary injunction.
U.S.C. Tit. 28, § 380. Affidavits were submitted, a transcript
of all the evidence before the Commission was received, and the
parties stipulated that thereon the case should be finally
determined on the merits. The court found that the rates will not
permit the company to earn a reasonable return and are
confiscatory, and by its decree permanently enjoined the Commission
from enforcing them.
The sole controversy is whether the company is bound by contract
with the city to continue to serve for the fares specified in the
franchises -- it being conceded that the finding below respecting
the inadequacy of the five-cent fare is sustained by the evidence.
Appellants contend that at all times the city had power to
establish rates by agreement, and that the franchise provisions
constitute binding contracts that are still in force. On the other
hand, the company maintains that the state never so empowered the
city, and it insists that, if the power was given and any such
contracts were made, they have been abrogated.
1. It is possible for a state to authorize a municipal
corporation by agreement to establish public service rates and
thereby to suspend for a term of years not grossly excessive the
exertion of governmental power by legislative action to fix just
compensation to be paid for service
Page 280 U. S. 152
furnished by public utilities.
Detroit v. Detroit Citizens'
Ry. Co., 184 U. S. 368,
184 U. S. 382;
Vicksburg v. Vicksburg Water Works Co., 206 U.
S. 496,
206 U. S. 508,
206 U. S. 515;
Public Service Co. v. St. Cloud, 265 U.
S. 352,
265 U. S. 355.
And where a city, empowered by the state so to do, makes a contract
with a public utility fixing the amounts to be paid for its
service, the latter may not be required to serve for less even if
the specified rates are unreasonably high.
Detroit v. Detroit
Citizens' Ry. Co., supra, 184 U. S. 389.
And, in such case, the courts may not relieve the utility from its
obligation to serve at the agreed rates, however inadequate they
may prove to be.
Public Service Co. v. St. Cloud,
supra.
This Court is bound by the decisions of the highest courts of
the states as to the powers of their municipalities.
Georgia
Ry. Co. v. Decatur, 262 U. S. 432,
262 U. S. 438.
Our attention has not been called to any California decision, and
we think there is none, which decides that the state legislature
has empowered Los Angeles to establish rates by contract. This
Court is therefore required to construe the state laws on which
appellants rely. As it is in the public interest that all doubts be
resolved in favor of the right of the state from time to time to
prescribe rates, a grant of authority to surrender the power is not
to be inferred in the absence of a plain expression of purpose to
that end. The delegation of authority to give up or suspend the
power of rate regulation will not be found more readily than would
an intention on the part of the state to authorize the bargaining
away of its power to tax.
Providence Bank v.
Billings, 4 Pet. 514,
29 U. S. 561;
Railroad Commission Cases, 116 U.
S. 307,
116 U. S. 325;
Freeport Water Co. v. Freeport, 180 U.
S. 587,
180 U. S. 599;
Stanislaus County v. San Joaquin C. & I. Co.,
192 U. S. 201,
192 U. S. 210;
Puget Sound Traction Co. v. Reynolds, 244 U.
S. 574,
244 U. S.
579.
This Court applied the established rule in
Home Telephone
Co. v. Los Angeles, 211 U. S. 265.
That company's
Page 280 U. S. 153
franchise was granted under the Broughton Franchise Act, which
provided that every such franchise "shall be granted upon the
conditions in this act provided and not otherwise." The city
charter gave power to its council to fix charges for telephone
service. The franchise stated that the rates should not exceed
specified amounts. An ordinance prescribing lower rates was passed.
The company brought suit for injunction against its enforcement on
the ground that the ordinance violated the contract clause of the
Constitution of the United States. The city insisted that it had
not been empowered by the state to make such a contract, and this
Court upheld its contention. It said (p.
211 U. S.
273):
"The surrender, by contract, of a power of government, though in
certain well defined cases it may be made by legislative authority,
is a very grave act, and the surrender itself, as well as the
authority to make it, must be closely scrutinized. . . . The
general powers of a municipality or of any other political
subdivision of the state are not sufficient. Specific authority for
that purpose is required."
