Eau Claire Water Co. v. City of Eau Claire
Eau Claire Water Co. v. City of Eau Claire
Opinion of the Court
Tbe contention is tbat tbe complaint states good grounds for tbe equitable relief asked, because tbe defendants seek to fasten a claim upon plaintiff’s waterworks system, to wbicb they are not entitled in law under tbe facts and circumstances alleged, and tbat, unless defendants be restrained, tbeir conduct in tbis respect will injuriously and vexatiously affect plaintiff’s property rights and thus subject it to irreparable losses. Plaintiff therefore asks that it be protected by order of tbe court preventing defendants from taking any further steps in tbe matter, and tbat tbe court declare tbe claim of a right to purchase to be without foundation in law. Tbis demand of tbe plaintiff is made upon tbe several grounds alleged in tbe complaint, wbicb are: (1) Tbat tbe city bad no power to contract for the purchase of tbe waterworks, and hence tbe provisions of tbe ordinance respecting it are ineffectual and void; (2) tbat, if it bad any such
The power of a city to establish, maintain, and operate a system of waterworks was clearly recognized in Ellinwood v. Reedsburg, 91 Wis. 131, 64 N. W. 885, as within the exercise of the powers granted it to accomplish the usual functions pertaining to police regulations, the preservation of the public health, and the general welfare. We cannot discover that acquiring an existing waterworks system, constructed by private parties under authority from the city, is an impediment to the exercise of this power. In its nature this is an exercise of such power for proper municipal purposes and differs from the usual method only in the manner of accomplishing it. Such method of acquiring control of waterworks plants has been upheld as proper in other jurisdictions. Fayetteville v. Fayetteville W., L. & P. Co. 135 Fed. 400; Bristol v. Bristol & W. W. W. 19 R. I. 413, 34 Atl. 359; 2 Abbott, Mun. Corp. §§ 456, 457.
It is said that if the contract for the purchase, contained in the ordinance authorizing the construction of plaintiff’s waterworks system, was legal in its inception, then the city
The allegations of the complaint show that the agreement of February 11, 1902, embraced an adjustment of differences between the city and the waterworks company respecting complaints of insufficiency of the service furnished the city and its inhabitants, but nothing appears, either expressly or by implication, indicating that the agreement in the ordinance respecting the city’s right to purchase the property was modified. Everything undertaken pursuant to that agreement was for the purpose of bringing the waterworks system up to the required state of efficiency evidently contemplated in the original undertaking for its construction, and the extension and additions of such improvements of the plant were treated as carrying out the original plan for providing a water
Another claim is that defendant cannot enforce any right to purchase under the notice served by its mayor on August 4, 1905, because no steps can be taken to effect this purpose until the city decides to make the purchase, and that such determination must be made on December 15th, the date of the expiration of the five-year intervals. This is asserted upon the condition in the contract that:
“Whenever the city shall determine or desire to purchase said works, the mayor thereof shall give written notice to said grantees, their heirs and assigns, to appoint and select two persons to act as arbitrators in fixing and appraising the value of such waterworks.”
The city is also to select two persons as arbitrators, and the four persons so selected are to choose a fifth. If these terms of the agreement were to be considered independently of all the other facts, it might furnish a basis for such a construction; but they must be read and interpreted with the other parts of this agreement, wherein it is specified that after the appraisal of the plant has been made and reduced to writing by the persons so chosen by the parties, and after they have delivered a duplicate thereof to the plaintiff and filed another with the city clerk within ten days after the appraisal so made, the city “shall thereupon have the right then and there to exercise' the option to take the said waterworks, and all property, rights, and appurtenances connected therewith, or. in any manner appertaining thereto, at the price so fixed.” The terms of this provision express clearly that the city is
It is also contended that the city is powerless to effect such a purchase, under the facts and circumstances alleged, upon the ground that its consummation calls for the creation of. a city debt in excess of the constitutional limitation. In view of the assessed valuation of the taxable property of the city, and in view of the fact that the city now has an indebtedness nearly reaching the constitutional limitation, and that an addition to the present city indebtedness of the amount of
Upon these considerations it must be held that the complaint states no facts showing that the right of the city to purchase, under the provisions of the ordinance, has been abrogated or lost; that the city is properly within its rights in seeking to have arbitrators appointed to appraise the plaintiff’s.waterworks plant for the purpose of enforcing the right reserved to it of securing it by purchase and conveyance; and that the trial court properly held that the complaint stated no grounds entitling plaintiff to relief restraining defendants from proceeding in this matter.
By ih& Oourt. — Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Eau Claire Water Company v. City of Eau Claire and another
- Status
- Published