St. Louis Gas-Light Co. v. St. Louis Gas, Fuel & Power Co.

16 Mo. App. 52, 1884 Mo. App. LEXIS 89
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Mo. App. 52 (St. Louis Gas-Light Co. v. St. Louis Gas, Fuel & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis Gas-Light Co. v. St. Louis Gas, Fuel & Power Co., 16 Mo. App. 52, 1884 Mo. App. LEXIS 89 (Mo. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinions

Lewis, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court

The plaintiff was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly, approved February 4, 1837. Its charter, which is to continue in force for fifty years from the first day of January, 1840, contains the following provisions : —

“ Sect. 22. The said company may also manufacture gas-fittings, portable gas vessels, and apparatus of all kinds appertaining to their business, and to sell the same, together with such inflammable gas as may be produced from oil, coal, tar, resin, pitch, wood, or other materials, or a combination of any such materials, in any manner hitherto used or hereafter to be used for the purpose ; the gas to be furnished either by fixed burners, or in- a portable and condensed state in vessels of suitable capacity and strength; also to-vend coke, lime, ammoniacal liquor, tar or other substances, residuum in the process of generating and purifying the said gas.
“ Sect. 23. That the St. Louis Gas-Light Company, their successors and assigns, shall have and be entitled to the sole and exclusive privilege of vending gas-lights and gas-fittings [58]*58in the city of St. Louis and in its suburbs, to such persons or bodies corporate as may voluntarily choose to contract for the same.
“ Sect. 24. That in order to enable the said company to carry the foregoing sections into effect, they shall be and are hereby authorized to lay pipes, conduits, or rails at the expense of the company, in any of the roads or in the avenues of the suburbs, or in any of the streets or alleys of the city of St. Louis, where the same may be required.” * * *

By the terms of a contract entered into with the city of St. Louis on the 28th of February, 1873, ££ the St. Louis Gas-Light Company waives, abandons, and surrenders forever to the city of St. Louis, irrevocably, any and all claims and pretence of claims, of exclusive right to have-gas-works, lay or have pipes and other appliances, vend or furnish gas, or do business as a gas company, in the following district or portion of said city, to wit:” Here follows a description of so much of the city as lies north of the south line of Washington Avenue, including all buildings fronting north upon the same south line.

The petition in this case charges, in substance, that the defendant corporation, having erected works for the purpose, announces and gives out that it intends to engage extensively in the business of making and vending, in every portion of the city, gas-lights and gas designed for illuminating uses ; that it has laid pipes and made connections, and is engaged in extending the same, and in selliug such gas-lights and gas, and is receiving compensation therefor. Plaintiff prays that the defendant may be restrained and enjoined, until after the first day of January, 1890, from further continuing to do any of these things in the district south of Washington Avenue. There was a hearing upon the pleadings and proofs, and a final decree granting the injunction prayed for.

The defence chiefly relied on assumes that the grant of [59]*59' xelusive privileges contained in the plaintiff’s charter was, midis, void; that it was in violation of existing constitutional limitations upon the powers of the legislative department, when the act was passed; and that, even without reference to such constitutional restrictions, the attempted grant was beyond the powers, as defined and understood in the necessities of civilized government, which a state may exercise over its citizeus. If any one of these propositions may be sustained by judicial authority, and the defendant is in a proper position to claim its benefits, the judgment ought to be reversed.

On the threshold of our inquiry, we are met by a claim that the supreme court of this state has solemnly adjudicated and determined the validity of the grant in question. If convinced of this, we could only follow that adjudication, and affirm the judgment in the present case. But we think that the contrary is true.

The controlling authority over any court, of a judicial opinion delivered in another cause by its superior in appellate jurisdiction, rests upon the same solid foundation with the plea of res judicata and the doctrine of stare decisis, in cases to which they apply, and refers, generally, to the same tests for a determination of its efficacy in a given case. These all proceed upon the fundamental idea, that whatever has been once submitted to the thorough process of judicial investigation wherein each of the adverse parties, stimulated by interest in the result, and aided by all the resources from which light might come, has presented.everything that could be urged in his own behalf, and thereupon an impartial arbiter has found and declared the true mean between the opposing forces, must have been properly determined if judicial methods are competent to such an end; and that it would be both useless and invidious to go over the same ground only to reach the same result. The conditions implied in this fundamental idea are indispensable in every application of the three instrumentalities referred to.

[60]*60The United States supreme court has always held that the construction of a state statute by the courts of the same state is, not merely persuasive but, controlling authority in the federal tribunals. This is quite as much as can be said of the authority of any appellate court over the rulings of its inferiors. Having in view this well settled law, the United States supreme court, in Carroll v. Carroll (16 How. 287), said : “ If the construction put by the court of a state upon one of its statutes was not a matter in judgment, if it might have been decided either way without affecting any right brought in question, then, according to-the principles of the common law, an opinion on such a-question is not a decision. To make it so there must have been an application of the judicial mind to the precise question necessary to be determined to fix the rights of the parties and decide to whom the property in contestation belongs. And therefore this court (and other courts organized under the common law) has never held itself bound by any part of an opinion, in any case, which was not needful to the ascertainment of the right or title in question between the parties.” To like effect are the remarks of Chief Justice Marshall in Cohens v. The State of Virginia (6 Wheat.. 399) : “ It is a maxim not to be disregarded that general expressions in every opinion are to be taken in connection with the case in which those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case, they may be respected, but ought not. to control the judgment in a subsequent suit, when the very point is presented. The reason of this maxim is obvious. The question actually before the court is investigated with care, and considered in its full extent; other principles, which may serve to illustrate it, are considered in their relation to the case decided, but their possible bearing on all other cases is seldom completely investigated.” In Molony v. Downs (8 Abb. Pr. 316), the conclusion reached by the* court was not reconcilable with two cases cited in argument, which were supposed to be authoritative. Daly, J., quoted [61]*61from a distinguished writer his definition of a precedent, as “a decision arrived at by a competent tribunal, after a patient inquiry into all points bearing upon the subject decided,” and found that the cases cited did not come up to such a definition.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Mo. App. 52, 1884 Mo. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-gas-light-co-v-st-louis-gas-fuel-power-co-moctapp-1884.