And, dealing with the charter provision there relied on by the
company, the court said (p.
211 U. S.
274):
"The charter gave to the council the power 'by ordinance . . .
to regulate telephone service and the use of telephones within the
city, . . . and to fix and determine the charges for telephones and
telephone service and connections.' This is an ample authority to
exercise the governmental power, . . . but entirely unfitted to
describe the authority to contract. It authorizes command, but not
agreement."
Section 470 of the Civil Code (March 21, 1872), cited by
appellants, merely regulates procedure. Section 497 authorizes
political subdivisions to grant authority for the laying of
railroads in streets "under such restrictions and limitations" as
they may provide. Stats. 1891, p. 12. This is too general. The
clause in § 501 (Stats.1903, p. 172) providing that the rate
of fare in municipalities
Page 280 U. S. 154
of the first class "must not exceed five cents" does not relate
to the power to contract, and plainly has no application here,
because Los Angeles never belonged to that class.
Section 1 of the Broughton Franchise Act [
Footnote 1] provides that franchises "shall be
granted upon the conditions in this act provided, and not
otherwise." The Act requires the sale of such franchises upon
advertisement stating the character of the franchise or privilege
proposed to be granted, but it nowhere expressly empowers the city
to establish rates by contract. This Court, in the
Home
Telephone Company case, dealt with the quoted provision. It
said (p.
211 U. S.
275):
"Here is an emphatic caution against reading into the act act
any conditions which are not clearly expressed in the act itself. .
. . It cannot be supposed that the legislature intended that so
significant and important an authority as that of contracting away
a power of regulation conferred by the charter should be inferred
from the act in the absence of a grant in express words. But there
is no such grant."
And, so far as concerns the matter under consideration, the act
was not expanded by the amendment of June 8, 1915. It authorizes
grantors of such franchises to impose such additional terms and
conditions
Page 280 U. S. 155
"whether governmental or contractual in character" as in their
judgment are in the public interest. This general language does not
measure up to the rule earlier invoked here by Los Angeles and
applied by this Court in the
Home Telephone Company
case.
The appellants invoke provisions of the city charter which are
printed in the margin. [
Footnote
2] But it requires no discussion to show that they are not
sufficient to empower the city by contract to establish rates. In
support of their claim, they cite
Columbus Ry. & Power Co.
v. Columbus, 249 U. S. 399;
Opelika v. Opelika Sewer Co., 265 U.
S. 215;
Public Service Co. v. St. Cloud, supra,
and
Southern Utilities Co. v. Palatka, 268 U.
S. 232. But the
Columbus case did not involve,
and this Court did not there decide, the question of power.
See p.
249 U. S. 407
and
Cleveland v. Cleveland City R. Co., 194 U.S. at
194 U. S.
532-534. And, in the other cases, we followed the
decisions of the courts of the respective states.
Page 280 U. S. 156
Appellants have failed to sustain their contention that the city
was empowered to make such rate contracts.
2. But, assuming that the fares were established by the
franchise contracts, we are of opinion that such contracts have
been abrogated. The state had power, upon the company's
application, through its Commission or otherwise, to terminate
them.
Pawhuska v. Pawhuska Oil & Gas Co., 250 U.
S. 394;
Trenton v. New Jersey, 262 U.
S. 182,
262 U. S. 186;
Henderson Water Co. v. Corporation Commission,
269 U. S. 278;
Denney v. Pacific Tel. Co., 276 U. S.
97.
November 30, 1918, the company applied to have the Commission
investigate its service and financial condition and for an order
authorizing it to "so operate its system and change its rates that
the income will be sufficient to pay the costs of the service." May
31, 1921, the Commission found that the existing fares would not
permit the company to collect enough to enable it to provide
adequate service.
See P.U.R.1922A, 66, 90. And it made an
order permitting a small increase. The company did not accept it,
but applied for a rehearing. After several postponements, the case
was stricken from the calendar, and, some years later, the company
asked that its application by dismissed. The Commission, October
18, 1926, granted the company's request and also revoked the
order.
