dissenting:
I find myself unable to concur in the' majority opinion.
After a thorough consideration of the subject in the light of all the positions taken and authorities cited by counsel and in the majority opinion, I am unshaken in *157the view that the conclusion reached in Virginia Western Power Co. v. Clifton Forge, 125 Va. 469, 99 S. E. 723, 9 A. L. R. 1148, as to the proper construction of the statute law in Virginia under which was granted the franchise involved in those cases (which is the same as that under which the franchise in the instant case was granted), is correct. This conclusion is stated in the opinion in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases, at pp. 493-4 of the report of those cases in 125 Va., at pp. 730, 731 of 99 S. E. (9 A. L. R. 1148), as follows: “We conclude, therefore, that the statute law, in existence when and under which the franchises involved in the cases before us were granted, expressly delegated to the municipalities the unlimited authority to contract with the grantee of such franchises on the subject of fixing the rates of charges aforesaid thereunder during the whole of the franchise period.” (Italics supplied).
As pointed out in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases at p. 492 of 125 Va., at p. 730 of 99 S. E. (9 A. L. R. 1148), it appears from the reading of section 125 of the Virginia Constitution, “that it plainly expresses the intention that, in the absence of such ‘other restrictions (on their powers) as may be imposed by law,’ municipalities are * * * to be clothed by the legislature with the unlimited power to contract by the franchise with the grantee thereof on the subject of fixing the rates which may be charged for services rendered the public thereunder during the whole franchise period.” But it is there added that, on this subject, this section of the Constitution is not self-executory and needs subsequent legislation to confer upon municipalities the power of making franchise contracts. In other respects this section is self-executory, but that was immaterial to those cases (as it was to the case now under review), and hence was not mentioned. The section *158was not referred to as itself conferring the power in question but as recognizing that the legislature might do so. The statute law was referred to as conferring such power in express terms. See 125 Va. pp. 491-3, 99 S. E. 730 (9 A. L. R. 1148).
As pointed out in the opinion in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases, section 124 deals with the power of municipalities to impose conditions upon its consent to the use of its streets, etc., by the public utility corporations mentioned. This power is absolute and unlimited; under it the municipalities may impose any condition they choose, however unreasonable; and it vests in municipalities the power to make a stipulation as to what the rate charges of the utility corporation shall be during the whole franchise period as a condition upon which the consent aforesaid is given. There is no room to doubt the unlimited character of this power, or to question that by acting under it municipalities may acquire vested rights which are absolute property rights. But property rights, however absolute, cannot, merely because they are absolute and vested rights, be held immune from the exercise of the sovereign power of the State. The State may by legislative action take away from its citizens the most absolute rights of property, and even the very lives of the citizens by ex post facto laws, unless forbidden so to do by Federal or State constitutional provision. As aforesaid, the power conferred by section 124 of the Virginia Constitution may be exercised by the ex parte action of the municipalities, consisting of the imposition of conditions upon the consent aforesaid. And since there is no constitutional provision safeguarding rights acquired under such ex parte action, such rights may be taken away at any time by the State in the exercise of the police power.
*159But Article 1, section 10, of the Federal Constitution provides as follows: “No State shall * * * pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts * That provision renders inviolable contracts entered into by municipalities under authority expressly conferred upon them by the legislature to contract.
Now as to what language in the statute will expressly confer upon municipalities the power to contract on the subject of fixing rates, so as to bring their contracts within the operation of the section of the Federal Constitution just cited, this may he here said: Any language of a statute which confers upon municipalities the power to fix rates by “agreement” with the grantee to whom, or to which, municipal privileges are granted, is held by the Supreme Court to expressly confer the power in question.
In Detroit v. Detroit, etc., Ry. Co., 184 U. S. 368, 22 Sup. Ct. 410, 46 L. Ed. 592; Detroit, etc., Ry. Co. v. Michigan, 242 U. S. 238, 37 Sup. Ct. 87, 61 L. Ed. 268; and Detroit, etc., Ry. Co. v. Detroit, 248 U. S. 429, 39 Sup. Ct. 151, 63 L. Ed. 341, contracts entered into by the municipality were held to fall within the operation of the guaranty of the Federal Constitution just mentioned, where the municipal authority conferred by the Michigan statute (Pub. Acts 1867, No. 35, §20) provided that railway rates “shall be established by agreement between such company and the corporate authorities of the city or village.” (Italics, supplied.)
The same was held in Cleveland v. Cleveland City R. Co., 194 U. S. 517, 24 Sup. Ct. 756, 48 L. Ed. 1102; Same v. Same, 201 U. S. 529, 26 Sup. Ct. 513, 50 L. Ed. 854; and Columbus Ry., Power & Light Co. v. Columbus, 249 U. S. 399, 39 Sup. Ct. 349, 63 L. Ed. 669, 6 A. L. R. 1648, where the Ohio statute provided that no street *160railway franchise shall be granted “except to the corporation, individual or individuals that will agree to carry passengers * * * at the lowest rate of fare.” (Italics supplied.)
The same was held in Los Angeles v. Los Angeles City Water Co., 177 U. S. 558, 20 Sup. Ct. 736, 44 L. Ed. 886, of a contract which had been entered into by the city with the water company which was named in a statute which provided that “The following acts, contracts and ordinances of the mayor and common council of the city of Los Angeles are hereby ratified and confirmed.” (Italics supplied.)
