Under the Federal Power Act, the City of Tacoma, a municipality
of the State of Washington authorized to construct and operate
electric power plants, applied for a license to construct and
operate a hydroelectric project on navigable waters. Its
application was opposed by the State on the ground,
inter
alia, that one of the reservoirs which would be created by the
proposed dams would inundate a fish hatchery owned by the State,
but the Commission issued the license. Under § 313 of the Act,
the State petitioned the Court of Appeals for review and challenged
the Commission's authority to issue the license on the ground,
inter alia, that the City could not act in opposition to
the policy of the State. Holding that state laws cannot prevent the
Commission from issuing a license or bar the licensee from acting
thereunder, the Court of Appeals affirmed the Commission's order.
This Court denied certiorari. In a proceeding by the City for a
judgment declaring valid a bond issue to finance the project, a
state court enjoined the City from proceeding with the project. The
Supreme Court of Washington affirmed on the ground that the City
was not authorized by state law to condemn state-owned property.
This Court granted certiorari.
Held: the judgment is reversed. Pp.
357 U. S.
322-341.
1. The fact that the project cannot be completed before
expiration of the license does not require dismissal of the writ on
the ground that the case is moot, because § 13 of the Act
expressly authorizes the Commission to extend the time for
completing the project, and an application for extension is
pending. P.
357 U. S.
333.
2. Under § 313(b) of the Act, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals became final upon this Court's denial of certiorari; it is
binding upon the State, its officers and its citizens, including
the taxpayers of Tacoma, and the objections and claims to the
contrary asserted by the State, its officers, and the taxpayers of
Tacoma in the bond validation suit were impermissible collateral
attacks upon, and
de novo litigation between the same
parties of issues
Page 357 U. S. 321
determined by, the final judgment of the Court of Appeals. Pp.
357 U. S.
334-341.
(a) Under the Commerce Clause, the Federal Government has
dominion, to the exclusion of the States, over navigable waters of
the United States. P. 334.
(b) Under § 313(b) of the Federal Power Act, the Court of
Appeals had "exclusive jurisdiction" to review the Commission's
order; all objections to the order, to the licenses to be issued
thereunder, and to the legal competence of the licensee to execute
its terms, must be made in the Court of Appeals or not at all, and
the judgment of the Court of Appeals is "final," subject to review
by this Court. Pp.
357 U. S.
335-337.
(c) Upon review of the Commission's order, the Court of Appeals
overruled the State's contention that the City, as a creature of
the State, had no right to take or destroy property of the State.
Pp.
357 U. S.
337-339.
(d) Even if it be thought that this issue was not raised in the
Court of Appeals, that was the only place where it could be raised,
because the Court of Appeals had "exclusive jurisdiction," and
Congress has declared that its judgment "shall be final," subject
to review by this Court. P.
357 U. S.
339.
(e) The decision of the Court of Appeals left open possible
questions with reference to "indebtedness limitations" in the
City's charter and other "questions of this nature," but it did not
leave open the right of the City to receive and perform, as
licensee of the Federal Government under the Federal Power Act, the
federal rights determined by the Commission and delegated to the
City as specified in the license. Pp.
357 U. S.
339-340.
(f) The final judgment of the Court of Appeals was effective not
only against the State, but also against its citizens, including
the taxpayers of Tacoma, for they, in their common public rights as
citizens, were represented by the State in those proceedings and,
like it, were bound by the judgment. Pp.
357 U. S.
340-341.
49 Wash. 2d
781,
307 P.2d
567, reversed and remanded.
Page 357 U. S. 322
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the latest episode in litigation beginning in 1948 which
has been waged in five tribunals and has produced more than 125
printed pages of administrative and judicial opinions. It concerns
the plan of the City of Tacoma, a municipal corporation in the
State of Washington, to construct a power project on the Cowlitz
River, a navigable water of the United States, in accordance with
a
Page 357 U. S. 323
license issued by the Federal Power Commission under the Federal
Power Act. [
Footnote 1] The
question presented for decision here is whether, under the facts of
this case, the City of Tacoma has acquired federal eminent domain
power and capacity to take, upon the payment of just compensation,
a fish hatchery owned and operated by the State of Washington, by
virtue of the license issued to the City under the Federal Power
Act, and, more particularly, § 21 thereof. [
Footnote 2] The project cannot be built
without taking the hatchery, because it necessarily must be
inundated by a reservoir that will be created by one of the
project's dams.
