State ex rel. Hill v. Port of Seattle

177 P. 671, 104 Wash. 634, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 522
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1919
DocketNo. 14907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 177 P. 671 (State ex rel. Hill v. Port of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hill v. Port of Seattle, 177 P. 671, 104 Wash. 634, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 522 (Wash. 1919).

Opinions

Chadwick, J.

In State ex rel. Hill v. Bridges, 87 Wash. 260, 151 Pac. 490, we held that the port district might build and operate an ice manufacturing and cold storage plant as an incident to its business of [635]*635warehousing. In the beginning, the power of the port district to manufacture and sell ice in the market as a commodity was raised. To forestall the question, the port district passed a resolution in which it disclaimed any such intention, saying, inter alia,

“It is not the purpose or intention of the commission to sell this ice, but to furnish it to fishermen at the fish storage warehouse and to charge a rate of so much per pound for the use of the warehouse storage, which charge will include the ice furnished.”

The intent of the resolution being to clearly proclaim that the commission would use its product to pack, recondition, preserve and re-ice for shipment such fish as might be brought to its docks.

The case was carried on to final decree, this declaration being a deciding, if not a controlling factor, in the final decision of the court. At the following session of the legislature, the commissioners prepared and caused to be enacted an amendment to the act defining its powers. As abridged for the purposes of argument by counsel for appellant, the amendment is as follows:

“All Port Districts . . . are hereby authorized . . . to lay out, construct, condemn, purchase, acquire, add to, maintain, conduct and operate, any and all systems of . . . wharves, docks, . . . warehouses, storehouses, elevators, grain-bins, cold storage plants, terminal icing plants, bunkers, . . . together with modern appliances for the economic handling, storing, and transporting of freight and handling of passenger traffic, and other harbor improvements, rail and water transfer, and terminal facilities within such port district.” Laws of 1917, p. 198, ch. 125, § 1.

Under the license of this amendment, as construed by counsel for the port district, the commissioners have—

(a) Manufactured and sold ice to railroad and ex[636]*636press companies for the purpose of icing refrigerator cars to transport perishable commodities out of the city of Seattle, although the shipments originate at other docks and warehouses.

(b) To railroad companies and express companies to carry into the interior and into other states for the purpose of refrigerating cars to carry perishable commodities into the city of Seattle, and without reference to the dock, warehouse or wharf at which the shipments are to be discharged.

(c) To steamboat companies for the purpose of icing and preserving perishable commodities carried by vessels departing from the city of Seattle.

(d) Cracked ice to fishing boats bound for the fishing grounds and banks, to preserve fish until they are brought into port and placed in cold storage or reconditioned.

(e) To fishermen and to those engaged in packing fish brought by fishing vessels to the city of Seattle and handled and stored at the port district’s docks at the east waterway.

(f) To fish packers and brokers, and other persons engaged in handling other perishable commodities, on various docks and piers within the city of Seattle.

(g) To others engaged in selling ice at retail in the city of Seattle.

As an incident to its business of cold storage or refrigeration, the commissioners put in an ice making plant. We say incident, for ice can be manufactured with the same power and the same' crew, and, possibly, with the same liquids. This, as we take it from a general view of the record, may be of either greater or less capacity, depending upon the number of cans or plates the manufacturer sees fit to install.

The commission installed a plant having a capacity of 15,000 tons per year, which is largely in excess of [637]*637the present needs of the port district. The commission bnilt np to the capacity of the machinery of the cold storage plant without reference to its needs as outlined by its resolution aforementioned; that is, to store, to recondition and repack for reshipment fresh fish brought to its own warehouses.

Relator brought this suit to enjoin the commissioners, and a temporary restraining order holding appellants generally to a limit of power consistent with the disclamatory resolution was issued. When the case came on for hearing on its merits, the court held that the temporary order should be made permanent, with some exceptions not necessary to mention here.

It cannot be denied that the appellant port commission is manufacturing far beyond its needs as a warehouseman, and doing a general commercial business in the manufacture and the sale of ice in the particulars mentioned.

Counsel for appellant ground their appeal on the amendment of 1917. In the words “terminal icing plants” they find justification for the doing of all of the things complained of.

Witnesses were sworn to testify on either side as to the meaning and comprehension of the term. They ran true to the form of expert witnesses and differed widely in their conclusions. Those offered by the appellant were generally of the opinion that the words mean that the appellant might do anything in the way of a business in ice that would promote the business of the port of Seattle, not the business of appellant corporation the “Port of Seattle” alone, but of everyone engaged in business in the city of Seattle and the county of King, and it is so earnestly contended here.

Whatever meaning may be given to the abstract phrase “terminal icing plant,” we are sure that the meaning given it by appellant cannot be sustained. [638]*638For our purposes it must remain in its setting and sustain its true relation in context. The amendment pertains strictly to the business of the appellant, it may “maintain, conduct and operate warehouses, storehouses, elevators, grain-bins, cold storage plants, terminal icing plants, . . . together with modern appliances, etc., . . . and terminal facilities within such port district,” as a grant of power to engage in private business away from, or in no way connected with, the general scheme outlined in the act creating the port district and the amendment of 1917.

The business of the port in receiving, icing, reconditioning, and packing fish for reshipment at its wharves, docks and warehouses is in aid of its public function, although done in a proprietary capacity. When it goes beyond the bound of its public engagement to take care of such business as does not naturally come to its terminals it ceases to be a public functionary. It is then engaged in a strictly private business, and for that there is no warrant in the law, either by express enactment or by implication, for the rule of construction is that any doubt as to the power of a municipal corporation must be resolved against the municipality — only such powers as are expressly granted, or such as are necessarily incident to its granted power, will be sustained, for the policy of the law has always been to limit, rather than to extend, the proprietary functions of a municipal corporation. State ex rel. Hill v. Bridges, 87 Wash. 260, 151 Pac. 490; State ex rel. Huggins v. Bridges, 97 Wash. 553, 166 Pac. 780.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P. 671, 104 Wash. 634, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hill-v-port-of-seattle-wash-1919.