Whereas, if the language of the statute confers upon the municipality merely the power to fix rates by ex parte action on its part, it is held by the Supreme Court that such language does not confer the power to contract on that subject. Various reasons are announced for such holding in the different cases, but the ex parte character of the power — the absence of the authority to fix the rates by agreement — distinguishes all of such cases. For example, Home Tel., etc., Co. v. Los Angeles, 211 U. S. 265, 29 Sup. Ct. 50, 53 L. Ed. 176, where the statutory authority was contained in the charter of the city by which the authority conferred upon the city was “to fix and determine the charges for telephones and telephone services; Milwaukee, etc., Ry. Co. v. Railroad Commission, 238 U. S. 174, 35 Sup. Ct. 820, 59 L. Ed. 1254, where the statutory authority (a Wisconsin statute) provided that the municipality might” grant to street railways the use of its streets “upon such terms as the proper authorities shall determine.” Mr. Justice Day, in the opinion of the court delivered by him, saying of the statute: “It authorizes the grant of the use of the streets upon such terms as the proper authorities shall determine, not upon such as the parties in interest shall *161agree;” Wyandotte, etc., Gas Co. v. Kansas, 231 U. S. 622, 34 Sup. Ct. 226, 58 L. Ed. 404, where the Kansas statute authorized cities “to prescribe and fix maximum rates and charges and regulate the collection of the same;” Pawhuska v. Pawhuska Oil & Gas Co., 250 U. S. 394, 39 Sup. Ct. 526, 63 L. Ed. 1054, where the Oklahoma statute provided that all grants by municipalities of franchises, such as that in question, “shall be subject at all times to reasonable regulation by ordinance as to use of streets and prices to be paid for gas or light,” and the State, by a later statute, transferred the regulatory authority to the State Corporation Commission. The Supreme Court in its opinion having this to say: “Thus the whole controversy is as to which of two existing agencies or arms of the State government is authorized for the time being to exercise in the public interest a particular power, obviously governmental, subject to which the franchise confessedly was granted. In this no question under the contract clause of the Constitution of the United States is involved;” Worcester v. Worcester, etc., Ry. Co., 196 U. S. 539, 25 Sup. Ct. 327, 49 L. Ed. 591, where the Massachusetts statute provided merely that the board of aldermen or selectmen might grant to street railway companies permission to locate the tracks of the railway company in the streets of the city or town, “under such restrictions as they deem the interests of the public may require;” New Orleans v. New Orleans Water Works Co., 142 U. S. 79, 12 Sup. Ct. 142, 35 L. Ed. 943, where the contract relied on was directly between the State and the water company, and was embodied in the charter of the latter, consisting of a provision that the property of the company should be exempt from taxation and that in consideration thereof the city should be allowed to use all water for municipal purposes free of charge — the Supreme Court approving *162the decision of the State court that such a contract, in its attempted tax exemption feature was ultra vires on the part of the legislature because of State constitutional provisions and therefore void, and holding that therefore no Federal question was involved; and in what the Supreme Court says in reference to the power of the State legislature to alter the provisions of such a contract, reference is made to the power of the legislature to enact, not retroactive, but prospective legislation, to operate upon the relations of the company and the city for the time following the enactment.
The above mentioned decisions embrace all of the Supreme Court cases cited and relied on in argument of counsel as amicus curiae and of counsel for the defendant in error; and the statute law of Virginia on the subject, especially when it is read in the light of the Virginia constitutional provisions aforesaid — and independently of those provisions — more clearly and expressly confers upon municipalities the power to fix rates by agreement, i. e., by contract, than any of the statutes involved in the Supreme Court eases cited above which hold that such power was conferred by the statutes therein construed.
When we read section 125 of the Constitution of Virginia, it clearly appears that that section contemplates that the legislature may authorize something more than the exercise by the municipality of the power to impose conditions or restrictions upon the consent aforesaid by ex parte municipal action. In addition to the provision specifically mentioned in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases, the following will be here referred to: Other than ex parte methods of municipal action on the subject are expressly mentioned, namely, it is specifically provided that “before granting any such franchise * * for a term of years, except for a trunk railway, *163the municipality shall first * * * receive bids therefor publicly, in such manner as may be provided by law, and shall then act as may be required by law.” (Italics supplied.) The statute, which provided the “law” mentioned, applicable alike in the instant case and in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases (sections 1033e and 1033f of Pollard’s Code, 1904), unmistakably requires the method by which the municipality is authorized to act in the premises to be by contract, where the consent to the use of the streets, etc., is “for a term of years;” which contract is made by the “bid” or offer made by the grantee of the franchise and the acceptance by the municipality of the “bid” or offer, all as provided for in the statute; thus creating, so far as the terms of the “bid” and acceptance extend, contract obligations on the part of the respective parties. And, as set forth in the opinion in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases: “So expressly are they (the municipalities) authorized to make unlimited contracts, and so binding are the contracts as such, that the courts mentioned in section 1033f are given jurisdiction by mandamus ‘to enforce compliance by said cities and towns and by all grantees of franchises * * * with all the terms and contracts and obligations of either party, as contained in franchises.’ ”
Moreover, as added in that opinion: “The latter section of the statute (section 1033f) further recognizes the binding nature of the franchise contract aforesaid, especially as to rates, during the whole franchise period, unless, of course, it is modified by the consent of both parties thereto — of the municipality as well as the grantee or holder of the franchise; but puts a restriction even upon the exercise on the part of the municipality of its consent to a modification of the terms of the contract by making the provision quoted in the statement preceding *164this opinion, to the effect that no snch consent as may result in allowing ‘an increase in the charge to be made * * * for the use by the public of the benefits of such franchise’ shall be given until after certain public advertisement is made.”
