The provision in the Constitution of the United States that "No
state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts"
necessarily refers to the law made after the particular contract in
suit.
The judgment of the highest court of a state involving the
enforcement or interpretation of a contact is not reviewable in
this Court, under the clause of the Constitution protecting the
obligation of contracts against impairment by state legislation and
under the existing statutes defining and regulating its
jurisdiction, unless by its terms or necessary operation it gives
effect to some provision of the state constitution or some
legislative enactment of the state claimed by the unsuccessful
party to impair the contract in question.
Bill in equity in a state court of Pennsylvania to enjoin the
municipal authorities of Easton, Pennsylvania, from constructing
waterworks. Decree dismissing the bill, which was affirmed by the
supreme court of the state. The plaintiff sued out this writ of
error. The federal question is stated in the opinion of the
court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
For many years prior to June 21, 1880, the Lehigh Water Company,
a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania, by the
purchase at judicial sale of the rights, powers, privileges, and
franchises of the West Ward Company, also a Pennsylvania
corporation, maintained a system of
Page 121 U. S. 389
waterworks whereby the inhabitants of the Borough of Easton in
that commonwealth were supplied with water for domestic and
business purposes. On that day it accepted the provisions of an act
of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, approved April 20, 1874,
entitled "An act to provide for the incorporation and regulation of
certain corporations." By such acceptance, it acquired the
privileges, immunities, franchises, and powers conferred by the act
upon corporations created under it.
It also became entitled to the benefit of the third clause of
the 34th section of that act, relating to water and gas
companies.
That clause provides:
"The right to have and enjoy the franchises and privileges of
such incorporation within the district or locality covered by its
charter shall be an exclusive one, and no other company shall be
incorporated for that purpose until the said corporation shall have
from its earnings realized and divided among its stockholders,
during five years, a dividend equal to eight percent per annum upon
its capital stock,
provided that the said corporations
shall at all times furnish pure gas and water, and any citizen
using the same may make complaint of impurity or deficiency in
quantity, or both, to the court of common pleas of the proper
county, by bill filed, and, after hearing the parties touching the
same, the said court shall have power to make such order in the
premises as may seem just and equitable, and may dismiss the
complaints, or compel the corporation to correct the evil
complained of."
The seventh clause of the same section provides:
"It shall be lawful at any time after twenty years from the
introduction of water or gas, as the case may be, into any place as
aforesaid for the town, borough, city, or district into which the
said company shall be located to become the owners of said works
and the property of said company by paying therefor the net cost of
erecting and maintaining the same, with interest thereon at the
rate of ten percent per annum, deducting from said interest all
dividends theretofore declared."
Laws Penn. 1874, pp. 73, 93.
Page 121 U. S. 390
After the acceptance by the Lehigh Water Company of the
provisions of the act of 1874, the constituted authorities of the
Borough of Easton, in conformity with a vote of its qualified
electors and under power conferred by Acts of the General Assembly
approved March 12, 1869 and April 15, 1867, Laws Penn. 1867, pp.
412, 1253-1254, determined to construct and itself maintain a
system of public works for supplying its inhabitants with water.
This suit was brought by the Lehigh Water Company for the purpose
of enjoining the authorities of the borough from constructing or
providing such works or from appropriating money therefor. The suit
proceeds upon these grounds: 1. that the acts of 1867 ceased to be
valid after the adoption of the present Constitution of
Pennsylvania; 2. that the Lehigh Water Company acquired, by the act
of 1874, the exclusive right to erect and maintain waterworks for
supplying water to the inhabitants of Easton; 3. that the acts of
1867, if not superseded by the Constitution of Pennsylvania,
impaired the obligation of the contract created between that
commonwealth and the company by the latter's acceptance of the
provisions of the act of 1874; consequently they were void under
the national Constitution.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, affirming the judgment of the
court of original jurisdiction dismissing the suit, held that the
exclusive right acquired by the Lehigh Water Company under the act
of 1874 was exclusive only against other private water companies,
and that the legislation did not intend to prohibit a city,
borough, or other municipal corporation from providing its
inhabitants with water by means of works constructed by itself from
money in its own treasury; also that the acts of 1867 were neither
repealed by the act of 1874 nor superseded by the state
constitution.
