East Boothbay Water District v. Inhabitants

177 A.2d 659, 158 Me. 32, 1962 Me. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 5, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 A.2d 659 (East Boothbay Water District v. Inhabitants) 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
East Boothbay Water District v. Inhabitants, 177 A.2d 659, 158 Me. 32, 1962 Me. LEXIS 7 (Me. 1962).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

Plaintiff and defendant have reported this case upon complaint, answer and agreed statement of facts and seek a declaratory judgment, R. S. (1954), c. 107, §§ [33]*3338, through 50; c. 103, § 15, P. L., 1959, c. 317, § 69, c. 378, § 67; Maine Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 72 (b), 155 Me. 573.

Defendant is a town and a municipal corporation. R. S., c. 90-A, § 2. By special enactment of the Legislature and in a proprietary as distinguished from a governmental function (Woodward v. Water District, 116 Me. 86, 90) it has owned a public, water utility system (R. S., c. 44, § 16, IV, XII, XVI, as amended) and for scores of years has supplied water service to consumers in the Towns of Boothbay and Boothbay Harbor and to customers at Squirrel Island in the Town of Southport.

Plaintiff is a quasi municipal corporation and water district created by the Legislature (P. & S. L., 1959, c. 132) with authority to provide water for users in the southeast portion of Boothbay, in the village of East Boothbay and in a portion of Boothbay Harbor. Its assigned territory is a component of the area served for the same purposes by the defendant.

The agreed statement of facts filed by the parties together with their requests for rulings is as follows:

“It is hereby stipulated and agreed-between the parties hereto as follows:
“1. The parties accept as fact for the purposes of this case the material facts found by the Court in the case of Inhabitants of Boothbay vs. Inhabitants of Boothbay Harbor, 148 Maine 31.
“2. Boothbay and Boothbay Harbor are two adjoining and separate municipal corporations.
“3. Boothbay Harbor owns and operates a water system which furnishes water for the area to the town of Boothbay Harbor and serves a portion of the town of Boothbay, all in accordance with the following chapters:
[34]*34 P & S Laws 1889, Chapter 381.
P & S Laws 1891, Chapter 241.
P & S Laws 1895, Chapter 56.
P & S Laws 1903, Chapter 203.
P & S Laws 1923, Chapter 7.
P & S Laws 1937, Chapter 52.
“4. The assets of the Boothbay Harbor Water System within the geographical limits of the East Boothbay Water District, which operates under P & S Laws of 1959, Chapter 132, primarily consist of surface mains and pipes and appurtenances for summer service and include one standpipe therefor, including the land on which the standpipe is located, also approximately 600 feet of underground main which cannot be used for winter service because of its shallow depth. The above lines are about one-half on public roads and one-half on private property.
The lines located on private property are not located on easements, but are there by permission and consent of the owner except in the case of five houselots in which there are recorded easements.
“5. The District is presently constructing its water system, which is now half finished and is anticipated to be finished about December, 1961, and this system will furnish water on a year-round basis with underground mains.
“6. The great bulk of the assets of the Boothbay Harbor Water System in the area of the District is of no economic use to the District because of the fact that they are seasonal surface lines which are being replaced by year-round underground mains. However, a portion of the surface pipes of the Town in some of the summer cottage areas could be of use to the District if they could be purchased or condemned at a fair value.
“7. The entire plant and facilities operated by the Boothbay Harbor Water System are wholly-owned by the town of Boothbay Harbor. The water system has derived its revenues from cus[35]*35tomers both in Boothbay Harbor, Boothbay, and other localities in the area that it serves.
“8. In order for the parties to further negotiate under Section 9 of the District’s charter or to take steps with reference to eminent domain under Section 10, it is necessary that the following legal issues be decided:
1. Prior to the effective date of the District’s charter did the town of Boothbay Harbor have an exclusive franchise for furnishing public water service within the area of what is now the District?
2. Following the effective date of the District charter, does the District now have an exclusive franchise within said area?
3. Is the District required to purchase or to take any of the water facilities of the town of Boothbay Harbor located in the area of the District?
4. If the District takes any of the facilities of said town of Boothbay Harbor located in the area of said District will it be required to pay simply the value of the facilities so taken or will it be required in addition to pay severance damages or consequential damages to other property of the town of Boothbay Harbor located within the area of said District?
5. If it takes any of such facilities within the area of the District may it pay only the value of the facilities so taken or must it also pay severance damages or consequential damages for other assets of the town of Boothbay Harbor located outside of the area of said District?
6. Whether or not the District takes any of the property of the town of Boothbay Harbor within the area of the district, must it compensate the town of Boothbay Harbor for the loss of the Town’s investment and business as re-[36]*36suit of the town losing those customers within the area of the District?
7. May the Town, if the District does not take its property within the area of said district, remove its property from the area of said District?”

An examination of the creative private and special laws which have imparted life and have conferred authority upon the plaintiff and the defendant corporations demonstrates convincingly that neither plaintiff nor defendant has been endowed with an exclusive franchise to furnish public water service within its respective territory. There is to be found in the legislative history of both parties no affirmative grant of monopoly and this court in a case very similar in its circumstances to the instant case has eschewed mere implication.

“What construction, then, is to be given to the plaintiffs’ charter? Does it in terms or by necessary implication confer those exclusive rights asserted by the plaintiffs ? While it is the accepted doctrine that all grants are to be construed according to the intention of the parties, yet there are certain general rules of construction by the light of which such contracts are to be examined. These rules are well settled by numerous authorities. One is, that in all grants by the government to individuals or corporations, of rights, privileges and franchises, the words are to be taken most strongly against the grantee, contrary to the rule applicable to a grant from one individual to another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 A.2d 659, 158 Me. 32, 1962 Me. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-boothbay-water-district-v-inhabitants-me-1962.