We therefore find in the statute law of Virginia aforesaid the unlimited power to contract within the meaning of the Federal Constitution; so that a contract fixing rates made by the municipality, in the exercise of that power, falls within the guaranty of Article 1, section 10, of the Federal Constitution, which prevents the impairment of the obligation of contracts by any action of the State, even though it be attempted by the legislature of the State, and that attempt be made in the alleged exercise of the police power. The police power is, in truth, in such case, suspended pro tanto, during the life of the contract, by virtue of the provisions of the Federal Constitution aforesaid, which is the supreme law of the land.
Such being the case, even if it were true (which, as pointed out in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases, is not believed to "be true), that the Constitution of the State undertook to say that by permission given the legislature to confer upon municipalities the aforesaid power to contract as to rates it did not mean to .allow the legislature to authorize contracts, the result of which would be to abridge the police power of the State temporarily, that would be immaterial. The sole material question is, has the statute law, enacted with the permission of, and hence not forbidden by, the State Constitution, conferred upon municipalities the unlimited power to contract as to rates by franchises, for the franchise period? If so, the Federal constitutional provision aforesaid has ordained the result which must inevitably follow, namely, that the contract, when once made in accordance with the power, shall remain inviolable during its *165life. That the statute law of Virginia in question has, with the permission of the State Constitution, given such municipal power to contract is plain, as I think, for the reason stated in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases and above elaborated to some extent.
The chief force of the able argument of counsel for the Virginia Railway and Power Company as amicus curiae, in opposition to the views above expressed, consists in its practically ignoring all consideration of the statute law involved and in considering the subject as if section 125 stood alone. When that section and the statute law are read and considered together, the conclusion reached in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases stands unaffected by the opposing argument.
There is one position taken in the argument opposed to the conclusion aforesaid which should perhaps be specifically dealt with, and that is this: Section 125 aforesaid, after providing that the grant of the right to use any public property mentioned, etc., for a term of years shall be made “as may be required by law” (which, as aforesaid, when the franchises involved in those cases and in the instant case were granted, provided for a franchise contract as the sole method to be pursued in such eases), and after making provisions with respect to the taking, over by the municipality of the plant and property, if any, of the grantee, contains the following provisions: “Every such grant * * * shall make adequate provision by way of forfeiture of the grant or otherwise, to secure efficiency of public service at reasonable rates, and the maintenance of the property in good order throughout the term of the grant.” (Italics supplied). The statute, section 1033-e, aforesaid contains the same language. It is contended that the language which I have italicized is mandatory and contains conditions precedent to the validity of the fran*166chise as a contract, and evidences the intention on the part of the State to reserve its right to exercise the power of regulation in the premises in the event that the franchise fails to make the adequate provisions required. But it is apparent from the language itself that it is not susceptible of that construction. By its very terms it is directory only. It specifically directs how the result mentioned (namely, the securing efficiency of public service at reasonable rates and the maintenance of the property in good order throughout the terms of the grant), is to be attained, to-wit, by the contract method. It provides that in the cases in which the municipality undertakes to exercise the power to fix rates by contract, the result aforesaid is to be attained by having ‘‘‘every such grant” (which as aforesaid, as applicable to the instant case, is the same as saying, by having “every such contract”) “make adequate provision by way of forfeiture of the.grant” (i. e., contract) “or otherwise.” It thus relies alone upon the provisions of the contract to do this, and so does the statute (section 1033-f aforesaid). The statute, as aforesaid, expressly .confers upon the municipalities the power of contract as the method relied on to attain the aforesaid result. That being so, the Federal constitutional provision aforesaid becomes operative and the contract entered into in pursuance of such power becomes inviolable.
If what is said above be not the proper constrúction of the language of section 125 in question, and if such language were to be construed to be mandatory and to contain conditions precedent to the validity of the franchise as a contract, it seems inevitable that the conditions precedent would go to the validity of the entire franchise. In that case the franchise would be void in toto if it did not in fact accomplish the result aforesaid. *167A fortiori the franchise would be void if it did not attempt to accomplish such result. That is to say, no municipality could grant a valid franchise unless it undertook to thereby fix rates. This would be a reductio ad absurdum, for no one contends that the municipalities, under the aforesaid constitutional and statutory provisions, did not have the power to grant valid franchises which make no attempt to fix rates.
The argument of counsel for the defendant in error, which is also an able one, admits the soundness of the aforesaid conclusions as applied to cases in which the utility corporation has not consented to a change of rates; but urges that, although the municipality may refuse its consent to a change of rates, if the utility corporation consents, the legislature may act for the municipality and consent to such a modification of the contract, notwithstanding the objection on the part of the municipality, and notwithstanding the provisions aforesaid of the statute (section 1033-f), providing the sole method by which a modification of the contract may be made by the consent of the municipality. The advantage to the utility corporations of such a rule is obvious; but the disadvantages to the municipalities is equally obvious. There is a homely adage which says, “it is a poor rule that does not work both ways.” If a municipality should find that, under changed conditions, the franchise rate is too high, it could, under such a rule, obtain relief only with the consent of the utility corporation; whereas, the latter, if it should, under the same circumstances, find that the rate is too low, could obtain relief, without the consent and against the protest of the municipality.