The question has arisen under the following circumstances and
proceedings. Having earlier filed its declaration of intention to
construct the project, [
Footnote
3] the City of Tacoma, a "municipality" [
Footnote 4] in the State of Washington, on
December 28, 1948, filed with the Commission, under
Page 357 U. S. 324
§ 4(e) of the Federal Power Act, [
Footnote 5] an application [
Footnote 6] for a federal license to construct a power
project, including two dams (known as Mossyrock and Mayfield) and
appurtenant facilities, on the Cowlitz River. [
Footnote 7]
The Mossyrock development was proposed to be located at Mile 65,
and to consist of a concrete dam across the Cowlitz rising 510 feet
above bedrock (creating a reservoir covering about 10,000 acres
extending 21 miles upstream) and an integral powerhouse containing,
initially, three generators each of 75,000-kilowatt capacity and
provisions for a fourth generator of like capacity.
Page 357 U. S. 325
The Mayfield development was proposed to be located at Mile 52,
and to consist of a concrete dam across the Cowlitz rising 240 feet
above bedrock (creating a reservoir, covering about 2,200 acres
extending 13.5 miles upstream to the tailwaters of the Mossyrock
Dam, which would inundate the State's fish hatchery) and an
integral powerhouse containing, initially, three generators each of
40,000 kilowatt capacity, and provisions for a fourth generator of
like capacity. The project -- estimated to cost $146,000,000,
including $9,465,000 for devices to enable anadromous fish to pass
to spawning grounds upstream and their young to pass to the sea,
and for new fish hatcheries -- would thus have initial capacity to
produce 345,000 kilowatts or 474,000 horsepower, and eventually
460,000 kilowatts or 632,000 horsepower, of electrical energy.
The Commission ordered a public hearing to determine whether the
license should issue, and gave notice of the hearing to the
Governor of the State of Washington. In response, the Attorney
General of the State filed an intervening petition, in the names of
the State's Directors of Fisheries and of Game, alleging in
substance that the State's Departments of Fisheries and of Game are
subdivisions of the sovereign State, and that the respective
Directors are charged with the duty of enforcing its laws
concerning the conservation of fish and game; that the dams and
fish-handling facilities proposed by the City would destroy fishery
resources of the State; that construction of proposed dams would
violate R.C.W. 90.28.060, requiring the State's permission to
construct any dam for the storage of 10 acre-feet or more of water,
and R.C.W. 75.20.010, prohibiting the construction of any dam
higher than 25 feet across any river tributary to the Columbia,
downstream from the McNary Dam, within the migratory range of
anadromous fish; and
"[t]hat the reservoirs which would be created by the
proposed
Page 357 U. S. 326
dams would inundate a valuable and irreplaceable fish hatchery
owned by the State of Washington, as well as . . . productive
spawning areas."
The City's answer admitted that the State's fish hatchery would
be inundated by the Mayfield Reservoir. The State's Attorney
General also appointed a Special Assistant Attorney General to
represent all persons of the State whose views were in conflict
with the State's official position.
Upon the issues thus frame,d a hearing, consuming 24 days, was
conducted by a Commission examiner throughout which the Attorney
General of the State, by his designated assistant, actively
participated in opposition to the application, and the Special
Assistant Attorney General, appointed for the purpose stated, also
participated in the proceedings before the Commission. Thereafter,
the Commission, on November 28, 1951, rendered its opinion,
[
Footnote 8] findings,
[
Footnote 9] and order granting
the license. [
Footnote 10]
Re City of
Page 357 U. S. 327
Tacoma, Washington, 92 P.U.R.(N.S.) 79. The State
petitioned for a rehearing, which was denied.
Pursuant to § 313 of the Act, 16 U.S.C. §
825
l, the State, in its proper name and also on behalf of
its Directors
Page 357 U. S. 328
of Fisheries and of Game, petitioned for review of the
Commission's order by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
The City intervened. The State there challenged the Commission's
authority to issue the license principally upon the grounds that
the City had not complied with applicable state laws, nor obtained
state permits and approvals required by state statutes; [
Footnote 11] that "Tacoma, as a
creature of the State of Washington,
cannot act in
opposition to the policy of the State or in derogation of its laws"
(emphasis added); and that the evidence was not sufficient to
sustain the Commission's findings and order. The Court of Appeals,
holding that
"state laws cannot prevent the Federal Power Commission from
issuing a license
or bar the licensee from acting under the
license to build a dam on a navigable stream, since the stream
is under the dominion of the United States,"
and that there was ample evidence to sustain the Commission's
findings and its order, affirmed.
Washington, Department of
Game v. Federal Power Comm'n, 207 F.2d 391, 396. (Emphasis
added.) The State then petitioned this Court for a writ of
certiorari, which was denied. 347 U.S. 936.
