Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/265/215/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 03:53:16+00:00

Document:
Justia › US Law › US Case Law › US Supreme Court › Volume 265 › City of Opelika v. Opelika Sewer Co.
1. A public service corporation is bound by rates fixed by a valid contract between it and a city even if the rates become so unremunerative that, if imposed under the police power, they would be confiscatory in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. P. 265 U. S. 217.
2. Decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama construing the state constitution and a city charter as permitting the city to grant a sewer company the right to operate in the city for a term of years at stipulated rates, subject to power in the legislature to revoke the contract, held binding in a suit by the company to obtain relief from the rates on the ground that they had become confiscatory. Id.
This is a suit by the Opelika Sewer Company to enjoin the city against preventing the plaintiff by various means at its disposal from putting into effect a schedule of rates that the plaintiff has proposed. It is to be taken that the present rates, which the plaintiff seeks to increase, are confiscatory unless the city has a right to insist upon them, and the question before us is whether the city has that right by contract or whether its enforcement of them deprives the plaintiff of its property without due process of law contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, as alleged in the bill. Cincinnati v. Cincinnati & Hamilton Traction Co., 245 U. S. 446. The district court held that there was no valid contract, and issued an injunction as prayed. The city appealed to this Court.
"making any irrevocable or exclusive grants of special privileges or immunities shall be passed by the legislature, and [that] every grant of a franchise, privilege, or immunity shall forever remain subject to revocation, alteration, or amendment."
No doubt it is true also that the legislature could not make such a grant indirectly by giving power to a city to make it. But we see no reason to doubt that the legislature, without impairing its power to revoke, may give a city power to make a contract from which the city, of its own motion, may not recede. The city has not attempted to recede from it. So we turn to the charter for light.
The charger of February 20, 1899, gives power "to maintain the health and cleanliness of the city, and, to this end, to adopt and maintain an efficient system of sewerage," § 11, and further on "to establish and build drains, sewers, . . . and to regulate the same," and, still later, to provide for assessing upon adjacent property a part of "the expense of such sewers as the board may from time to time deem necessary for the purpose of receiving sewerage from houses and lots," etc. These provisions suggest that the legislature expected the work to be done by the city itself. But it is not the interest of either party to maintain that the whole transaction was void, and we shall assume that the city had power to make an arrangement with a company to do the work.
The Alabama decisions construe the state constitution and such chargers to allow a contract to be made, subject to being revoked whenever the legislature of the state may think fit. Greenville v. Greenville Water Works Co., 125 Ala. 625, 639. Weller v. Gadsden, 145 Ala. 137, 157. Mobile Electric Co. v. Mobile, 201 Ala. 607, 609.
with reference to sewers built by the city and the regulation of the city's own property. They do not go far enough to empower it to regulate prices charged by another -- and, in short, we find no grand of that character elsewhere. But, as we have said, the Alabama decisions sustain the conclusion that the city had the power to make the contract upon which it relies. In Bessemer v. Bessemer City Water Works, 152 Ala. 391, it was held that a city, even though having the power to regulate rates, could bind itself by contract, but the precise language of the charter does not appear. The federal circuit court of appeals in the same jurisdiction takes the same view of the Alabama decisions that we have expressed, Birmingham v. Birmingham Waterworks Co., 213 F. 450, aff'g s.c. 211 F. 497.

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