Aside, however, from the unfairness of such a rule, which is in itself a strong argument to show the nonexistence of it, on principle and from a legal standpoint, *168the legislature has no power, without the consent of the municipality, to change such a contract after it has been made by the municipality. This subject was expressly dealt within the Virginia Western Power Co. Case, and no reason is perceived for reaching a different conclusion from that there reached, namely, that the power to contract having been given to the municipality, and that power, while it remained unrevoked, having been exercised in the making of the contract, the contract is embraced within the guaranty of the Federal Constitution aforesaid — -is inviolable by any subsequent State action; so that, while the legislature may revoke the municipal power as to the making of any such future contracts, the contracts theretofore made in execution of the power remain unaffected by the subsequent ac-' tion of the legislature. That is to say, the case is the same in principle, and the result must be the same, as where power is given to any agent to execute a contract for his principal. When the agent has entered into a contract in execution of the power, the principal is bound by the contract and cannot affect its obligation by afterwards revoking the power of the agent. In Central Union Tel. Co. Case, 189 Ind. 210, 126 N. E. 628, relied on for the defendant in error, this principle is recognized. See quotation from that case below.
And a further principle is also involved: In contracts of the character under consideration, the municipality does not act in entering into them merely as an agent of the State; but also in its quasi private capacity, as agent for the private advantage of the inhabitants of the municipality itself, as a legal personality distinct from the State. The inhabitants, and the municipality in its private, proprietary capacity, acquire a fixed interest in the observance of the obligation of franchise contracts, made by the municipality in the exercise of *169the power conferred upon it as aforesaid, which is protected by the guaranty of the Federal Constitution aforesaid, so that it cannot be taken away without their consent, any more than can the interest of the franchise grantee in the observance of the obligation of such contracts be taken away without such grantee’s consent. All of this is pointed out in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases.
In the case of Winfield v. Public Service Com., 187 Ind. 53, 118 N. E. 535, P. U. R. 1918-B, 747, cited and quoted from in Judge Prentis’ opinion, the original franchise involved was granted to the telephone company in 1901 by the city of Logansport under the statute enacted in 1867 (Acts 1867, p. 33) and amended in 1891 (Acts of Ind. 1891, p. 122, sec. 3623, Burns’ 1894). This statute provided that the common council of municipalities should have “exclusive power over the streets, highways, alleys and bridges” within the city for certain named general purposes. The statute vested in the municipalities the power of ex parte action merely, not the power to contract as to rates. It contained, in substance, merely the same character of provisions as are contained in section 124 of the Constitution of Virginia and in the statute enacted in pursuance thereof. And the Indiana Supreme Court holds in such case that such statute did not confer upon municipalities the power to contract as to rates, so as to bring the case within the operation of the contract clause of the Federal Constitution, on precisely the same ground and upon the holding of precisely the same line of authorities as are set forth and cited in the opinion of this court in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases. Moreover, the Indiana court expressly recognizes the doctrine that the State may irrevocably, during the life of the franchise, divest itself of the right to exercise the *170police power in the regulation of the rates charged by-public service companies and that the State has .divested itself of such right in the case of franchises granted by municipalities under the power to contract on the subject expressly conferred upon them by statute.
The subsequent statutes of Indiana,, referred to in the quotations from the opinion of the court in the Winfield Case made in the majority opinion were material only to this extent: The Public Service Commission of the State was created by act of Assembly in 1913 (Acts 1913, c. 76). The telephone company thereupon surrendered its original franchise and obtained from the city of Logansport a new franchise under the statute law then in force on the subject of the power of municipalities to grant franchises. The statute law, which was in existence at the time the new franchise was granted, vested in the Public Service Commission the power to determine the reasonableness of any and all provisions of franchises, and to regulate the charges of the public service companies. It was under such a condition of the statute law that the provisions of certain sections of the new statute, concerning what the franchises might provide, were held not to confer upon municipalities the power to contract on the subject, within the meaning of the Federal contract clause aforesaid. Moreover, the new franchise itself, as is noted in the opinion in that case, contained the following express provision: “This franchise is made and granted, and shall be enjoyed, subject to all the laws passed, or which may hereafter be passed, by the legislature of the State of Indiana for the regulation and control of telephone companies.”