Page 357 U. S. 329
While the petition for review was pending in the Ninth Circuit,
the City, on February 3, 1952, commenced an action in the Superior
Court of Pierce County, Washington, against the taxpayers of Tacoma
and the State's Directors of Fisheries and of Game, seeking a
judgment declaring valid a large issue of revenue bonds, authorized
by the City's ordinance (No. 14386) of January 9, 1952, to be
issued and sold by Tacoma to finance the construction of the
Cowlitz project -- a proceeding specifically authorized by R.C.W.
7.25.010 through 7.25.040. As required by those statutes, the court
named representative taxpayers of Tacoma as class defendants, and
also appointed their counsel, who demurred to the City's complaint.
The State's Directors of Fisheries and of Game, acting through an
Assistant Attorney General of the State, filed an answer and also a
cross-complaint (reasserting substantially the same objections that
they and the State had made before the Commission, and that had
been made in, and rejected by, the Court of Appeals on their
petition for review) to which the City demurred. The judge of the
Superior Court sustained the Taxpayers' demurrer and dismissed the
suit. [
Footnote 12] Tacoma
appealed to the Supreme Court of Washington. T hat court, three
justices dissenting, reversed the judgment and remanded the cause
with instructions to overrule the Taxpayers' demurrer and to
proceed further consistently with the court's opinion.
City of
Tacoma v. Taxpayers of Tacoma, 43 Wash.
2d 468,
262 P.2d
214. [
Footnote 13]
Page 357 U. S. 330
Following that opinion, the City, on June 21, 1955, accepted
bids for a block of its revenue bonds totaling $15,000,000, and, on
the next day, it awarded contracts for construction of the Mayfield
Dam aggregating $16,120,870. Two days later, June 24, 1955, the
Directors, "acting for and on behalf of the State," moved in the
Superior Court for, and obtained,
ex parte, an order
enjoining the City, pending determination of the suit, from
proceeding to construct the Cowlitz project or to sell any of its
revenue bonds. That order was modified on June 30, 1955, to permit
such construction work as would not in any manner interfere with
the bed or waters of the Cowlitz River. Promptly thereafter, the
City began construction of the project, within the limits of the
injunction, and had expended about $7,000,000 thereon to the time
the work was completely enjoined as later stated.
"is acting illegally and in excess of its authority in the
construction of the . . . project as presently proposed for the
reason that said project would necessarily impede, obstruct or
interfere with public navigation contrary to the proviso of R.C.W.
80.40.010 et seq.,"
entered judgment in favor of the Taxpayers and the State, and
enjoined the City from proceeding to construct the project.
Tacoma appealed, and the Taxpayers, the State and its Directors
cross-appealed, to the Supreme Court of Washington.
Page 357 U. S. 332
On February 7, 1957, that court, [
Footnote 14] three justices dissenting, affirmed.
City of Tacoma v. Taxpayers of Tacoma, 49 Wash. 2d
781,
307 P.2d
567. It agreed that the Washington statutes proscribing the
construction of dams (
357
U.S. 320fn11|>note 11) were
"inapplicable . . . insofar as the same conflict with the
provisions of the Federal Power Act or the terms and conditions of
[the City's] License for said project, or insofar as they would
enable State officials to exercise a veto over said project"
(
id., 49 Wash. 2d at 801, 307 P.2d at 577), but it
disapproved the action of the trial court in sustaining the State's
objection that the project would interfere with navigation in
violation of R.C.W. 80.40.010. However, upon the declared premise
that, though the trial court's judgment was based upon an erroneous
ground, it would sustain it if correct on any ground within the
pleadings and established by proof, it held that, though the State
Legislature has given the City the right to construct and operate
facilities for the production and distribution of electric power
and a general power of condemnation for those purposes,
"the legislature has [not] expressly authorized a municipal
corporation to condemn state-owned land previously dedicated to a
public use [and] that the city of Tacoma has not been endowed with
[State] statutory capacity to condemn [the State's fish
hatchery];"
that
"the city of Tacoma [may not] receive the power and capacity to
condemn [the State's fish hatchery] previously dedicated to a
public use, from the license issued to it by the Federal Power
Commission in the absence of such power and capacity
under
state statutes"
(emphasis
Page 357 U. S. 333
added); and that the City's "
inability so to act can be
remedied only by state legislation that expands its capacity."
(Emphasis in original.)
Id., 49 Wash. 2d at 798, 799, 307
P.2d at 576, 577. This, it said,
"is not a question of the right of the Federal government to
control all phases of activity on navigable streams, nor a question
of its power, under the Federal power act, to delegate that right.
