1. The principle permitting suit against an agent of the
Government to restrain execution of an unconstitutional statute
protects only legal rights. P.
306 U. S.
137.
2. Franchises to be a corporation and to function as a public
utility and nonexclusive franchises to occupy and use public
property and places for service of the public do not grant freedom
from competition. P.
306 U. S.
138.
3. The validity of a statutory grant of power cannot be
challenged merely because its exercise results in harmful
competition. The damage is
damnum absque injuria. P.
306 U. S.
139.
Page 306 U. S. 119
4. State laws requiring electric power companies to obtain
certificates of convenience and necessity as a condition to doing
business do not confer upon those possessing such certificates a
standing to enjoin operations of the Tennessee Valley Authority,
which, though it has no such certificate, operates with consent of
the State. P.
306 U. S.
141.
5. The appellant power companies may not raise, in this case,
any question of discrimination forbidden by the Fourteenth
Amendment involved in state exemption of the Tennessee Valley
Authority from commission regulation.
Frost v. Corporation
Commission, 278 U. S. 515,
distinguished. P.
306 U. S.
143.
6. The competition of the Tennessee Valley Authority in
underselling the power companies and in fixing resale rates by
contract does not amount to regulation of their rates in violation
of the Tenth Amendment, and gives rise to no cause of action under
that Amendment or under the Ninth Amendment. P.
306 U. S.
143.
7. The findings and evidence in this case do not sustain the
charge of a conspiracy between the Tennessee Valley Authority and
the Public Works Administrator to intimidate the appellant power
companies into selling their existing systems where the Authority
desires to seize the market for electricity. P.
306 U. S.
144.
Cooperation by two federal officials, one acting under a statute
whereby funds are provided for the erection of municipal plants and
the other under a statute authorizing the production of electricity
and its sale to such plants, in competition with the appellants,
does not spell conspiracy to injure their business. P.
306 U. S.
146.
1 F. Supp. 947 affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of a District Court of three judges which
dismissed a bill filed by numerous electric power companies wherein
they sought to enjoin the Tennessee Valley Authority and its three
executive officers and directors from generating, distributing, and
selling electric power and from other injurious and allegedly
unconstitutional activities in harmful and destructive competition
with the appellants.
Page 306 U. S. 134
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Tennessee Valley Authority Act [
Footnote 1] erects a corporation, an instrumentality of
the United States, to develop by a series of dams on the Tennessee
River and its tributaries a system of navigation and flood control
and to sell the power created by the dams. Eighteen corporations
which generate and distribute electricity in Tennessee, Kentucky,
Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, West Virginia, Virginia, North
Carolina, and South Carolina, and one
Page 306 U. S. 135
which transmits electricity in Tennessee and Alabama, filed a
bill in equity, in the Chancery Court of Knox County, Tennessee,
against the Authority and its three executive officers and
directors. The prayers were that the defendants be restrained from
generating electricity out of water power created, or to be
created, pursuant to the Act and the Authority's plan of
construction and operation; from transmitting, distributing,
supplying or selling electricity so generated, or to be generated,
in competition with any of the complainants; from constructing, or
financing the construction of, steam or hydroelectric generating
stations, transmission lines or means of distribution, which will
duplicate or compete with any of their services; from regulating
their retail rates through any contract, scheme, or device, and
from substituting federal regulation for state regulation of local
rates for electric service, more especially by incorporating in
contracts for the sale of electricity terms fixing retail rates.
The defendants removed the cause to the United States District
Court for Eastern Tennessee, and there answered the bill. As
required by the Act of August 24, 1937, [
Footnote 2] a court of three judges was convened which,
after a trial, dismissed the bill. [
Footnote 3]
Fourteen of the complainants are here as appellants. [
Footnote 4] They contend that water
power cannot constitutionally be created in conformity to the terms
of the Tennessee Valley Authority Act, and the United States will
therefore acquire no title to it, because it will not be produced
as an incident of the exercise of the federal power to improve
Page 306 U. S. 136
navigation and control floods in the navigable waters of the
nation. They affirm that the statutory plan is a plain attempt, in
the guise of exerting granted powers, to exercise a power not
granted to the United States -- namely, the generation and sale of
electric energy; that the execution of the plan contravenes the
Fifth, Ninth, and Tenth Amendments of the Constitution, since the
sale of electricity on the scale proposed will deprive the
appellants of their property without due process of law, will
result in federal regulation of the internal affairs of the states,
and will deprive the people of the states of their guaranteed
liberty to earn a livelihood and to acquire and use property
subject only to state regulation. The appellees contest these
contentions. For reasons about to be stated, we do not consider or
decide the issues thus mooted.