In the case of Salt Lake City v. Utah Light & Traction Co., 52 Utah 210, 173 Pac. 536, 3 A. L. R. 715, P. U. R. 1918-F, 377, from the opinion in which the quotation is *171made in the majority opinion, the sole municipal authority which was relied on by the city as conferring the power to contract, within the meaning of the Federal Constitution contract clause, Was contained in the following provision of the Constitution of Utah (Article 12, sec. 8), namely: “No law shall be passed granting the right to construct and operate a street railroad * * within any city or incorporated town, without the consent of the local authorities who have control of the street or highway proposed to be occupied for such purposes.” That provision is, in substance, the same as section 124 of the Virginia Constitution and the statute enacted in pursuance thereof, and the Utah Supreme Court, in the Utah Light & Traction Co. Case, held that it did not confer upon municipalities the power to contract on the subject within the meaning of the contract elause of the Federal Constitution, for the same reason and upon the same line of authorities referred to as supporting such holding in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases. Further, at the time the franchise was granted, which was involved in the Utah Light & Traction Co. Case, the Constitution of that State also contained the following provisions, namely: Laws 1917, C. 47, Art. 4, secs. 1 and 3, vested the Public Utility Commission of the State with full regulatory powers over any and all public utility companies and rates charged by them under their franchises or otherwise. Const. Art. 12, sec. 12, provided that “All railroad and other transportation companies are declared to be common carriers and subject to legislative control.” And Art. 12, sec. 15, provided that “The legislature shall pass laws establishing reasonable maximum rates of charges for the transportation of passengers and freight, for correcting abuses, and preventing discrimination and extortion in rates of freight and passenger tariffs by the different *172railroads and other, common carriers in the State, and shall enforce such laws by adequate penalties.” It was of a franchise granted by a municipality, with no greater powers to start with than are conferred by section 124 of the Virginia Constitution, and with those powers further restricted by virtue of the aforesaid other constitutional provisions, that the Utah Supreme Court used the language which is quoted in the majority opinion.
The Utah Light and Traction Co. Case holds that, although without power conferred upon it to contract within the meaning of the Federal Constitution contract clause, municipalities may enter into contracts which will be binding both upon the municipality and the person or corporation with which the contracts are made, until and unless the State exercises the police power of regulation. That is to say, that they may make contracts subject to the police power of regulation. And all of the cases referred to in the briefs of counsel for appellee and in the majority opinion, to the effect that as municipalities are merely agents of the State, the State may, at any time, waive the rights of the municipalities “in the contract” (with the single exception of the case of Grossbeck v. Detroit, etc., Co., 210 Mich. 227, 177 N. W. 726, 1023,. referred to more specifically below), involve contracts such as that involved in the Utah Light & Traction Co. Case, which are, in truth, not contracts at all within the terms of the Federal Constitution aforesaid.
Such are the following cases cited and relied on by counsel for appellee in his brief (some of which are cited as pertinent cases in the ^majority opinion), namely: Pawhuska v. Pawhuska Oil & Gas Co., supra (250 U. S. 394, 39 Sup. Ct. 526, 63 L. Ed. 1054); Salem v. Salem Water, Light & Power Co., 255 Fed. 295, 106 C. C. A. *173465; Dubuque Electric Co. v. City of Dubuque, 260 Fed. 353, 171 C. C. A. 219, 10 A. L. R. 495; Sand Point Water & Light Co. v. City of Sand Point, 31 Idaho, 498, 173 Pac. 972, L. R. A. 1918-F, 1106, P. U. R. 1918-F, 737; People, etc., Glens Falls v. New York Pub. Ser. Com., 225 N. Y. 216, 121 N. E. 777; North Wildwood v. Pub. Utility Com., 88 N. J. Law, 81, 95 Atl. 749; Collingswood Sewerage Co. v. Collingswood, 91 N. J. Law, 20, 102 Atl. 901, P. U. R. 1918-C, 261; In re Northampton E. & W. Traction Co. (N. J. Sup.), 102 Atl. 930; Hillsboro v. Pub. Ser. Com., 97 Ore. 320, 187 Pac. 617, 192 Pac. 390; Woodburn v. Public Ser. Com., 82 Ore. 114, 161 Pac. 391, L. R. A. 1917-C, 98, Ann. Cas. 1917-E, 996; In re Searsport Water Co., 118 Me. 382, 108 Atl. 452; In re Island Falls Water Co., 118 Me. 397, 108 Atl. 459; State, etc., v. Burr, 79 Fla. 290, 84 So. 61; City of Sapulpa v. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co., 79 Okl. 196, 192 Pac. 224; City of Portland v. Pub. Ser. Com., 89 Ore. 325, 173 Pac. 1178; Village of Warsaw v. Pavilion Natural Gas Co., and Village of Perry v. Same, 111 Misc. Rep. 565, 182, N. Y. Supp. 73; New Orleans v. New Orleans Water Works Co., supra (142 U. S. 79, 12 Sup. Ct. 142, 35 L. Ed. 943); Worcester v. Street Ry. Co., supra (196 U. S. 539, 25 Sup. Ct. 327, 49 L. Ed. 591); Traverse City v. Michigan R. Com., 202 Mich. 575, 168 N. W. 481, P. U. R. 1918-F, 752; Leiper v. Balt. & P. R. Co., 262 Pa. 328, 105 Atl. 551, P. U. R. 1919-C, 397; Central Union Tel. Co. v. Indianapolis Tel. Co., 189 Ind. 210, 126 N. E. 628. Southern Iowa Electric Co. v. Chariton, 255 U. S. 539, 41 Sup. Ct. 400, 65 L. Ed. 764 (May 15, 1921), cited in the brief of counsel for the Virginia Railway and Power Co., is also one of the same class of cases.
In Pawhuska v. Pawhuska, as above noted, the Oklahoma statute relied on to confer the municipal authority, authorized merely the ex parte action of the city, *174consisting of reasonable regulation at all times by ordinance.
In Salem v. Salem Water Co., supra, cited in the majority opinion, the act of incorporation of the city, relied on to confer the municipal authority, provided that the common council of the city “may grant and allow the use of the streets and alleys of the city to any person, company or corporation who may desire to establish water works for supplying the city and the inhabitants thereof with * * * water or light upon such terms and conditions as the council may prescribe.” (Italics supplied.) This is merely the ex parte authority above mentioned, and not the authority to contract within the meaning of the Federal Constitution clause aforesaid.
