U.S. Supreme Court
LONG ISLAND WATER-SUPPLY CO. v. CITY OF BROOKLYN, 166 U.S. 685
(1897)
166 U.S. 685
LONG ISLAND WATER-SUPPLY CO.
v.
CITY OF BROOKLYN.
No. 216.
April 26, 1897.
[166 U.S. 685, 686] Under authority of chapter 737 of the
Laws of New York for 1873 (Laws N. Y. 1873, p. 1100), as amended in
1881 (Laws N. Y. 1881, p. 443, c. 321), the plaintiff in error was
organized as a water company. On September 15, 1881, it entered into a
contract with the town of New Lots, by which it agreed to lay water
pipes and mains in the streets of New Lots, and supply the town with
water. The town, on the other hand, agreed to pay for hydrants to be
furnished and supplied, as provided in the contract, at a specified
rate per hydrant, the number of hydrants to be not less than 200. The
term of the contract was 25 years. This contract was modified on July
2, 1885, but the modification contains nothing material to this
controversy.
In 1886, by chapter 335 (Laws N. Y. 1886, p. 540), the town of
New Lots was annexed to and merged in the city of Brooklyn, to be
known thereafter as the Twenty-Sixth ward of said city.
The fourth section of this act provided, among other things,
that 'the amount annually payable by said town for water supplied to
it under existing contracts between it and the Long Island
Water-Supply Company, shall, after this act takes effect, during the
terms of said contract, or until said city shall purchase or acquire
the property of said water company, as in the next section provided,
be levied and collected
[166 U.S. 685, 687] from the property situated and
taxable within the territory hereby annexed, and such amount shall be
paid to the said water company by said city as it falls due from time
to time under said contracts, and the said city of Brooklyn shall not
distribute or furnish water for consumption of use within said
territory, or lay any pipes or mains for the distribution or supply of
water within said territory, until the expiration of the charter of
said company, or until the said city shall purchase or acquire the
property of said company, as in the next section provided.'
By section 5 the city was given power to purchase or condemn the
property of the company within two years, but did neither. In 1892 the
legislature passed another act (Laws 1892, p. 960, c. 481),
authorizing the city of Brooklyn to condemn the property of the
company, the first section of which is as follows:
'Section 1. The public interest requires the acquisition, by
the city of Brooklyn, for the public use of the reservoir, wells,
machinery, pipes, franchises and all other property of the Long
Island Water Supply Company, and the said city of Brooklyn is hereby
authorized to acquire the same for such use by condemnation, free of
all liens and incumbrances whatsoever, provided that the proceedings
herein, hereinafter and hereby authorized shall be commenced within
one year after the passage of this act.'
Subsequent sections prescribed the procedure. Proceedings were
had under this act. The commissioners appointed, as provided therein,
valued the property of the company at $570,000, of which $370,000 was
named as the value of the tangible property, and $200,000 that of the
franchises, contracts, and all other rights and property, of
whatsoever nature or kind, of the company, including therein the
contract between the town of New Lots and the company. The special
term of the supreme court, on June 29, 1893, made an order vacating
and setting aside this report, and appointing new commissioners. The
city of Brooklyn appealed to the general term of that court, which, on
December 1, 1893, reversed the order of the special term and confirmed
the report of the com-
[166 U.S. 685, 688] missioners. The company then took an
appeal to the court of appeals. That court affirmed the decision of
the general term (143 N. Y. 596, 38 N. E. 983), and remitted the
record to the supreme court, which court, on December 4, 1894, entered
final judgment in favor of the city of Brooklyn, and thereupon this
writ of error was sued out.
John F. Dillon and B. F. Tracy, for plaintiff in error.
A. G. McDonald and George G. Reynolds, for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the court.
So far as respects any mere matter of procedure, or of conflict
between the statute authorizing the condemnation or the proceedings
had thereunder and the constitution of the state, the decision of the
court of appeals is conclusive. Bridge Co. v. Dix, 6 How. 507; Bucher
v. Railroad Co.,
125 U.S. 555 , 8 Sup. Ct. 974; Adams Exp. Co. v. Ohio,
165 U.S. 194 , 17 Sup. Ct. 305. Our inquiry must be directed to
the question whether any rights of the water-supply company secured by
the constitution of the United States have been violated. The
contention of plaintiff in error is that the proceedings had under the
statute which resulted in the judgment of condemnation violate section
10, art. 1, of the constitution of the United States, which forbids
any state to pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts, and
were not 'due process of law,' as required by the fourteenth
amendment.