The Authority's acts which the appellants claim give rise to a
cause of action comprise (1) the sale of electric energy at
wholesale to municipalities empowered by state law to maintain and
operate their own distribution systems; (2) the sale of such energy
at wholesale to membership corporations organized under state law
to purchase and distribute electricity to their members without
profit; (3) the sale of firm and secondary power at wholesale to
industrial plants.
The appellants are incorporated for the purpose and with the
authority to conduct business as public utilities. Several do so
only within the states of their incorporation; those chartered
elsewhere have qualified as foreign corporations under the laws of
the states in which they manufacture, transmit, or distribute
electricity. Most of them have local franchises, licenses, or
easements granted by municipalities or governmental subdivisions,
but it is admitted that none of these franchises confers an
exclusive privilege.
Page 306 U. S. 137
While the Authority has not built or authorized any transmission
line, has not sold or authorized the sale of electricity, or
contracted for, or authorized any contract for, the sale of
electricity by others, in territory served by nine of the
appellants, it has done some or all of these things in areas served
or susceptible of service by five of the companies, and it plans to
enter in the same way the territory of other appellants. It is
clear, therefore, that its acts have resulted and will result in
the establishment of municipal and cooperative distribution systems
competing with those of some or all the appellants in territory
which they now serve, or reasonably expect to serve by extension of
their existing systems, and in direct competition with the
appellants' enterprises through the sale of power to industries in
areas now served by them or which they can serve by expansion of
their facilities. The appellants assert that this competition will
inflict substantial damage upon them. The appellees admit that such
damage will result, but contend that it is not the basis of a cause
of action, since it is
damnum absque injuria, -- a damage
not consequent upon the violation of any right recognized by
law.
The appellants invoke the doctrine that one threatened with
direct and special injury by the act of an agent of the government
which, but for statutory authority for its performance, would be a
violation of his legal rights may challenge the validity of the
statute in a suit against the agent. [
Footnote 5] The principle is without application unless
the right invaded is a legal right -- one of property, one arising
out of contract, one protected against tortious invasion, or one
founded on a statute which confers a privilege. [
Footnote 6]
Page 306 U. S. 138
The appellants urge that the Tennessee Valley Authority, by
competing with them in the sale of electric energy, is destroying
their property and rights without warrant, since the claimed
authorization of its transactions is an unconstitutional statute.
The pith of the complaint is the Authority's competition. But the
appellants realize that competition between natural persons is
lawful. They seek to stigmatize the Authority's present and
proposed competition as "illegal" by reliance on their franchises
which they say are property protected from injury or destruction by
competition. They classify the franchises in question as of two
sorts -- those involved in the state's grant of incorporation or of
domestication and those arising from the grant by the state or its
subdivisions of the privilege to use and occupy public property and
public places for the service of the public.
The charters of the companies which operate in the states of
their incorporation give them legal existence and power to function
as public utilities. The like existence and powers of those
chartered in other states have been recognized by the laws of the
states in which they do business permitting the domestication of
foreign corporations. The appellants say that the franchise to be a
public utility corporation and to function as such, with incidental
powers, is a species of property which is directly taken or injured
by the Authority's competition. They further urge that, though
nonexclusive, the local franchises or easements, which grant them
the privilege to serve within given municipal subdivisions, and to
occupy streets and public places, are also property which the
Authority is destroying by its competition. Since
Page 306 U. S. 139
what is being done is justified by reference to the Tennessee
Valley Authority Act, they say they have standing to challenge its
constitutionality.