Shortly thereafter, the company applied for a basic fare of 7
cents in cash or 6 1/4 cents in tokens. The fares so proposed were
substantially higher than those which were not accepted by the
company. Again, the Commission made extensive investigations. And,
March 26, 1928, it filed a report which contained findings as to
the value of the property, operating revenues, operating expenses,
including cost of depreciation and taxes, amount available for
return, average net income for five years ending with 1926, stated
that the cost of operation might be reduced, and concluded that, by
reason of such facts, the rates of fare charged by the company
Page 280 U. S. 157
were not unreasonable, and that the rates proposed would be
unjust and unreasonable. And the Commission made an order denying
the company's application.
There is no decision in the courts of the state as to the effect
of the proceedings before and action taken by the Commission, and
therefore we are required to construe the applicable provisions of
the local Constitution and statutes.
Denney v. Pacific Tel.
Co., supra, p.
276 U. S. 101.
Under the state constitution, Art. XII, § 23, as amended
November 3, 1914, and the Public Utilities Act of April 23, 1915,
the Commission has exclusive power to regulate rates. And § 27
of the Act [
Footnote 3] gave to
street railway companies the right to charge more than five cents
upon showing before the Commission that the higher charge is
justified. No distinction is made between rates established by
franchise contracts and those otherwise fixed. Fares may not be
changed without approval of the Commission. The policy of the state
is that all rates shall be just and reasonable (§ 15), and the
Commission is directed, whenever, after hearing had upon its own
motion or upon complaint it shall find that rates are unjust or
insufficient, to determine the just and reasonable rates thereafter
to be observed. § 32(a). [
Footnote 4] The language used
Page 280 U. S. 158
in
Denney v. Pacific Tel. Co., supra, p.
276 U. S. 102,
is pertinent here:
"The department made its investigation and order without regard
to the franchise rates and treated the questions presented as
unaffected thereby. It exercised the power and duty to fix
reasonable and compensatory rates irrespective of any previous
municipal action. We must treat the result as a
bona fide
effort to comply with the local statute."
The proceedings before the Commission and its orders clearly
show that it twice took jurisdiction to determine just and
reasonable rates. Its order of May 31, 1921, by reason of the
company's failure to put in the increased rates, never became
operative, and finally was vacated. The report and order of March
26, 1928, found that existing rates were just and reasonable and,
in legal effect, required the company to continue to observe them.
The court below found the rates confiscatory, and appellants do not
here question that finding.
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS is of opinion that, as our finding that
the city had no power to make rate contracts is sufficient to
dispose of the case, it would be better not to take up the second
point.
[
Footnote 1]
Its first sentence, as originally enacted, read:
"Every franchise or privilege to . . . construct or operate
railroads along or upon any public street or highway, or to
exercise any other privilege whatever hereafter proposed to be
granted by the . . . governing or legislative body of any . . .
city . . . shall be granted upon the conditions in this Act
provided, and not otherwise."
Stats. Cal. 1893, p. 288. The Act was amended in 1897 (Stats.
1897, pp. 135, 177), reenacted in 1901 (Stats.1901, p. 265) and
1905 (Stats.1905, p. 777), and amended in 1909 (Stats 1909, p.
125). The first sentence has remained substantially the same. The
amendment of June 8, 1915 (Stats.1915, p. 1300) inserted
immediately after this sentence:
"The grantor may, however, in such franchise impose such other
and additional terms and conditions not in conflict herewith,
whether governmental or contractual in character, as in the
judgment of the legislative body thereof are to the public
interest."
[
Footnote 2]
Article I, § 2(25) Stats.1905, p. 994 (February 16, 1905),
providing that no franchise for use of public streets should be
granted by the city except by a specified vote nor for a term of
more than 21 years and that
"every grant . . . shall make adequate provision by way of
forfeiture . . . or otherwise to secure efficiency of public
service at reasonable rates and the maintenance of the property in
good order throughout the term of the grant."
