Spring Valley Water-Works v. Bartlett

16 F. 615, 8 Sawy. 555, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1847
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 F. 615 (Spring Valley Water-Works v. Bartlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spring Valley Water-Works v. Bartlett, 16 F. 615, 8 Sawy. 555, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1847 (uscirct 1883).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.

This is an application for an injunction, pending the litigation, to restrain the mayor and supervisors of San Francisco from passing the ordinance set out in the bill, or any other ordinance, to fix the price of water supplied to the city and people of San Francisco for one year, from July 1, 1883, in pursuance of the provisions of article 14 of the constitution of California.

The Spring Valley Water-works is a corporation created under the general statute of California, entitled “An act for the incorporation of water companies,” passed April 22, 1858, (St. 1858, p. 218.) Section 4 of this act provides that—

“ The rates to be charged' for water shall be determined by a board of commissioners to be selected as follows: Two by such city and county or city or town authorities, and two by the water company; and in case that four cannot agree to the valuation, then, in that ease, the four shall choose a fifth person, and he shall become a member of-said board. If the four commissioners cannot agree upon a fifth, then the sheriff of the county shall appoint such fifth person. The decision of a majority of said board shall determine the rates to be charged for water for one year, and until new rates shall be established.”

[617]*617Article 14 of the constitution of'1879, adopted since'the organization of the Spring Valley Water-works under the said act of 1868, and since complainant completed its works and introduced water into the city of San Francisco in pursuance of the provisions of that act, changed the mode of fixing the price of water by providing as follows: '

« 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 and town, or the inhabitants thereof, shall be fixed annually by the board of supervisors, or the city and county or city or town council, or other governing body of such city and county or city or tow'n, 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. Any board or body failing to pass the necessary ordinance or resolution fixing water rates, when necessary, -within such time, shall be subject to peremptory process to compel action at the suit of any party interested, and shall be liable to such further processes and penalties as the legislature may prescribe. Any person, company, or corporation collecting ratos in any city and county or city or town in this state, otherwise than as so established, shall forfeit the franchises and water-worhs of such person, company, or corporation to the city and county or city or town where the same are collected, for the public use.”

The complainant insists that said article 14 of the state constitution, so far as it is applicable to the Spring Valley Water-works, is absolutely void, as being in conflict with article 1, § 10, of the constitution of the United States, prohibiting the passage of any law impairing the obligation of a contract; and of the fourteenth amendment of the national constitution, providing that no state shall “deprive any person of * * * property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” It is urged that the provision in the act of 1858, proscribing the mode and tribunal for fixing the price of water, is a term of the contract under which the complainant expended many millions of dollars in introducing water, by the terms of which the vendor as well as the vendee had a voice in fixing its price, which, it is claimed, is a right of great value; while the fourteenth article of the state constitution abrogates that term of the contract, deprives the vendor of any voice in fixing the price of the water it brings into the city for sale, and gives to the vendee — the buyer — the entire control of the price, which it may fix at rates that will be ruinous to complainant; ■and in ease it refuses to submit, the complainant will forfeit all its [618]*618• property to'the city. It is also insisted that for the city to fix the .price in its discretion at unremunerative rates, is, to that extent, to ■ deprive the complainant of its property for both public and private uses without compensation or due process of law. Also, that to take from complainant any voice in fixing the price of the commodity which it introduces into the city for sale, and confer the power to determine the price upon the purchaser, is to subject it to conditions and limitations as to the control and free use of its own property not imposed ■ upon other persons with respect to their property, and in this respect ■ deprives the complainant of the equal protection of the laws.

These are grave questions, and their gravity cannot fail to arrest the attention of those familiar with the early public history of the city, whose recollection carries them back to a comparatively-reeent . period, when our citizens were compelled to procure their daily supplies of water for domestic uses from carts, and to store it in barrels, obtaining for their money much less in quantity, and an article greatly inferior in quality, to that now brought into the city and delivered in every room in their houses, under the stimulus of the inducement to complainant held out by the provisions of the act of 1858.

The first ground of objection to the bill confidently relied on by defendants, though urged in argument apparently less confidently by their counsel, is that they are a legislative body, endowed with legislative powers, to be exercised with absolute' discretion; and tlaat they are not amenable to the jurisdiction of this or any other court to inquire into their acts; that neither this court nor any other court has any power in any case to control or limit their action in their legislative capacity-; and, consequently, that it has no jurisdiction to investigate their proceedings. In view of the large multitude of cases cited by counsel on both sides, in which the relative powers of the courts and similar municipal bodies have been discussed and determined against those public officers upon various grounds, depending upon the varying circumstances of each particular case, the position, at least, challenges attention for its boldness. But the substantial and principal ground upon which the complainant rests its case, cuts under and lies beyond the reach of this objection. It is that the provision of the state constitution upon which the defendants’ authority to deal with the matter in question at all rests, is in conflict with the constitution of the United States* and is, therefore, utterly void. If this be so, then defendants have no authority of any kind, legislative, judicial, or administrative, to deal with the question at all. They are not acting within the scope of their authority, and have no dis-[619]*619eretion in tlie matter. Article 6 of the constitution of the United States provides that—

“ This constitution, and tlie laws of tlie United States which shall he made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in evert/ state shall he hound thereby, anything in the constitution, or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.”

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. 615, 8 Sawy. 555, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 1847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-valley-water-works-v-bartlett-uscirct-1883.