The vice of the position is that neither their charters nor
their local franchises involve the grant of a monopoly or render
competition illegal. The franchise to exist as a corporation, and
to function as a public utility, in the absence of a specific
charter contract on the subject, creates no right to be free of
competition, [
Footnote 7] and
affords the corporation no legal cause of complaint by reason of
the state's subsequently authorizing another to enter and operate
in the same field. [
Footnote 8]
The local franchises, while having elements of property, confer no
contractual or property right to be free of competition either from
individuals, other public utility corporations, or the state or
municipality granting the franchise. [
Footnote 9] The grantor may preclude itself by contract
from initiating or permitting such competition, [
Footnote 10] but no such contractual
obligation is here asserted.
The appellants further argue that, even if invasion of their
franchise rights does not give them standing, they may, by suit,
challenge the constitutionality of the statutory grant of power the
exercise of which results in competition. This is but to say that,
if the commodity used by a competitor was not lawfully obtained by
it, the corporation with which it competes may render it liable
in
Page 306 U. S. 140
damages or enjoin it from further competition because of the
illegal derivation of that which it sells. If the thesis were
sound, appellants could enjoin a competing corporation or agency on
the ground that its injurious competition is
ultra vires,
that there is a defect in the grant of powers to it, or that the
means of competition were acquired by some violation of the
Constitution. The contention is foreclosed by prior decisions that
the damage consequent on competition, otherwise lawful, is in such
circumstances
damnum absque injuria, and will not support
a cause of action or a right to sue. [
Footnote 11]
Certain provisions of state statutes regulating public utilities
are claimed to confer on the appellants the right to be free of
competition. Each of the states in which any of them operates, save
Mississippi, [
Footnote 12]
has established a commission to supervise and regulate public
utilities. While the statutes [
Footnote 13] differ in their provisions, all but that of
Virginia require a public utility to obtain a certificate of
convenience and necessity as a condition of doing business. The
appellants commenced business in the various states prior to the
adoption of the requirement of such certificates, and, so far as
appears, they have none covering their entire operations. They
have, however, obtained certificates for extensions made since the
passage of the statutes, and they claim that, in any event,
these
Page 306 U. S. 141
laws afford them protection from the Authority's competition,
since any utility now seeking to serve in their territory must
obtain a certificate, and hence they have standing to maintain this
suit against the Authority which has none. The position cannot be
maintained. Whether competition between utilities shall be
prohibited, regulated, or forbidden is a matter of state policy.
That policy is subject to alteration at the will of the
legislature. [
Footnote 14]
The declaration of a specific policy creates no vested right to its
maintenance in utilities then engaged in the business or thereafter
embarking in it.
Moreover, the states in which the Authority is now functioning
have declared their policy in respect of its activities. Alabama
has enacted that federal agencies, instrumentalities, or
corporations shall not be under the jurisdiction of its Public
Service Commission; [
Footnote
15] that municipalities and improvement authorities may own and
operate electric generating and distributing systems and may
contract with a federal agency such as the Authority for the
purchase of energy, and stipulate as to the use of the energy,
including rates of resale; [
Footnote 16] that nonprofit membership corporations may
be formed for the distribution among their members of electricity
with like power to contract with the Authority for the required
energy. [
Footnote 17]
Tennessee has amended Section 5448 of its Code, which defines
public utilities, so as to exclude federal corporations such as the
Authority from the jurisdiction of the State Utilities Commission;
[
Footnote 18] has authorized
municipalities to own and operate electric generating transmission
and distribution systems and to contract for power
Page 306 U. S. 142
with the Authority on terms deemed appropriate, including the
fixing of resale prices; [
Footnote 19] has authorized the formation of nonprofit
membership electric corporations with like powers to contract.
[
Footnote 20] Kentucky has
authorized municipalities to establish and maintain light, heat,
and power plants; [
Footnote
21] and has provided for the organization of nonprofit
cooperative electric corporations which may contract with the
Authority for purchase of energy and stipulate as to resale prices.
[
Footnote 22] Mississippi,
which has no state law for regulation of utilities, has empowered
municipal and county governments to establish and maintain electric
distribution systems which may buy power from the Authority and
contract as to resale prices; [
Footnote 23] has created a rural electrical authority and
authorized the formation of power districts and nonprofit
competitives, all competent to purchase energy from the Authority
and distribute it and to contract with the Authority as to resale
rates to consumers. [
Footnote
24] The Authority's action in these states is consonant with
state law, but, as has been shown, if the fact were otherwise, the
appellants would have no standing to restrain its continuance.