It only questions the capacity of a municipal corporation of this
state
to act under such license when its exercise requires
the condemnation of state-owned property dedicated to a public
use."
Id., 49 Wash. 2d at 798, 307 P.2d at 576. (Emphasis
added.) We granted certiorari. 355 U.S. 888.
At the outset, respondents ask dismissal of our writ on the
ground that the case is moot. They argue that it is evident the
Cowlitz project cannot be completed by December 31, 1958, which is
the date now stated in the license for its completion. There is no
merit in this contention ,because § 13 of the Federal Power
Act, 41 Stat. 1071, 16 U.S.C. § 806, expressly provides
that
"the period for the completion of construction carried on in
good faith and with reasonable diligence may be extended by the
commission when not incompatible with the public interests,"
and an application by the City is now pending before the
Commission for an extension of completion time based upon delays
entailed by these proceedings.
We come now to the core of the controversy between the parties,
namely, whether the license issued by the Commission under the
Federal Power Act to the City of Tacoma gave it capacity to act
under that federal license in constructing the project and
delegated to it federal eminent domain power to take upon the
payment of just compensation, the State's fish hatchery --
essential to the construction of the project -- in the absence of
state legislation specifically conferring such authority.
Page 357 U. S. 334
At the threshold of this controversy, petitioner, the City,
asserts that, under the express terms of § 313(b) of the Act,
16 U.S.C. § 825
l(b), this question has been finally
determined by the decision of the Court of Appeals (
State of
Washington, Dept. of Game v. Federal Power Comm'n, 207 F.2d
391) and this Court's denial of certiorari (347 U.S. 936), and that
respondents' cross-complaints, and proceedings thereon, in the
subsequent bond validation suit in the Washington courts have been
only impermissible collateral attacks upon the final judgment of
the Court of Appeals. If this assertion is correct, the judgment of
the Supreme Court of Washington now before us would necessarily
have to be reversed, for obviously that court, like this one, may
not, in such a case, reexamine and decide a question which has been
finally determined by a court of competent jurisdiction in earlier
litigation between the parties. We must turn then to an examination
of petitioner's contention.
It is no longer open to question that the Federal Government,
under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution (Art. I, § 8,
cl. 3), has dominion, to the exclusion of the States, over
navigable waters of the United States.
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 196;
New Jersey v. Sargent, 269 U. S. 328,
269 U. S. 337;
United States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.,
311 U. S. 377,
311 U. S. 424;
First Iowa Hydro-Electric Cooperative v. Federal Power
Comm'n, 328 U. S. 152,
328 U. S. 173;
United States v. Twin City Power Co., 350 U.
S. 222,
350 U. S.
224-225. Congress has elected to exercise this power
under the detailed and comprehensive plan [
Footnote 15] for development of the Nation's
water resources, which it prescribed in the Federal Power Act, to
be administered by the Federal Power Commission.
First Iowa
Hydro-Electric Cooperative v. Federal Power Comm'n, supra; United
States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co., supra.
Page 357 U. S. 335
Section 313(b) of that Act, upon which petitioner's claim of
finality depends, provides, in pertinent part:
"(b) Any party to a proceeding under this chapter aggrieved by
an order issued by the Commission in such proceeding may obtain a
review of such order in the United States court of appeals for any
circuit wherein the licensee or public utility to which the order
relates is located . . . by filing in such court, within 60 days
after the order of the Commission upon the application for
rehearing, a written petition praying that the order of the
Commission be modified or set aside in whole or in part. A copy of
such petition shall forthwith be served upon any member of the
Commission, and thereupon the Commission shall certify and file
with the court a transcript of the record upon which the order
complained of was entered. Upon the filing of such transcript, such
court
shall have exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify, or
set aside such order in whole or in part. No objection to the
order of the Commission shall be considered by the court unless
such objection shall have been urged before the Commission in the
application for rehearing unless there is reasonable ground for
failure so to do. The finding of the Commission as to the facts, if
supported by substantial evidence, shall be conclusive. . . .
The judgment and decree of the court affirming, modifying, or
setting aside, in whole or in part, any such order of the
Commission shall be final, subject to review by the Supreme Court
of the United States upon certiorari or certification as provided
in sections 346 and 347 of Title 28."
16 U.S.C. § 825
l(b). (Emphasis added.)
This statute is written in simple words of plain meaning and
leaves no room to doubt the congressional purpose
Page 357 U. S. 336
and intent. It can hardly be doubted that Congress, acting
within its constitutional powers, may prescribe the procedures and
conditions under which, and the courts in which, judicial review of
administrative orders may be had.
