City of Mitchell v. Dakota Central Telephone Co.

246 U.S. 396, 38 S. Ct. 362, 62 L. Ed. 793, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 1560
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 15, 1918
Docket198
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 246 U.S. 396 (City of Mitchell v. Dakota Central Telephone 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 Mitchell v. Dakota Central Telephone Co., 246 U.S. 396, 38 S. Ct. 362, 62 L. Ed. 793, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 1560 (1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

Counsel agree that th§ issues on this appeal are: (1) The jurisdiction of the District Court. (2) The scope and interpretation of ordinances Nos. 174 and 180. (3) Whether the judgment pleaded by the city is res ju-dicata.

The first proposition needs but little comment. The company attacked the. ordinance or resolution of the city requiring the company to remove its poles and wires from the streets as an impairment of the contract constituted by other ordinances and hence invoked against the city the contract clause of the Constitution of the United States and also, on account of the asserted destruction of its property, urged in its protection the due process clause. The. city combated both propositions. The District Court, however, sustained both, resting its decision upon, the opinion , of the Supreme Court of the State in a suit.by. the city against the telephone company. City of Mitchell v. Dakota Central Telephone Co., 25 S. Dak. 409. We shall presently consider this case. For the disposition of the present contention it is enough to say the case was brought by the city to recover a percentage of gross receipts of the company as provided in ordinance 135. In resistance the company contended that the provision was inserted without authority and was illegal and void, and contended besides that its rights in the streets were not derived from the city but from § 554 of the Civil Code of .the State' and that it was not competent for,.the city to impose conditions upon the *407 company. The court rejected the contentions and held that under, the constitution of the State the city had the right to grant or withhold its consent to the use of its streets, and it necessarily had the right to grant the same upon such terms and conditions as it might choose to impose.

Applying the case, the District Court sustained the validity of ordinance No. 135, but decided that it expired by limitation of time in May, 1913, and that necessarily the rights granted by it terminated on that date, and that the company’s rights, if it had any, were derived from ordinance 180 and the resolution of April 10, 1907. 1 The court considered the former a valid exercise of the power of the city and a contract between it and the company which was impaired by the subsequent resolutions.

It will be seen, therefore, that the company invoked rights under the Constitution of the United States and the District Court considered. them to be substantial, not formal, and accordingly exercised jurisdiction.

The second and third propositions mingle in discussion. The District Court decided, as we have said, that ordinance 18Ó constituted a contract between the city and the company, and, exerting the right to interpret it, further decided that it gave the company the right to occupy the streets and compelled an injunction against the city’s resolution and attempt to remove it. We shall spend no time in vindication of the exertion of the right; it is an established right of the federal courts, when the *408 contract clause of the Constitution of the United States is inyoked, and we pass immediately to the consideration of ordinance No. 180. As we have seen, it was preceded by some years by ordinance No. 135, and by some' months by ordinance No. 174. ,It was passed, it is contended, to complete the flatter; ih what respect we shall presently consider.

The case centers upon the ordinance. The.’telephone company contends that it gives the company the right to operate not merely long distance lines, but a local telephone exchange within the city. In other words, the contention is that it superseded ordinance No. 135 and became a new source of right, a right both of long distance and local exchange. The city opposes this construction and insists that the ordinance confers only the right to maintain a long distance system; that the right to a local exchange was given by ordinance No. 135 and expired with the expiration of that ordinance, May, 1913. And the city urges that its characterization of ordinance No. 180 was sustained by the Supreme Court of the State in City of Mitchell v. Dakota Central Telephone Co., supra.

Counsel are at odds as to the case. It, as we have seen, was brought by the city against the company to recover a certain percentage of the gross receipts of the company, provided to be paid by § 4 of ordinance No. 135. One of the defenses of the company was that that ordinance was in effect repealed and superseded by ordinance No. 180 so far as it related to the payment of the percentage of. the gross proceeds of the company. The Supreme Court decided against the defense, reversing the judgment of the trial court. The court, in answer to the contention of the company, held that ordinance No. 180 did not "have the effect of repealing, qualifying, or modifying ordinance No. 135, and the fact that the defendant [the company] paid the 10 per cent, on its gross proceeds for two years subsequently to the adoption of ordinance *409 No. 180 clearly shows that it did not claim, for a time at least, that ordinance No. 180 in any manner affected the prior ordinance . . . There is- clearly no inconsistency between the two ordinances; one being for a local city telephone system, and the other being for a long distance telephone system.”

The court also decided that the resolution of the city of April 10, 1907, had not the effect of repealing ordinance No. 135, but had only the purpose of giving to the company permission to place its. wires underground instead of stretching them on poles in the streets.

The decision would seem to need no comment. It clearly adjudged that the ordinances had different purposes, and that ordinance No. 135 was not repealed in any particular by No. 180, the former applying to the local system and the latter to the long distance system.

The District Court, however, did not give the decision this broad effect but considered that it concluded only “that the two ordinances did not cover so exactly the same field and scope that it could be fairly said, that the city intended by the passage of ordinance No. 180 to repeal ordinance No. 135.” It is not very obvious how ordinance No. 135 could exist for one purpose and not for all the purposes for which it was enacted; how it could exist for the exaction of a revenue from the system and not exist for the system; how it could co-exist for nine years with No. 180 and yet have been superseded by the latter. Besides, the Supreme Court distinguished between the two ordinances, declaring that there was no inconsistency between them, “one being for a local city telephone system, and the other being for a long distance telephone system.” The decision, indeed, gave emphasis to* the distinction. From the operation of one a revenue was exacted, upon the other no condition was imposed.

It is, however, alleged in the bill that the company had *410

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Bluebook (online)
246 U.S. 396, 38 S. Ct. 362, 62 L. Ed. 793, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 1560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mitchell-v-dakota-central-telephone-co-scotus-1918.