Bethlehem City Water Co. v. Bethlehem Borough

80 A. 984, 231 Pa. 454, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 865
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 24, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 163
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 A. 984 (Bethlehem City Water Co. v. Bethlehem Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bethlehem City Water Co. v. Bethlehem Borough, 80 A. 984, 231 Pa. 454, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 865 (Pa. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

The borough of Bethlehem, Northampton county, was incorporated in 1845, and in 1854 became subject to the general borough Act of April 3, 1851, P. L. 320. The borough of West Bethlehem was incorporated under the same act in 1886 out of territory in Hanover township, Lehigh county. A small stream — the county line — lay between the two boroughs, which were consolidated in 1904 and constitute the present borough of Bethlehem, the defendant.

[456]*456The Bethlehem South Gas and Water Company was incorporated by a special act of assembly, approved April 13, 1864, and was empowered to introduce into “the village of Bethlehem South, and the villages adjoining, in Saucon, Salisbury, and Hanover townships, in the counties of Northampton and Lehigh, a sufficient supply of gas and pure water.” The company was organized in 1867 and immediately thereafter began to supply Bethlehem South with water. In 1884, the company extended its mains and pipes into the village of Hanover township, which, in September, 1886, was incorporated as the borough of West Bethlehem. The company, on July 17, 1885, accepted the constitution of 1874; and on November 20, 1899, filed in the office of the secretary of the commonwealth its acceptance of the constitution and of the corporation Act of April 29, 1874, P. L. 68, and its supplements. The Mountain Water Company was incorporated in July, 1893, and the Bethlehem Consolidated Water Company in January, 1902. The three companies were, on April 19, 1902, merged into the Bethlehem Consolidated Water Company which, on December 3, 1903, sold and conveyed to the plaintiff, the Bethlehem City Water Company, all its franchises and property.

Prior to the incorporation of West Bethlehem borough the water company laid its mains and pipes through the principal streets of the former village, then in Hanover township, and, at the instance of the inhabitants, supplied them with water for domestic purposes and fire protection. At that time, there were eight fire plugs in the village. The company has, since the incorporation of the borough, continued to supply water for municipal and domestic purposes, and has enlarged and extended its plant to meet the increased demand of the growing population of West Bethlehem borough. The number of fire plugs at present is thirty-nine.

In December, 1908, the town council of the defendant borough passed an ordinance which was approved by the burgess providing for an election to determine upon an [457]*457increase of the borough’s indebtedness for the purpose of erecting a water plant to supply water to the borough of Bethlehem, including the territory embraced in the former borough of West Bethlehem. The election was held and resulted in favor of the proposed increase of indebtedness. This bill was filed by the plaintiff company to enjoin the defendant borough and its officers from increasing the municipal indebtedness and from issuing any bonds for the purpose of raising funds for the construction of waterworks, and from laying mains in and supplying water to the territory formerly comprising the borough of West Bethlehem, now a part of the present borough. A perpetual injunction was issued as prayed for, and the defendant borough has appealed.

The plaintiff contends that the borough of West Bethlehem by its action and relations with the plaintiff company and its predecessors, resulting in an implied contract with the water company to furnish a supply of water to the borough, has exhausted its power to supply water to its citizens and is estopped from erecting and maintaining its own plant for that purpose. The question for decision in the case is, therefore, whether under the facts and the law the borough has a right to construct its own water plant.

It was found that “no express contract was ever entered into between the plaintiff or its predecessors and the borough of West Bethlehem, defining the relation existing between the said parties, either as to the amount which the borough was to pay for water supplied, or as to the term in which it was to be supplied; and no ordinance granting permission to occupy the streets was ever asked for or received by the plaintiff or its predecessors from the borough of West Bethlehem or the defendant borough.” This finding would ordinarily, under our cases, be a sufficient reply to the contention of the plaintiff company that the borough had selected another agency to supply water to its inhabitants and was therefore estopped from constructing its own plant for the purpose. It is argued, [458]*458however, and upon this the company relies to sustain its position and the decree in its favor, that there is and has been since 1887 by reason of the act and conduct of the parties an implied contract whereby the boroughs, in consideration of the furnishing of water by the plaintiff and its predecessors, agreed not to supply the inhabitants of West Bethlehem borough with water through its own municipal agency. We find nothing in the record to sustain this contention. The company had erected its plant and was supplying water to the territory of West Bethlehem for domestic and fire purposes before the existence of the borough. This was done by virtue of its charter powers. Subsequent to the creation of the borough, it continued to perform the same service, not by reason of any contract with the borough, but in exercise of the same powers. It is said, however, and it may be conceded that after the incorporation of the borough in 1886 the water company enlarged its plant, extended its mains, that additional fire plugs were installed at different points in the borough at the request of the municipality and for which the borough paid an annual rent, that the council agreed to pay for fire plugs at certain locations if the company would extend its mains to those points, and that the borough published statements showing expenditures to the plaintiff company and its predecessors for water received for municipal purposes. How do either of these facts or all of them together establish an implied contract that the “borough agreed not to supply the inhabitants of West Bethlehém with water through its own municipal agency”? The general borough act of 1851 confers upon every borough incorporated under the act the “power to provide a supply of water for the use of .the inhabitants.” It is this power, when once exercised, that is exhausted and estops the borough from adopting another method to supply water.

Keeping in view the settled doctrine that a municipal corporation,- when exerting its function for the general good, is not to be shorn of its power by mere implication [459]*459and that the intention to restrict the exercise of its public powers must be manifested by words so clear as not to admit of two different or inconsistent meanings, it is apparent that none of the acts of the municipality, suggested by the plaintiff, discloses an intention to contract with the water company to provide water “for the use of the inhabitants” of the borough or to make the company the municipal agent for such purpose. The water system of the plaintiff company, as we have seen, was constructed before the incorporation of the borough, and the inhabitants of that territory were being supplied with water by the company. It entered the territory and laid its mains and pipes without permission, invitation or request of the municipality and solely by virtue of the authority conferred by its charter. There was no express contract to supply water to the township or to the borough.

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Bluebook (online)
80 A. 984, 231 Pa. 454, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bethlehem-city-water-co-v-bethlehem-borough-pa-1911.