Fall v. Cty. of Sutter
Fall v. Cty. of Sutter
Opinion of the Court
Cope, J. concurring.
This bill was filed to restrain the defendants from building and setting up a free bridge over the Feather River, at or near Marysville. The ground of complaint is, that the plaintiffs are the owners and possessors of a licensed toll-bridge near by. The plaintiffs aver that the franchise was acquired in 1852 by the plaintiff Hanson ; that since the acquiring of the franchise the holders thereof, assigns, etc., have done everything required of them by law; that all the franchises, property, etc., in connection with the bridge, have been held by the present plaintiffs since 1855 ; that in 1852 plaintiff Hanson and cocorporators, under the name of the Yuba City and Marysville Bridge Company (having been previously organized as a corporation in this name) made due application to the Court of Sessions of the county of Yuba for authority to construct their bridge, and duly observed and fulfilled all the terms and requirements of the law; and on the fifth of October, 1852, that Court, by order, granted to the corporation authority to construct and a license to keep the same and collect the tolls thereon
The Judge of the County Court of Sutter having denied an injunction upon this bill, the plaintiffs below appeal from this order; and counsel, waiving technical objections, have desired that the case thus made be decided upon its legal merits.
We do not consider it necessary to criticise very closely the provisions of the Act of 1850 or 1855 in reference to bridges, ferries, etc., to determine whether the rights of the plaintiffs are governed by the first or last of these statutes, or both together; nor is it necessary to decide the question of the power of the Legislature to
It is not necessary to criticise the particular language of the Act of 1850 ; for supposing that the limitations and provisions applicable to the Court of Sessions apply to or control the Legislature, and supposing further, that the rights of the appellants rest under and are protected by that act—suppositions which we make only for the argument—still, by the Act of 1850, there is no grant of an exclusive right. It is true, the Court of Sessions could by that act only grant another bridge or ferry franchise—after the first had been granted—in certain contingencies, the public convenience being one; but the question is, who is to judge of the public convenience, or whether a given thing is for that convenience. The answer is, that body or power to whom the public welfare is committed with the general power to provide for and promote it. Public convenience, in this sense, is not a fact so much as it is a conclusion, or matter of judgment, or of expediency, and it is the same thing as if the word interest or policy were used, the effect of which would be to make the action of the granting power to depend upon its discretion, which probably could not be reviewed in a Court of Justice. It would be peculiarly a matter of political regulation, not a fact for legal ascertainment.
While it may shock our notions of a true conservatism that the Legislature should, as the facts represent them to have done here, be allowed to deal harshly with individual rights, after having authorized and encouraged an enterprise, leading necessarily to the expenditure of a large sum of money upon the faith that the profits
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FALL v. THE COUNTY OF SUTTER
- Cited By
- 13 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Franchises for erecting toll-bridges, or ferries, being sovereign prerogatives, belong to the political power of the State, and are primarily represented and granted by the Legislature as the head of the political power. • Where the power of granting these franchises has been by legislative enactment delegated to subordinate tribunals, as in this State to the Courts of Sessions and Boards of Supervisors, such tribunals are only agents of the Legislature in this respect. Grants made by these subordinate tribunals by virtue of the authority thus delegated, are equally valid as if made by the Legislature directly, and the effect of a grant by them is to give a right of property to the grantee or licensee which it is not in the power of the Legislature to divest or transfer to another, so long as the owner holds in obedience to law. Grants of franchises of this character, not being exclusive in their terms, do not confer upon the grantees any exclusive right to the line of travel which is accommodated by them, or to its profits, and do not estop the granting power from making other grants of like character, the effect of which is to impair the value and take away the profits of the franchise first granted. Where the grant of such franchises is not in terms exclusive, the Government holding this power, to tie exercised for the public interest and convenience, is not to be presumed to part with its right to make other grants which may impair the value of the first, and will not be held to have done so except where such an intent appears affirmatively and plainly. This intent is not shown from a mere grant of the franchise or privilege. The provisions of the Acts of 1850 and 1855, concerning bridges and ferries, prohibiting the subordinate granting tribunals from licensing a second bridge or ferry within one mile of a former one, except under certain conditions, one of which is where a second grant is required by the public convenience,'impose no restrictions upon the power of the Legislature in making other grants. The question of what the public convenience requires, is a political not a legal one. Its decision rests with the Legislature and depends upon its discretion, the exercise of which, in the granting of a subsequent franchise, is conclusive and not reviewable in a Court of Justice. Under the Act of 1850 concerning public ferries, the plaintiffs, in 1852, obtained from the Court of Sessions of Tuba County, a license to construct and maintain a toll-bridge across the Feather Kiver, at a point near the city of Marysville, and constructed and have since maintained, at the point indicated, a bridge sufficient to accommodate the line of travel, and have complied with all the provisions of the law regulating franchises of this character. In 1859 the Legislature by special act granted to the defendants the privilege of constructing another bridge within six hundred feet of that of plaintiffs, and calculated to accommodate the same lino of travel, and to impair greatly the profits and value of plaintiffs' franchise. Defendants having commenced the construction of a bridge under this act, plain tifis brought this action to enjoin its completion and its use for the purpose intended: Held, that plaintiffs were not entitled to the injunction.