Cf. Labor Board v. Cheney
California Lumber Co., 327 U. S. 385,
327 U. S. 388.
So acting, Congress in § 313(b) prescribed the specific,
complete and exclusive mode for judicial review of the Commission's
orders.
Safe Harbor Water Power Corp. v. Federal Power
Comm'n, 124 F.2d 800, 804,
certiorari denied, 316
U.S. 663. It there provided that any party aggrieved by the
Commission's order may have judicial review, upon all issues raised
before the Commission in the motion for rehearing, by the Court of
Appeals which "shall have exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify,
or set aside such order in whole or in part," and that
"[t]he judgment and decree of the court, affirming, modifying,
or setting aside, in whole or in part, any such order of the
Commission,
shall be final, subject to review by the
Supreme Court of the United States upon certiorari or
certification. . . ."
(Emphasis added.) It thereby necessarily precluded
de
novo litigation between the parties of all issues inhering in
the controversy, and all other modes of judicial review. [
Footnote 16] Hence, upon judicial
review of the Commission's order, all objections to the order, to
the license it directs to be issued, and to the legal competence of
the licensee to execute its terms, must be made in the Court of
Appeals or not at all. For Congress, acting within its powers, has
declared that the Court of Appeals shall have "exclusive
jurisdiction" to review such orders, and that its judgment "shall
be final," subject to review by this Court upon certiorari or
certification. Such statutory finality need not be labeled
res
Page 357 U. S. 337
judicata, estoppel, collateral estoppel, waiver, or the
like, either by Congress or the courts.
The State participated in the hearing before the Commission. It
there vigorously objected to the issuance of the license upon the
grounds, among others,
"[t]hat the reservoirs which would be created by the proposed
dams would inundate a valuable and irreplaceable fish hatchery
owned by the State,"
"The applicant . . . has submitted satisfactory evidence of
compliance with the requirements of all applicable State laws
insofar as necessary to effect the purposes of a license for the
project, [
Footnote 17] and
it is a municipality within the meaning of § 3(7) of the Act.
[
Footnote 18] "
Page 357 U. S. 338
The State then petitioned the Commission for a rehearing,
reviving the foregoing contentions and raising others. The petition
was denied.
Thereafter, the State, following the procedures prescribed by
§ 313(b), petitioned the proper Court of Appeals for review of
the Commission's findings and order. After full hearing, that court
rejected all contentions there raised by the State, did not disturb
any of the Commission's findings, and affirmed its order without
modification.
Washington Department of Game v. Federal Power
Comm'n, 207 F.2d 391. It made particular mention of, and
approved, the Commission's finding, as rephrased by the court, that
the City had submitted
"such evidence of compliance with state law as, in the
Commission's judgment, would be 'appropriate to effect the purposes
of a Federal license on the navigable waters of the United
States.'"
Id., 207 F.2d at 396.
Moreover, in its briefs in the Court of Appeals, the State urged
reversal of the Commission's order on the grounds that the City
"has not shown, nor could it show, that [it] has availed itself
of . . .
any right to take or destroy the property of the
State of Washington [and that] Tacoma, as a creature of the
Washington, cannot act [under the license] in opposition to the
policy of the State or in derogation of its laws."
(Emphasis added.) In rejecting these contentions -- that the
City does not have "any right to take or destroy property of the
State" and "cannot act" in accordance with the terms of its federal
license -- the Court of Appeals said:
"Again, we turn to the First Iowa case,
supra. There,
too, the applicant for a federal license was a creature of the
state, and the chief opposition came from the state itself. Yet the
Supreme Court permitted the applicant to act inconsistently
with
Page 357 U. S. 339
the declared policy of its creator, and to prevail in obtaining
a license."
"Consistent with the First Iowa case,
supra, we
conclude that the state laws cannot prevent the Federal Power
Commission from issuing a license
or bar the licensee from
acting under the license to build a dam on a navigable stream,
since the stream is under the domination of the United States."
Id., 207 F.2d at 396. (Emphasis added.) We think these
recitals show that the very issue upon which respondents stand here
was raised and litigated in the Court of Appeals and decided by its
judgment. But even if it might be thought that this issue was not
raised in the Court of Appeals, it cannot be doubted that it could
and should have been, for that was the court to which Congress had
given "exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify, or set aside" the
Commission's order. And the State may not reserve the point, for
another round of piecemeal litigation, by remaining silent on the
issue while its action to review and reverse the Commission's order
was pending in that court -- which had "exclusive jurisdiction" of
the proceeding and whose judgment therein as declared by Congress
"shall be final," subject to review by this Court upon certiorari
or certification. After the Court of Appeals' judgment was
rendered, the State petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari,
which was denied. 347 U.S. 936.
