City of Waterville v. Kennebec Water District

25 A.2d 475, 138 Me. 307, 1942 Me. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 13, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 A.2d 475 (City of Waterville v. Kennebec Water District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Waterville v. Kennebec Water District, 25 A.2d 475, 138 Me. 307, 1942 Me. LEXIS 15 (Me. 1942).

Opinion

Sturgis, J.

The Territory and the people constituting the'City of Waterville and the Fairfield Village Corporation, both in the State of Maine, by the provisions of Chapter 200 Private and Special Laws 1899 were constituted a quasi municipal corporation under the name of the Kennebec Water District for the purpose of supplying the inhabitants of the District and of the towns of Benton and Winslow and the municipalities with pure water for domestic and municipal purposes, with authority to acquire the entire plant, property and franchises, rights and privileges of the Maine Water Company, an existing local public service corporation, to take and hold the water of designated rivers and streams and their tributary lakes and any land and real estate necessary for purposes there enumerated and to lay and take up, repair and replace all necessary pipes, aqueducts and fixtures in and through the streets and highways of the District and of the towns of Benton and Winslow. The management of the District was vested in a Board of Trustees who were authorized to issue bonds to pay for the property of the Maine Water Company and a new source of water supply including the incidental expenses thereof, but for no other purpose.

After delays, the reasons for which are not here of concern, as of April 30, 1905, the end of its first active fiscal year, the Kennebec Water District had completed its purchase of the property of the Maine Water Company, acquired a new source of water supply and made extensive additions and improvements which it carried on its books as betterments, for all of which it was indebted on outstanding notes and open accounts. It had not at this time issued any bonds.

In Chapter 152 of the Private and Special Laws of 1905, the power of the Kennebec Water District to issue bonds under its Charter was broadened and it was granted the right to refund [315]*315its indebtedness and make temporary loans. The Amendment in part reads:

“Section 3. * * *
Section 10. The trustees of the district may for the purpose of paying any necessary expenses and liabilities incurred under the provisions of this act including the ex- . penses incurred in acquiring the property of the Maine Water Company by purchase or otherwise, in securing sources of supply, taking water and land, paying damages, laying pipes, constructing, maintaining and operating a water plant, and making renewals, extensions, additions and improvements to the same, issue from time to time bonds of the district to an amount necessary in the judgment of the trustees therefor. * * *
Section 4. Said district is hereby authorized to refund its indebtedness from time to time in whole or in part as may seem best to the trustees and to borrow money temporarily for any of the legitimate purposes of the district.”

Acting under this amendment, during the fiscal year ending April 30, 1906, the floating debt of the District was refunded by a bond issue of $950,000 and with assets of a book value of $968,060.10, its balance sheet showed a small book surplus. This, in general, was the financial structure of the Kennebec Water District at the beginning of its public service.

It is not necessary to follow and review in detail the subsequent growth and progress of the District. It has been developed into a water system of large proportions completely modern and in first class condition. Its service has been improved and extended and is of a high order. As of December 31, 1936, the end of its then current fiscal year, its balance sheet showed that its total assets had increased to $1,763,-281.41. Its bonded indebtedness had been reduced to $850,-000.00. Among its liabilities are listed Long Term Debt Retired' Through Surplus $336,000, Sinking Fund Reserves-[316]*316$176,988.24. Other Permanent Reserves $10,000 and Reserve for Depreciation $189,861.24. A Surplus (Profit and Loss) of $189,522.39 is reported. This was the financial status of the District according to its current balance sheet when this proceeding was instituted.

The income of the Kennebec Water District, in the main, comes from water rates paid by private and public consumers. These rates by the terms of its Charter were to be established and disbursed by the Board of Trustees in accordance with the following formula:

“Section 11. All individuals, firms and corporations, whether private, public or municipal, shall pay to the treasurer of said district the rates established by said board of trustees for all water used by them, and said rates shall be uniform in their application within the district. Said rates shall be so established as to provide revenue for the following purposes:
I. To pay the current running expenses for maintaining the water system and provide for such extensions and renewals as may become necessary.
II. To provide for payment of interest on the indebtedness of the district.
III. To provide each year a sum equal to not less than one, nor more than three per cent of the entire indebtedness of the district, which sum shall be turned into a sinking fund to provide for the final extinguishment of the funded debt. The money set aside for the sinking fund shall be devoted to retirement of the district’s obligations or invested in such securities as savings banks are allowed to hold.
IV. If any surplus remain at the end of the year it shall be divided between the municipalities composing the district in the same proportions as each contributed to the gross earnings of the district’s water system, and in order that these proportions may be readily determined, all [317]*317money received for water in each of said municipalities shall be entered in separate accounts so that the total amount thereof can be easily ascertained.”

No question as to the fairness of the rates established under this provision is raised here. Complaint is that Clause IV of Section 11 has never been complied with and surpluses remaining at the end of many years have never been divided.

In this proceeding in Equity the City of Waterville seeks an accounting by the Kennebec Water District and prays that it be declared a trustee, for the complainant and all others entitled thereto, of the funds representing the surplus of its rate revenues remaining at the end of each year of its operations and of all moneys diverted without authority from its surpluses. The Kennebec Water District in its Answer, denying generally the allegations of the Bill, pleads the statute of limitations and submits an account of its annual receipts and disbursements, which, as made up, shows no substantial annual surpluses ever existed or accumulated. To this Replication was filed. The Inhabitants of the Town of Fairfield and the Fairfield Village Corporation, joined as defendants, having failed to appear, decrees pro confesso have been entered against them.

The City of Waterville introduces the yearly balance sheets of the Kennebec Water District, supplemented by accountants’ schedules and computations based on an examination of the corporate books and records, which purport to exhibit, in accordance with accepted accounting rules and practices, the accrual of annual surpluses of rate revenues during the years 1912-1936 inclusive, amounting in the aggregate to $289,-843.09 which are distributable among the municipalities composing the district under Paragraph IV Section 11 of the Act of Incorporation.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A.2d 475, 138 Me. 307, 1942 Me. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-waterville-v-kennebec-water-district-me-1942.