City of Detroit v. Michigan Public Utilities Commission

286 N.W. 368, 288 Mich. 267
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1939
DocketDocket No. 54, Calendar No. 40,176.
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 286 N.W. 368 (City of Detroit v. Michigan Public Utilities Commission) 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 Detroit v. Michigan Public Utilities Commission, 286 N.W. 368, 288 Mich. 267 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

McAllister, J.

The Detroit City Gas Company during- the past 30 years has manufactured, sold, and distributed gas in the city of Detroit. When its charter expired in 1923, the city entered into an agreement, granting a franchise for an additional time. Such franchise had not been ratified by three-fifths majority of the electorate of the city of De *274 troit, and was thereafter declared invalid by this court. Walker Brothers Catering Co. v. Detroit City Gas Co., 230 Mich. 564 (P. U. R. 1925D, 366). Controversy then arose between the city and the gas company as to the rates to be charged. The gas company published a schedule of rates, whereupon the city passed an ordinance which in effect accepted these rates, but at the same time imposed a rental charge of $125,000 per month upon the gas company for the use of the city streets. The company then filed a bill in equity in the United States district court for the eastern district of Michigan to enjoin the enforcement of this rental charge, and, before the determination of such case, promulgated an increased schedule of rates. The city, thereafter, filed a bill of equity in the circuit court of Wayne county, setting forth that such rates were unreasonable and arbitrary, and prayed that the company be enjoined from putting them into effect.

The entire controversy, up to this time, involved manufactured gas. However, both parties had been investigating the feasibility of the use of natural gas, and as a result of such investigation, and after considerable negotiation between the gas company and the city, it was decided to substitute natural gas for manufactured gas. Since the use of natural gas would render any decision in the pending cases of temporary effect, and in order to make a new arrangement, it was agreed that consent decrees should be entered in both pending cases, terminating* the litigation and providing* for a new contract for the furnishing and distribution of gas. This agreement was contained in the consent decree entered in the circuit court of Wayne county, which is the proceeding of especial importance in this case.

*275 Such decree provided that the company was to receive a certain base earning, dividing profits above this agreed amount with the consumers. It further provided that within a specified time in the future the company would promulgate a schedule of rates for consumers. Pursuant to the decree, the gas company afterward promulgated a schedule of rates.

On April 27,1937, Duncan C. McCrea, prosecuting attorney for Wayne county and a customer of the gas company, filed a petition with the Michigan public utilities commission, claiming* that the plan and agreement contained in the decree were fraudulent and formulated solely in the interest of the gas company, to the damage and detriment of the rights of the public. In his petition, in which he was later joined by more than 50,000 other consumers of the gas company, he prayed that the commission take jurisdiction to investigate the methods by which the rates were established; to investigate the effect upon Michigan natural gas prices of alleged monopolistic control; and to establish just and reasonable rates. Upon the filing of the petition, the commission issued an order, setting* a date for the hearing thereof, to ascertain whether it had jurisdiction to hear and determine the matters set forth in the petition, and caused notice of such hearing to be served upon petitioner, the city of Detroit, and the gas company.

After an extensive hearing*, and upon the opinion of the attorney general, the commission determined that it had jurisdiction under the petition to investigate and establish just and reasonable rates for natural gas in the city of Detroit.

From the order entered by the commission, the gas company and the city of Detroit appeal, contending that the commission has no jurisdiction because :

*276 The consent decree is an agreement fixing rates between the municipality and utility, and by statute the commission has no jurisdiction where there is such a contract.

"Where the franchise of a public utility has expired, only the municipality can petition the commission to fix rates, and the commission obtains no jurisdiction upon the petition of an individual consumer.

Since the suit of the city in the circuit court for Wayne county was brought by the city on behalf of all other consumers of gas, the consent decree therein entered is binding on petitioner and all other consumers.

The primary question to be determined is whether, under the arrangement now existing between the city and the gas company, the public utilities commission is excluded from jurisdiction to inquire into and determine rates.

Section 4 of the public utilities commission act (2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 11009 as amended by Act No. 138, Pub. Acts 1931 [Comp. Laws Supp. 1935, § 11009, Stat. Ann. § 22.4]), provides in part:

“In no case shall the commission have power to change or alter the rates or charges fixed in, or regulated by, any franchise or agreement heretofore or hereafter granted or made by any city, village or township. ’ ’

If there is a valid agreement or franchise granted or made by the city, fixing’ or regulating rates or charges, the commission has no power to change or alter them, as rates fixed by agreement are not subject to control of the commission. Lenawee County Gas & Electric Co. v. City of Adrian, 209 Mich. 52 (10 A. L. R. 1328).

In this regard it is of importance to consider the power of a municipality to enter into a contract, fix *277 or regulate rates to be charged by a public utility, and the necessary requisites to the exercise of such a power. A municipal corporation possesses only those powers expressly granted; those necessarily or fairly implied in or incidental to the powers expressly granted; and those essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation. The latter consist of powers not simply convenient to the exercise of the declared objects but those indispensable thereto. Attorney General v. Detroit Common Council, 150 Mich. 310 (121 Am. St. Rep. 625); Barnhart v. City of Grand Rapids, 237 Mich. 90. No express power is given to the city of Detroit to regulate the rates of public utilities, and this power is not one of those essential to local self-government. City of Kalamazoo v. Titus, 208 Mich. 252, 265. Such power arises only from the exercise of powers necessarily implied.

Article 8, § 28, Const. of 1908, provides :

“No person, partnership, association or corporation operating a public utility shall have the right to the use of the highways, streets, alleys or other public places of any city, village or township, for wires, poles, pipes, tracks or conduits, without the consent of the duly constituted authorities of such city, village or township; nor to transact a local business therein without first obtaining a franchise therefor from such city, village or township..

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Bluebook (online)
286 N.W. 368, 288 Mich. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-detroit-v-michigan-public-utilities-commission-mich-1939.