With reference to the first part of this contention, it is said
that in 1881 the town of New Lots made a contract with the
water-supply company by which for each and every year during the term
of 25 years it covenanted to pay to the company so much per hydrant
for hydrants furnished and supplied by it; that the act of annexation
continued the burden
[166 U.S. 685, 689] of this obligation upon the territory
within the limits of the town, although thereafter the town, as a
separate municipality, ceased to exist, and the territory became
simply a ward of the city of Brooklyn; that the condemnation
proceedings destroyed this contract, and released the territory from
any obligation to pay the stipulated hybrant rental; that a state or
municipality cannot do indirectly what it cannot to directly; that, as
the municipality could not, by any direct act, release itself from any
of the obligations of its contract, it could not accomplish the same
result by proceedings in condemnation. We cannot yield our assent to
this contention. All private property is held subject to the demands
of a public use. The constitutional guaranty of just compensation is
not a limitation of the power to take, but only a condition of its
exercise. Whenever public uses require, the government may appropriate
any private property on the payment of just compensation. That the
supply of water to a city is a public purpose cannot be doubted, and
hence the condemnation of a water-supply system must be recognized as
within the unquestioned limits of the power of eminent domain. It
matters not to whom the water- supply system belongs, individual or
corporation, or what franchises are connected with it; all may be
taken for public uses upon payment of just compensation. It is not
disputed by counsel that, were there no contract between the company
and the town, the waterworks might be taken by condemnation. And so
the contention is, practically, that the existence of the contract
withdraws the property, during the life of the contract, from the
scope of the power of eminent domain, because taking the tangible
property will prevent the company from supplying water, and therefore
operate to relieve the town from the payment of hydrant rentals. In
other words, the prohibition against a law impairing the obligation of
contracts stays the power of eminent domain in respect to property
which otherwise could be taken by it. Such a decision would be
far-reaching in its effects. There is probably no water company in the
land which has not some subsisting contract with a municipality which
it supplies, and within which its works are located;
[166 U.S. 685, 690]
and ruling that all those properties are beyond the reach of
the power of eminent domain during the existence of those contracts is
one which, to say the least, would require careful consideration
before receiving judicial sanction. The fact that this particular
contract is for the payment of money for hydrant rental is not vital.
Every contract is equally within the protecting reach of the
prohibitory clause of the constitution. The charter of a corporation
is a contract, and its obligations cannot be impaired. So it would
seem to follow, if plaintiff in error's contention is sound, that the
franchises of a corporation could not be taken by condemnation,
because thereby the contract created by the charter is impaired. The
privileges granted to the corporation are taken away, and the
obligation of the corporation to perform is also destroyed.
The vice of this argument is twofold: First. It ignores the fact
that the contract is a mere incident to the tangible property; that it
is the latter which, being fitted for public uses, is condemned. And
while the company, by being deprived of its tangible property, is
unable to perform its part of the contract, and therefore can make no
demands upon the town for performance on its part, it still is true
that the contract is not the thing which is sought to be condemned,
and its impairment, if impairment there be, is a mere consequence of
the appropriation of the tangible property. Second. A contract is
property, and, like any other property, may be taken under
condemnation proceedings for public use. New Orleans Gas Co. v.
Louisiana Light & Heat Producing & Manuf'g Co.,
115 U.S. 650, 673 , 6 S. Sup. Ct. 252. Its condemnation is, of
course, subject to the rule of just compensation, and that is all that
is implied in the decisions such as Hall v. Wisconsin,
103 U.S. 5 , cited by counsel. In that case it appeared that Hall
had a contract with the state for services entered into in pursuance
of a statute, that he performed the services, but that before
finishing his work the legislature repealed the statute authorizing
the contract. It was held that he was nevertheless entitled to his
stipulated compensation. The act of the legislature in the repeal was
not one providing for condemnation, and, in so far as it partook of
the [166 U.S. 685, 691]
nature of a condemnation, it ignored the obligation of
just compensation, and was, therefore, void; but it was not held that,
if just compensation had been provided, and a public use required, the
contract might not have been condemned.