Article I, § 2(30) Stats.1911, p. 2063 (March 25,
1911):
"The city . . . shall have the right and power: . . . to fix and
determine the rates . . . for . . . the conveyance of passengers .
. . by means of street railway . . . cars. . . . To regulate,
subject to the provisions of the constitution of the California,
the construction and operation of . . . street railways. . . ."
Article I, § 2(40), being § 2(25),
supra, (as
amended April 7, 1913) Stats.1913, p. 1633:
"The city . . . shall have the right and power: To grant
franchises, . . . for furnishing . . . transportation . . . or any
other public service; to prescribe the terms and conditions of any
such grant, and to prescribe by ordinance . . . the method of
procedure for making such grants. . . ."
[
Footnote 3]
Section 27 declares that fares of more than five cents shall not
be charged on street railroads
"except upon a showing before the Commission that such greater
charge is justified; provided, that, until the decision of the
Commission upon such showing, a street . . . railroad . . . may
continue to . . . receive the fare lawfully in effect on November
3, 1914."
Stats.1915, p. 131.
[
Footnote 4]
Section 32(a):
"Whenever the Commission, after a hearing had upon its own
motion or upon complaint, shall find that the rates . . . collected
by any public utility . . . are unjust, unreasonable,
discriminatory or preferential, or in anywise in violation of any
provision of law, or that such rates . . . are insufficient, the
Commission shall determine the just, reasonable or sufficient rates
. . . to be thereafter observed and in force, and shall fix the
same by order as hereinafter provided."
Stats.1915, p. 132.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS, dissenting.
The railway claims that the Commission's refusal to authorize a
fare higher than five cents confiscates its property. The city and
the Commission do not insist here that the five-cent fare is
compensatory, and they concede that, since 1915, the latter has had
jurisdiction to authorize a higher fare. They defend solely on the
ground that the railway bound itself by contracts not to charge
more; that these contract provisions are still in force, except as
modified by the Act of 1915 empowering the Commission to authorize
changes in the rate;
Page 280 U. S. 159
that an alleged error of the Commission in refusing authority to
charge more can be corrected only by proceedings brought in the
supreme court of the state to compel the Commission to do its duty,
and that the lower court's finding that the rate is noncompensatory
is therefore immaterial.
The district court recognized that such contracts, if existing,
would be a complete defense to this suit,
Columbus Ry. &
Power Co. v. Columbus, 249 U. S. 399;
Georgia Ry. & Power Co. v. Decatur, 262 U.
S. 432;
Opelika v. Opelika Sewer Co.,
265 U. S. 215;
St. Cloud Public Service Co. v. St. Cloud, 265 U.
S. 352;
Southern Utilities Co. v. Palatka,
268 U. S. 232;
expressed a strong doubt whether the city ever had the power to
contract concerning the rate of fare, and, declining to pass upon
that question, granted the relief prayed for solely on the ground
that any such contract right which existed had been abrogated.
The franchises under which the railway is operating are
confessedly contracts. The words used concerning the rate of fare
are apt ones to express contractual obligations. The railway
contends, however, that the fare provisions were not intended to be
contracts, and that, if they were so intended, they were not
binding, because neither the city nor the county had the power to
contract as to the rate of fare. It insists, further, that if the
fare provisions were originally binding as contracts, they were
abrogated in 1921 or 1928 by action of the Commission.
First. Most of the franchises were granted before the
state had vested in the Commission power to regulate street railway
rates or had expressly reserved to itself otherwise the power to
change rates theretofore fixed by ordinance. This power of
regulation was first expressly conferred upon the Commission in
1915, by amendments to §§ 13, 27, and 63 of the Public
Utilities Act, Stats.1915,
Page 280 U. S. 160
p. 115, made pursuant to an amendment of § 23 of Article
XII of the California Constitution adopted November 3, 1914. These
enactments did not purport to abrogate any existing contract. Nor
did they purport to take from the city or from the county any power
theretofore possessed to make a contract concerning the rate of
fare. Their effect was merely to make any such contract, whether
theretofore or thereafter entered into, subject to change by the
Commission. Unless and until so changed, a contractual fare fixed
by franchise remains in full force.
