This is a bill filed to restrain the city, its common council, and executive officers from taking action' pur
The case was heard upon pleadings and proofs. The controlling facts are not in dispute. The following is an outline of them:
In March, 1890, the Bartlett Illuminating Company was incorporated under the Michigan statute of 1881 (chapter 191, Compiled Taws of 1897), providing for the incorporation of electric light companies. In October, 1890, the city adopted a general ordinance to authorize the establishment of electric works. The Bartlett Illuminating Compauy took the steps required by that ordinance, and under it became vested with the right to use the city streets and public places with poles, conduits, wires, etc., for the purpose of furnishing electric light and power. This right was not an exclusive right. jNTo rates were fixed in the ordinance. Until July 1, 1910, the Bartlett Illuminating Company was the only company furnishing electric service in Saginaw.
In 1908 the Eastern Michigan Power Company was organized under Act 232 of the Public Acts of Michigan for 1903 for the purpose of furnishing electric light and power. The act named was the only one in force at the time under which a corporation of the kind could be organized lawfully. The company was organized to carry on business in various counties, among others, Saginaw.
In December, 1908, the common council of Saginaw passed an ordinance granting to this company, its successors and assigns, the right to use the streets of the city in its business. The company accepted the ordinance, which contained a maximum rate provision of 11 cents for ordinary service. This rate was several cents lower than the general rate charged at the time by the Bartlett Company. This ordinance and the matters attending its adoption will be discussed in detail later.
In 1909 the complainant was organized under act 232 above mentioned for the purpose of carrying on the business of furnishing electric light and power. In June, 1910, it acquired by purchase from the Eastern Michigan' Power Company all the rights which that company had acquired under the ordinance of 1908, and it acquired by purchase from the Bartlett Company all the property, plant, and franchise owned by that company. The Bartlett Company thereupon distributed to its stockholders the avails of this sale, called in and canceled its stock, and later filed the proper notice of the cessation of its business.
Since July 1, 1910, the complainant has been furnishing electric current to the citizens of Saginaw and to the city itself for its street lighting. It is furnishing service at the rates required by the ordinance of 1908 granted to the Eastern Michigan Company, except where those rates resulted in a charge larger than was being made by the Bartlett Company, and in such cases it has furnished service at the lower rates charged by the latter company. To 85 per cent, of the
On August 15, 1910, the common council adopted the resolution which caused the filing of this bill. The resolution revoked the franchise granted the Bartlett Illuminating Company in 1890, required that company at once to remove its poles, wires, conduits, and other appliances from the streets, and, upon its failure to begin removal within, 60 days of service upon it of the resolution, directed the city officers to commence removal of the same. The resolution in preambles sets out, among other things, that the conveyance of the Bartlett Company to the complainant of its property and franchises was in violation of the terms of the ordinance of 1890. When the resolution was passed, complainant had no producing, plant and distributing system besides that acquired from the Bartlett Company. The Eastern Michigan Company had never erected a plant with which to operate under its ordinance.
The testimony is clear that to remove the apparatus mentioned would inflict serious loss on complainant, amounting to some hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Upon these facts complainant claims that the resolution of August 15, 1910, is a law which impairs the obligation of a contract, and, if acted upon, would deprive it of property without due process of. law, and cause it irreparable injury.
Upon the filing of the bill, a restraining order was granted which is still in force. Three principal questions were argued by counsel:
[1] (1) The question of the validity of the ordinance of 1908 granting rights to the Eastern Michigan Power Company may be treated first. The complainant affirms, and the defendants deny, 'the validity of this ordinance. The ordinance runs to the Eastern Michigan Power Company by name. It provides that it shall inure to the benefit of the company’s successors and assigns. It confers power upon the company, its successors and assigns, to construct, acquire, maintain, and use electric lights, etc., for a period .of 30 years. It fixes maximum rates to be charged for service. There appears to be no question raised by the defendants of the corporate capacity of the Eastern Michigan Power Company to accept this ordinance, nor of the fact of its acceptance, nor of the corporate capacity of the complainant to take the assignment of the rights conferred by the ordinance upon the Eastern Michigan Company. The defendants claim that the, ordinance is void by reason of an alleged defect or omission in advertising for bids for its acceptance. The complainant’s claim is that the defect, if any, is immaterial, and that the city, having adopted and published the ordinance, cannot now.be heard to allege its invalidity.
The charter of the city provides (chapter 24, § 8) :
“The common council shall not grant any special franchise on any of the streets of said city until the same have been advertised for sealed proposals, ixor for a longer term than thirty years, nor grant exclusive privileges for the use of the streets, sidewalks and public places.”
On November 2, 1908, the common council received a petition for a franchise from the Eastern Michigan Power Company. On November 16, 1908, the common council, sitting in conuhittee of the
It is claimed by the city that the hid finally accepted was not that embodied in the sealed proposal, and that the council, therefore, had no power to adopt the ordinance which it did adopt.
While in the elaborate brief of counsel for defendants many cases have been collected, attention has been called to no case which seems to me precisely in point. The charter requires sealed proposals, but does not require the letting to the highest bidder, nor does it in terms certainly forbid what was here done. A sealed proposal was submitted as required, and was accepted. No other proposal was received. The acceptance was reconsidered and the matter left on tlie table of the council for future disposition. As no other proposal than that of the Eastern Michigan Company was received at the 14-cent rate, it eaiiuot be said that the interests of the public were endangered because a fresh advertisement was not directed when the council concluded during the period that it was on the table to reduce the rate from 14 to 11 cents. The case is not one where without readvertisement a higher rate was arranged for. If the ordinance had been adopted as advertised and accepted, and then an amendment reducing the rate passed and accepted, there scarcely could have been any question as to the validity of the amended ordinance. The ordinance offered and that adopted and accepted were the same, except that the grantee assented to a change against its interest in the matter of rates, dt may also properly be observed that the whole transaction was at the instance of the Eastern Michigan Company whose petition of November 2d set the council in motion.
