Columbus v. Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co. of Baltimore

218 U.S. 645, 31 S. Ct. 105, 54 L. Ed. 1193, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 2057
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 7, 1910
Docket41
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 218 U.S. 645 (Columbus v. Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co. of Baltimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbus v. Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co. of Baltimore, 218 U.S. 645, 31 S. Ct. 105, 54 L. Ed. 1193, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 2057 (1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lurton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill by the trustee under a mortgage made by the Columbus Water Works Company upon its plant and franchise to secure an issue of bonds, to enjoin the municipal authorities of Columbus, Georgia, from constructing and operating a municipal water system, thereby impairing the obligation of a contract between the city and the water works company granting to the latter, for a term of thirty years an exclusive right to maintain a water works .system in the streets of the city.

The bill, in substance, avers, .and the answer admits, that the city has procured from the legislature of Georgia authority to construct and operate ’ a municipal water plant and to issue the bonds of the .city for that purpose, and that in pursuance of this legislative authority ordinances have been passed providing for the construction *650 of such water works and for the issuance of bonds to provide the means, and that notice of that purpose, and that the city no longer regards the contract with the Columbus Water Works Company as binding or obligatory, has been given.

The material defenses are, first, that the city had no power to make an exclusive contract; second, that the contract for rental of hydrants created an aggregate indebtedness prohibited by the constitution of the. State; and, third, that the water works company had not kept its contract in respect of the character or capacity of the plant it was to provide and maintain, and has failed in its obligation to furnish an. abundant and constant supply of pure, and- wholesome water, thus compelling the municipality to construct a system of its own for the protection of the health and property'of its inhabitants.

These defenses were relied upon in the answer of the city as a defense against , the injunction-sought by the complainant and were made, the subject of a cross bill against the complainant and the water works company, praying, relief against the contract as having been first broken by the company.

Prior .to the filing of this bill the same complainant had filed its original bill in the sanie court against the Coluih-bus Water Works Company, praying a foreclosure of its mortgage, a default having occurred. The bill referred to was filed December 22, 1902. The present bill was not filed until July 30, 1903... One of the allegations of the foreclosure bill was “that during the continuance of this deéd of trust the said party of the first part will not do or suffer to be done any act or acts whereby, the security of the said bondholders shall be in any way . or manner or in any amount impaired, and that the said party of the first part will at all times preserve, maintain and keep its waterworks, pumps, machinery, reservoirs, piping, hydrants and. equipments in good repair, working order and condition *651 and supplied with all the machinery, equipments and appliances for providing water to the city of Columbus and vicinity , and shall and will from time to time make all needful and proper repairs, renewals and replacements and useful and proper alterations, additions, betterments, and improvements.

“3. That your orator is informed that for more than six months last past the Columbus Water Works Company has suffered the security of the bondholders to become impaired by not maintaining and keeping its water works supplied with all the machinery, equipments and appliances for providing water to the city of Columbus and vicinity, and. by not making useful and proper additions, betterments and improvements to said water works. Further explaining the foregoing allegation your orator states that, owing to an unprecedented and. protracted drought the sources of supply of water for the said water works have to a large extent failed for the time being; that it is within the power of the said water works company to provide for such a contingency by seeking and availing itself of other sources of supply, but that, as your orator is informed, owing to the attitude of the city of Columbus, which now is taking steps bo provide a water supply of its own, the Columbus Water Works Company is unable to sell its bonds reserved in its treasury for such purposes and which could have been sold except for the attitude of the said city and therefore is unable to carry out the betterments and improvements in its water supply above mentioned.”

Under that bill, which was unopposed, a receiver was appointed, who has ever since been in possession and is still operating said works. Upon application of the mortgage trustee and by consent of the bondholders and of the company, receiver’s certificates have been issued to the extent of $50,000, and expended in repairing and improving the supply of water and the distributing system. *652 There has never been any consolidation of the two suits, but by an amended bill in the present case filed October 15, 1903, the fact of the pendency of the aforementioned' foreclosure bill and the action had thereunder was stated. It was also averred in this amendment that by means of the receiver’s certificates issued in the foreclosure case such improvements and enlargements had been made in the plant of the company that the receiver was then supplying an abundance of- wholesome water, and that the trustee by direction of the bondholders was willing to. expend such other sums as should be found necessary to enable the mortgagor company to carry out its contract.

Upon the bill as thus amended, the answer and cross bill and the answer thereto, and upon ex parte affidavits the court heard a motion for an injunction pendente lite. Upon that hearing the court disposed of two legal defenses arising upon the face of the contract,, namely, whether a contract extending over thirty years for the rental of hydrants was the creation of an indebtedness for the aggregate of the rental, and second, whether the city had power to make an exclusive contract. Both of these questions were decided by Judge Newman against the city. On November 19, 1903, an injunction pending the suit was allowed, and the cause referred to a special master to take proof and report his findings of law and fact in respect of the issues with reference to the failure of the water works company to comply with its contract. See 130 Fed. Rep. 180.

On January 23, 1904, the city filed its petition praying a dissolution of this injunction, alleging that a great amount of evidence had been taken by the special master, and that the reservoir had again failed, and that water was now being taken from the Chattahooche River, and that the water at the intake was polluted by reason of the fact that one of the city’s sewers emptied into the stream *653 a short distance above the intake, and also that a polluted branch which drained a suburb of the city emptied into the river a short distance above the riveir intake. Thereupon, on January 25, 1904, the preliminary injunction was dissolved.

The special master, on November 19, 1904, filed a full, elaborate and able report with findings of fact and law. Upon the material questions he found in favor of the contentions of the city in respect to both fact and law. His findings of fact, as condensed by him, which are material to be here set out, are as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
218 U.S. 645, 31 S. Ct. 105, 54 L. Ed. 1193, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 2057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-v-mercantile-trust-deposit-co-of-baltimore-scotus-1910.