In Dubuque Electric Co. v. City of Dubuque (an Iowa case) and Sand Point Water & Light Co. v. City of Sand Point (an Idaho case), there was no statutory or constitutional authority whatever purporting to empower the city to contract as to rates.
In People, etc., Glens Falls v. Pub. Ser. Com. (a New York case) the statutory authority relied on by the city provided that gas companies might “lay conductors for conducting gas through the streets * * * in each such city, village and town, with the consent of the municipal authority thereof, and under such reasonable regulations as they may provide.”
In North Wildwood v. Pub. Utilities Com. (a New Jersey case involving water rates) there was no statutory or constitutional authority whatever purporting to empower the city to contract as to rates.
In Collingswood Sewerage Co. v. Collingswood (also a New Jersey case, involving sewerage rates) the statute relied on by the city (Acts 1898, p. 484), incorporating-the city, merely authorized it to give or refuse its con*175sent to the use of its streets, etc., and to fix the rates to be charged by the grantee of the franchise as a condition attached to that consent.
In the case of In re Northampton E. & W. Traction Co. (likewise a New Jersey case) the report of it does not disclose the statute involved, but refers to the Collingswood Case, just cited, for reasons on which the decision is based.
In Hillsboro v. Pub. Ser. Com. (an Oregon case) the provision in the charter of the city did authorize the city council “to contract with any person, persons or corporation” for water, but it did not authorize the fixing of the rates to be charged therefor by contract or agreement. The statute also contained the language that the city council was authorized “to make provisions for providing the city with water,” etc. And the court held that the municipal authority thus conferred was not contractual in its nature, but was precisely of the same character as that involved in Woodburn v. Pub. Ser. Com., supra, next to be mentioned below.
In Woodburn v. Pub. Ser. Com. (also an Oregon ease) the statute relied on to confer the municipal authority was contained in the amended charter of the city, and provided merely that the city was given the power “to grant franchises in, through and upon the streets of the city for public uses and public benefit.”
In the case of In re Searsport Water Co. (a Maine case) the decision is placed upon the ground that “the fixing or regulation of charges to the inhabitants of the city, by contract, is nowhere mentioned” in the provisions of the charter of the city, or company, which were relied on to confer the municipal authority to fix such charges by contract within the meaning of the contract clause of the Federal Constitution. The case is on all fours with Hillsboro v. Pub. Ser. Com., supra.
*176In the case of In re Island Falls Water Co. (also a Maine case) the language of the statute is not given in the report of the case. This, however, is said of it: “More distinct language than that of the statute (P. & S. L. 1905, c. 22) invoked as sustaining the contract relied upon, must be used before a public service is withdrawn from the regulatory power of the State.”
In State, etc. v. Burr (a Florida street railroad rate case) the municipal authority relied on was contained in the charter of the city. By the original charter the city was given “power by ordinances * * to grant ■ the right of way through the streets, avenues and squares of said city for the purposes of street or other railroads.” The charter was amended by a subsequent act. The report of the case does not give the language of the amendment, but of the provisions says this: “The provisions * * * amending the charter of the city of Jacksonville do not confer upon the city authority to fix rates of fares for street railroads, although it does confer power with reference to the use of the streets and viaducts by street railroads.”
In City of Sapulpa v. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. (an Oklahoma case) the statute provided as follows: “Sec. 754. They (the city council) shall have the power to provide for lighting the streets and alleys of the city by gas or otherwise and to authorize the construction of gas works and street railroads. Sec. 755. For the purpose of providing water, gas and street railroads, the mayor and city council may contract with any person or company to construct and operate the same, and may grant to such company or person for a time which may he agreed upon the exclusive privilege of using the streets and alleys of such city for such purpose or purposes.” (Italics supplied.) The court in its opinion says this: “We are * * of the opinion that * * sections 754 and *177755 * * did not clearly confer upon the city of Sapulpa power to fix the rates for a definite period of time * * (Italics supplied).
In City of Portland v. Pub. Ser. Com. (an Oregon case) the statute provided as follows: “The council may * * * grant for a limited time specific franchises or rights in or to any of the public property or places mentioned in the preceding sections. Every such grant shall specifically set forth and define the nature, extent and duration of the franchise or right thereby granted, and no franchise or right shall pass by implication. At all times the power and right reasonably to regulate in the public interest the exercise of the franchise or right so granted shall remain and be vested in the council, and said power and right cannot be divested or granted.” This is practically the same situation of the statute law as that involved in the Pawhuska Case, supra.
In Village of Warsaw v. Pavilion Natural Gas Co. and Village of Perry v. Same the statute law was the same as that involved in People, etc., Glens Falls v. Pub. Ser. Com., supra.
In New Orleans v. New Orleans Water Works Co. and Worcester v. Street Ry. Co. the statutes involved have been above cited in the references made to those cases.
In Traverse City v. Michigan R. Com. it was not even claimed that, as the laws of Michigan then stood, there was any express statutory authority given the city to fix rates to be charged by telephone companies by contract; and it is held in this ease that such authority is not to be inferred from the power conferred upon the city “to regulate and control the use of its streets by telegraph and telephone or other companies” referred to in such grant of power.