These were precisely the proceedings prescribed by Congress in
§ 313(b) of the Act for judicial review of the Commission's
findings and order. They resulted in affirmance. That result,
Congress has declared, "shall be final."
But respondents say that the Court of Appeals did not decide the
question of legal capacity of the City to act
Page 357 U. S. 340
under the license and, therefore, its decision is not final on
that question, but left it open to further litigation. They rely
upon the following language of the opinion:
"However, we do not touch the question as to the legal capacity
of the City of Tacoma to initiate and act under the license once it
is granted. There may be limitations in the City Charter, for
instance, as to indebtedness limitations. Questions of this nature
may be inquired into by the Commission as relevant to the
practicability of the plan, but the Commission has no power to
adjudicate them."
Id., 207 F.2d at 396-397. We believe that respondents'
construction of this language is in error. The questioned language
expressly refers to possible "indebtedness limitations" in the
City's Charter and "questions of this nature," not to the right of
the City to receive and perform, as licensee of the Federal
Government under the Federal Power Act, the federal rights
determined by the Commission and delegated to the City as specified
in the license. That this was the meaning of the court, if its
meaning might otherwise be doubtful, is made certain by the facts
that the court did not disturb a single one of the Commission's
findings; affirmed its order without modification; and said, in the
sentence immediately preceding the questioned language:
"Consistent with the
First Iowa case,
supra,
we conclude that the state laws cannot prevent the Federal Power
Commission from issuing a license
or bar the licensee from
acting under the license to build a dam on a navigable stream,
since the stream is under the dominion of the United States."
Id., 207 F.2d at 396. (Emphasis added.)
The final judgment of the Court of Appeals was effective not
only against the State, but also against its citizens, including
the taxpayers of Tacoma, for they, in their
Page 357 U. S. 341
common public rights as citizens of the State, were represented
by the State in those proceedings, and, like it, were bound by the
judgment.
Wyoming v. Colorado, 286 U.
S. 494,
286 U. S.
506-509;
cf. Missouri v. Illinois, 180 U.
S. 208,
180 U. S. 241;
Kansas v. Colorado, 185 U. S. 125,
185 U. S. 142,
s.c.,
206 U. S. 206 U.S.
46,
206 U. S. 49;
Georgia v. Tennessee Copper Co., 206 U.
S. 230,
206 U. S. 237;
Hudson County Water Co. v. McCarter, 209 U.
S. 349,
209 U. S. 355;
Pennsylvania v. West Virginia, 262 U.
S. 553,
262 U. S. 591,
262 U. S. 595;
North Dakota v. Minnesota, 263 U.
S. 365,
263 U. S.
373.
We conclude that the judgment of the Court of Appeals, upon this
Court's denial of the State's petition for certiorari, became final
under § 313(b) of the Act, and is binding upon the Washington,
its Directors of Fisheries and of Game, and its citizens, including
the taxpayers of Tacoma, and that the objections and claims to the
contrary asserted in the cross-complaints of the State, its
Directors of Fisheries and of Game, and the Taxpayers of Tacoma, in
this bond validation suit, were impermissible collateral attacks
upon, and
de novo litigation between the same parties of
issues determined by, the final judgment of the Court of Appeals.
Therefore, the judgment of the Supreme Court of Washington is
reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
41 Stat. 1063
et seq., 16 U.S.C. § 791a
et
seq.
[
Footnote 2]
41 Stat. 1074, 16 U.S.C. § 814.
[
Footnote 3]
On August 6, 1948, the City filed with the Commission its
declaration of intention to build this power project. On March 18,
1949, the Commission ruled that the Cowlitz River was navigable
below the proposed project, and that its construction would affect
navigation and interstate commerce, and, hence, could not be built
without a license from the Commission, because of the provisions of
§ 23 of the Federal Power Act. 41 Stat. 1075, 16 U.S.C. §
816.
[
Footnote 4]
"'Municipality' (as used in the Federal Power Act) means a city,
county, irrigation district, drainage district, or other political
subdivision or agency of a State competent under the laws thereof
to carry on the business of developing, transmitting, utilizing, or
distributing power."
§ 3(7), 41 Stat. 1063, 16 U.S.C. § 796(7).
By a Washington statute, all cities and towns of that State are
made legally competent to
"construct, condemn and purchase, purchase, acquire, add to,
maintain, and operate works, plants, and facilities for the purpose
of furnishing the city or town and its inhabitants, and any other
persons, with gas, electricity, and other means of power and
facilities for lighting, heating, fuel, and power purposes. . .
."
