City of Benton Harbor v. Michigan Fuel & Light Co.

231 N.W. 52, 250 Mich. 614, 71 A.L.R. 114, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 1027
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketDocket No. 94, Calendar No. 34,765.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 52 (City of Benton Harbor v. Michigan Fuel & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Benton Harbor v. Michigan Fuel & Light Co., 231 N.W. 52, 250 Mich. 614, 71 A.L.R. 114, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 1027 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

North, J.

This suit was brought by the city of Benton Harbor to restrain the defendant from longer occupying and using the city’s streets incident to the conduct of its business as a gas company. Plaintiff claims the franchise under which defend *616 ant asserts the right to operate expired April, 1920, and that the defendant is continuing to use the city’s streets without right. This is denied by the defendant. Plaintiff’s bill was dismisséd in the circuit, and it has appealed.

The question to be adjudicated is whether this franchise was limited to a 30-year period, which has expired. It was originally granted in April, 1890, to the Excelsior Gas Company, a corporation organized under Act No. 109, Pub. Acts 1855, as amended by Act No. 25, Pub. Acts 1889 (chap. 126, Howell’s Statutes). The statute vested this corporation, its successors, and assigns with full power to manufacture and sell gas and to lay conductors for conducting gas through the streets, lands, or squares' of any city with the consent of the municipal authorities under such reasonable regulations as they may prescribe. The franchise rights granted by the municipality were embodied in an ordinance and in part in the following language:

“Section 1. That the Excelsior Gas Company shall have the right to establish and maintain gas works within the corporate limits of Benton Harbor for manufacturing and furnishing gas for lighting and fuel purposes in said village, providing the same are in operation by November 1, 1890.
“Section 2. That said company for this purpose shall have the right to lay mains and pipes in any and all streets, lanes, alleys and highways within said village.” (The ordinance contains further provisions fixing the general gas rates and giving reduced rates to the municipality for gas used by it.)

It will be noted the ordinance granting this gas franchise fixed no time limit or term of its duration. Neither was there a limitation of that character in the’ Constitution or statutes of this State at that *617 time. On the day the above ordinance was passed, the articles of incorporation of the Excelsior Gas Company were executed. They were filed two days later. No limit to the term of the corporate existence was fixed in its articles of association, but the Constitution of Michigan at that date limited the term of corporate life to 30 years, subject, however, to right of renewal under statutory provision. We quote in part the constitutional provision:

“No corporation, except for municipal purposes (and other purposes not here material), shall be created for a longer time than thirty years; but the legislature may provide by general laws * * * for one or more extensions of the term of such corporation * * * not exceeding thirty years for each extension.” Const. 1850, art. 15, §10, as amended in April, 1889.

Immediately after the adoption of the constitu, tional amendment, the legislature passed Act No. 166, Pub. Acts 1889 (2 Comp. Laws 1897, §§7130, 7131), which provides:

“That it shall be lawful for any corporation heretofore or hereafter organized, under the general laws of this State, engaged in the manufacturing and supplying any town, city or village with gas for lighting the same, whose corporate term has expired, or shall expire by limitation, * * * to direct the continuance of its corporate existence for such further term, not exceeding thirty years from the expiration of its former term, as may be expressed in a resolution for that purpose. * * #
“The renewed term of such corporation shall begin from the expiration of the former term thereof, and the corporation thus renewed shall hold and own all the property held and owned by the corporation before renewal, and all of the rights and privileges belonging thereto.”

*618 Act No. 112, Pub. Acts 1889 (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 11350), provides:

“Any corporation formed under any general law of this State may at any general or special meeting of its stockholders, with the consent of three-fourths of its capital stock, sell and convey all its property and franchises, rights and privileges * * * to any other corporation formed under the same or any similar law for corporate purposes of the same character. ’ ’

From the foregoing it is clear that at the time the Excelsior Gas Company incorporated and accepted the Benton Harbor gas franchise, the corporation had a charter for an initial period of 30 years, but it also had the right to continue its corporate existence for a period “not exceeding thirty years from the expiration of its former term,” and the statutes above quoted vested in “the corporation thus renewed” all the property, rights, and privileges, held by it before-renewal; and gave it power to sell “all its property and franchises * * * to any other corporation formed * * * for corporate purposes of the same character.”

In 1906 the Berrien County Gas Company was incorporated under the general corporation law of this State, Act No. 232, Pub. Acts 1903. The defendant herein is the Berrien County Gas Company with its corporate name changed to the Michigan Fuel & Light Company. It is conceded to be the possessor by valid transfers of any and all existing rights incident to the franchise granted by the plaintiff to the Excelsior Gas Company. Its initial corporate period of 30 years will not expire until 1936. Plaintiff asserts this corporation has no right to operate under the Benton Harbor gas franchise, it being plaintiff’s claim that this franchise terminated in *619 1920 upon the expiration of the initial 30 year period of the Excelsior Gas Company’s corporate life because the franchise was granted to that corporation without words of succession. This contention is not tenable. A corporation’s powers are granted to it and defined by its corporate franchise construed in connection with the pertinent constitutional and statutory provisions then in force. Mason v. Perkins, 73 Mich. 303, 319. The constitutional provision and statutes above quoted gave the Excelsior Gas Company the power to extend its corporate life beyond the initial period of 30 years, and it is conceded that plaintiff cannot and it does not question the validity of the assignment under which defendant holds this franchise. This court has quoted with approval the words of Justice Lurton in City of Owensboro v. Telephone Co., 230 U. S. 58 (33 Sup. Ct. 988):

“The grant by ordinance to an incorporated telephone company, its successors and assigns, of the right to occupy the streets and alleys of a city with its poles and wires for the necessary conduct of a public telephone business, is a grant of a property right in perpetuity, unless limited in duration by the grant itself, or as a consequence of some limitation imposed by the general law of the State, or by the corporate powers of the city making the grant.” North Michigan Water Co. v. Escanaba, 199 Mich. 286, 303.

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Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 52, 250 Mich. 614, 71 A.L.R. 114, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-benton-harbor-v-michigan-fuel-light-co-mich-1930.