Henderson Water Co. v.
Corp. Comm'n, 269 U. S. 278,
269 U. S.
281-282. Consequently, it is not here claimed that these
enactments alone abrogated the alleged contracts as to rate of
fare.
Second. The railway contends, however, that the
Commission abrogated the fare contracts by its action taken in 1921
pursuant to this legislation. The facts are these. In 1918, the
railway asked the Commission to make an investigation of its
service and its financial condition and for an order enabling it to
so operate its system that the income would be sufficient to pay
the cost of the service. In that application, the railway expressly
disclaimed any desire to increase its rate of fare, but, about two
years later, it made a supplemental application for leave to do so.
On May 31, 1921, the Commission made a report in which it declared
that "an increase in the fare in some form" should be granted, and
that the railway be authorized
"to file with the Commission and put into effect within thirty
(30) days from the date of this order a schedule of rates
increasing the present basic 5-cent fare to 6 cents,"
ten tickets for 50 cents.19 Cal.R.R.Comm'n Op. 980, 1002. The
railway did not file a schedule of fares. Instead, it moved for a
rehearing. That motion was promptly set down for hearing by the
Commission, but was never heard, for the railway asked first for an
adjournment, then that its motion be stricken
Page 280 U. S. 161
from the calendar, and finally that an order be entered setting
aside the decision made and dismissing the entire proceeding,
including the application for increase of fare. This request of the
railway was granted, the order of dismissal reciting that the
authorization to increase the fare had "been suspended by virtue of
the pendency of a petition for rehearing," as the statutes
provided. Public Utility Act, § 66. Obviously this action
taken in 1921 cannot be deemed an abrogation or modification of any
existing fare provision of the franchises unless it be held that
mere entry by the Commission upon an inquiry as to the rate of
fare, as commanded by the statute, has that effect. Reason and
authority are to the contrary.
Third. Nor did the action taken by the Commission in
1928, in the proceedings now under review, abrogate any existing
fare provision. There also, the Commission took jurisdiction, as it
was by the statute required to do. It refused to authorize a higher
fare because it concluded that, for the past five years, the
railway had been earning an average annual return of 7.1 percent;
that it was not being efficiently operated; that the management had
failed to introduce certain economics previously recommended which
would have increased its net earnings, and that, for these reasons,
the existing five-cent fare was just and reasonable. The Commission
may have erred in its judgment, but it is clear that it did not
change the rate of fare. In
Georgia Ry. & Power Co. v.
Decatur, 262 U. S. 432,
262 U. S. 439,
it was held that the assumption of jurisdiction by the Commission
to the extent of affirmatively ordering the continuance of existing
transfer privileges did not effect an abrogation of an existing
contract provision relating thereto, since such action did not
conflict with the terms of the contract.
Compare Los Angeles v.
Los Angles City Water Co., 177 U. S. 558,
177 U. S. 578;
Minneapolis v. Street Ry. Co., 215 U.
S. 417,
215 U. S. 435.
In
Denney v. Pacific Telephone Co., 276 U. S.
97, the Commission had previously
Page 280 U. S. 162
granted an increase in fare of which the company had availed
itself.
Assuming that the railway was bound by contract to maintain a
five-cent fare, it could be relieved from its obligation only by
the Commission. Had the Commission authorized an increase in fare,
it would still be questionable whether the contract would have been
thereby abrogated, or only modified by making the railway's
obligation less onerous. Surely the Commission's refusal to grant
any help, because in its opinion none is needed, cannot have the
anomalous effect of entirely relieving the railway of its
obligation.
Fourth. If the district court erred in holding that the
action taken in 1921 or 1928 had the effect of abrogating any
existing contract, there must be a determination whether such
contracts did exist in fact and law. It was assumed by the district
court and by counsel in this Court that, if the city lacked the
power to bind itself contractually by the fare provisions, the
railway could not be bound thereby. This conclusion is not
commanded by logic or by the law of contracts. Lack of power in the
municipality to bind itself is a factor to be considered in
determining whether the parties intended to enter into a contract.