The true view is that the condemnation proceedings do not impair
the contract, do not break its obligations, but appropriate it, as
they do the tangible property of the company, to public uses. The
statute under which these proceedings were had declares the necessity
of the acquisition 'for the public use of the reservoir as well as
machinery, pipes, franchises, and all other property' of the company,
and the application for the appointment of commissioners not only
described the tangible property, but also added: 'All franchises,
contracts, more particularly a certain contract dated the 15th day of
September, 1881, between the town of New Lots and the said Long Island
Water-Supply Company, and referred to in chapter 335, Laws of 1886,
and all other rights and property of whatsoever nature or kind, as the
same may so appear.' The commissioners, after a hearing, valued first
the tangible property at $370,000, and the franchises, contracts, and
all other rights and property, including this particular contract, at
$200,000. In other words, the condemnation proceedings did not
repudiate the contract, but appropriated it. and fixed its value. The
case of Bridge Co. v. Dix, 6 How. 507, is in point. The bridge company
had a charter from the state of Vermont creating it a corporation, and
investing it with the exclusive privilege of erecting a bridge over
West river within four miles of its mouth, and with the right of
taking tolls for passing the same. Under that authority it had erected
its bridge, and was in the enjoyment of the franchise. During the life
of the charter, and under authority of an act of the legislature,
condemnation proceedings were taken for the purpose of condemning the
bridge and extinguishing the charter; converting the former into a
free public highway. These proceedings culminated in an award of
compensation and a judgment of condemnation. The supreme court of the
state having sustained the proceedings, they were brought to this
court on error, and there, as here, the
[166 U.S. 685, 692]
contention was that the proceedings were in violation of the
tenth section of the first article of the constitution. This
contention was overruled, and in the course of the opinion it was
observed:
'No state, it is declared, shall pass a law impairing the
obligation of contracts; yet, with this concession constantly
yielded, it cannot be justly disputed that in every political
sovereign community there inheres necessarily the right and the duty
of guarding its own existence, and of protecting and promoting the
interests and welfare of the community at large. This power and this
duty are to be exerted not only in the highest acts of sovereignty,
and in the external relations of governments; they reach and
comprehend likewise the interior polity and relations of social
life, which should be regulated with reference to the advantage of
the whole society. This power, denominated the 'eminent domain of
the state,' is, as its name imports, paramount to all private rights
vested under the government, and these last are, by necessary
implication, held in subordination to this power, and must yield in
every instance to its proper exercise. ... Now, it is undeniable
that the investment of property in the citizen by the government,
whether made for a pecuniary consideration or founded on conditions
of civil or political duty, is a contract between the state, or the
government acting as its agent, and the grantee; and both the
parties thereto are bound in good faith to fulfill it. But into all
contracts, whether made between states and individuals or between in
dividuals only, there enter conditions which arise, not out of the
literal terms of the contract itself. They are superinduced by the
pre- existing and higher authority of the laws of nature, or
nations, or of the community to which the parties belong. They are
always presumed, and must be presumed, to be known and recognized by
all, are binding upon all, and need never, therefore, be carried
into express stipulation, for this could add nothing to their force.