As the Authority has not acted in any way in North Carolina,
South Carolina, Virginia, or West Virginia, the appellants'
contention that its proposed entry into some or all of them confers
a right to sue for an injunction against injury thereby threatened
has even less support. [
Footnote
25]
Page 306 U. S. 143
The appellants may not raise any question of discrimination
forbidden by the Fourteenth Amendment involved in state exemption
of the Authority from commission regulation. For this reason,
Frost v. Corporation Commission, 278 U.
S. 515, on which they rely, is inapplicable. Manifestly
there can be no challenge of the validity of state action in this
suit.
A distinct ground upon which standing to maintain the suit is
said to rest is that the acts of the Authority cannot be upheld
without permitting federal regulation of purely local matters
reserved to the states or the people by the Tenth Amendment and
sanctioning destruction of the liberty said to be guaranteed by the
Ninth Amendment to the people of the states to acquire property and
employ it in a lawful business. The proposition can mean only that,
since the Authority sells electricity at rates lower than those
heretofore maintained by the appellants, such sale is an indirect
regulation of appellants' rates. But the competition of a privately
owned company authorized by the state to enter the territory served
by one of the appellants would, in the same sense, constitute a
regulation of rates. The contention amounts to saying that
competition by an individual or a state corporation is not
regulation, but competition by a federal agency is. In contracting
with municipalities and nonprofit corporations, the Authority has
stipulated respecting
Page 306 U. S. 144
the price at which the energy supplied shall be resold by its
vendees. That is said to be a regulation of the appellant's
business. But it is nothing more than an incident of competition;
it is but a method of seeking and assuring a market for the power
which the Authority has for sale, and a lawful means to that end.
[
Footnote 26] The sale of
government property in competition with others is not a violation
of the Tenth Amendment. As we have seen, there is no objection to
the Authority's operations by the states, and, if this were not so,
the appellants, absent the states or their officers, have no
standing in this suit to raise any question under the amendment.
[
Footnote 27] These
considerations also answer the argument that the appellants have a
cause of action for alleged infractions of the Ninth Amendment.
Finally, it is asserted that the right to maintain this suit is
sustained by certain allegations of concerted action by the
officials of the Authority and the Public Works Administrator. The
bill alleges that, having adopted an unlawful plan, the defendants
have cooperated, and threaten to continue to cooperate, in its
execution with Harold L. Ickes, as Administrator of the Federal
Administration of Public Works, in a systematic campaign to coerce
and intimidate the complainants into selling their existing systems
in municipalities or territory in which the Authority desires to
seize the market for electricity; that, in order to make this
coercion effective, Ickes has, in cooperation with, or on request
of, the Authority, announced loans and grants of federal funds to
municipalities; that the Authority and Ickes have cooperated, and
continue to do so, to force municipalities to purchase the
Page 306 U. S. 145
Authority's power under threats that, unless they do, proposed
loans and grants for municipal systems will not be made. The bill
states that, though Ickes
"confederated and acted with the defendants in some of its
illegal acts, and is therefore a proper party, he is not a
necessary party, and is not joined as a defendant, because he is
beyond the jurisdiction of the court."
There is a prayer that the defendants be restrained from
confederating and acting in concert with Ickes for the described
ends.
The District Court finds that the Authority has not indulged in
coercion, duress, fraud, or misrepresentation in procuring
contracts with municipalities, cooperatives, or other purchasers of
power; has not acted with any malicious or malevolent motive, and
has not conspired with municipalities or other purchasers of power.
The record justifies these findings. It is claimed, however, that
they are inconclusive, since the court erroneously excluded much
proffered evidence tending to sustain the charge. An examination of
the record discloses that certain of the evidence offered was
properly excluded, and that, in other instances, the rejection of
that offered constituted, at most, harmless error.
Error is assigned to the trial court's refusal to permit the
taking of the deposition of the Public Works Administrator. In view
of the prior opportunity which the claimants had to take this
deposition, the lateness of the application, and other factors,
permission to take the deposition was a matter within the court's
discretion, and it does not appear that the discretion was
abused.
