St. Cloud Public Service Co. v. City of St. Cloud

265 U.S. 352, 44 S. Ct. 492, 68 L. Ed. 1050, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2614
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 26, 1924
Docket10
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 265 U.S. 352 (St. Cloud Public Service Co. v. City of St. Cloud) 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
St. Cloud Public Service Co. v. City of St. Cloud, 265 U.S. 352, 44 S. Ct. 492, 68 L. Ed. 1050, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2614 (1924).

Opinion

*354 Mr. Justice Sanford

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the Public Service Company to enjoin the City from interfering with a proposed increase in the rates charged for fuel gas.

The allegations of the bill, shortly stated, are: The Company is a public service corporation organized under the laws of Minnesota, and the City, a municipal corporation of that State. In 1905. the City, by ordinance, granted the Company’s predecessor, its successors and assigns, the right to construct and maintain for thirty years works for the manufacture, distribution and sale of gas to the City and its inhabitants, and authorized it to sell fuel gas at a rate not exceeding $1.35 per thousand cubic feet. The grantee’s rights were assigned to the Company in 1915, and since then it has been engaged in manufacturing and selling fuel gas under the ordinance. 1 Since 1917 the Company has sold fuel gas at the maximum rate of $1.35 prescribed by the ordinance. This rate has not yielded, and cannot yield any return on the value of the property devoted to the gas business, has resulted in a constant loss and steadily increasing operating deficit, is inadequate and confiscatory, ana deprives the Company of its property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. The City Commission has refused to entertain a petition to prescribe a rate yielding a reasonable return on the invested capital. To secure a fair and reasonable return, a rate of $3.39 per thousand cubic feet is necessary. The Company intends *355 to increase its rate to that price. The City, however, has threatened to interfere with the collection of the proposed increased rate, and, unless restrained, will attempt to force the Company to continue to sell gas at the prescribed maximum rate, resulting in. controversies and multiplicity of suits, and inflicting irreparable loss and injury upon the Company.

The bill prays that the court adjudge that the maximum rate prescribed by the ordinance is confiscatory and violates the rights of the Company under the Fourteenth Amendment; and that the City be enjoined from interfering with the Company in raising the rate to $3.39, or attempting in any manner to force it to continue to sell gas at the ordinance rate.

A motion by the Company for a preliminary injunction was denied. Thereafter, on motion of the City, the court dismissed the bill for want of equity, on the ground that there was a “valid, and subsisting contract between the City and the plaintiff Company governing the matter of a maximum rate for fuel gas.” The Company, by reason of the constitutional question involved, has appealed directly to this Court. Jud. Code, § 238; Columbus Ry. Co. v. Columbus, 249 U. S. 399.

It has been long settled that a State may authorize a municipal corporation to establish by an inviolable contract the rates to be charged by a public service corporation for a definite term, not grossly unreasonable in time, and that the effect of such a contract is to suspend, during its life, the governmental power of fixing and regulating the rates. Home Telephone Co. v. Los Angeles, 211 U. S. 265, 273, and cases there cited. And where a public service corporation and the municipality have power to contract as to rates, and exert that power by fixing the rates to govern during a particular time, the enforcement of such rates is controlled by the obligation resulting from the contract, and the question whether they, are *356 confiscatory is immaterial. Southern Iowa Elec. Co. v. Chariton, 255 U. S. 539, 542, and cases there cited; Paducah v. Paducah Ry. Co., 261 U. S. 267, 273; Georgia Ry. Co. v. Decatur, 262 U. S. 432, 438. The existence of a binding contract as to the maximum rate for fuel gas is therefore the controlling issue upon which this controversy depends. Its solution turns upon the questions whether the City had power to contract on this subject by the ordinance of 1905; and, if so, whether the ordinance constituted such a contract.

1. Was the City authorized to enter into a contract as to the rate to be charged for fuel gas? Such authority must clearly and unmistakably appear. Home Telephone Co. v. Los Angeles, supra, p. 273; Paducah v. Paducah Ry. Co., supra, p. 272. Whether it existed depends upon the laws of Minnesota in force at the time. The consolidated charter of the City (Special Laws of 1889, c. 6, p. 131) provided as follows: The City “ shall be capable of contracting and being contracted with; and shall have all the powers possessed by municipal corporations at common law.” C. 1, § 1. “ The common council in addition to all powers herein . . . specifically mentioned, shall have full power and authority to make ... all such ordinances . . . for the general welfare of the city and the inhabitants thereof, as they shall deem expedient.” C. 4, § 4. “ The common council shall have full power by ordinance: ... To provide for and control the erection and operation of gas works, electric lights, or other works or material for lighting the streets and alleys, public grounds, and buildings of said city, and supplying light and power to said city and its inhabitants; and to grant the right to erect, maintain and operate such works, with all rights incident or pertaining thereto, to one or more private companies or corporations . . ; to provide for and control the erection and operation of works for heating the public buildings of said city by *357 steam, gas, or other means, and supplying light, heat, and power to the inhabitants of said city; to grant the right to erect such works and all incident rights to one or more private companies or corporations, and to control and regulate the erection and operation of such works . . ; provided, . . . that the compron council shall have authority to regulate and prescribe the fees and rates and charges of any and all companies hereinbefore mentioned.” C. 4, § 5, cl. 10.

In construing and giving effect to these provisions of the charter we look to the decisions of the Supreme Court of the State. In Reed v. City of Anoka, 85 Minn.

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265 U.S. 352, 44 S. Ct. 492, 68 L. Ed. 1050, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-cloud-public-service-co-v-city-of-st-cloud-scotus-1924.