Every contract is made in subordination to them, and must yield to
their control, as conditions inherent and paramount, wherever a
necessity for their execution shall occur. Such a condition is the
right of eminent domain. This right
[166 U.S. 685, 693] does not operate to
impair the contract affected by it, but recognizes its obligation in
the fullest extent, claiming only the fulfillment of an essential
and inseparable condition. ... A distinction has been attempted, in
argument, between the power of a government to appropriate for
public uses property which is corporeal, or may be said to be in
being, and the like power in the government to resume or extinguish
a franchise. The distinction thus attempted we regard as a
refinement which has no foundation in reason, and one that, in
truth, avoids the true legal or constitutional question in these
causes; namely, that of the right in private persons, in the use or
enjoyment of their private property, to control, and actually to
prohibit, the power and duty of the government to advance and
protect the general good. We are aware of nothing peculiar to a
franchise which can class it higher, or render it more sacred, than
other property. A franchise is property, and nothing more. It is
incorporeal property, and is so defined by Justice Blackstone, when
treating, in his second volume (chapter 3, p. 20), of the Rights of
Things.' See, also, Richmond, F. & P. R. Co. v. Louisa R. Co., 13
How. 71, 83; Boston & L. R. Corp. v. Salem & L. R. Co., 2 Gray, 1,
35, 36.
The views thus expressed have never been overruled, and we think
are controlling of this case. Counsel seek to distinguish that case
from this in that here, as they say, there is an executory contract
for 25 years, whereas in that case there was only incorporeal
property, the result of an executed grant; here the use of the
waterworks property is not changed, whereas there the bridge was
converted from a toll into a free bridge; and they quote some remarks
made by Mr. Justice McLean, in a concurring opinion in respect to this
matter (page 537), as follows:
'No state could resume a charter under the power of
appropriation, and carry on the functions of the corporation. A bank
charter could not be thus taken, and the business of the bank
continued, for public purposes. Nor could this bridge have been
taken by the state, and kept up by it as a toll bridge. This could
not be called an appropriation of private
[166 U.S. 685, 694]
property to public purposes. There would be no change
in the use, except the application of the profits, and this would
not bring the act within the power. The power must not only be
exercised bona fide by a state, but the property, not its product,
must be applied to public use. ... The use of this bridge, it is
contended, is the same as before the act of appropriation. The
public use the bridge now as before the act of appropriation; but it
was a toll bridge, and by the act it is made free. The use,
therefore, is not the same. The tax assessed on the citizens of the
town to keep up and pay for the bridge may be impolitic or unjust;
but that is not a matter for the consideration of this court.'
We do not think the differences between the cases such as to
affect the right of condemnation. A charter is not simply an executed
grant, but a continuing contract. There is a duty of performance by
the recipients of the grant which continues during the life of the
charter. Neither can the power of the state to condemn a waterworks
system depend upon the question whether it makes the supply of water
absolutely free to all individuals who desire to use it. The state,
which, in the first place, has the power to construct a water-supply
system, and charge individuals for the use of the water, may condemn a
system already constructed, and continue to make such charge. This is
not turning over property from one private corporation to another, but
taking property from a private corporation and vesting the title in
some municipal corporation for the public use. It is not essential to
a public use that it be absolutely free and without any charge to any
one. The state may build a railroad, and charge tolls for passengers
and freight. It is, nevertheless, a public function which it is
exercising, and the property is devoted to public uses. And so,
wherever there is cost in continuing a public work, the state has a
right to demand compensation for any individual use and personal
benefit therefrom.
Neither can it be said that there was not 'due process of law'
in these condemnation proceedings. It is not essential that the
assessment of damages be made by a jury. Such award may be made by
commissioners, at least where there is
[166 U.S. 685, 695] provision for a review
of their proceedings in the courts. Central Branch U. P. R. Co. v.
Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., 28 Kan. 453, 463; Cooley, Const. Lim.
563. And sections 9 and 10 of the act of 1892, under which these
proceedings were had, require that the commissioners make and file a
report of their proceedings and determination in the supreme court of
the county of Kings, and that application must be made to that court
for a confirmation of the report; that notice of such application must
be given, and that 'upon such application the court may confirm the
report, or may set it aside for irregularity, or for error of law in
the proceedings before the commissioners, or upon the ground that the
award, in part or in whole, is excessive, or is insufficient'; and
appeal was allowed from the decision of that court to a higher. We do
not question the proposition that form is not the only thing essential
to due process. We said in the recent case of Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co.
v. Chicago,
166 U.S. 226 , 17 Sup. Ct. 581: 'The mere form of the proceeding
instituted against the owner, even if he be admitted to defend, cannot
convert the process used into due process of law, if the necessary
result be to deprive him of property without compensation.'