The remaining assignments of error directed to the exclusion of
evidence of cooperation between the two federal agencies go to the
rejection of evidence consisting largely of correspondence between
them and press releases or announcements by officers of one or the
other. The record contains all but a few of these rejected
documents,
Page 306 U. S. 146
those omitted apparently not being thought of importance.
Scrutiny of them compels the conclusion that, if the rejected
evidence had been admitted, the trial court's holding that a
conspiracy had not been proved should not be overruled.
The only findings on this subject requested by the appellants
were to the effect that the Public Works Administration has
cooperated with and assisted the Tennessee Valley Authority in the
furtherance of the latter's power program, and that the former has
made contracts and allotments for loans and grants to twenty-three
municipalities in the states of Alabama, Mississippi, and
Tennessee, amounting to about fourteen million dollars, for the
purpose of constructing municipal systems of distribute the
Authority's power in competition with the appellants; that the
applications for loan and grant in some instances specify that the
municipal system will duplicate a privately owned system, in others
that a large business will be done by the municipal plants because
of the low promotional rates of the Authority; that some of the
applications state they were filed to take advantage of the low
rates offered by the Authority, and that, with few exceptions, they
state that the electricity to be distributed in the city will be
purchased from the Authority. A further requested finding is that
the applications of certain Alabama cities recite that they have
secured written contracts from practically all consumers; that
these contracts refer to lower rates to be secured, provided the
rates charged by the city shall be thus prescribed by the Authority
for resale at retail. The court refused to make the requested
findings, and error is assigned to this refusal. It is apparent
that, if the court had made the findings, no conclusion of
confederation or conspiracy, with malicious intent to harm the
appellants or to destroy their business, would thereby have been
required.
Cooperation by two federal officials, one acting under a statute
whereby funds are provided for the erection of
Page 306 U. S. 147
municipal plants and the other under a statute authorizing the
production of electricity and its sale to such plants in
competition with the appellants, does not spell conspiracy to
injure their business. As the court below held, such cooperation
does not involve unlawful concert, plan, or design, or cooperation
to commit an unlawful act or to commit acts otherwise lawful with
the intent to violate a statute.
In no aspect of the case have the appellants standing to
maintain the suit, and the bill was properly dismissed.
The decree is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE REED took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Act of May 18, 1933, 48 Stat. 58, as amended by Act of August
31, 1935, 49 Stat. 1075, 16 U.S.C. §§ 831
et
seq.
[
Footnote 2]
50 Stat. 751, 752, 28 U.S.C. § 380a,.
[
Footnote 3]
21 F. Supp.
947.
[
Footnote 4]
Georgia Power Company was enjoined from maintaining the action.
See Georgia Power Co. v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, 17 F. Supp.
769; 89 F.2d 218; 302 U.S. 692. Four other complainants have
since been permitted to withdraw from the litigation without
prejudice to its prosecution by the remaining appellants.
[
Footnote 5]
Philadelphia Co. v. Stimson, 223 U.
S. 605,
223 U. S. 619;
Stafford v. Wallace, 258 U. S. 495,
258 U. S. 512;
Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U. S. 447,
262 U. S. 488.
The same rule applies to suits against state officers:
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738,
22 U. S.
857-859;
Terrace v. Thompson, 263 U.
S. 197,
263 U. S. 214;
Sterling v. Constantin, 287 U. S. 378,
287 U. S.
393.
[
Footnote 6]
In re Ayers, 123 U. S. 443;
Walla Walla v. Walla Walla Water Co., 172 U. S.
1;
American School of Magnetic Healing v.
McAnnulty, 187 U. S. 94;
Ex parte Young, 209 U. S. 123;
Scully v. Bird, 209 U. S. 481;
Philadelphia Co. v. Stimson, supra; Lane v. Watts,
234 U. S. 525;
Truax v. Raich, 239 U. S. 33;
Lipke v. Lederer, 259 U. S. 557.
[
Footnote 7]
See Charles River Bridge v. Warren
Bridge, 11 Pet. 420,
36 U. S. 548;
Washington & B. Turnpike
Co. v. Maryland, 3 Wall. 210,
70 U. S. 213;
Hamilton Gaslight & Coke Co. v. Hamilton City,
146 U. S. 258,
146 U. S. 268;
Pearsall v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 161 U.
