Concurring Opinion.
By His Honor, Charles F. Claiborne:My opinion is that the Ordinance No. 2683, contains two essential features. First, that the Public Belt Railroad Commission shall be composed of sixteen citizens to be appointed by the Mayor, eleven of whom shall be selected from the different commercial exchanges of the City of New Orleans, and five from the City at large, with a tenure of office fixed at sixteen years; and second, that said commission should have a right to select from its members a President pro tern, who should “have active charge, control, management, and supervision of the business of said commission, subject to direction of said commission.”
The commission was thus composed in order to command public confidence by placing the railroad under the care and management of representative business men of the community who expected to use the road and were most interested in its success; and to remove the railroad from the danger and vicissitudes of political changes in the City administration. The personnel of the commission became an important and essential part of the commission.
But the commission needed money to build the road. Therefore the Legislature prepared Act 179 of 1908, which was afterwards adopted as an amendment to the Constitution of the State. This act authorized the City of New Orleans to issue $2,000,000.00 of Bonds to be styled “Public Belt Railroad Bonds of the City of New *324Orleans, ’ ’ for the payment of which the net revenues of said Railroad were pledged over and above the obligation of the City, this act recognized the existence of the ordinance 2683 creating the Belt Road Commission by specifically referring to it. The title of the act reads:
“To authorize the City of New Orleans to issue $2,000,000.00 of five per cent bonds; to provide for the disposition of the proceeds thereof through such Public Belt Railroad Commission as the City of New Orleans may have heretofore organized or may hereafter organize, the members of which shall be appointed by the Mayor of the City of New Orleans, etc. ’ ’
And Section 7 provides:
“That the City of New Orleans shall construct, equip, maintain and operate said Public Belt Railroad system of the City of NeAV Orleans through and by means of such Board or Copimission as may have been, or may be, organized by the City of New Orleans, the members of which shall be appointed by the Mayor of the City of New Orleans with the consent of the Council, the powers, duties, and functions of which shall be prescribed by the City of New Orleans. The control, administration, management and supervision of the construction, maintenance, operation and development of the Public Belt Railroad of the ’City of New Orleans shall be exclusively vested and rémain in such Board or Commission, etc. ’ ’
It is apparent therefore that this Act of 1908, after-wards dignified as a constitutional amendment, was passed to carry out the Ordinance No. 2683 and was ancillary thereto. The prospectus used for negotiating and recommending- the bonds held up both to the confidence of the buyers.
'Section 8 of the Act provided: “That all the provisions of this Act shall constitute a contract betAveen the *325holder oí the bonds issued thereunder, the State of Louisiana, the 'City of New Orleans .and the Board of Commissioners of the Port of New Orleans. ’ ’
On January 21st, 1913, the Council of the City of New Orleans passed Ordinance 74, Section 1 of said Ordinance makes the Commissioner of Public Utilities of the City of New Orleans a member of said Commission.
It also provides that said “Commissioner of Public Utilities of the City of New Orleans shall be acting president of said Commission. He shall have active charge, management and control of the detail operations of the Belt Railroad system, and the head of the several departments of accounting, operations, and engineering, shall report to him and take instructions from him. He shall report to the Commission and keep same fully advised of all matters falling within his management and shall be the agent through whom the general directory powers of the Commission shall be executed.”
I think that this Ordinance 74, which makes the Commissioner a member of the Belt Road Commission is a violation of Act 179 of 1908, which provides that members of the Commission shall be appointed by the Mayor.
I think it also violates the contract with the bondholders who purchased'the bonds upon the faith of two promises which were held out to them, first, that the Commission should have the right to elect its own vice-president from among its own members, and second that the vice-president selected by it should have the active charge, management and supervision of the business of said Commission, subject to the direction of said 'Commission,” in other words that the railroad should be at all times under the uncontested, undisputed, and undivided management' of the Commission. Ordinance 74 *326designates who the vice-president shall be, and vests him with the “active charge, control, management of the detail operations of the Belt Railroad system” and strikes out the important reservation contained in Ordinance 2683 “subject to the direction of said Commission.” The effect of such elimination is clearly in'my mind to corn stitute him in sole “active, charge” of the road.