But, if they did, the railway's promise need not fail for lack of
mutuality. The law does not require that a particular contractual
obligation must be supported by a corresponding counter-obligation.
It is conceded that the city possessed the power to enter into the
franchise contract. The contention is merely that it could not
surrender its power to regulate rates. But there is nothing in the
fare provisions to indicate that the city attempted to do that.
These provisions in terms bind only the railway. The railway
unquestionably had power to agree to charge a fixed fare. The grant
of the franchise is sufficient consideration, if so intended, for
any number of contractual obligations which the railway may
Page 280 U. S. 163
have chosen to assume. In
Southern Iowa Electric Co. v.
Chariton, 255 U. S. 539, a
case coming from Iowa, it was held, following Iowa decisions, that,
since the city lacked power to bind itself, there was no contract.
And there is a statement to that effect in
San Antonio v. San
Antonio Public Service Co., 255 U. S. 547,
255 U. S. 556.
But, in
Southern Utilities Co. v. Palatka, 268 U.
S. 232,
268 U. S. 233,
the question was expressly left open. Obviously that is a matter of
state law on which the decisions of this Court are not
controlling.
Fifth. If it be true that the railway is not bound by
the fare provisions unless the city had power to bind itself in
that respect, it is necessary to determine whether the city had
that power and whether the parties did in fact contract as to the
rate of fare. Whether the city had the power is, of course, a
question of state law. In California, the Constitution and the
statutes leave the question in doubt. Counsel agree that there is
no decision in any court of the state directly in point. They
reason from policy and analogy. In support of their several
contentions they cite, in the aggregate, 30 decisions of the
California courts, 15 statutes of the state, besides 3 provisions
of its Code and 7 provisions of its Constitution. The decisions
referred to occupy 308 pages of the official reports; the sections
of the Constitution, Code, and statutes 173 pages. Moreover, the
102 franchises here involved were granted at many different times
between 1886 and 1927. And during that long period, there have been
amendments both of relevant statutes and of the Constitution. The
city or the county may have had the power to contract as to the
rate of fare at one time and not at another. If it is held that the
city or the county ever had the power to contract as to rate of
fare, it will be necessary to examine the 102 franchises to see
whether the power was exercised. It may then be that some of the
franchises contain valid fare contracts, while others
Page 280 U. S. 164
do not. In that event, the relief to be granted will involve
passing also on matters of detail.
In my opinion, these questions of statutory construction, and
all matters of detail, should, in the first instance, be decided by
the trial court. To that end, the judgment of the district court
should be vacated, and the case remanded for further proceedings,
without costs to either party in this Court. Pending the decision
of the trial court, an interlocutory injunction should issue.
Compare City of Hammond v. Schappi Bus Line, 275 U.
S. 164;
City of Hammond v. Farina Bus Line &
Transportation Co., 275 U. S. 173;
Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway, 279 U. S. 813. It
is a serious task for us to construe and apply the written law of
California.
Compare Gilchrist v. Interborough Rapid Transit
Co., 279 U. S. 159,
279 U. S.
207-209. To
"one brought up within it, varying emphasis, tacit assumptions,
unwritten practices, a thousand influences gained only from life,
may give to the different parts wholly new values that logic and
grammar never could have gotten from the books."
Diaz v. Gonzalez, 261 U. S. 102,
261 U. S. 106.
This Court is not peculiarly fitted for that work. We may properly
postpone the irksome burden of examining the many relevant state
statutes and decisions until we shall have had the aid which would
be afforded by a thorough consideration of them by the judges of
the district court, who are presumably more familiar with the law
of California than we are. The practice is one frequently followed
by this Court. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 280 U. S. 165
In the case at bar, there are persuasive reasons for adopting
the course suggested. The subject matter of this litigation is
local to California. The parties are all citizens of that state and
creatures of its legislature. Since the railway denies that there
ever was a valid contract governing the rate, and asserts that, if
any such existed, they have been abrogated, the contract clause of
the federal Constitution is not involved. The alleged existence of
contracts concerning the rate of fare presents
Page 280 U. S. 166
the fundamental issue of the case. Whether such contracts exist,
or ever existed, depends wholly upon the construction to be given
to laws of the state. Upon these questions, the decision of the
Supreme Court of California would presumably have been accepted by
this Court if the case had come here on appeal from it.
