Sambor v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.

27 F.2d 406, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1324
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 1928
DocketNo. 4175
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 406 (Sambor v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sambor v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co., 27 F.2d 406, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1324 (E.D. Pa. 1928).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

The conclusions reached are that the motions for a. restraining order and for a preliminary injunction should be denied, and the motion to dismiss the bill be granted. Although there are thus in form three motions before us, they all merge in the question of whether the order of the Pennsylvania Pub-' lie Service Commission, approving an 8-cent tariff schedule rate of fare by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company operating a street railway system in the city of Philadelphia, is valid, in the face of a contract be[407]*407tween the company and the city of Philadelphia that no more than a 5-eentl fare should be charged. The entering into of this contract by the company was a condition of the grant to it of the franchise or privilege of operating its ears within the city.

The theory of a cause of action on which the bill is framed is based upon the following propositions:

(1) Under the Constitution and laws of the state of Pennsylvania, no street railway company can lawfully enter upon the streets of the city or operate its railway thereon without the consent of the city.

(2) The city thus having the absolute power to consent could condition it upon the entering into of a contract by the company not to exact for the service it rendered more than a prescribed rate of charge.

(3) An agreement made in the acceptance of this condition became a binding contract, the obligation of which cannot be escaped by the company, nor under the provisions of the Constitution of the state and of the United States can this obligation be impaired by any law of the state.

The defendants meet these propositions by an acceptance of 1 and 2 and a qualification of the third, and advance these supplemental propositions.

(4) When the instant contract was made, there was under the Constitution and laws of the state, written into every transaction and every contract, the provision that it was subject to such control and modification as the state, in the exercise of its police powers, might at any time impose. This provision thus became part of the contract, and had as much binding force as any other part of the contract.

(5) The state did, by an act of Assembly, known as the Public Service Company Act (Pa. St. 1920, §§ 18057-18214), in the exercise of its powers, establish a commission or tribunal, known as the Public Service Commission, with power to regulate the affairs of public utilities corporations, and to establish a tariff schedule of charges for services rendered to the public, from which the company is not permitted to depart.

(6) The change of rates here complained of was a change enforced by the orders of this commission in the exercise of its lawful powers and in conformity with the terms of the contract as both those laws and the contract have been interpreted by the eourts of the state.

The present bill is one filed in a court of the United States. This suggests and has provoked a discussion of the jurisdiction of this court. So far as this means jurisdiction in the sense of the possession of the judicial power to determine the cause, we see no need to go into the question, although it has been discussed at some length by counsel for plaintiff.

We think this discussion has been provoked by a misapprehension of the position taken by the defendants. The Constitution of the United States takes from the states the power to do what is here averred has been attempted.

No state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts. Article 1, § 10, el. 1. . The clause thus concerns the Constitution of the United States. The “judicial power” of the courts of the United States extends to all “eases arising under” the Constitution. Article 3, § 2, cl. 1.

This court clearly possesses the needed judicial power, and has just as clearly had imposed upon it the duty to determine the cause. Inasmuch as the meaning of the Constitution must be found, it is again clear that the courts of the United States must find and declare that meaning and apply it to the fact situation presented. There is a much narrower sense in which the term “jurisdiction” is sometimes employed, whether in strict accuracy of expression or not. This cause concerns itself primarily with matters of local concern wholly. The contract is local, in the sense that it is limited in its operation to a single city and territory within a state. The laws which are the law of the contract are the laws of a state. The validity of those laws depend primarily upon the Constitution of the state. Indeed, the concern of the laws of the United States is confined to the single inquiry of whether there is here any impairment of the obligation of a contract within the meaning of the national Constitution. The very question here presented (aside from its purely national Constitution feature) has been before the eourts of the state and ruled by them; contracts of the type of the contract before us have been before the state eourts and construed to be subject to the exercise of the police power of the state, and the specific order of the commission which established the rate of fare here in controversy has been upheld by the state eourts. The defendants in consequence urge that the United States courts are bound to accept the situation as thus defined and found by the courts of the state. The true doctrine we think to be this:

The eourts of the United States must, as before stated, put their own interpretation upon the national Constitution, whatever its [408]*408meaning may be elsewhere thought to be, but, when they are dealing with its application to a fact situation made up of a contract, the law of which is the law of a state, and which is to be construed under the Constitution and statutes of that state, the United States courts are bound to accept the meaning of the state Constitution and statutes given to them by the courts of the state. Counsel for the plaintiff accepts this general doctrine, but contends that, when the rulings of the courts of the state are in conflict with themselves, the courts of the United States must be guided by their own judgment and in reaching it are not bound by the latest deliverance of the highest judicial court of the state, but may recur to an earlier ruling if found to be in accord with what the law should be declared to be. Such counsel for plaintiff avers to be the situation here presented. He relies with confidence upon one ruling of the Supreme Court of the state, and admits that opposing counsel may, with equal confidence, rest their defense upon another. The choice, as counsel for plaintiff views the case, is to be made between these two rulings.

The position of counsel for plaintiff is perhaps more accurately expressed by the statement that every contract is to be read in the light of the law of the place of the contract (as found by the courts of the state) which law thus becomes the law of the contract. The obligation of the contract is thereby fixed beyond the control of either of the parties, and, under the Constitution of the United States, beyond the power of the state by “any law” to in any wise impair. The meaning of the contract as thus determined and its obligation as thus fixed is unaffected by any subsequent ruling even of the highest judicial tribunal of the state declaring the law to be and to have been otherwise than what it was thus earlier found to be. It is in this sense that the courts of the United States feel at full liberty to follow an earlier in preference to a later ruling of the highest court of the state when there is conflict between them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 406, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sambor-v-philadelphia-rapid-transit-co-paed-1928.