City of Gretna v. Gulf Distilling Corporation

21 So. 2d 884, 207 La. 719, 1945 La. LEXIS 803
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 26, 1945
DocketNo. 37461.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 So. 2d 884 (City of Gretna v. Gulf Distilling Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Gretna v. Gulf Distilling Corporation, 21 So. 2d 884, 207 La. 719, 1945 La. LEXIS 803 (La. 1945).

Opinion

*721 ROGERS, Justice.

The City of Gretna brought this suit against the Gulf Distilling Corporation for the cost of water which plaintiff claimed defendant used and failed to pay for. The suit was dismissed on exceptions and plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.

It was alleged in the original petition that on or about November 7, 1942, defendant began operating a distilling plant in the City of Gretna without having applied for water service as it was required to do under the laws of the city, and that from that date until the end of May 1943, the defendant used water from the mains of the city which had been connected with the plant of the American Distillery Corporation and also from the fire hydrants of the city. That the cost of the water consumed by defendant during the month of November 1942 amounted to $172.27, and that the cost of the water consumed by defendant for each of the months of December 1942, up to and including May 1943, amounted to $240.49 for each month, or a total cost of $1,615.23, to which a penalty of ten per cent, or $161.52, should be added, making a total amount due plaintiff $1,776.75.

To that petition defendant filed an exception of vagueness, alleging that plaintiff failed to set out the number of gallons of water used by the defendant each month ■ and the price per gallon, and for that reason plaintiff should be ordered to amend his petition. Before the exception was fixed for trial, plaintiff filed a supplemental and amended petition. It was alleged in , this petition, after reiterating' all the allegations of the original petition, that paragraph 2 of the original petition • should be amended so as to read as follows:

“That the defendant on or about Nov. 7, 1941, began operating a distillery plant in the City of Gretna, without ever having applied for water service from the City of Gretna, as it was required to do under the laws of the City of Gretna, and from said date until the end of May, 1942, said defendant used water from the City of Gretna water mains connected previously with the American Distilling Corporation amounting to the sum of $1,615,23, as appears from an itemized statement of account herewith attached and made a part hereof. That payment for water consumed should have been made on the 10th day of the month following service and upon failure to make payment on or before said day, a penalty of 10% additional would be imposed.

“(2) That during the latter part of April 1942, plaintiff discovered that the defendant was illegally diverting water through a two inch connection with its mains on Second Street, which line was supposed to have been discontinued and closed off, when a four inch line and meter was installed for the American Distilling Company on Fried near Front Street.

“(3) That it was also discovered that the Gulf Distilling Corporation had been using water unlawfully from the’ City of Gretna fire hydrants on the public sidewalks of the City and that it has not been possible to estimate the amount of water so diverted and used, but that the Gulf Corporation ought to have records to show the amount of said consumption and that *723 judgment should he rendered against said defendant for the value of the water so diverted and used. In the event that the defendant kept no record of the water so illegally diverted and used, the Court should fix the amount thereof and render judgment in favor of the City of Gretna therefor at the rates charged by the City of Gretna for water consumed; arid petitioner is of the belief that water diverted through the said fire plugs would amount to not less than $400.00.”

Attached to the petition is an itemized statement covering the amount of $1,615.23 claimed as the cost of the water illegally used by the defendant from the water mains of the City of Gretna which had been connected with the American Distillery Corporation. Plaintiff prayed for judgment in the amount shown on the itemized statement, together with an additional amount of $400, which plaintiff alleged was diverted from the fire hydrants of the city and illegally used by the defendant, or for a total of $2,015.23, together with a penalty of ten per cent thereon and five . per cent interest from judicial demand.

To this supplemental and amended petition defendant also filed an exception of vagueness - on the ground that the allegations of the petition were too general and indefinite to permit the defendant to safely answer. .

After hearing the parties, the trial judge maintained the exception and ordered plaintiff to amend his petition by setting forth the number of gallons of water defendant used each month and the price per gallon. The' judge also ordered the plaintiff to amend his petition so as to eliminate suppositions and to specifically allege whether the water line was discontinued and closed off, and to set forth specifically, as an allegation of fact, whether the defendant has or has not the records to show the amount of water consumed by it.

Plaintiff then filed a second supplemental and amended petition claiming $2,015.23 with penalties and interest. It was alleged in this petition that during the latter part of April 1942, the plaintiff discovered that the defendant had been illegally obtaining water through a two-inch line connected with plaintiff’s water mains on Second Street between Amelia Avenue and Fried Street, which water line had been cut off during the month of August 1935, when the property was being operated by the American Distillery Corporation; that the defendant knew the water was being diverted through the said two inch line and also knew that there was no meter operating on said line and that the defendant had never been billed for the water passing through the said two inch line; that after the discovery by plaintiff of the illegal diversion of water by the defendant, plaintiff cut off the two inch line; that for the first month, May 1942, when the water used in defendant’s manufacturing plant passed through the four inch meter located at Fried Street near Front Street, the meter showed that the defendant used 2,152,400 gallons of water for the month of May 1942, for which, based on the regular water rates, plaintiff charged defendant $240.49; that the plaintiff having no means of determining the amount of water illegally used by defendant, since it began its operations on *725 November 6, 1941, plaintiff charged defendant for the remainder of the month of November 1941, or for twenty-two days, $172.29, and for the months of December 1941, January, February, March and April 1942, at the rate of $240.49 a month, as shown on the itemized statement annexed to the petition as part. That the amount of water consumed and the amount due therefor for the month of May 1942 were used as a basis for the estimate of the amount due for the water illegally used by defendant for the previous six months.

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Bluebook (online)
21 So. 2d 884, 207 La. 719, 1945 La. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-gretna-v-gulf-distilling-corporation-la-1945.