S. 646,
161 U. S.
664.
[
Footnote 8]
Compare Lehigh Water Co. v. Easton, 121 U.
S. 388.
[
Footnote 9]
Joplin v. Southwest Missouri Light Co., 191 U.
S. 150;
Helena Waterworks Co. v. Helena,
195 U. S. 383,
195 U. S. 393;
Madera Waterworks v. Madera, 228 U.
S. 454;
Green v. Frazier, 253 U.
S. 233;
Puget Sound Power & Light Co. v.
Seattle, 291 U. S. 619,
291 U. S.
624.
[
Footnote 10]
Walla Walla v. Walla Walla Water Co., supra; Superior Water,
L. & P. Co. v. Superior, 263 U. S. 125.
[
Footnote 11]
Railroad Co. Ellerman, 105 U.
S. 166,
105 U. S.
173; Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes, 302 U.
S. 464,
302 U. S.
479-483, and cases cited;
Greenwood County v. Duke
Power Co., 81 F.2d 986, 997;
Duke Power Co. v. Greenwood
County, 91 F.2d 665, 676,
aff'd, 302 U. S. 302 U.S.
485.
[
Footnote 12]
In Mississippi, there is no State Commission, but municipalities
are given the authority to regulate utilities within their
territorial limits. Mississippi Code (1930) §§ 2400,
2401, 2414.
[
Footnote 13]
Alabama Code (1928) § 9795; Carroll's Kentucky Statutes
(1936) § 3952-25; North Carolina Code (1935) § 1037(d);
Williams' Tennessee Code (1934) § 5502-3; South Carolina Code
(1934 Supp.) § 8555-2(23); Virginia Code (1936) §§
3693-3774k; West Virginia Code (1937) § 2562(1).
[
Footnote 14]
Compare Wheeling & B. Bridge Co. v. Wheeling Bridge
Co., 138 U. S. 287,
138 U. S. 292;
Williams v. Wingo, 177 U. S. 601,
177 U. S.
604.
[
Footnote 15]
Alabama Acts, Regular Session 1935, No. 1, p. 1.
[
Footnote 16]
Alabama Acts, Regular Session 1935, No. 155, p. 201.
[
Footnote 17]
Alabama Acts, Regular Session 1935, No. 45, p. 100.
[
Footnote 18]
Tennessee Public Acts 1935, chap. 42, p. 98.
[
Footnote 19]
Tennessee Public Acts 1935, chap. 32, p. 28; Tennessee Public
Acts 1935, chap. 37, p. 78.
[
Footnote 20]
Tennessee Public Acts 1937, chap. 231, p. 882.
[
Footnote 21]
Caroll's Kentucky Statutes (1936) §§ 3480d-1 to
3480d-22.
[
Footnote 22]
Kentucky Acts, Fourth Extraordinary Session, 1936-1937, chap. 6,
p. 25.
[
Footnote 23]
Mississippi Laws, 1936, chap. 185, p. 354; Chap. 271, p.
531.
[
Footnote 24]
Mississippi Laws 1936, chap. 183, p. 334; chap. 187, p. 370;
chap. 184, p. 342.
[
Footnote 25]
In fact, several of the states in question have statutes which
would to some extent, and in some circumstances, permit the
purchase and use of power created by the Authority. In all of them,
municipalities may establish and operate their own distribution
systems: North Carolina Code (1935) § 2807; South Carolina
Code (1932) §§ 7278-7280, 8262; Virginia Code (1936)
§ 3031; West Virginia Code (1937) §§ 494, 591(86).
North Carolina and Virginia have statutes permitting the formation
of cooperatives which may buy power from the Authority under
contracts fixing resale rates: Public Laws of North Carolina, 1935,
chap. 291, p. 312; Virginia Code (1936) chap. 159A, section
4057(1),
et seq. South Carolina has created a State Rural
Electrification Authority with power to buy electricity from any
federal agency: South Carolina Code (1936 Supplement) §
6010-2.
[
Footnote 26]
Oregon & Calif.R. Co. v. United States,
238 U. S. 393;
United States v. Gratiot, 26 Fed.Cas. pp. 12-14,
aff'd 39 U. S. 14 Pet.
