Chattanooga & Tennessee River Power Co. v. United States

209 F. 28, 126 C.C.A. 170, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1753
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
DocketNo. 2,355
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 F. 28 (Chattanooga & Tennessee River Power Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattanooga & Tennessee River Power Co. v. United States, 209 F. 28, 126 C.C.A. 170, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1753 (6th Cir. 1913).

Opinion

WARRINGTON, Circuit Judge.

The power company, plaintiff in error, was convicted of violating the act which restricts the daily .service of laborers and mechanics employed upon the public works of the United States to eight hours. Act August 1, 1892, c. 352, 27 Stat. 340 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2521). The power company demurred to the indictment on the ground that it shows bn its face that the work in question is not “a public work of the United States,” within the meaning of the act alluded to. The demurrer was overruled, the company found guilty and a fine imposed; and error is prosecuted.

The indictment was returned December 5, 1911. It charges in substance that the power company entered into a contract with the United States to build a lock and dam across the Tennessee river, a navigable stream, at Hales Bar, Guild, Tenn., and, further, that while engaged in the construction of' the lock and dam," “a public work of the United States,” the company “employed, directed, and controlled the services of laborers and mechanics” thereon, and “intentionally required and permitted” them “to work more than eight hours in a calendar day, when there was no extraordinary emergency.” The contract is incorporated into the indictment by exhibit, and specifically refers to the acts of Congress pursuant to which it was executed.

Accepting under the demurrer the recitals contained in the contract, the requisite conditions existed to authorize it to be entered into, as it was September 12, 1905, according and subject to the provisions of the act passed April 26, 1904 (33 Stat. pt. 1, p. 309, c. 1605), as. amended January 7, 1905 (Id. p. 603, c. 32).1 The task set for us is to determine whether the work described in the contract and authorized by these acts of Congress is “a public work of the United States” within the meaning of the act of August 1, 1892, commonly known as the “Eight-Hour Law”; for the fact that the power company entered into the contract with the United States, and so nominally falls within the word “contractor” found in the Eight-Hour Law, cannot be questioned. The acts authorizing the contract, ánd the contract itself, provide for the construction of an efficient lock and dam in the Tennessee river; and the power company is required to and does undertake at its expense to furnish everything (save only the plans and certain specified materials which the government is to furnish), and to do all that is necessary to accomplish this result, and to vest title [30]*30to the whole in the United States; and the power company does this in consideration of receiving from the United States a grant of “such rights as it possesses to use the water power produced by said dam, and to convert the same into electric power or otherwise utilize it,” for a specified time, subject, however, to the condition that “nothing shall be done in the use of the water” from the dam to interfere with navigation or with the government’s use and control of the water for that purpose. This clearly limits the grant to the use only of surplus water! If, instead of this, a money consideration had been agreed upon, there could be no question touching the character or ownership of the work; indisputably it would have been one of the public works of the United States. Can it be that the medium of payment can operate to change this result?

It is true that this surplus-water- power privilege is in terms to continue for 99 years; but this is subject to the right of revocation upon payment of the reasonable value of such necessary property as the company may acquire for the enjoyment of the privilege, the value of the “franchise hereby conferred” being expressly excluded. Thus the surplus-water power privilege is at most a determinable franchise ; and this is further burdened with an obligation of the power company to “furnish the necessary electric current while its * * * power plant is in operation to move the gates and operate the locks and to light the United States buildings and grounds, free of cost to the United States.” Now it is not the purpose to minimize the practical value of this privilege while it lasts. The attempt is simply to ascertain and define the nature of the privilege. For it is urged that the main objqct alike of the enactments and the contract was to produce this surplus-water power privilege and acquire part of the benefits of it, and that the lock and dam were a mere incident. It would be anomalous if the government were to regard its powers concerning navigable waters as entitling it to build locks and dams in navigable streams for the sole purpose of producing water power for the benefit of private persons; and yét this is the logic of counsel’s insistence.

As Mr. Justice Brown said, in Kaukauna Co. v. Green Bay, etc., Canal, 142 U. S. 254, at page 273, 12 Sup. Ct. 173, at page 177 (35 L. Ed. 1004), followed in Green Bay, etc., Canal Co. v. Patten Paper Co., 172 U. S. 58, 76, 77, 19 Sup. Ct. 97, 43 L. Ed. 364, when considering the effect of a statute of Wisconsin which reserved to the state the surplus water power created by the erection of a dam .over the Fox river, a navigable stream:

“Upon the other hand, it is probably true that it is beyond the competency of the state to appropriate to itself the property of individuals for the sole purpose of creating a water power to be leased for manufacturing purposes. * * * But if, in the erection of a public dam for a recognized public purpose, there is necessarily produced a surplus of water, which may properly be used for manufacturing purposes, there is no sound reason why the state may not retain to itself the power of controlling or disposing of such water as an incident of its right to make such imiu’ovement.”

A rule of decision of long standing still prevails in Ohio to the effect that, upon the state’s abandonment of a portion of one of its canals, it is not liable to its lessees of surplus water derived therefrom; Judge [31]*31West saying, in Hubbard v. City of Toledo, 21 Ohio St. 379, 398, followed in Elevator Co. v. Cincinnati, 30 Ohio St. 629, 642:

“If-it were otherwise, the state would be compelled to maintain her canals, at any sacrifice, for the exclusive benefit of the lessees of surplus water. This-cannot be. The creation of water power did not enter into the purpose of their construction. It was adventitious, incidental, and, therefore, necessarily precarious ; and those obtaining grants thereof must be supposed to have taken them subject to the fluctuations of tides and the changes of time.”

And Mr. Chief Justice Waite said, in Fox v. Cincinnati, 104 U. S. 783, at page 785 (26 L. Ed. 928), when considering a similar question originating1 in Ohio:

“The use of the water for hydraulic purposes is but an incident to the principal object for which the canal was built, to wit, navigation.”

Furthermore, the intent to be deduced from the whole legislation was to increase the dejpth of the water in this portion'of1 the Tennessee river for purposes of navigation; and there is nothing concerning the design as to surplus water to indicate that anything more was contemplated than a subordinate and incidental object.

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Related

Peterson v. United States Ex Rel. Marsh Lumber Co.
119 F.2d 145 (Sixth Circuit, 1941)
Chattanooga & Tennessee River Power Co. v. Lawson
139 Tenn. 354 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
209 F. 28, 126 C.C.A. 170, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chattanooga-tennessee-river-power-co-v-united-states-ca6-1913.