City of Minneapolis v. Minneapolis Street Railway Co.

215 U.S. 417, 30 S. Ct. 118, 54 L. Ed. 259, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1850
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 1, 1910
Docket46
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 215 U.S. 417 (City of Minneapolis v. Minneapolis Street Railway 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 of Minneapolis v. Minneapolis Street Railway Co., 215 U.S. 417, 30 S. Ct. 118, 54 L. Ed. 259, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1850 (1910).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Dat

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota, enjoining the city *421 of Minneapolis from enforcing, as against the Minneapolis Street Railway Company, appellee, a certain ordinance of the city of Minneapolis, passed February 9, 1907, prescribing the rate of fare for the transportation of passengers over any street railway line, or lines, of the company in the city of Minneapolis.

The case was tried upon amended bill and answer. The ground alleged for injunction in' the amended bill was in substance that the ordinance of February 9, 1907, violated the terms of a previous and subsisting contract, prescribing the rates of fare to be charged by the company in the city of Minneapolis. It appears in the record that the railway company was organized on July 1, 1873, and that its alleged contract arises from an ordinance of the city of Minneapolis passed July 9,1875, ratified by an act of the legislature of the State of Minnesota passed March 4, 1879. We shall have occasion later on to deal more specifically with this ordinance and ratifying act.

It is sufficient for the present purpose to say. that it is the contention of the company that by the ordinance of July 9, 1875, and the ratifying act, it became the owner of an irrepealable contract for the term of fifty years from the date of its organization; by the terms of which it had the right to charge a fare not exceeding five cents for each person carried on any continuous line which might be designated by the city council of the city, such continuous line, however, not to exceed three mile's in length. The contract, it is alleged, is violated by the ordinance of February 9, 1907, requiring the sale of six tickets for twénty-five cents.

The existence of the alleged contract is deified by the city upon several grounds. It is urged that the complainant company- was so organized that its charter, and consequently its corporate life, expired thirty years after the date of its incorporation, that is, on July 1, 1903, and, therefore, its contract rights, ceased and terminated at that time. This contention is based upon the incorporation of the company, which, *422 it is insisted, could only be under Title IV of the laws of Minnesota, which includes transportation and other lawful business, and limits corporations organized thereunder to a continuation for not more than thirty years. Bissell’s Stats, of Minn. 1873, p. 443.

It is the contention of the company that it was organized under Title I of the laws of Minnesota (Bissell’s Stats. 1873, p. 419), for a term of fifty years. Title I is headed “ Of corporations empowered to take private property for public uses,” and includes corporations “for the purpose of building, improving and. operating railways, . . ■ . and all works of internal improvement which require the taking of private property or any easement therein.” Pertinent provisions of Title .I as to incorporation are given in the margin. 1

*423 Title II is Of corporations for pecuniary profit other than . those named in Title I.” The pertinent parts of that title are given in the margin. 1 .

*424 Much of the elaborate briefs of counsel in this case is devoted to a discussion .of the question of the organization of this corporation, and as to whether it' was under the one title or the other. This is not a proceeding in quo warranto, and the jurisdiction of the Federal court rested upon the contention that the company has a contract right protected from impáirr ment by a legislative act of the State. It is only necessary to examine the question of the incorporation'and organization of the company so far. as is required to determine whether or not this alleged contract right exists, and whether it has been violated by the ordinance of the city of Minneapolis, attacked in the amended bill.

There can be no question that the attempted incorporation of this company was under Title I of the statutes already referred to. It was incorporated by five persons. It states the business for which it was formed, “to construct and operate *425 railways in the streets and highways of the city of Minneapolis and its suburbs in the county of Hennepin, State of Minnesota.” It states the time of the commencement of the corporation to be the first of July, 1873, and the period of continuance thereof to be fifty years thereafter. The shares of capital stock are twenty-five hundred at $100 each.

Under Title II the corporate life is limited to not more than thirty years, and the shares of capital stock are to be not less than $10 or more than $50 each.

The corporation has continued to act since the expiration of the thirty years which would have been its corporate life had it been organized under Title II. There have been no proceedings, so far as the record shows, to inquire into its corporate existence since the expiration of the thirty years, and this record discloses that a number of ordinances have been passed by the city of Minneapolis since July 1, 1903, requiring of the corporation the construction of additional lines of railway upon certain of the streets of the city of Minneapolis, and to other- • wise discharge its duties as a continuing corporation.

This record therefore shows that the company undertook to ' organize under Title I, for the period of fifty years, has continued to act as such corporation, and was so acting at the time of the passage of the ordinance of February 9, 1907.

We proceed to examine the question, Did the ordinance of July 9, 1875, together with the ratifying act of 1879, make a ■contract between the city of Minneapolis and the street railway company, which would endure for the period of fifty years? Section I of the ordinance of. July 9, 1875, provides:

.“Sec. I.-That the Minneapolis Street Railway Company be and is hereby granted, during the term of its charter, the exclusive right and privilege of constructing and operating a single or double track for a passenger railway line, with all necessary tracks for turnouts, sidetracks and switches, in such streets of said city as the city council may deem suited to street railways, subject to the terms, conditions and forfeitures hereinafter contained; provided, that the city council reserves the *426 right to limit the saidscomnany to the construction of a single track upon such street or streets as it may deem proper.

Section VIII of the same ordinance provides:

“Sec. VIII.

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215 U.S. 417, 30 S. Ct. 118, 54 L. Ed. 259, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-minneapolis-v-minneapolis-street-railway-co-scotus-1910.