It may be true, as contended, that, as construed by the court of
appeals, the determination of the commissioners is conclusive as to
the mere value of the property; but there is no denial of due process
in making the findings of fact by the triors of fact, whether
commissioners or a jury, final as to such facts, and leaving open to
the courts simply the inquiry as to whether there was any erroneous
basis adopted by the triors in their appraisal, or other errors in
their proceedings.
The error charged against the commissioners in respect to their
basis of valuation is that they failed to regard the company as
possessed of exclusive rights. It is said by counsel in their brief
that the company had, by virtue of its contract and the act of
annexation, 'two vested rights as against the city of Brooklyn: (1) A
vested right, resting in contract, to continue to supply water under
and pursuant to the said contracts with the town of New Lots 'during
the term of said [166
U.S. 685, 696] contract'; that is, for the unexpired
period of said contracts,-about fourteen years. (2) A further vested
right, resting in contract and valid legislative enactment, to enjoy
its franchises until the expiration of its charter, protected from any
rivalry on the part of the city of Brooklyn.'
The view taken by the majority of the commissioners is thus
stated in their report:
'To recapitulate what has just been said, we have valued the
franchise upon the as sumptions (1) that at present the water
company alone has the right publicly to purvey water in the
Twenty-Sixth ward; (2) that the exclusiveness now incident to its
right may at any time be taken from it by the legislature, or by
local authorities acting under legislation; but (3) that neither the
legislature nor local authorities would, in determining whether to
take from the company the exclusiveness of its right, fail to have
such due regard as is demanded by ample and fair public policy, to
the past investment, risks, and services of the company, and to the
reasonably just expectations which those who have invested money in
its work had in mind when so investing.'
The court of appeals held that neither the statute under which
the company was organized, nor the contract, nor the act of
annexation, gave to the company rights exclusive and beyond the reach
of legislative action. These conclusions of the court of appeals are
vigorously challenged in the argument, but we are of opinion that they
are correct. The statute simply provided for the organization of water
companies. The contract in terms contained no words of exclusion. It
gave to the company the privilege of laying its mains in the streets
of the town, and contained a covenant on the part of the town to pay
certain hydrant rental. But grants from the public are strictly
construed in favor of the public, and grants of a privilege are not
ordinarily to be taken as grants of an exclusive privilege. Charles
River Bridge Co. v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420; Turnpike Co. v. State,
3 Wall. 210; Stein v. Water-Supply Co.,
141 U.S. 67 , 11 Sup. Ct. 892; Hamilton Gaslight & Coke Co. v.
Hamilton City,
146 U.S. 258 , 13 Sup. Ct. 90; Syracuse Water Co. v. City of
Syracuse, 116 N. Y. 167, 22 N. E. 381. Nor is there anything in the
act [166 U.S. 685, 697]
of annexation which made a contract or created a right
beyond the power of the legislature to change. It gave the city the
right to purchase or condemn at any time within two years, but this
specification of time did not operate to prevent the legislature from
enlarging the time, or from granting at any subsequent period during
the life of the contract a further right of purchase or condemnation.
No consent was asked of the town company in the act of annexation; it
entered into no new contract; nothing was done to enlarge the rights
which it had against the public. The act was simply one of legislative
discretion in respect to municipal organization, and, like any other
such act, subject to future modification by the legislature.
Neither can the act of 1892 be adjudged in conflict with the
federal constitution because it fails expressly and in detail to
prescribe the uses to which the property shall be put by the city of
Brooklyn after the condemnation. The property condemned was not vacant
land susceptible to a multitude of uses. The character of its use had
already been determined by the action of the company. It was already
used for public purposes, and the condemnation simply took the title
away from the private corporation, and vested it in the municipality.
And the statute cannot be adjudged unconstitutional because it did not
in terms declare that the city of Brooklyn should continue the same
use or appropriate the property to some other equally public purpose.
These are the vital questions in the case. We see no error in
the judgment, and it is therefore affirmed.
Mr. Justice PECKHAM takes no part in the decision of this case.