In reference to the remaining ground relied upon by the company,
the state court said:
"The third ground of objection is wholly without merit. By
constructing waterworks of its own, the borough will not destroy
the franchises of the plaintiff company. It may impair their value,
and probably will do so, but of this the company
Page 121 U. S. 391
have no legal cause of complaint. The granting of a new charter
to a new corporation may sometimes render valueless the franchises
of an existing corporation; but unless the state by contract has
precluded itself from such new grant, the incidental injury can
constitute no obstacle.
Charles River Bridge v. Warren
Bridge, 11 Pet. 420;
Turnpike Co. v.
Maryland, 3 Wall. 210;
Piscataqua Bridge v. New
Hampshire Bridge, 7 N.H. 35. No contract has been shown
between the water company and the state by which the latter is
precluded from granting to the Borough of Easton the privilege of
erecting works to supply its citizens with water."
The only question presented by the record which this Court can
properly consider is whether the judgment below denies to the
plaintiff in error any right or privilege secured by that provision
of the Constitution of the United States which declares that "no
state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts."
Obviously this clause cannot be invoked for the reversal of the
judgment below. It is equally clear that the law of the state to
which the Constitution refers in that clause must be one enacted
after the making of the contract the obligation of which is claimed
to be impaired. Neither the Lehigh Water Company nor its
predecessor had, under any statute enacted prior to 1874, an
exclusive right to maintain waterworks in the Borough of Easton for
supplying its inhabitants with water. Nor did the grant to the
borough, in the acts of 1867, of the power to construct and
maintain a system of public waterworks infringe any right or
privilege which the plaintiff in error then had under its charter.
But the claim is that the exclusive privilege acquired by the
company under the statute of 1874 was impaired in value by the acts
passed in 1867. It cannot, however, with propriety be said that the
obligation of a contract made with the state in 1874 was impaired
by statutes enacted in 1867. Whether the former repealed by
implication the acts of 1867 presents no question arising under the
national Constitution. That is a question simply of statutory
construction, which the state
Page 121 U. S. 392
court was competent to determine, and whose judgment in respect
thereto is not subject to reexamination in this Court. Had the
Borough of Easton been authorized, by a statute enacted
after the Lehigh Water Company had acquired the exclusive
privilege given by the act of 1874, then this Court would have been
compelled to decide, upon its independent judgment, whether the
latter applied only to private corporations, for in such case the
determination of that question would be involved in the inquiry
whether there was a contract between the state and the company,
and, if there was a contract, whether its obligation was impaired
by a law subsequently enacted.
Louisville Gas Co. v. Citizens'
Gas Co., 115 U. S. 683,
115 U. S.
697.
The argument in behalf of the company seems to rest upon the
general idea that this Court, under the statutes defining its
appellate jurisdiction, may reexamine the judgment of the state
court in every case involving the enforcement of contracts. But
this view is unsound. The state court may erroneously determine
questions arising under a contract which constitutes the basis of
the suit before it. It may hold a contract void which in our
opinion is valid; it may adjudge a contract to be valid which in
our opinion is void; or its interpretation of the contract may in
our opinion be radically wrong; but in neither of such cases would
the judgment be reviewable by this Court under the clause of the
Constitution protecting the obligation of contracts against
impairment by state legislation, and under the existing statutes
defining and regulating its jurisdiction, unless that judgment, in
terms or by its necessary operation, gives effect to some provision
of the state constitution, or some legislative enactment of the
state which is claimed by the unsuccessful party to impair the
obligation of the particular contract in question.
Railroad
Company v. Rock, 4 Wall. 177,
71 U. S. 181;
Railroad Company v.
McClure, 10 Wall. 511,
77 U. S. 515;
Knox v. Exchange
Bank, 12 Wall. 379,
79 U. S. 383;
Delmas v. Ins.
Co., 14 Wall. 661,
81 U. S. 665;
University v. People, 99 U. S. 309,
99 U. S. 319;
Chicago Life Ins. Co. v. Needles, 113 U.
S. 574,
113 U. S.
582.
The judgment is
Affirmed.