Under such circumstances, my opinion is that what was done was not in violation of the charter provision quoted, and that the ordinance is valid. The ordinance having been duly accepted, a contract between the city and the Eastern Michigan Power Company was formed. The rights of the last-named company have now passed to complainant, which is competent to exercise them, and it has a contractual right to operate under the ordinance.
The dispute then between the parties on this branch of the controversy comes to this: While the complainant could acquire, and . did acquire, the fixed property of the Bartlett Company, did it acquire, and could the Bartlett Company transfer to it, any right to maintain those appliances in the streets and to use them there? Under the act of 1881, as to electric light companies, the Bartlett Company upon its organization received from the state a right to construct, maintain, and operate in the highways of the state its poles, conduits, and wires, subject only to reasonable regulation by municipalities of this use of the highways. Michigan Telephone Co. v. St. Joseph, 121
Complainant urges that Saginaw could impose only reasonable regulations upon the Bartlett Company, and not such terms as those imposed in section 9 of the ordinance of 1890, and that under the charter the city had no power to embody in the ordinance the clause in question, and that the assent of the company to the ordinance did not operate to prevent it from transferring the privileges in the streets as a part of its property, in view of the statute under which it is organized and the statute permitting a sale by one corporation to another of its property. On the other hand, it is insisted by defendants that it was competent for the Bartlett Company and the city to agree upon the terms of the ordinance in question; that they did so agree, and that the complainant, as transferee of the Bartlett Company, cannot now be heard to say that it is not bound, or that the Bartlett Company was not bound, by the terms of section 9. So long as complainant continues to operate under the ordinance of 1908, it seems to be of no practical importance which party is right as to the point in dispute. If at some later day a decision of this question is important to the parties, it can he passed upon in some proper proceeding. 1 express no opinion upon it at this time, but reserve it for future determination, if necessary, in some other proceeding.
[3] (3) Defendants insist that complainant has created by its conduct an unlawful combination or monopoly, and has no standing in the case. An outline of the facts as to the organization and transactions of the complainant has been given above. It was organized under a law in force in 1909 to do a business lawful under the statutes of the state. It seems to have been duly and legally organized. It had corporate power to become vested with the rights in the streets conferred in 1908 upon the Eastern Michigan Power Company and its assigns and to exercise those rights. It had corporate power also to become the owner of the property belonging to the Bartlett Illuminating Company and to use that property, whether or not under section 9 of the ordinance of 1890 it could become vested with the fights in the streets granted to the Bartlett Company.
Moreover, as the assignee of the Eastern Michigan Company, it was vested with power under the ordinance of 1908 to acquire an electric lighting system as well as to construct such system. As bearing upon this point, it may also be important to observe that the complainant never acquired any of the stock of either the Eastern Michigan Company or the Bartlett Company; that the former company had no property, but only its rights under the ordinance, and that it conveyed all of its rights for a cash consideration; and that the latter company had both an ordinance right and fixed property and conveyed both to the complainant, which, as has been already said, is operating the fixed property under the ordinance which it acquired from the Eastern Michigan Company. The complainant has nonexclusive rights in the streets whether these are the street rights of the Eastern Michigan Company alone or those and the rights of the Bartlett Company. Complainant has a maximum rate ordinance acquired by assignment
It is argued by the defendants that the effect of the purchase by complainant above stated frorii the Eastern Michigan and Bartlett Companies is to suppress competition, and, if operations ave conducted under the ordinance of 1908, to prevent control of rates by the Michigan Railroad Commission. The argument appears to be that, if the Bartlett Cpmpany had continued to do business, its rates would have been subject to the control of the Railroad Commission, as there was no rate provision in its ordinance. It may be true that its rates would thus have been subject to state control. The city, however, had chosen to grant in 1908 an ordinance containing a provision for maximum rates considerably lower than those being charged by the' Bartlett Company. If the Eastern Michigan Company had constructed and operated a plant, and the Bartlett Company, finding that it was doing business at a loss, had gone out of business and sold its property to the Eastern Michigan Company, competition would have dis-. appeared by reason of the city’s grant to the Eastern Michigan Company. If the Eastern Michigan Company, on the other hand, had not constructed a system, and the Bartlett Company had continued to have the field to itself, as in years past, although its rates were subject to control by the State Railroad Commission, there would have been, of course, an absence of competition. There never had been competition in the business, and, in fact, there was noire when the complainant took over the property of the Bartlett Company and the street franchise-of the Eastern Michigan Company. Such taking over did not suppress any existing competition, nor is there anything t,o show there would have been competition if the complainant had not acted as it did. Its action did result in a large reduction in price of current to most consumers, especially small consumers, and gave to the citizens a benefit which they could derive from the ordinance of 1908 that up to July 1, 1910, had been of no practical use to them. It gave them, too, all the advantage they could have got if the Eastern Michigan Company had actively competed for business with the Bartlett’ Company.
I am forced to the conclusion that the complainant in purchasing what it did from the other two companies did not create an unlawful combination or monopoly, or disobey the statutes of the state.
My conclusion, therefore, is that the resolution of the common council of August 15, 1910, so far as it directed the removal from the streets and public places of the city of Saginaw of the poles, wires, conduits, and other apparatus named therein which had been formerly
The complainant is entitled to a permanent injunction against the action of the defendants under said resolution looking to such removal of poles, wires, conduits, and apparatus.