Compare
Georgia Ry. & Power Co. v. Decatur, 262 U.
S. 432,
262 U. S. 438;
Appleby v. City of New York, 271 U.
S. 364,
271 U. S.
380.
The constitutional claim of confiscation gave jurisdiction to
the district court. We may be required, therefore, to pass at some
time upon these questions of state law. And we may do so now. But
the special province of this Court is the federal law. The
construction and application of the Constitution of the United
States and of the legislation of Congress is its most important
function. In order to give adequate consideration to the
adjudication of great issues of government, it must, so far as
possible, lessen the burden incident to the disposition of cases
which come here for review. [
Footnote
2/2]
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES joins in this opinion.
[
Footnote 2/1]
This course was pursued in the following, among other cases, in
which a lower federal court erroneously left undecided a question
of local law or of its application:
Gainesville v.
Brown-Crummer Co., 277 U. S. 54,
277 U. S. 61;
Hammond v. Schappi Bus Line, 275 U.
S. 164,
275 U. S.
169-172;
Hammond v. Farina Bus Line,
275 U. S. 173,
275 U. S.
174-175;
Wilson Cypress Co. v. Pozo,
236 U. S. 635,
236 U. S.
656-657; in the following cases in which the lower court
erroneously left undetermined a question of fact:
Security
Mortgage Co. v. Powers, 278 U. S. 149,
278 U. S. 159;
United States v. Magnolia Co., 276 U.
S. 160,
276 U. S.
164-165;
United States v. Brims, 272 U.
S. 549,
272 U. S. 553;
Gerdes v. Lustgarten, 266 U. S. 321,
266 U. S. 327;
Chastleton Corp. v. Sinclair, 264 U.
S. 543,
264 U. S.
548-549;
Vitelli & Son v. United States,
250 U. S. 355,
250 U. S. 359;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Bogert, 250 U.
S. 483,
250 U. S. 494,
250 U. S. 497;
Union Pac. R. Co. v. Weld County, 247 U.
S. 282,
247 U. S. 287;
Marconi Wireless Co. v. Simon, 246 U. S.
46,
246 U. S. 57;
Owensboro v. Owensboro Waterworks, 191 U.
S. 358,
191 U. S. 372;
Chicago, Milwaukee, etc., Ry. v. Tompkins, 176 U.
S. 167,
176 U. S. 180;
in the following cases in which the circuit court of appeals did
not review the merits because of an erroneous view of the
jurisdiction of the district court:
Guardian Savings Co. v.
Road Dist., 267 U. S. 1,
267 U. S. 7;
Brown v. Fletcher, 237 U. S. 583,
237 U. S.
586-588;
cf. Louie v. United States,
254 U. S. 548,
254 U. S. 551;
in the following cases in which the circuit court of appeals
restricted its review because it erroneously regarded the action as
one at law instead of a suit in equity:
Twist v. Prairie Oil
Co., 274 U. S. 684,
274 U. S. 692;
Liberty Oil Co. v. Condon Bank, 260 U.
S. 235,
260 U. S. 245; in
the following in which the circuit court of appeals erroneously
narrowed the scope of its review for other reasons:
Krauss
Bros. Co. v. Mellon, 276 U. S. 386,
276 U. S. 394;
National Brake Co. v. Christensen, 254 U.
S. 425,
254 U. S. 432;
in the following cases in which the state court placed its decision
on an erroneous view of federal law, and therefore did not consider
the question of local law involved:
Chicago & N.W. Ry. v.
Durham Co., 271 U. S. 251,
271 U. S.
257-258;
Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Dakota
County, 260 U. S. 441,
260 U. S.
445-447;
Ward v. Love County, 253 U. S.
