Owensboro v. Owensboro Waterworks Co.

191 U.S. 358, 24 S. Ct. 82, 48 L. Ed. 217, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1456
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1903
Docket58
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 191 U.S. 358 (Owensboro v. Owensboro Waterworks 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
Owensboro v. Owensboro Waterworks Co., 191 U.S. 358, 24 S. Ct. 82, 48 L. Ed. 217, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1456 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna,

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

By the act of the general assembly of Kentucky, approved Juñe 14, 1893, the appellant was made a city of the third class, and was given, as a city of that class, the following powers ’ expressed in section 3290: “The common council of said city shall, within the limitations of the constitution of the State and this act, have power by ordinance; . . . -5th, to pro *367 vide the city and the inhabitants thereof with water, light, power, heat and telephone service, by contract, or by works of its own, located either within or beyond the boundaries of the city. To make regulations for the management thereof, and to fix and regulate the prices to consumers and customers.”

Under this section the city passed the ordinance which prescribes the rates and regulations complained of. The Circuit Court decided that the city was not given the power to pass the ordinance, and. considered it unnecessary to pass on the other issues. The court said:

“If the city of Owensboro had no lawful.power or authority to pass the ordinance at all, then the enforcement of it. would clearly be a taking from the complainant of its right to certain property. First, without compensation; second, without due process of law; third, without giving tó it the equal protection of the law.

“This makes it necessary to inquire whether the city had the statutory power and authority to pass the ordinance complained of. It does not seem to be needful to inquire whether the state constitution gives the general assembly power to delegate authority in the premises to the city. The initial proposition is, has the legislature done so in fact, whether it had the power or not? This must depend upon the proper interpretation and construction of section 3290 of the Kentucky Statutes, ...”

Interpreting the section the court held that the word “thereof” in the last sentence of the section had for its antecedent the words “works of its own.” Substituting these words for the word “thereof,” the sentence would read, and the city’s power would be, “to make regulations for the management of its own works, and to fix and regulate the prices to consumers and customers.” But another ambiguity appears, viz., of what is the city to fix and regulate the prices ? Certainly of something, and it would seem from the context, the same thing, of which it was to regulate the management. But this leads to an absurdity, and we must find a purpose (antecedent) to which *368 both powers can refer. The city might, indeed, make regulations for the management of its works, but it could not fix and regulate the price of them to consumers and customers. Besides,'we cannot conceive that an explicit grant of power was necessary to enable the city to manage its own works. The power to construct would have implied the power to manage and operate. It must not be overlooked that the section was intended to apply not only to the appellant city but to all cities of the third class, and confer power not only to provide water, but other services, and it might have .seemed necessary, or at any rate prudent, to the legislature to reserve to the cities the power over the management of works constructed by private persons, and as prudent to reserve a power to fix and regulate the prices to consumers of the services afforded. It is certainly not difficult to conceive the necessity of the exercise of those powers, and if attempted to be exercised without a reservation, the cities might be met (and there are examples of this)- with the contention that the power had been bartered away and was precluded by the obligation of a contract. The' construction urged by appellee' must, therefore, be rejected. There is a more natural one. The purpose of section 3290 was to provide the inhabitants of cities of the third class with the services mentioned — water, light, power, heat and telephone. They could be provided by the cities directly or they could be provided by private persons; but whatever way provided, the power was given to regulate the management and fix the rates of the services, and this was but the endowment of a common governmental power.

It is, however, contended that the ordinance is in violation of the contracts between the city and appellee, -constituted by the resolutions and ordinance of the 3d of June, 1889. The argument is that the city had entered into contracts with the Owensboro Water Company, the predecessor of appellee, to which contracts and their "obligations and rights, it is contended, the appellee succeeded by assignment from the water company, with the consent and approval of the city as ex *369 pressed in the resolutions and ordinance of June 3, 1889. To determine their legal effect, however, it will be necessary to , consider the law which authorized them.

At the time of the passage of the ordinance granting the Owensboro Water Company the right to construct waterworks the city existed and was exercising its powers under the charter of 1878, and the provision in that for supplying water to the inhabitants of the city was as follows: “To make, establish and regulate wells, cisterns, reservoirs and pumps, and.to provide for the furnishing of the city and the inhabitants thereof with water and gas.”

The same provision was carried into the charter of 1882, and constituted the authority of the city when the ordinance, and resolutions of June, 1889, were passed. It is contended that this provision gave the city no power to fix the rates. And' counsel say: “In such case and in the absence of an express contract the individual or corporation furnishing' water for domestic purposes may charge whatever seems right and reasonable.”

But counsel go further. They deny the right of the city to fix rates, and yet assert its power to enter into an irrevocable contract with the water company giving it such power, that is, givingut power to .fix rates free from any regulation by the city, not only under any authority the city then possessed, but under any authority the city might be given by the legislature.

In this contention there are several elements, but we pass their consideration; and determine what contracts, if any, the city entered into with the water company. Of course, it is implied in the grant to the company that it might charge some rates to consumers, but the question is, were those rates exempt from regulation by the city under any power it then had or might be given? An- affirmative answer is contended for by the appellee under sections 9,10 and 14 of the granting ordinance. Section 9 is the pivotal section. The others are complementary. By it the company was given “power and ¿authority to make and enforce as a ■part of the condition [italics *370 ours] upon which it will supply water to its consumers, all needful rules and Regulations [italics ours], not inconsistent with the law or provisions of this ordinance.” The section is concerned with.the rules between the company and consumers aloné.' The company .may enforce all needful rules and regulations as fart of the condition upon which it will supply water.

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Bluebook (online)
191 U.S. 358, 24 S. Ct. 82, 48 L. Ed. 217, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owensboro-v-owensboro-waterworks-co-scotus-1903.