North American Const. Co. v. Des Moines City Ry. Co.

256 F. 107, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 868
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Iowa
DecidedMarch 18, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 256 F. 107 (North American Const. Co. v. Des Moines City Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Const. Co. v. Des Moines City Ry. Co., 256 F. 107, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 868 (S.D. Iowa 1919).

Opinion

WADE, District Judge.

[1] A franchise is a contract. There is no question about the authority of the city to make a contract with the street railway company for service, and for rates to be charged for such service. There is some doubt as to the power to' fix rates for gas and electricity by contract, but this doubt arises out of the fact that the Legislature has conferred upon cities the power to regulate rates of lighting companies, but has not conferred any such power as to street railway service. The only way that a city in Iowa can fix a rate for street railway service is by contract.

[2] The parties to this controversy agree that the franchise in this case constitutes a valid contract. No one claims that the court has any power to change this contract, or modify it in any particular. It is elementary that a court has no power to make contracts for individuals or corporations, nor to modify them when made. The only power the court has in relation to controversies of this kind is to construe a contract when its meaning is in doubt. That is the only question before the court in this case. The receivers claim that the franchise, taken as a whole, means one thing as to fares; the city claims that it means something else. This contract was made in 1915. It is to be regretted that, so soon after its execution, the parties should differ as to what it means.

Section 17 of the contract is definite as to rates for fare, and, if it stood alone, of course there would be no controversy about it; but the receivers claim that the provisions of section 17, as to fares, must be construed in connection with section- 7, which provides definitely for the payment from the fares collected of certain amounts, consisting “of all costs of operation, including taxes and interest, at not to exceed 5 per cent, on the company’s indebtedness .represented by bonds, and not to exceed 6 per cent, on the remainder of such indebtedness, and the setting aside of a depreciation fund,” after the expiration of three-year rehabilitation period.

Here it is important to consider certain elementary propositions, which should be understood, not only by the parties, but by the public, who are most directly interested in this contract. This corporation, at the time this contract was made, had certain outstanding capital stock; it also owed certain debts, some of which were represented by bonds, and some of which were ordinary obligations. It was also required by the contract that the company should make further expenditures in the way of extensions and betterments.

The total amount of the indebtedness of the company, which now totals $6,388,872.88, was agreed upon by the city and the corporation. To meet the interest upon this indebtedness, the operating expenses, taxes, and depreciation, of course, the corporation had no mone}*-, and would have no money, except as it received it from fares collected. The amount which would be received from fares,- could only be ap[109]*109proximated, and the amount of cost for operation could only be estimated, and of course, in the last year and a half, conditions with reference to the cost of operation have changed, so that anything contemplated at that time as the cost of operation proves to be entirely inadequate. For instance, it is stated by counsel that the increased cost of labor alone, under present wages, adds $174,000 per year to the expense of operation.

The contract specifically provides that the company shall pay (from fares collected, because there was no other source of income): (1) The cost of operation; (2) taxes; (3) 5 per cent, on the company’s indebtedness represented by bonds; (4) 6 per cent, on the remainder of the indebtedness; and, (5) a depreciation fund, which is to be fixed each year, with reference to replacement, renewals, and maintenance of equipment, etc. The contract also provides for what is termed “first-class” service.

It is the contention of the receivers, and for the purpose of this hearing only this contention is assumed to be true, that the income from fares will not pay the cost of operation, taxes, interest, and depreciation, and continue present service. It is here apparent, of course, that, if this contention is true, fares will have to be increased or service reduced. It will be observed that there is no claim that there should be any income to pay any dividend upon any of the capital stock, under present conditions, and under the terms of the contract; the contention simply being that, under the specific terms of the contract, the cost of operation, faxes, and depreciation must be met from the fares, and that they are not sufficient to pay them.

Under these circumstances the receivers contend that the contract contemplates that the service must be kept up, and therefore that the fares must be increased. It is the contention of the city that, if there must be a change in either the fares or the service, the change must be in the service, and that the fares cannot be increased. Evidence has been introduced as to the preliminary negotiations leading up to the adoption of the franchise. Provisions of the ordinance are pointed out, emphasizing the fact that “the first and primary purpose in making this contract is to secure to the public first-class modern street car service.”

It is contended that the dominant element in the contract is the service, and that the fares are secondary, and therefore that, if either one must yield, it is the provision as to fares. With this contention I cannot agree. While the contract emphasizes the matter of service, the court cannot close its eyes to the fact, which is a matter of common knowledge, that in controversies over franchises for street railways the thing most prominent in the mind of the people (one of the parties to this contract) is rates of fare. Fares touch the people most directly, and I have no doubt, from all the evidence before the court, that so far as the people of Des Moines are concerned they assumed that the fare was definitely and finally determined by this franchise. In all the discussions, so far as the evidence discloses, there was no suggestion that at any time the fares might be increased. Upon different occasions, during the discussion of the franchise, when statements were made ex[110]*110pressing the. fact that fares were definitely fixed for the period of the franchise, no suggestion to the contrary was made by any one.

It is true, as contended by the receivers, that it was contemplated at the time that under this contract there should be income enough from fares to pay for the cost of the service, and such cost was definitely fixed and limited as aforesaid. Four things were clearly fixed in the minds of the parties: (1) The indebtedness upon which interest should be paid; (2) the rate of such interest; (3) the fares; and (4) the service.

[3] As between the fares and the service, looking at the language of the franchise, as to which is it most inflexible? The service in the nature of things could not be defined, except in general terms. Two supervisors were agreed upon, one representing the city and one the company, and in their hands was placed to a large extent the determination of the service to be rendered; and then a further provision is made that, in case of disagreement between the supervisors, the question upon which they do not agree shall be submitted to arbitration.

Of course, the people of Des Moines cannot have service which will not be paid for out of the fares.

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. 107, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-american-const-co-v-des-moines-city-ry-co-iasd-1919.