R.C.W. 80.40.050. Tacoma has exercised such powers since
1893.
[
Footnote 5]
41 Stat. 1065, 16 U.S.C. § 797(e). That subsection, so far
as presently pertinent, provides:
"The commission is hereby authorized and empowered --"
"
* * * *"
"(e) To issue licenses to citizens of the United States, or to
any association of such citizens, or to any corporation organized
under the laws of the United States or any State thereof, or to any
State or municipality for the purpose of constructing, operating,
and maintaining dams, water conduits, reservoirs, powerhouses,
transmission lines, or other project works necessary or convenient
for the development and improvement of navigation and for the
development, transmission, and utilization of power across, along,
from, or in any of the streams or other bodies of water over which
Congress has jurisdiction under its authority to regulate commerce
with foreign nations and among the several States. . . ."
[
Footnote 6]
The application was accompanied by the maps, plans,
specifications and estimates of cost covering the proposed project,
as required by § 9(a) of the Act. 41 Stat. 1068, 16 U.S.C.
§ 802(a). Those maps, plans and specifications made clear that
the State's hatchery would be inundated by the proposed Mayfield
Reservoir.
[
Footnote 7]
The Cowlitz River is a tributary of the Columbia in Southwestern
Washington. It drains an area of 2,490 square miles of the western
slope of the Cascade Range, and flows westerly for about 100 miles
and thence southerly for 30 miles to its confluence with the
Columbia at Longview, which is about 65 miles above the mouth of
the Columbia. It is conceded to be navigable at all points below
the projected Mayfield Dam, and, at the point of confluence with
the Columbia, is a tidal river with an average flow of about 10,000
cubic feet per second.
[
Footnote 8]
The Commission's opinion discussed at length the State's basic
contention that the river should be left in its natural state for
the unobstructed use and propagation of anadromous fish and, upon
that contention, concluded:
"The question posed does not appear to us to be between all
power and no fish, but rather between large power benefits (needed
particularly for defense purposes), important flood control
benefits and navigation benefits, with incidental recreation and
intangible benefits, balanced against some fish losses, or a
retention of the stream in its present natural condition until such
time in the fairly near future when economic pressures will force
its full utilization. With proper testing and experimentation by
the city of Tacoma, in cooperation with interested state and
Federal agencies, a fishery protective program can be evolved which
will prevent undue loss of fishery values in relation to the other
values. For these reasons, we are issuing the license with certain
conditions which are set forth in our accompanying order."
92 P.U.R.(N.S.) 79, 85.
[
Footnote 9]
In its order granting the license, the Commission made 66
findings in which, among other things, it found that the Cowlitz is
a navigable water of the United States below the site of the
proposed project, and that the dams and reservoirs will affect the
interests of interstate or foreign commerce (
see
§§ 4(e) and 23 of the Act, 41 Stat. 1065, 16 U.S.C.
§ 797(e), and 41 Stat. 1075, 16 U.S.C. § 816); that a
critical shortage of electric power exists on the west side of the
Cascade Range; that the project "will be an exceptionally valuable
addition to the Northwest Region power supply"; that "none of the
hydroelectric projects suggested for construction in lieu of the
Cowlitz Project can be constructed as quickly or as economically as
the Cowlitz Project"; that the project has been approved by the
Chief of Engineers and the Secretary of the Army (
see
§ 4(e), 41 Stat. 1065, 16 U.S.C. § 797(e)); that the
project is financially and economically feasible; that
"
the applicant . . . has submitted satisfactory evidence of
compliance with the requirements of all applicable State laws
insofar as necessary to effect the purposes of a license for the
project [
see § 9(b), 41 Stat. 1068, 16 U.S.C.
§ 802(b)] and it is a municipality within the meaning of
§ 3(7) of the Act,"
and that,
"[u]nder present circumstances and conditions and upon the terms
and conditions hereinafter included in the license,
the project
is best adapted to a comprehensive plan for improving or developing
the waterway involved for the use or benefit of interstate or
foreign commerce, for the improvement and utilization of
water-power development, for the conservation and preservation of
fish and wildlife resources, and for other beneficial public uses
including recreational purposes."
See § 10(a), 41 Stat. 1068, 16 U.S.C. §
803(a). (Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 10]
The license was issued on November 28, 1951, for a period of 50
years from January 1, 1952 -- the first day of the month in which
the City filed with the Commission its ordinance, No. 14386,
enacted on January 9, 1952, formally accepting the license and all
its requirements and conditions.
See § 6, 41 Stat.
