City of Detroit v. Ellis

Michigan Supreme Court
City of Detroit v. Ellis, 103 Mich. 612 (Mich. 1895)
61 N.W. 886
Grant, Hooker, Long, McGrath, Montgomery

City of Detroit v. Ellis

Opinion of the Court

McGrath, G. J.

This is an application for an order *613do show cause why the Attorney General should not file an information in the nature of a quo warranto to inquire by what right the Detroit Citizens’ Street-Bailway Company claims to exercise, and does exercise, in certain streets •of the city of Detroit, the right of maintaining and using street-railway tracks in said streets.

Petitioners allege that in November, 1862, the common council of the city of Detroit passed an ordinance whereby •consent was given to one Bushnell and his associates, who were about to organize as a corporation, to lay street railway tracks and to operate a street-railway system in and ■upon certain streets in the city of Detroit; that “ afterwards, •on the 9th day of May, 1863, said.Bushnell and his associates organized into a corporation, which, by its articles, was to continue for 30 years, under the name of .the Detroit City Bailway, which entered into possession of said streets, and built and maintained street-car lines, and exercised all the usual franchises connected therewith; ” that “ November 14, 1879, another ordinance was made, adding other provisions to the agreement between the street-railway company and the city, and providing that "the ‘powers and privileges conferred and obligations imposed on the Detroit City Bailway Company by the ordinance passed November 24, 1862, and the amendments thereto, are hereby extended and limited to 30 years from this date;”’ that in 1891 the Detroit Citizens’ StreetBailway Company was organized for a period of 30 years, and, soon after its organization, received a conveyance of all the property rights and franchises of said Detroit City Bailway Company, and under such conveyance the Detroit Citizens’ Street-Bail way Company claims the right to operate, and is now using, all the franchises in said streets; “that the value of the franchises and rights in said streets occupied and claimed by said Citizens’ Street-Bailway •Company is very great, and that its claims are a great *614obstacle, as your petitioners are informed and believe, and therefore aver, to the making of the best terms which the city can make for the public accommodation by the establishment and maintenance of improved street-car lines on said streets, and are therefore injurious to the city and all residents; that, if the claims of said Citizens’ Company are declared void, arrangements can readily be made with other street-car companies by which the car service can he greatly improved, and either the fares much reduced, or the amount paid to the city be greatly increased, or both; that the said ordinance of 1879, attempting to-extend the franchises and rights of said Detroit City Railway 30 years from November 14, 1879, was void after May 9, 1893, because the life of said grantee expired at that tipie.”

In 1892 the city of Detroit filed its bill in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, in chancery, against the-Detroit City Railway, the Detroit Citizens’ Street-Railway Company, and others, setting forth at length the matters which are substantially set forth in the petition herein, and praying that defendants might be enjoined from operating street railways in said streets after the 9th day of May, 1893. The said cause was afterwards removed to the circuit court of the United States for the Eastern District of Michigan, in equity, where a decree was finally entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill. City of Detroit v. Detroit City Ry. Co., 60 Fed. Rep. 161. Defendants took the case to the court of appeals, where it was heard upon its merits; and in October, 1894, a decree was entered reversing the decree of the circuit court, and dismissing the bill. 64 Fed. Rep. 628, 12 C. C. A. 365.

Why must not the question here sought to be raised by quo warranto be regarded as res judicata as against the moving parties, the city of Detroit and certain of its citizens? Under its charter, the city of Detroit has the charge *615and supervision of the streets of that city. It has the power to establish, open, widen, extend, straighten, alter, vacate, and abolish streets; to clean, grade, pave, repair, and improve the same; to prohibit and prevent incumbering or obstructing highways; to remove incumbrances froim such streets; and to control, prescribe, and regulate thei manner in which streets within the city shall be used and enjoyed. In the very act containing the grant to the, street-railway company, the supervision and control, by cities and other local municipalities, over streets and highways, is recognized,- and the exercise of the right granted is made dependent upon the consent of the local entity. If a street-railway company is operating its system upon the streets of the city of Detroit in the absence of a valid and binding consent granted by the city, the municipality is certainly a proper party, if not the proper party, to take proceedings to enjoin such operation, not only by virtue of its control over the streets, but also because the power to consent involves the-authority to prevent. The municipality moves in such case, not as a proprietor, but in its representative capacity, — as the representative of the public, — as the proper party to complain of the unauthorized use of such streets. The only question in issue is as. to the validity of the consent granted.

Counsel for the petitioners say in their brief that—

“ This application is made by the municipal authorities of the city, who are the trustees of the public, for the-protection of the interests of the public in the streets.”

Again they say:

“In this case the municipality itself makes the complaint. It is vested with the control of the streets in the interest and for the protection and benefit of the public. It is hindered and prevented from the exercise of such control by the acts of the railway company.”

The bill in the case in the United States court was filed *616by tbe same authorities, in precisely the same capacity, and to reach the same result. Can the adjudication, then, be avoided by the simple addition of individual members of the body comprising the beneficiaries? If so there will be no end to the litigation. In the case of Clark v. Wolf, 29 Iowa, 197, cited in Wells on Res Adjudicata (section 136), it was held as to a county — and the same principle would apply to a city — that a judgment against it, or its legal representatives, in a matter of general interest to all the people thereof, as one respecting the levy and collection of a tax, is binding, not only on the official representatives of the county named in the proceeding as defendants, but upon all the citizens thereof, though not made parties defendant by name. This must be the true rule as to matters of public concern, when the proper representative of the public has moved or has been made a party to the proceeding.

If the authority to consent to the use of its streets be regarded as a delegation of power to the municipality, and the authority over the streets be also considered as a delegation of power to the city, the municipality must be regarded, as is said in Railway Co. v. City of Belleville, 47 Ill. App. 388, as “related to the State as its agent," in so far, at least, as to conclude the State by litigation had in good faith respecting the subject-matter. Again, the State has regarded the matter of consent as one of purely local concern. A controversy arose between the city of Detroit and the Citizens’ Railway Company as to whether the consent of the city had been given in such a manner .as to be available to the present company and binding upon the city, and the city appealed to the courts, where the matter has been determined. The only question litigated was whether the consent given survived to the present company. In a proceeding instituted by the municipality, a court of competent jurisdiction has determined *617that matter in favor of the company, and that determination is conclusive upon all parties concerned.-

The order to show cause must be denied.

Long, Grant, and Montgomery, JJ., concurred with McGrath, 0. J.

Dissenting Opinion

Hooker, J.

Without dissenting from the views expressed by my brother, I prefer to concur in the result reached in the case upon other grounds. It is nowhere shown that this proceeding is of concern to the State. Indeed, counsel say that all that is asked is that the Attorney General shall permit the use of his name to the relators, thus practically confirming the already obvious fact that the city of Detroit wishes to be allowed to continue a litigation in the name of another which it cannot lawfully do in its own, being foreclosed by an adverse decision from a court of competent jurisdiction in a suit instituted by itself. It would be anomalous to grant a discretionary writ for such a purpose.

Reference

Full Case Name
The City of Detroit v. Adolphus A. Ellis, Attorney General
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published