526.
[
Footnote 27]
Compare Georgia Power Co. v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, 14 F. Supp.
673, 676.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER dissenting.
The decision just announced goes too far. It excludes from the
courts complainants seeking constitutional protection of their
property against defendants acting, as it is alleged, under invalid
claim of governmental authority in setting up and carrying on a
program calculated to destroy complainants' business. The issues
joined by the parties, tried below and fully presented to this
Court, include the question whether, when construed to authorize
the things done and threatened by defendants, the challenged
enactment is authorized by the Constitution or repugnant to the
Fifth, Ninth, and Tenth Amendments. The issues also include the
question whether, as being applied, the Act is void because the
execution of defendants' program will deprive complainants of their
property without due process of law in contravention of the Fifth
Amendment. This Court holds complainants have no standing to
challenge the validity of the Act, and puts aside as immaterial
their claim that, by defendants' unauthorized acts, their
properties are being destroyed.
Page 306 U. S. 148
The opinion states:
"The Authority's acts which the appellants claim give rise to a
cause of action comprise (1) the sale of electric energy at
wholesale to municipalities empowered by state law to maintain and
operate their own distribution systems; (2) the sale of such energy
at wholesale to membership corporations organized under state law
to purchase and distribute electricity to their members without
profit; (3) the sale of firm and secondary power at wholesale to
industrial plants."
That the substance of complainants' case may not be so
compressed is disclosed by the summary of their bill that
follows:
Complainants are 19 public utilities. Each, authorized by law,
is engaged in generating and selling electricity within the
political subdivisions of various States. Some have long-term
contracts under which they furnish large quantities of electricity.
They are more than able to fill the needs of the territories in
which they operate, and are ready to supply such additional
facilities as may be needed in the future. Their properties are
modern and economically operated, and possess great value as going
concerns. Their rates yield no more than a reasonable return, and
are fully regulated by the States in which they serve.
Defendants are the Tennessee Valley Authority, a body corporate
created by the Act of May 18, 1933, with the right to sue and be
sued, and its three directors, charged with the duty of exercising
the powers of the Authority. Harold L. Ickes, the Administrator of
the Public Works Administration, has confederated with defendants
in some acts charged to be illegal; he is not sued, because beyond
the jurisdiction of the court. From its principal office at
Knoxville, Tennessee, the Authority carries on a proprietary
business as a public utility for the generation, transmission,
distribution, and sale of electricity in Tennessee, Mississippi,
Georgia and Alabama.
Page 306 U. S. 149
On its face, the Act discloses purpose to authorize a large and
indeterminate number of great works for the primary purpose of
creating a vast supply of electric power, to use this power to
establish the United States in the business of producing,
transmitting, and selling electric power, and to dispose of this
power in a manner inconsistent with the principles of our dual
system and so as to govern the concerns reserved to the States. Any
references in the Act to navigation or to any other constitutional
objective are unsubstantial, and mere pretenses or pretexts under
which it is sought to achieve an object reserved to the States.
Except with respect to power available at Wilson Dam prior to the
acts complained of, the program is one of creating an outlet for
power deliberately produced as a commercial enterprise to be sold
in unlawful and destructive competition with power now available in
adequate quantities.
The program contemplates ultimately the development of all power
sites on the Tennessee River and all its tributaries as an
integrated electric power system, the construction and operation of
hydroelectric plants at these sites, the use of auxiliary steam
plants, the interconnection of all plants, and the elimination of
existing privately owned utilities.
In the area of over 40,000 square miles, there are 149 water
power sites which, with auxiliary steam plants, will produce 25
billion k.w.h. annually. Present consumption of the area is 56% of
that quantity. The electric power to be produced by defendants can
only be sold through displacement of the complainants. Execution of
the program will necessarily destroy all or a substantial part of
the business and property of each of the complainants.
Defendants have taken over Wilson Dam and the nitrate plant and
have commenced, or recommended to Congress, the construction of 10
other dams; their program
Page 306 U. S. 150
calls for 11 completed dams by July 1, 1943. They have prepared
plans for the construction of high-tension transmission lines from
the dams to at least 14 cities, and indeed to the whole area. They
have purchased or are attempting to purchase distribution systems
in at least 15 cities. They have entered into contracts to sell
power to various communities and industries for a 20-year period,
and have agreed to supply firm power to other and larger
cities.
