New Orleans, City & Lake Railroad v. City of New Orleans

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

This is a suit by injunction to prevent the city from selling a right of way for a sreet railroad over a certain portion of Magazine street, the plaintiff claiming that the proposed sale vio - lates the following stipulation in the subsisting contract between it and the city:

“ The Oity of New Orleans binds herself not to grant during the period for which said franchises are sold a right of way to any other railroad company upon the streets through which said right of way is hereby sold, unless by mutual agreement between the city and the purchaser or purchasers of these franchises.”

It can not be denied that the action sought to be restrained is in violation of the terms of this quoted clause of the contract. Whether the plaintiff is entitled to any, and if so, to what relief on account of such violation, are questions which we shall not discuss in the present opinion. It is sufficient to say that plaintiff is clearly not entitled to the particular relief invoked in this case.

We have repeatedly held that the Oity Council of New Orleans has no power to grant an exclusive right to use a street for the purposes of a street railway; and that any such exclusive grant can not ■operate to deprive succeeding councils of the right and power to regulate the streets by granting new franchises when deemed necessary for the public convenience, and when not inconsistent wit)i, or destructive of, the exercise of franchises formerly granted.

*731The proposed sale does not interfere with the exercise of the franchise granted to plaintiff save in the single feature of its exclusiveness. If the Oity Council, with which plaintiff contracted, had no power to grant an exclusive right or to deprive succeeding councils of the right to grant new franchises in the public interest, obviously plaintiff’s claim to an injunction restraining the granting of such new franchises can not be sustained, even if it were conceded that plaintiff was entitled to some kind of relief for' the consequent breach of its contract-

We do not understand that the learned counsel of plaintiff contests the logic of this conclusion; but with great earnestness and zeal he assails the correctness of the judicial conclusion which we have repeatedly announced, that the City Council of New Orleans has no power to grant or sell, in perpetuo, or for a term of years, the exclusive right to use its streets for the purposes of a street railway. New Orleans City & Lake Railroad Company vs. City of New Orleans, 44 An. — (decided, April 18, 1892) ; Canal and Claiborne Street Railroad Company vs. Crescent City Railroad Company, 44 An. — (decided, April 4, 1892) ; Canal & Claiborne Street Railroad Company vs. Orleans Railroad Company, 44 An. —; Canal & Claiborne Street Railroad Company vs. Crescent City Railroad Company, 41 An. 561; New Orleans City Railroad Company vs. Crescent City Railroad Company, 12 Fed. R. 308.

He claims that this is the first case which has been presented in which the grant of the exclusive right has been expressly made as a stipulation and condition of a contract, and that it is thus differenced from prior cases.

In the case first above cited (which, however, is not yet final) we had under consideration the very contract now presented, and we then held, in the language of the syllabus:

“The charter of the city of New Orleans, Act No. 7 of 1870, did not confer power upon the corporation to grant the exclusive privilege of the use of a street. The power conferred was restricted to the regulation and management of the streets.”

We have, however, carefully considered the plaintiff’s argument, which reduced to the form of a syllogism is as follows:

1. In absence of constitutional inhibition, which did not exist at date of this contract, the Legislature of the State had the power to grant exclusive rights to the use of a street for a street railway.

*7322 The Legislature of Louisiana has delegated to the city of New Orleans its whole power over this subject; ergo the city has power to grant such exclusive rights.

In support of the major premise counsel cites a formidable array of authorities. We have no occasion to consider these or to enter into the nice distinctions in the definition and limitation'of the legislative power on this subject which appear in the decisions and text b >oks, because thejdoctrine heretofore announced by us rests entirely on our negation of the minor premise.

The grant of power to the Oity Oouncil in this matter, under the Charter of 1870, in force at the date of this contract, is found in Sec. 12, as follows:

“ To regulate and make improvements in the streets. * * * To regulate the proper government of carts, drays, carriages, Omnibuses, and other vehicles of every description; freight, locomotive, passenger and street cars, which run in the streets and within the limits of the city.” * * *

We have been referred to, and have ourselves been able to find, no authority holding that such a grant included a delegation of power to grant an exclusive right of way over streets to a railway company.

The power to “ regulate the streets ” is a persisting power, not exhausted by a single exercise thereof.

The case of Brown vs. Duplessis, 14 An. 854, held that it was a proper exercise of this power of regulation for the city to authorize street railways to be established on the streets. If one council, under this power to regulate, had the right to establish such a railway, it is difficult to understand why a succeeding council, having precisely the same power, should not have the right to establish a similar railroad, when found necessary in the public interest, and provided always it did not destroy or impair substance of the former grant.

The legislative grant to the city of New Orleans of the power to establish street railways is subject to the same construction which would be applied to a direct legislative grant to a private corporation for the same purpose; and as to the latter, Judge Dillon says:

“ A legislative grant of authority to construct a street railway is not exclusive unless so declared in terms, and, therefore, the Legislature may, at will and without compensation to the first company, *733authorize a second railway on the same streets or line, unless it has disabled itself by making the first grant irrepealable and exclusive.” 2 Dillon Mun. Corp., 3d Ed., Sec. 727.

The same principle must be applied in the construction of legislative delegations of authority to municipal corporations. Unless the terms of the delegation embrace expressly the power to grant exclusive rights, or are so sweeping as to operate a complete abdication of the whole legislative power in favor of the corporation, it can not be held to include such extraordinary power, the possession of which even by the Legislature is not free from dispute. See Elliott on Roads and Streets, p. 569.

The extremely general, guarded and cautious terms of the delegation in the instant case preclude any such construction and produce a'strong conviction that no such purpose was contemplated by the legislative mind.

The most apposite case we have found is that of Davis vs. Mayor, 14 N. Y. 536, of which we give Judge Diilon’s summary as follows:

“In a leading case, Davis vs. Mayor, it appeared that the city corporation, by, its charter, possessed general power to open, alter, repair and regulate the streets. By virtue of this power, and without any express authority from the Legislature, the corporation of the city undertook, by resolution, to confer upon an association of persons the exclusive right to construct and maintain for a term of years a railway in Broadway for the transportation of passengers for pi’ofib. It was the opinion of five of the seven judges of the Oourt of Appeal3-bhat the resolution was void. * * The judgment of the court in the case mentioned rests upon the sound principle that the powers of the corporation, in respect to the control of its streets,, are held in trust for the public benefit, and can not be surrendered or delegated by contract to private parties.” 2 Dillon Mun. Corp. Secs. 715, 716.

The later ease of People vs. O’Brien, 111 N. Y. 1, does not overrule or conflict with Davis vs. Mayor, bub is clearly distinguishable from it in the essential feature that an exclusive grant was not involved.

A different conclusion from that which we have reached would be nothing less than a public calamity.

Under the conditions of life in great cities, experience demonstrates that the power of regulating the use of streets in the estab*734lishment of railways thereon is one of the most important and essential of all municipal powers to the comfort, convenience and health of the inhabitants. Such railways relieve the unwholesome crowding of population in central localities, abolish the nuisance of over-populated tenement houses, enable the industrial classes to find homes where land is cheap, space is ample and air is pure, from which these carriers supply swift and frequent transportation to and from their working places, and contribute, in so many ways, to the comfort and convenience of the whole people that one wonders how such communities ever lived without them.

Whilst valid contract rights must be respected and only interfered With in the constitutional exercise of the power of eminent domain, claims to exclusive privileges, under grants which are ultra vires, can not be permitted to thwart or obstruct the municipal discretion in the administration of this important public trust confided to them to be exercised for the benefit of the people.

Judgment affirmed.