1067, 16 U.S.C. § 799. The license, among other things,
incorporated the City's maps, plans, specifications, and estimates
of cost for the construction of the project (
see §
9(a), 41 Stat. 1068, 16 U.S.C. § 802(a)); incorporated by
reference all provisions of the Federal Power Act (
see
§ 6, 41 Stat. 1067, 16 U.S.C. § 799); required
construction of the project to be commenced within two years from
the effective date of the license and to be completed within 36
months (
see § 13, 41 Stat. 1071, 16 U.S.C. §
806); required the City to construct, maintain and operate such
fish-handling facilities and fish hatcheries as may be prescribed
by the Commission, but, before doing so, to make further studies,
tests and experiments in cooperation with the United States Fish
and Wildlife Service and the Departments of Fisheries and of Game
of the State of Washington to determine the effectiveness of such
facilities, and to submit the plans therefor to the Commission and
obtain its approval.
[
Footnote 11]
The Washington statutes relied upon were R.C.W. 75.20.050,
proscribing the diversion or use of water without a state permit;
R.C.W. 75.20.100, requiring the State's approval of plans for the
protection of fish in connection with the construction of dams; and
R.C.W. 75.20.010, proscribing the construction of any dam higher
than 25 feet across any stream tributary to the Columbia,
downstream from the McNary Dam, within the migration range of
anadromous fish.
[
Footnote 12]
This order was entered by the Superior Court of Thurston County,
to which the cause had been transferred.
[
Footnote 13]
"[T]hese state laws are in direct conflict with the Federal
Power Act, they are invalid under the terms of the supremacy clause
contained in Article VI of the United States constitution . . . ,
[and] [w]here, as here, the state and Federal acts cannot be
reconciled or consistently stand together, the action of a state
even under its police power must give way."
Id., 43 Wash. 2d at 483, 262 P.2d at 222. And, in
answering the further contention that the City, "being a municipal
corporation created by the state, may not defy the laws of its
creator" [
id., 43 Wash. 2d at 491, 262 P.2d at 227], the
court said:
"The Federal Power Act defines the term 'municipal corporation'
and authorizes the power commission to issue a license to such an
entity.
Appellant has complied with the state law with respect
to the right of a municipality to engage in the business of
developing, transmitting and distributing power. Having been
granted a license by the power commission, we hold that appellant
is at the present time in the same position as any other licensee
under the act."
Id., 43 Wash. 2d at 492, 262 P.2d at 227. (Emphasis
added.)
[
Footnote 14]
The Supreme Court of Washington was then somewhat differently
constituted than when it rendered its decision on October 14, 1953,
reversing the Superior Court's judgment sustaining the Taxpayers'
demurrer to the City's complaint.
City of Tacoma v. Taxpayers
of Tacoma, 43 Wash. 2d
468,
262 P.2d
214.
[
Footnote 15]
For a summary of the detailed and comprehensive plan of the Act,
see First Iowa case, supra, at
328 U. S. 181,
note 25.
[
Footnote 16]
Cf., e.g., Myers v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp.,
303 U. S. 41,
303 U. S. 48-50;
United States v. Corrick, 298 U.
S. 435;
Washington Terminal Co. v. Boswell, 75
U.S.App.D.C. 1, 124 F.2d 235.
[
Footnote 17]
See § 9(b) of the Act 41 Stat. 1068, 16 U.S.C.
§ 802(b).
[
Footnote 18]
Under § 3(7) of the Act, "municipality" means, among other
things, a city "competent under the laws [of the State] to carry on
the business of developing, transmitting, utilizing, or
distributing power." 41 Stat. 1063, 16 U.S.C. § 796(7). It is
no longer disputed that Tacoma is expressly authorized by R.C.W.
80.40.050 to carry on such business, and that it has done so for
many years. In fact, the State's brief in this Court goes much
further, saying that
"[i]mplicit in the state court's ruling is that petitioner, if
licensed, could build a dam on a plan which would not necessitate
the destruction of the state's fish hatchery,"
and that "Tacoma . . . has the right to build the dam in such a
way that the fish hatchery will not be damaged."
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion, but deem it appropriate to state my
understanding of what the Court has held. The Court of Appeals in
the earlier proceeding had jurisdiction to determine whether state
or federal law governed Tacoma's power to condemn the State's
hatchery, and that issue itself was a federal question. Section
313(b) of the Federal Power Act therefore foreclosed
relitigation
Page 357 U. S. 342
of this issue in the present case. I do not understand the Court
to suggest that the Federal Power Act endowed the Commission and
the Court of Appeals with authority to decide any issues of state
law if such law were deemed controlling, or that, had the Court of
Appeals undertaken to do so, such a determination would have
foreclosed reexamination of such a decision in other
proceedings.