The avowed purpose of the program is to effect a federal
regulation of intrastate electric rates and service by a so-called
"yardstick" method or "regulation by competition." The yardstick
for wholesale rates is the wholesale rate charged by the Authority.
It is unreasonable and confiscatory as a measure of complainants'
rates in that it excludes the cost of the major part of the
investment necessary to render the service, and excludes necessary
operating expenses. The yardstick for retail rates is the sum of
the wholesale rate and the amount which the Authority allows
municipalities to add to the wholesale rate to cover cost of local
distribution; it excludes many items of necessary cost of rendering
the service.
Pursuant to a plan promulgated in 1933, defendants are
conducting a systematic campaign for the purpose of disrupting the
established business relations between complainants and their
customers, destroying the good will built up by complainants,
seizing their markets, and inciting the residents of communities
served by them to cooperate with defendants in their scheme to
develop an absolute monopoly.
With full knowledge of the noncompensatory and confiscatory
character of the yardstick rates, they have represented to the
inhabitants of communities served by complainants that these
"yardsticks" were fair measures of reasonable rates, and have
thereby attempted to incite the
Page 306 U. S. 151
inhabitants to build publicly owned systems using power
furnished by the Authority, to lead them to believe that they are
being charged unreasonable rates, to stir up political agitation
against privately owned utilities, and to bring complainants into
disrepute and disfavor.
The defendants attempt to coerce complainants to sell
distribution systems and transmission lines, in territories which
defendants intend to appropriate at prices far below fair value by
threatening that, unless complainants accede, they will construct,
or cause to be constructed, duplicate facilities subsidized in
construction and operation by federal funds and render
complainants' properties wholly valueless. The Administrator of the
Public Works Administration has cooperated with defendants.
Defendants inform the owners that, unless they sell, either the
Authority or the municipalities will build duplicate systems with
federal funds. At defendants' request, the Administrator authorizes
and announces a gift to the municipality of from 30% to 45% of the
cost of the duplicate system and agrees to lend the balance,
repayable out of earnings, if any, of the duplicate plant, upon
condition that the municipality will agree to use power of the
Authority and will, as soon as possible, oust the existing utility.
If the utility agrees to sell, the allotments are cancelled without
regard to the will of the municipality. This policy has already
been applied in certain cities. The defendants and Administrator
also cooperate to force municipalities to agree to purchase power
furnished by the Authority by threats that otherwise federal
allotments for public works will be cancelled or denied.
Defendants have caused bills, designed to forward their power
program, to be submitted to the legislatures of various States in
the area, and have lobbied for and brought about their passage.
They have installed Authority personnel throughout the area to
disseminate
Page 306 U. S. 152
propaganda in behalf of the program. The Electric Home and Farm
Authority, a corporation set up as a governmental agency of which
the individual defendants are directors, finances sale of
electrical devices, prints and circulates costly advertising in
praise of the Authority program. Defendants have offered to supply
electricity to large industrial customers of some of the
complainants at noncompensatory and discriminatory rates. They have
attempted to persuade complainants' customers to break existing
contracts. Complainants cannot meet this competition, because of
the noncompensatory rates and because they are forbidden by state
law to make discriminatory rates.
The bill prays invalidation of the Act as unconstitutional and
injunction and other relief against defendants.
Unquestionably, the bill shows that complainants are not
asserting a right held or complaining of an injury sustained in
common with the general public. They allege facts that unmistakably
show that each has a valuable right as a public utility,
nonexclusive though it is, to serve in territory covered by its
franchise, and that, inevitably, the value of its business and
property used will suffer irreparable diminution by defendants'
program and acts complained of. If, because of conflict with the
Constitution, the Act does not authorize the enterprise formulated
and being executed by defendants, then their conduct is unlawful
and inflicts upon complainants direct and special injury of great
consequence. Therefore, they are entitled to have this Court decide
upon the constitutional questions they have brought here.
See
Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U. S. 447,
262 U. S. 488;
Frost v. Corporation Commission, 278 U.
S. 515,
278 U. S.
521.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS joins in this opinion.