City of Grafton v. Holt

52 S.E. 21, 58 W. Va. 182, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 96
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 21 (City of Grafton v. Holt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Grafton v. Holt, 52 S.E. 21, 58 W. Va. 182, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 96 (W. Va. 1905).

Opinion

Cox, Judge:

This is a petition by the City of Qrafton for a writ of prohibition to prohibit Hon. John Homerllolt, Judge of the circuit court of Taylor county, from interfering with the city in the management and control of its water works plant, and from fixing the rates that said city shall charge consumers of water, and from preventing the city from shutting off the water from such consumers as refuse to pay therefor.

The city of Grafton under its charter authority owns the water works supplying the inhabitants and others of the city with water for compensation. On the 27th. day of May, 1905, the city, upon recommendation of a committee of its Council, adopted a schedule of rates for water, to be charged the consumers, uniform as to each class of consumers, but increasing the rates theretofore charged. The increased rates were afterwards embodied in a formal ordinance, adopted by the Common Council, and were required to be collected from and after July 1, 1905. It is claimed that this formal ordinance was not adopted until after the 1st of July, 1905, but that is immaterial here. After the adoption or the now schedule of rates a bill was filed in the circuit court of Taylor county by George W. Whitescarver and certain other persons named, citizens, tax payers, and consumers of water, on behalf of themselves and the other citizens, tax payers and consumers of water of said city, similarly situated, against the city as defendant for the purpose of setting aside the order of the Common Council increasing the water rates, and for an accounting to-ascertain the amount justly imyable, applicable to all consumers of the same class with the plaintiffs, and for the purpose of restraining the city, its officers and agents, from shutting off the water on the premises of the plaintiffs, and the other inhabitants of the city similarly situated, it being alleged in the bill that the city is threatening to turn off the water for failure to pay the increased water rates. Upon presentation of this bill to the said judge of the circuit court on the 8th day of July, 1905, a temporary injunction was awarded, practically as prayed for. After-wards, on the 12th day of July, 1905, pursuant to notice a motion was made by the defendant city to dissolve the injunction on the ground, among others, that the said judge was without legal authority to act in the suit by reason of being [184]*184a consumer of water within the city, and personally interested in the subject matter of the litigation. The motion to dissolve was overruled by Judge Holt in vacation, and this proceeding followed.

The petition xaroceeds upon the theory that Judge Holt, being a consumer of water supplied by the city water works, is in the same situation as the plaintiffs in said bill, and disqualified from acting as judge in that suit, or touching the subject matter of that litigation, by reason of interest. The fact is not denied, but conceded, that Judge Holt is a consumer of water from the city water works, and in the same situation as the plaintiffs in said bill, although not made a party therein by name. The first question for us to determine is, whether or not Judge Holt, being so situated, is disqualified by reason of interest from acting as judge in that suit. In order to disqualify, the interest of the judge must not be merely an interest in the legal question involved in the suit, but an interest in the subject matter to be determined thereby, Forest Coal Co. v. Doolittle, Judge, &c., 54 W. Va. 210.

We must-see if this is the kind of a suit which, if maintainable at all, could be maintained by the plaintiffs named suing on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated. The general equity rule is that all parties in interest must be before the court; but there are certain exceptions to this rule which are as clearly established and as well settled as the rule itself. In cases to which the exceptions apply one or more persons representing a class or common interest or common rights are permitted to sue on behalf of themselves and all others in the same situation. The exceptions to the rule have grown up as matters of necessity to meet the ends of justice. To undertake to review all the authorities defining and sustaining the exceptions would be impracticable in this opinion. We shall content ourselves with the citation of a few of those most pertinent to the case in hand: “The rule requiring all parties interested in the subject matter or object of the suit to be made parties, however numerous, is relaxed when its observance becomes extremely difficult or inconvenient, and a person holding a common interest with numerous others may sue in his own name in behalf of himself and such other persons without joining them in the suit.” Hogg’s Equity Proced., section 39.

[185]*185“In some cases the persons who hold a common relation to the subject are so numerous that to attempt to unite them all in one suit would be, even if practicable, very inconvenient, and would subject the proceedings to the danger of perpetual abatement and other impediments from intermediate deaths, marriages, incompetency, or change of interests. * * * In such cases the court will allow a bill to be brought by some of the parties on behalf -of themselves and all others, taking-care that there shall be a due representation of all substantial interests before the court.” Bart. Oh. Prac., section 47.

A clear statement of exceptions is contained in Judge Story’s work on Equity Pleading. This eminent author says: “The most usual cases arranging themselves under this head of exceptions are: (1) Where the question is one of common or general interest and one or more sue or defend for the benefit of the whole; (2) Where the parties form a voluntary association for public or private purposes and those who sue or defend may fairly be presumed to represent the rights and interests of the whole; (3) Where the parties are very numerous and, although they have or may have separate, distinct interests, yet it is impracticable to bring them all before the court.”

In speaking of the third class of cases mentioned above the same author says: “In this class of cases there is usually a privity of interest between the parties, but such a privity is not the foundation of the exception. On the contrary it is sustained in some cases where no such privity exists. However, in all of them there always exists a common interest or a common right which the bill seeks to establish and enforce, or a general claim or privilege, ivhich it seeks to establish or to narrow or take away. ******* jn an these classes of cases it is apparent that all the parties stand or are supposed to stand in the same situation, and have one common right, or one common interest the operation and protection of which will be for the common benefit of all, and cannot be to the injury of any. It is under such circumstances, and with such objects that the bill is permitted to be filed by a few on behalf of themselves and all others, or against a few and yet to bind the rights and interests of the others.” Story’s Equity PI. sections 97, 120, 126,. As bearing upon and sustaining the exceptions mentioned see Smith et al. v. [186]*186Swormstedt et al., 16 Howard 288: Beech on Inj. 365; R. R. Co. v. Gibson, 85 Ga. 1; 2 Spelling on Inj. 973; 15 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 629; Fletcher Eq. Pl. & Pr. section 26; 1 Daniels Ch. Pl. & Pr. 238; Bull v. Read, 13 Grat. 86.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 21, 58 W. Va. 182, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-grafton-v-holt-wva-1905.