Dolan v. Louisville Water Co.

174 S.W.2d 425, 295 Ky. 291, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 28, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 425 (Dolan v. Louisville Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolan v. Louisville Water Co., 174 S.W.2d 425, 295 Ky. 291, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 232 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Ratliff

Affirming.

Tlie appellants, R. J. Dolan, James J. Langan, Walter Boldt, Louis W. Nord, Millie Nord English and ■George L. Garrett, as plaintiffs below, suing in their own behalf and other citizens, taxpayers, purchasers and consumers of water in the city of Louisville, alleged to be .similarly situated and interested in the same question, brought this action in the Jefferson circuit court against the Louisville Water Company, a corporation; the Board ■of Waterworks of the Louisville Water Company, a corporate body, and the city of Louisville, a municipal corporation, seeking a decree and judgment of the chancellor enjoining the city of Louisville from collecting from the Louisville Water Company a rate or sum more than ■.sufficient to pay maintenance and operating expenses of the water plant and the debts of the Louisville Water ■Company.

*293 After setting ont the corporate status, powers, authorities and duties of the respective defendants, plaintiffs alleged, in substance, that the city of Louisville is and was at all times mentioned the owner of all the shares of capital stock of the Louisville Water Company which at all times mentioned was engaged in supplying water to the city of Louisville and inhabitants thereof and that the city of Louisville, by and through its Board of Waterworks, controls, manages and operates the plant of the Louisville Water Company including its franchise and all other property and is vested with the power to contract and be contracted with and to sue and be sued in the name of the Louisville Water Company; that the Board of Waterworks is vested with power and authority and it is its duty to fix, make and collect reasonable sums or rates for the use or sale of water furnished to any individual, firm or corporation other than the city of Louisville.

In paragraph two of the petition plaintiffs alleged that between the dates of June 30, 1856, and April 19, 1907, the city of Louisville purchased and thereby became the sole owner of all the shares of the capital stock of the Louisville Water Company, a total of 12,751 shares, each share having the par value of $100, .thus making the total investment of the city of Louisville in the Louisville Water Company the sum of $1,275,100, and that the shares of stock are deposited with the commissioners of the sinking fund of the city of Louisville and are held by the commissioners as a part of the sinking-fund of the city. Plaintiffs further alleged that prior to the year 1923 and' after the city of Louisville' had purchased the capital stock of the Louisville Water Company, the water company reimbursed or paid to the city of Louisville all the funds used by the city in the purchase of the stock with interest thereon, and at the present time, and for many years, the city of Louisville has none of its funds invested in the water company and that all the assets accumulated and now owned by the water company have been paid in full by the inhabitants of the city of Louisville who are and were users or purchasers of water from the Louisville Water Company since the purchase by the city of Louisville of all of the capital stock of the water company. The petition further set out the sum the city had required the water company to pay into the sinking fund of the city since the year 1923; the sum held by the commissioners of the sinking fund for *294 the use and benefit of the water company and the balance as a profit to the city, followed with the allegation that a fair rate to the city on its investment in the capital stock of the water company should not exceed 6% per annum, and the sums collected and now being collected by the Board of Waterworks and the Louisville Water ■Company from the plaintiffs and all other users of water in the city are exorbitant and unreasonable. Plaintiffs further assert that the levy and collection of said assessment or tax for the use and benefit of the city is in violation of the Constitution of the state of Kentucky, Sections 171, 181 and 181a, and the Constitution of the United States and in violation of the taxing authorities and powers granted the city of Louisville by the laws of the state of Kentucky, and that neither the Board of Waterworks nor the water company has any power to fix, levy and collect taxes from the purchasers or users ■of water for the benefit of the city of Louisville.

The relief asked in the prayer of the petition was that an injunction be granted against the city of Louisville and the Louisville Water. Company enjoining the ■city from collecting from the Louisville Water Company and enjoining the water company from paying to the city during the pendency of the action any sums of money more than a reasonable rate 'on the capital stock of the water company held by the city, and that any sum in excess of 6% be adjudged unfair and unreasonable, and that the money collected by the city from the water company for the years 1923 to 1939, inclusive, in excess of ■6% on the capital stock be repaid by the city to the water company and that the latter refund the same to the plaintiffs and other users and purchasers of water; that the city and water company produce for inspection all their records pertaining to the management, control .and operation of the water company; that the funds or sums of money now being collected by the water company in excess of reasonable cost of operation be impounded by the court and held for final distribution at the termination of the action; that the rates pow charged and collected be adjudged unfair and unreasonable; that it be adjudged that any demand made by the city from the water company in excess of a reasonable rate on its ■capital stock is an attempt to levy a tax upon the plaintiffs ; that an attempt to levy such tax through the Board •of Waterworks in the name of the water company for the use and benefit of the city for purposes other than for. *295 maintenance of the water company be held unconstitutional and void; and that the Board of Waterworks is not vested with the power to fix, levy and collect any such tax or taxes.

The plaintiffs moved the court for an order granting them the right to maintain and prosecute the action as a class action as provided in Section 25 of the Civil Code of Practice, and to grant a temporary injunction for the purposes indicated in the prayer of the petition. The court ruled that plaintiffs’ cause of action, or alleged cause of action, was not a class action and denied them the right to prosecute the same as a class action and also denied a temporary injunction. Thereupon the defendants filed a special demurrer, motions to elect and to strike and to make more specific, and also a general demurrer. The chancellor sustained the special demurrer based on defect of parties plaintiff and also sustained the motion to require plaintiffs to elect which cause of action they would prosecute (it being contended by defendants that there were six “pretended” causes of action improperly joined,) and also to elect in whose name the action would be prosecuted and to strike from the petition the names of five of the plaintiffs named in the action and their respective “pretended” causes of action. The chancellor also sustained a general demurrer without leave to amend but granted plaintiffs thirty days to replead. At the expiration of the thirty days, plaintiffs having failed to plead further, the chancellor entered an order sustaining the general demurrer and dismissed the petition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 425, 295 Ky. 291, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolan-v-louisville-water-co-kyctapphigh-1943.