State v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Minturn, J.

The writ of certiorari in this case removes, at the instance of the town of Phillipsburg, an order of the *142public utility commissioners, made on November 19th, 1912, granting to the Phillipsburg Horse Car Railroad Company permission to change the gauge of its tracks from five feet two and one-half inches to the standard gauge of four feet eight and one-half inches.

The order is attacked in the first place upon the ground that the commissioners were without jurisdiction to make it. We consider that the Public Utility act of 1911 (at p. 378) confers general and specific authority upon the commissioners to deal with the question. By its terms the board is given general supervision, jurisdiction and control “over all public utilities, and also over their property rights, equipments, facilities and franchises/5 and power is conferred upon it “to permit any street railway to change its existing gauge to standard steam railway gauge, upon such terms and conditions as said board shall prescribe.55 . Having exercised the power thus amply conferred to deal with the subject-matter of this controversy, the objection is urged that there was an absence of any evidence upon which the board could reasonably base its finding.

If there was evidence upon which the board could reasonably make the order we are precluded by the express terms of the enactment from reviewing it. Inter-State Telephone and Telegraph Co. v. Board of Utility Commissioners, 55 Vroom 184.

The facts before the board were contained in a stipulation filed by the parties, which took the place of oral testimon3r, and this was supplemented by the testimony of the inspector of the commissioners, who in a written report, after investigation, recommended the change of gauge.

The record and testimony-thus adduced presented all the necessary facts upon which the commissioners might exercise the jurisdiction conferred upon them.

The railroad Compaq was incorporated under two acts of the legislature (Pamph. L. 1867, p. 801, and Pamph. L. 1868, p. 161), under which it was authorized to construct a railroad of a certan gauge in Phillipsburg with the consent of the town. Subsequently the railroad equipped its road *143with, electricity under an ordinance of the municipality foT the purpose, the provisions of which were accepted by the company.

It is now contended by the town in answer to this exercise of jurisdiction by the public utility commissioners, that this ordinance and its acceptance constituted in legal effect a contract between the town and the company, which is protected from impairment by the familiar provisions of the federal constitution.

The concrete inquiry therefore presented by this situation is whether the state by committing to an administrative board the power to regulate the conduct and operation of a quasi public corporation can constitutionally change the gauge of street car tracks to accord with what the legislature may conceive to be the public interest, where such gauge under a prior legislative delegation of power to the municipality was fixed by ordinance, the terms of which the company has accepted.

It will be observed in this inquiry that the contractual relationship sought to be sustained is pleaded not by the company, which is not before us as a complaining party, but by a municipal corporation, an arm of the state government, to which the power pro bono publico was delegated by the legislature.

It is not perceived how the question of the constitutionality of the acts of the public utility commissioners can enter as betwnen the state and its creature the town, upon a mere proposal not to divest the municipality of any property right, but to transfer from the local municipal body to a general state board the legislative police power of street regulation, in the operation of street car companies, a power inherent in the state and of which it has not even pro tanto divested itself by prior temporary delegation to the municipality, to subserve what at the time of the delegation may be conceded to have been a local public interest.

Were we dealing with a contention of this nature pressed by the railroad corporation, other considerations would present themselves, but as between the local body politic and its *144creator, the state, the principle is fundamental in our jurisprudence that the charter of a public corporation is not considered a contract, and does not come within the doctrine of the Dartmouth College case. Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518; Newton v. Mahoning County, 100 U. S. 548; Prirce v. Crocker, 166 Mass. 347; Paterson v. Society for Establishing, &c., 4 Zab. 385.

As was said in an early case in the history of constitutional construction: “It is an unsound and even absurd proposition that political power conferred by the legislature can become a vested right as against the government in any individual or body of men.” People v. Morris, 13 Wend. 325.

In the case of East Hartford v. Hartford Bridge Co., 10 How. (U. S.) 511, the town was given the right by legislation to maintain a ferry over the river. Subsequently by several acts the state first granted one-half of the ferry privilege to an adjoining town, and finally provided for the entire discontinuance of the ferry. The town of East Hartford contested this legislative procedure, upon the ground that its constitutional rights were thus invaded. The United States Supreme Court, in declining to accede to that view, said: “The doings of the legislature as to this ferry must be considered rather as public laws than as contracts. They related to public interests. They changed as those interests demanded. The grantees, likewise the towns, being mere organizations for public purposes were liable hr have their public powers, rights and duties modified or abolished at any moment by the legislature.” ~ ■

To the same effect is Mulcahy v. Newark, 28 Vroom 513.

It is to be observed also that the power thus conferred upon this prosecutor, quite manifestly was that of police regulation, being concerned with the control and regulation of fits streets in the interest of the traveling public.

The contention, therefore, that.such a power once conceded by the legislature to the municipality is incapable of modification or revocation is conspicuously opposed to’ the fundamental doctrine that tire police power of the state can*145not be aliened even by express grant. Thorpe v. Railroad Co., 27 Vt. 149; Boston Beer Co. v. Massachusetts, 97 U. S. 25; Vanderbilt v. Adams, 7 Cow. (N. Y.) 349; Cooley Const. Lim. 345.

That tbe power thus inalienably possessed by the state may be delegated in the interest of the public weal, to such subordinate agency as public expediency may in legislative contemplation dictate, is a doctrine equally fundamental. State v. Tryon, 39 Conn. 183; Com. v. Plaisted, 148 Mass. 375; Village of Carthage v. Frederick, 122 N. Y. 268.

That the change of gauge ordered by the commissioners was not intended to change the legal status of the railroad, or vary its obligations to the municipality under the provisions of any special statute applicable to it is manifest from the terms of the order that it. “shall not be construed to enlarge otherwise its present rights or narrow its present legal obligations in any respect whatever.”

These considerations render it manifest that the order of the commissioners must be affirmed.