In Leiper v. Balt. & P. R. Co. (a Pennsylvania case) *178the rate contract was made between an individual and the railroad company and there was no legislative authority conferring upon the individual, or the railroad company, the power to make such a contract. Indeed, at the time the contract was made, the laws of Pennsylvania, by its Constitution and statutes, expressly reserved to the State the power of regulation over all rates charged by public service companies, which power was at one time exercised through the courts under statute passed long before the individual contract involved in the case before the court was made, and, later, by the Public Service Commission, to which such regulatory power was transferred by a statute passed -after such individual contract was made.
In Southern Iowa Electric Co. v. Chariton, 255 U. S. 539, 41 Sup. Ct. 400, 65 L. Ed. 764, May 15, 1921, the statute relied on to confer the municipal authority provided that the municipalities “* * shall have power to require every individual or private corporation operating such works or plant, subject to reasonable rules and regulations, to furnish any person applying therefor along the line of its pipes, mains, wires, or other conduits, with gas, water, light, or power, and to supply said city or town with water for fire protection, and with gas, water, light or power for other necessary public purposes (and to regulate and fix the rent or rates for water, gas, heat and electric light or power), * * and these powers shall not be abridged by ordinance, resolution or contract.”
In Central Union Tel. Co. v. Indianapolis Tel. Co., the municipal authority to fix rates by franchise contract is not involved, although it is discussed and the distinction is recognized which, as aforesaid, is made in the Supreme Court cases above mentioned, between municipal authority .to act ex parte and the authority *179to fix rates by agreement. In this ease the franchise in question contained a clause in which it was stated that “It is also agreed that the franchise and privileges herein granted by the city of Indianapolis are so granted upon the distinct condition that * *” (the franchise and rights thereunder should not be thereafter assigned) “without the consent of the Board of Public Works of said city and ratified by the common council of the city * Subsequently a statute was enacted to the effect that such franchises and rights thereunder might be sold and assigned with the consent of the Publie Service Commission; and thereafter the franchise was sold and assigned with the consent of such commission thereupon obtained. The sole question in the case was, whether the aforesaid clause in the franchise vested in the city a contract right of giving or withholding its consent to such sale and assignment, which could not be taken away by the State by the subsequent legislation conferring the function of the exercise of such right of consent upon another agency of the state, to-wit, the Public Service Commission.
The court held, in substance, that although acquired by contract, the right in question was in truth merely a right to exercise a power which was, in its nature, a condition imposed upon the right of the grantee of the franchise to sell it, which was to be exercised by ex parte action of the city in its public character of mere agent of the State. That, therefore, the State had the right, before such power was exercised, to designate some other agency to exercise it, to-wit, the Public Service Commission. And on this subject the court in its opinion says this: “If, before the power to give or to withhold such consent was withdrawn by the State, the city had exercised the power by assenting to a sale, such assent would have bound the State, and any contract of *180sale made thereunder would have been protected by the Constitution” (meaning the contract clause of the Federal Constitution) “from the imposition by the State of any additional terms or conditions or from any changes or alterations in its terms. The State, however, might withdraw the power to give or to withhold consent to such sale at any time before it was finally exercised by the city. By section 953^ of the public utilities act, supra, the power to give or to withhold consent to such sales was withdrawn by the legislature from all óf the municipalities of the State, and that power was delegated to the Public Service Commission. After the taking effect of that act, the sole power to give or to withhold such consent rested in the commission, and municipalities were entirely shorn of such power.”
We see, therefore, that in all of these cases which are relied on as opposed to the holding in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases, with the single exception of the case of Groesbeck v. Detroit, etc., R. Co. (which will be presently more explicitly mentioned), the express authority, if any, conferred upon the municipalities is either an authority regulatory in its nature or is an authority to act merely ex parte, by imposing conditions or restrictions upon the consent or permission granted, neither of which is an authority contractual in its nature, but is merely the same character of authority as is conferred by section 124 of the Virginia Constitution and- the statute enacted in pursuance thereof, and no more; and is not the aforesaid power to fix the rates by agreement between the municipality and the grantee of the franchise, which, as aforesaid, is, when expressly authorized by the State, the power to contract which is embraced within the meaning of the contract clause of the Federal Constitution. In most of these cases this distinction is expressly alluded to; in some it is not; but *181in all it exists, and entirely harmonizes the holding of these eases with the Supreme Court eases above cited on the subject of when municipal contracts fall within the guarantee of the Federal Constitution contract clause. So that, in truth, these cases leave, as the real question to be determined, that which was decided in the Virginia Western Power Co. Cases, namely: Did the statute law of Virginia aforesaid expressly confer upon the municipality the authority to fix the rates in question by franchise agreement? The whole ease, in so far as the construction of the statute law is concerned, depends and turns upon the decision of that question.
