City and County of Denver v. New York Trust Co.

229 U.S. 123, 33 S. Ct. 657, 57 L. Ed. 1101, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2428
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 26, 1913
DocketNos. 642 and 643
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 229 U.S. 123 (City and County of Denver v. New York Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City and County of Denver v. New York Trust Co., 229 U.S. 123, 33 S. Ct. 657, 57 L. Ed. 1101, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2428 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit presents a threefold controversy, to which the New York Trust Company (a New York corporation), the City and County of Denver (a municipal corportation in Colorado), and the Denver .Union Water Company (a Colorado corporation) are the principal parties. They are respectively the successors of similar corporations whose acts, together with their own, created the situation out of which the controversy • arose, but it will be convenient to treat them as if they were the original participants in all those acts. Although formerly controlled by a charter enacted by the legislature of the State, the city, in pursuance of an amendment of the state constitution, came in 1904 to be governed .by a charter framed and adopted by the people of the city and over which they possessed an exclusive power of alteration and amendment. Laws 1889, p. 124; Laws 1893, p. 131; Const., Art. 20, Rev. Stat. 1908, p. 55.

By the charter from the state legislature (Laws 1889) the city was given power (§ 9) “to construct or purchase *126 water works for the use of the city” and generally to do whatever was “ needful ... in order to supply the city with water for fire, irrigating, domestic and other purposes,” subject to the qualification (§12) that “all franchises or privileges ” granted by the city should “be limited to twenty _ years from the granting of the same” April 10, 1890, while that charter was in force, the city, by an ordinance designated as No. 44 and duly accepted by the water company, granted to the latter, its successors and assigns, the right' and privilege of laying down, continuing and maintaining pipes and other apparatus for the conveyance and distribution of water along and through designated streets, alleys and public places of the city, “to such'extent as the city may lawfully grant the same” and subject to termination as therein provided. The ordinance contained various provisions regulatory of,the right and privilege so granted, the duty of the water company to supply water for private use and for fire and other public purposes, the rates to be charged private users, and the hydrant rentals to be paid by the city. There were also the following sections:

“Sec. 11. At the expiration of the period of twenty years from and after the date of the passage and approval of the ordinance, in case the city shall then elect so to do, the said works may be purchased by the said city, and in case the parties can not agree, after such election, upon the price to be paid by the city for the water works of the. said company, its successors and assigns, then their fair cash value shall, be determined by arbitration, by five disinterested persons, none of whom shall be residents of Denver, two of them to be chosen by the city, two by the company, and the fifth by the four first chosen, and in case of failure on the part of the company to name arbitrators for the period of thirty days after the city shall have named arbitrators and notified the company so to do, the city may apply to any court having equity *127 jurisdiction in the county in which the city of Denver shall then be situated for the appointment of two persons of the qualifications aforesaid as such arbitrators, and the court may thereupon appoint two persons, who shall act with the same force and effect as if appointed by the company, and the decision of a majority of said board shall be final and binding upon' both parties,' and upon the payment, or tender of payment, by said city the said company shall convey to said city all of its property, real or personal, easements, rights and privileges, and thereafter all franchises, rights and privileges which have been at any time theretofore granted said company, its successors or assigns, and which it may then possess, shall cease and be at an end.
“Sec. 12. At the expiration of the said period of twenty years the said city may, at its election, renew the contracts hereby made, by ordinance to that effect, for a like period of twenty years, but at a price for hydrant rental 10 per cent, less than mentioned in section 10 hereof, for the period remaining after the ten years after May 1st, 1891, and for successive periods of twenty years at the price last aforesaid, as often and as long as the city may choose., This section is conditioned, however, upon the full performance by the city of the provisions of section 2 hereof.
“Sec. 19. This'ordinance, when the same shall be in writing accepted by The Denver Water Company, becomes a contract between the city of Denver and the said The Denver Water Company, its successors and assigns, and the same shall as to every provision herein contained as fully bind and inure to the benefit of the successors and assigns of the said The Denver Water Company as to the said company'. And it is expressly understood that by the acceptance of this ordinance the .said The Denver Water Company loses no rights in regard to the occupation of the streets, alleys and public places, or as to the rights of any other person or persons thereto which it now *128 possesses, but the same are hereby recognized and confirmed and are'to be deemed independent of and not merged in any grant in this "ordinance elsewhere contained.
“Sec. 20. All mains, pipes, valves and other apparatus now owned by said The Denver Water Company, and composing its plant, and all such mains, pipes, valves, hydrants and other apparatus, as said The Denver Water Company,' its successors or assigns, shall hereafter lay down or set .in or upon any of the streets, alleys or other public places within said city shall be and remain the sole and absolute property of said The .Denver Water Company, its successors and assigns, and the said The Denver Water Company, its successors or assigns, shall forever be considered and entitled to be in possession thereof, except in case of purchase by said city under the terms of this- ordinance, or some agreement between said city and said company, its successors or assigns, when all rights of whatsoever nature of said company, its successors or assigns, in and to the subject-matter hereof shall vest in said city.
“Sec. 21, While the consideration for the respective agreements of the city and the company are upon each side the several agreements of the other, all of the several grants, contracts and agreements in this ordinance contained are to be deemed independent agreements with the same force find effect as if each section of this ordinance was contained in a separate ordinance by itself.”

By a written contract.made in 1870 the city had granted to the water company a sole and exclusive right to lay pipes within the city for use in the distribution and sale of water, but that contract had been expressly annulled by another made in 1874, whereby the city granted to the company a right of like character expressly limited to a period of seventeen years from May 1 of that year. What was said in §§ 19 and 20 of the ordinance of 1890 about rights and a water plant already possessed by the water *129

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Bluebook (online)
229 U.S. 123, 33 S. Ct. 657, 57 L. Ed. 1101, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-and-county-of-denver-v-new-york-trust-co-scotus-1913.