Act 179 of 1908, grants the City of New Orleans the power to construct and operate a public belt railroad system by means of such Board or Commission- as may have been or may be organized by the' City of New Orleans, the members of which shall be appointed by the Mayor of the City of New Orleans, with the consent of the Council, the powers, duties and functions of which (Commission) shall be prescribed by the City of New Orleans. The pronoun “which” refers to the “Commission” and not to the “members” thereof. The Council was clothed with power of defining the powers and duties of the “Commission” alone, and not of its members.
Otherwise we must presume that the legislators were ignorant of the rules of grammar. The Commission alone, and not the Council, was to define the duties and functions of its members and officers, otherwise the railroad would have been administered by the Council and not by the Commission. •
The difference between the two ordinances is, that 'by Ordinance 2683 the Railroad Commission controlled and administered the road through a president pro tem elected by itself from one of its members and subject to -removal by itself if he did not give satisfaction or if his views of his duties did not agree with theirs, while under Ordinance 74 the office of “President pro tem” is abolished and the Board must administer through a member named by the City Council and made by it *327‘‘Acting' President” and not subject to removal'by the Board. • This must be conceded to be a material difference indeed: In other words it makes the “Acting’ President” the creature of the Council and independent of the Commission,. or at least indifferent as to whether the Commission likes him or not. Such is the palpable object of Ordinance 74, otherwise there was no motive or reason for its enactment. The defendant in this case was a member of the Commission and had been elected president- pro tem of the Commission under Ordinance ■2683. If it was not intended by Ordinance 74 to curtail the powers of the Commission and to enlarge those of -the “Acting President” why enact Ordinance 74?
Can it be seriously argued that the Commission continued to retain the management and control of the railroad, when Ordinance 74 creates an officer for it who, by virtue of the very letter of the Ordinance, ‘ ‘ shall have active charge, management, and control of the detail operations of the Belt Railr-oiad System” especially when the words of the old Ordinance 2683 ‘ ‘ subject to the direction of said Commission” have been industriously stricken out and evidently with an object.
Any contrivance by which the exclusive “'control, administration, management and supervision of the railroad by the Commission” is affected is a glaring violation of the Act of 1908, and of the Constitution.
Not only is the Act 179 of 1908, a contract between the parties named in said Act, but it is a -contract with the people of New Orleans. They were told that they were the happy possessors of a most excellent Railroad Commission; that said Commission was composed of the best people of' this City controlling the business of the City and offering the best guarantees for intelligence, business ability, and honesty; but that-'because said Commis*328sion needed money to build the road they were asked by their vote to authorize" the City to issue $2,000,000.00 worth of bonds to be spent by that. Commission and to tax themselves to pay said bonds in case the revenues of said road were insufficient to pay the bonds; to vote for a constitutional amendment embodying in terms a contract to protect them.
Opinion and decree, June 15th, 1914. Rehearing refused, July 17th, 1914. Writ granted, October 24th, 1914 [134 La., 923].There was no necessity of the specific declaration in the act that it formed a contract. It was a contract without those words. It would certainly be a violation of that contract for the city by ordinance to name a member of that Commission; to make him vice-president of the Commission, when the contract said that the Commission should elect its own -vice-president; to confer the powers of administration of the road upon the- vice-president named by the Council, when the contract provided that the Commission should have sole control. It may be that the people would not have voted for an issue of $2,000,000.00 of bonds and an additional tax, had they been told that the -'Council could so amend the law as to assume the control themselves.
For these reasons I am of the opinon that Ordinance 74 is null and void.
In so holding I am supported by the Supreme Court of this State in the case of State ex rel. Saunders vs. Kohnke, 109 La., 838 (851 to 868).