The case of Groesbeck v. Detroit, etc., R. Co., supra (210 Mich. 227, 177 N. W. 726 1023), was decided by a divided court, two judges dissenting. The majority opinion does hold that the legislative right existed to empower the Public Service Commission to regulate the rates fixed by a franchise contract made by the city under the authority expressly conferred by the Michigan statute, which provided that railway rates “shall be established by agreement” between the railway company and the corporate authorities of the city. But the holding is in direct conflict with the Supreme Court case of Detroit, etc., Ry. Co. v. Michigan, supra (242 U. S. 238, 37 Sup. Ct. 87, 61 L. Ed. 268), in which the very same Michigan statute was involved, as well as with the other Supreme Court cases of Detroit v. Detroit, etc., Ry. Co., Cleveland v. Cleveland City R. Co., Same v. Same, Columbus Ry. Power & Co. v. Columbus, and Los Angeles v. Los Angeles City Water Co., above cited; as is pointed out in the dissenting opinion delivered by Judge Fellows and concurred in by Judge Bird. Moreover, the reasoning of the dissenting opinion is convincing, whereas the majority opinion contains a mere statement of conclusion unsupported by any reasoning, *182merely referrring to certain decisions to sustain the conclusion. Among the cases I have reviewed are all of the cases cited in the majority opinion to sustain its holding, except two, a Supreme Court ease and a Missouri case. None of the cases which I have reviewed sustains such holding. The Supreme Court case cited is Kies v. Lowry, 199 U. S. 233, 26 Sup. Ct. 27, 50 L. Ed. 167. That ease holds merely that a contract obligation is not impaired by a statute creating a new school district and giving to it property within its limits which had belonged to the old district out of which the new district.was created. Plainly, the case is entirely foreign to the subject of, and does not sustain, the holding under consideration. I do not have the Missouri case before me at the moment.
I have carefully examined the notes in 3 A. L. R. 730-748 and 9 A. L. R. 1165-1177, cited in the majority opinion, and find nothing therein inconsistent with the views above expressed, when what is' there said is carefully considered in the light of what is really involved in the cases referred to, except that, in the 3 A. L. R. note at pp. 735-6 there are references to the statements in the opinions in certain cases cited, to the effect that there is a distinction between the power of the municipalities to make rates for themselves and power to make rates for their inhabitants; but it is found, on examination of those eases, either that the decisions do not depend upon such distinction, or that the municipal authority in question in the particular case makes that distinction and confers the power in the one case, but not in the other. Re Lincoln Water Co. (Me.), P. U. R. 1919-B, 752, is a case of the latter class. In that case it was held that the general law of Maine did not confer upon municipalities the power to regulate the rates which water companies might charge the *183inhabitants; and that such power eonld not be implied from the power granted in the charter of a municipality, “to contract for water for municipal and fire purposes.” As aforesaid, the Virginia statute on the subject expressly confers on municipalities the power to fix by contract the rates charged the inhabitants of the municipality as well as the rates charged the municipality itself.
The case of Sedalia v. Pub. Ser. Com., 275 Mo. 201, 204 S. W. 497; Leiper v. B. & P. R. Co., 262 Pa. 328, 105 Atl. 551, P. U. R. 1919-C, 397, cited and relied on by counsel in behalf of defendant in error, is, in its holdings, in a class by itself.
The statute involved in the ease just cited, as stated in the report of the case, merely authorized the city to contract for water service, in lieu of the city’s furnishing itself with water by municipal ownership and operation of the plant. The statute, in truth, was, in substance, merely the same as those involved in the Hillsboro, Searsport, Lincoln and Sapulpa Cases above reviewed, by which the authority to contract as to certain matters was conferred upon the municipalities, but the authority to fix rates by the contract was not thereby expressly conferred. The case might have been properly decided, just as it was decided, upon that ground.
.However, considering the decision as it stands, the following will be observed: The court held that the statute involved would have had the effect of conferring upon municipalities the power to contract as to rates, within the meaning of the contract clause of the Federal Constitution, if the legislature had had the power to enact it. The court further held, however, that in view of the provision of section 5 of Article 12 of the. Missouri Constitution, the legislature did not have the power to enact such a statute so as to confer *184such power to contract as to rates. The language of such section of the Missouri Constitution is as follows: “The exercise of the police power of the State shall never be abridged or so construed as to permit corporations to conduct their business in such manner as to infringe the equal rights of individuals, or the general well-being of the State.” This was the sole provision of that Constitution on the subject. It did not, like the Virginia Constitution, in addition to such provision, contain further provisions, such as are found in section 125 of the Virginia Constitution, which expressly sanction the contemplated enactment by the legislature of a statute conferring upon municipalities the power to contract within the meaning of the Federal Constitution contract clause, until such time as the legislature should enact still further legislation taking away such power from municipalities after the enactment of the latter character of legislation. As pointed out in the opinion of the court in the Western Power Co. Cases, it seems plain that, under all of the provisions of the Virginia Constitution on the subject (which must be all read and construed together) the Virginia legislature had the power to enact the statute law in question at the time it was enacted. When all of the clauses of the Virginia Constitution on the subject are read together, they plainly say, in substance, this: The power of the State to regulate rates charged by public utilities shall never be permanently relinquished, but may be suspended pro tanto, for periods not exceeding thirty years, by contracts fixing such rates, entered into by municipalities under the authority of the statute law which is involved in the instant case, so long as that statute law remains unchanged, the power of the legislature all the time existing, however, by the repeal of such statute law, or by other enactment, to take away at any time from *185municipalities the authority to make such contracts after such action of the legislature. Therefore, as such statute law was valid under the Virginia Constitution, it conferred upon municipalities the power to make the contract in question so long as that statute law remained unaltered by the legislature. It so remained when the franchise contract involved in the instant case was entered into, as aforesaid, hence such contract is embraced within the guarantee of the aforesaid clause of the Federal Constitution on the subject, under the rule established by the unbroken line of Supreme Court decisions above cited.
Kelly, P., concurs in this dissent.