Spring Valley Water Co. v. City of San Francisco

252 F. 979, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 984
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJuly 13, 1918
DocketNos. 14,275, 14,735, 14,892, 15,131, 15,314, 15,569, Circuit Court; Nos. 26 and 96, District Court
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 252 F. 979 (Spring Valley Water Co. v. City of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spring Valley Water Co. v. City of San Francisco, 252 F. 979, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 984 (N.D. Cal. 1918).

Opinion

RUDKIN, District Judge.

For more than 60 years last past the Spring Valley Water Company, a California corporation, and its predecessors in interest, have been engaged in the public service of supplying the city of San Francisco and its inhabitants with water for domestic and other purposes. To enable it to discharge the duties thus assumed, the company has acquired lands and water rights, and has constructed dams, reservoirs, pipe lines, and the usual facilities for conserving, impounding, conducting, and delivering the water thus supplied. Section 1 of article 14 of the state Constitution provides as follows;

“The use of all water now appropriated, or that may hereafter he appropriated, for sale, rental, or distribution, is hereby declared to be a public use, and subject to the regulation and control of the state, in the manner to be prescribed by law: Provided, that the rates or compensation to be collected by any person, company, or corporation in this state for the use of water supplied to any city and county, or city, or town, or the inhabitants thereof, shall be fixed, annually, by the board of supervisors, or city and county, or city, or [980]*980town council, or other governing body of such city and county, or city, or town, by ordinance or otherwise, in the manner that other ordinances or legislative acts or resolutions are passed by such body, and shall continue in force for one year and no longer. Such ordinances or resolutions shall be passed in the month of February of each year, and take effect on the first day of July thereafter.”

Pursuant to this constitutional requirement the board of supervisors of the city and county of San Francisco, iñ the month of February, 1907, passed an ordinance fixing the rates or compensation to- be charged by the plaintiff for the use of water for the year commencing' on the 1st day of July, 1907; and ending on the 30th day of June, 1908; and in the month. of February of each succeeding year thereafter, until and including the year 1914, a similar ordinance was passed fixing the rates or compensation to be charged for the use of water for the ensuing year. Soon after the passage of the ordinance of February, 1907, the plaintiff instituted suit No. 14,275 in the Circuit ■Court of the United States for the Northern District of California to restrain the city and county of San Francisco and the board of supervisors from enforcing the rates or compensation fixed by the ordinance, invoking the jurisdiction of that court on the ground that the rates or compensation thus fixed were noncompensatory, and that the ordinance took the property of the plaintiff for a public use without making just compensation therefor, and deprived the plaintiff of its property with-cut due process of law, in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Articles of Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. ’ Similar suits were instituted in the same court, and in the United States District Court, which succeeded to its jurisdiction in 1912, to enjoin the ■enforcement of the rates or compensation fixed by the ordinances passed in the ensuing years for the like reason. After the issues were made up the several cases were referred to the standing master by consent of parties, with directions to take the testimony and report his findings and conclusions to the court. The testimony has been taken, the master’s report has been filed, exceptions to the report have been saved, and the case is now before the court for final disposition.

[1] At the threshold of the case the court is met with the objection that, inasmuch as the. reference was by consent, the findings of the master are conclusive upon the court, unless there has been manifest error in the consideration given the testimony or in the application of governing principles of law. Kimberly v. Arms, 129 U. S. 512, 9 Sup. Ct. 355, 32 L. Ed. 764, Davis v. Schwartz, 155 U. S. 636, 15 Sup. Ct. 237, 39 L. Ed. 289, and kindred cases are cited in support of this proposition. That rule, however, has but a limited application to a case of this kind.

In Knoxville v. Knoxville Water Co., 212 U. S. 1, 7, 29 Sup. Ct. 148, 150 (53 L. Ed. 371), the court said:

“At the threshold of the consideration of the case the attitude of this •court to the facts found below should be defined. Here are findings of fact by a master, confirmed by the court. The company contends that under these circumstances the findings are conclusive in this court, unless they are without support in the evidence or were made under the influence of erroneous views of the law. We need not stop to consider what the effect of such findings would be in an ordinary suit in equity. The purpose of this suit is to arrest [981]*981file operation of a law on the ground that it is void and of no effect. It happens -<hat in this particular case it is not an act of the Legislature that is attacked, but an ordinance of a municipality. Nevertheless the function of rate making is purely legislative in its character, and this is true whether it is exercised directly by the Legislature itself or by some subordinate or administrative body, to whom the power of fixing rates in detail has been delegated. 1’he completed act derives its authority from the Legislature and must be regarded as an exercise of the legislative power. * * * There can be at this day no doubt, on the one hand, that the courts on constitutional grounds may exercise tho power of refusing to enforce legislation, nor, on the other hand, that that power ought to be exercised only in the dearest cases. The constilulional invalidity should be manifest, and, where that invalidity rests upon disputed questions of fact, the invalidating facts must be proved to the satisfaction of the court. In view of tho character of the judicial power invoked in such cases, it is not tolerable that its exercise should rest securely upon the findings,of a master, even though they be confirmed by the trial court. The power is best safeguarded against abuse by preserving to this court complete freedom in dealing with the facte of each ease. Nothing less vhan this is demanded by the respect due from the judicial to tho legislative authority. It must not be understood that the findings of a master, confirmed by the trial court, are without weight, or that they will not, as a practical cuestión, sometimos be regarded as conclusive. All that is intended to be said te that in cases of this character this court will not fetter its discretion or judgment by any artificial rules as to the weight of the master’s findings, however useful and well settled these rules may ho in oi-dinary litigation. We approach the discussion of the facts in this spirit.”

But in Chicago, Milwaukee, etc., Ry. Co. v. Tompkins, 176 U. S. 167, 180, 20 Sup. Ct. 336, 341 (44 L. Ed. 417), the court said:

"We are all of opinion that a better practice is to refer the testimony to nome competent master, to make all needed computations, and find fully the facts.

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Bluebook (online)
252 F. 979, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-valley-water-co-v-city-of-san-francisco-cand-1918.