17,
253 U. S. 25. In
all these cases, this Court recognized its undoubted power to
decide the matters erroneously left undetermined by the courts
below, but it preferred to remand the cases for further
proceedings, either on the ground that the determination of the
undecided issues was too burdensome a task or on the ground that
those issues should more appropriately be decided, in the first
instance, by the lower courts.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Compare "Distribution of Judicial Power between the
United States and state Courts," by Felix Frankfurter, XIII Cornell
Law Quarterly, 499, 503; "The Business of the Supreme Court at
October Term 1928," by Frankfurter and Landis, XLIII Harvard Law
Review, 33, 53, 56, 59-62.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
I agree with MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS that this case should have
been disposed of by remanding it to the district court of three
judges for determination whether the railway company, under its 102
franchises, or any of them, is bound by contract to maintain a
five-cent fare. That question is, I think, different from the one
presented in
Home Telephone Co. v. Los Angeles,
211 U. S. 265,
and
Page 280 U. S. 167
involved in
Detroit v. Detroit Citizens' Railway Co.,
184 U. S. 368, and
Vicksburg v. Vicksburg Water Works Co., 206 U.
S. 496, whether the city had the requisite legislative
authority to bind itself not to reduce the rate of fare fixed by
the franchise. Here, concededly, the power to regulate rates is
reserved to the state commission, and the question preliminary to
the whole case is whether the railroad company has bound itself to
serve for a five-cent fare. I know of no principle of the law of
contracts,
qua contracts, which would preclude its doing
so, even though the city had no power to obligate itself to
maintain any particular rate. It has not purported to exercise such
power by so contracting. It had power to grant franchises, and the
grant of the franchise, without more, would be good consideration
for the company's undertaking to maintain a five-cent fare.
Williston on Contracts, §§ 13, 140.
The provision of the statute of April 7, 1913, enacted after the
decision in
Home Telephone Co. v. Los Angeles, supra,
authorizing the city to grant franchises and "to prescribe the
terms and conditions" of the grant, and that of the act of June 8,
1915, authorizing the grantor of the franchise to impose terms and
conditions "whether governmental or contractual in character," to
quote no others, would seem to permit the city to acquire, by the
mere grant of the franchise, without other obligation on its part,
such contractual undertakings on the part of the railroad company
as did not contravene the public interest.
If there be any public policy forbidding the company so to bind
itself or forbidding the city to take advantage of the undertaking
so given and acquired, it is one peculiar to local law, having its
origin in local history and conditions, and so is peculiarly an
appropriate subject for consideration, in the first instance, by
the court of the district.
Page 280 U. S. 168
But as the Court, without dealing with this aspect of the
matter, has held that the railway company is not so bound, it is
unnecessary to decide that the state Railroad Commission's refusal
to raise the rate would have been enough to abrogate the contract,
if there had been one, and the practice of the Court not to pass on
questions of constitutional or state law not necessary to a
decision should, I think, be scrupulously observed. Even if
necessary to decide the question, I would not be prepared to say
that the refusal of the Commission to fix a fare different from the
contract rate would destroy the contract. By contracting for a
five-cent fare, the railway company waived the protection of the
due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Columbus Ry.
Co. v. Columbus, 249 U. S. 399;
Southern Iowa Electric Co. v. Chariton, 255 U.
S. 539,
255 U. S. 542;
Paducah v. Paducah Ry. Co., 261 U.
S. 267,
261 U. S. 272;
Georgia Ry. Co. v. Decatur, 262 U.
S. 432,
262 U. S. 438;
Henderson Water Co. v. Corporation Commission,
269 U. S. 278,
269 U. S. 281.
Granting that the contract was subject to the power and duty of the
Commission to modify it by changing the rate, that power has not
been exercised, and the duty is one arising, not under the
Constitution and laws of the United States, but is imposed by state
statute, for breach of which a state remedy alone should be given.
See Henderson Water Co. v. Corporation Commission, supra,
p. p.
262 U. S. 282
(
compare Corporation Commission v. Henderson Water Co.,
190 N.C. 70).