City Mill Co. v. Honolulu Sewer & Water Commission

30 Haw. 912, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 48
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1929
Docket1847
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 912 (City Mill Co. v. Honolulu Sewer & Water Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Mill Co. v. Honolulu Sewer & Water Commission, 30 Haw. 912, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 48 (haw 1929).

Opinion

*913 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

By Act 150, L. 1925, the legislature created a commission, to be known as the Honolulu sewer and water commission, consisting of five citizens of the Territory and residents of Honolulu, to be appointed by the governor in accordance with section 80 of the Organic Act. The commission ivas created for' the purpose of planning* and constructing an adequate sewer and Avater system for the district of Honolulu and was given certain subsidiary powers not material to be here considered. By Act 222, L. 1927, certain additional powers were conferred up- . on the commission. The title of the latter Act is: “An Act to provide for an investigation and report by the Honolulu sewer and water commission upon the Avater resources available for the district of Honolulu, with recommendations for legislation to provide for their-proper conservation, development, use and control, and. further providing for the immediate control and regula *914 ■tion of new, or reopening of old, artesian wells in the district of Honolulu.” In a preamble to the Act it is said: “Whereas, in the report submitted to the legislature of the Territory of Hawaii at its fourteenth regular session by the Honolulú sewer and water commission, pursuant to the terms of Act 150 of the Session Laws of 1925, it is represented to the legislature that the water resources within the district of Honolulu, on the Island of Oahu, are limited, and do not increase with the growth of popúlation or the enlargement of the requirements for water therein; that unless the same are carefully conserved and economically administered they will soon become inadequate for the public needs; and that the health and general welfare of the public will require that the manner and extent of the development, conservation, use and control of the water resources of said district should be determined and regulated by governmental authority as soon as practicable.” In section 1 it is provided that the commission “is hereby vested with full power and authority to survey and investigate the location and sources of supply of water within the district of Honolulu, both surface and underground, and any surface waters outside of said district in said island, and to determine or estimate the amounts available for use and , the maximum productivity of such sources thereof.” Section 2 makes it a duty of the commission to study and compile records and estimates of “water required for present and reasonably prospective uses” in Honolulu and to devise and recommend to the legislature “prospective ways and means by which such uses may be coordinated and served with a maximum conservation, storage, distribution and application of all waters of said district” and “to estimate the cost of the necessary works for, carrying out such objects.” Under section 3 all owners and users of artesian wells in the district *915 of Honolulu are required to furnish to the commission all data desired by it relating to the location and use of artesian wells. Section 4 provides that “any person owning an artesian well in said district may relieve himself of further liability therefor * * * by granting to the City and County of Honolulu the right to permanently seal said well.” Section 5 reads as follows: “Permit for new wells. From and after the passage of this Act, it shall be unlawful for any person to sink, bore, drill or drive any new artesian well in said district of Honolulu, or to reopen any artesian well which has been unused for two years or more, except under and pursuant to the terms and conditions of a permit therefor from the commission. Application for such permit shall be made to the commission, in writing, signed and verified by the party intending to operate under same, setting forth the name and post office address of the applicant, a description of the location of the well proposed to be bored or reopened (which location shall thereafter be exactly marked upon the ground, if so requested by the commission), the nature and extent of the proposed use of the water, and shall be - accompanied by the specifications for the proposed work, including the casing, capping, equipping and means of control and operation of such well. If, in the opinion of the commission, the proposed work would threaten the safety of the water of the artesian area or basin which would be drawn upon by such well, by lowering its level or increasing the salt content of any existing well or wells, the application therefor may be denied. The commission may charge a fee of one hundred dollars ($100.00) for any permit issued hereunder. All such fees shall be deposited.by the commission with the treasurer of the City and County of Honolulu and are hereby appropriated for the use of the .commission.” Section 6 provides that “as a condition precedent *916 to granting any permit” to sink or reopen any artesian well, the applicant .may he required to sign an agreement to perform the work in the manner prescribed by the commission and thereafter to operate and maintain the Avell in accordance with the provisions of the Act and under such rules and regulations as the commission may from1 time to time promulgate. It also authorizes the commission to require of the applicant a bond or other form of indemnity to insure compliance with its orders and rules.. In the event of failure on the part of the OAvner to comply with the orders of the commission relating to the sinking, reopening or maintenance of a well, the commission is given power “either to seal such well at the cost of such bond, or do such work as may be necessary ;to put the same in proper condition at like cost.” Under section 7 the commission is authorized, for cause satisfactory to it, and after notice and hearing, to suspend or revoke any permit for the opening of a Avell. Under section 8 the commission is given .poAver to investigate all the uses of water within the district and any machinery, or equipment used for the transmission or distribution of water and to ascertain all manner of details relating to artesian wells and the strata through Avhich they pass; is authorized “to prescribe and regulate the manner in which neAV artesian wells in said district may be bored, drilled or driven, encased, capped, or unused wells reopened, controlled and operated, including methods and materials of construction and means of control; and to install or require the installation of -measuring devices of water from any such well, and provide for the maintenance and protection of such devices;” also power to enter upon any property, public or private, at any reasonable time, without Avarrant, in order to exercise any of the other powers given by the Act; to “subpoena and compel the attendance of Avitnesses *917 to any investigation or proceeding before tlie commission” and to compel “the production of books, papers and other evidence; * * * to administer oaths and examine witnesses under oath;” and to punish for contempt. Section 9 authorizes the commission, subject to the approval of the governor, to make, alter and repeal “such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, as it may deem necessary for the furtherance of any of the purposes of this Act or the appropriate exercise of any of its powers.” Section 10 reads as follows: “Appeal to supreme court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 912, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-mill-co-v-honolulu-sewer-water-commission-haw-1929.