Edgeworth Water Co. v. Sewickley Boro.

164 A. 523, 309 Pa. 425, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1932
DocketAppeal, 104
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 A. 523 (Edgeworth Water Co. v. Sewickley Boro.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgeworth Water Co. v. Sewickley Boro., 164 A. 523, 309 Pa. 425, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 738 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

In its history of the case plaintiff (appellant) says: “This is an equity proceeding to restrain the defendants from supplying water to Edgeworth Club in the Borough of Edgeworth.” In the printed arguments of both sides, in the supplemental briefs and in the one submitted as amicus curiae, the scope of the proceeding would seem to be wider. We will confine our review to what appellant says is before us, perhaps incidentally making reference to one matter in a wider view.

Speaking generally, we are to decide whether the plaintiff, the Edgeworth Water Company, has the exclusive right to supply water to the Edgeworth Club and whether the furnishing of water to the club by the commissioners of Sewickley Water Works is an intrusion by the latter into the former’s territory.

Edgeworth Water Company was incorporated June 19,1883, under the General Corporation Act of April 29, 1874, P. L. 73, for the purpose of supplying water to the public in Leet Township, Allegheny County. Edgeworth Borough was carved out of Leet Township in 1904. It adjoins the Borough of Sewickley. Clause 3 of section 34 of the Act of 1874 contains this provision relating to water companies: “The right to have and enjoy the franchises and privileges of such incorporation within the district or locality covered by its charter shall be an exclusive one; and no other company shall be incorpo *428 rated for that purpose until the said corporation shall have from its earnings realized and divided among its stockholders, during five years, a dividend equal to eight per centum per annum upon its capital stock.”

The Borough of Sewickley was incorporated in 1858, under the General Borough Law of April 3, 1851, P. L. 320. The commissioners of Sewickley Water Works were created under a special act of assembly approved February 21, 1873, P. L. 147, the title of which reads, “An act authorizing the erection of water works in the Borough of Sewickley by commissioners, and the issue of borough bonds, and the levy of a special water tax.” The act creates a board of commissioners of five persons for the purpose of erecting and maintaining water works to supply the inhabitants of the Borough of Sewickley and “such portions of the adjoining townships as the commissioners may include.”

Summarized, the chancellor found the following facts, controlling the controversy in our opinion: A private water system connecting with certain springs had been constructed by two individuals in Leet Township sometime in the early 1870’s, which constituted the only physical property of the Edgeworth Water Company from its incorporation to a time subsequent to November 30, 1894. This system supplied only the residences of the two individuals, and two of their employees. No charge was made for water even to these consumers until June 7, 1892. The Edgeworth Water Company did not function as a public service company until after November 30, 1894.

The commissioners of Sewickley Water Works constructed their plant and on April 24, 1875, one of their mains was in close proximity to the Township of Leet. On that date, application was made by a resident of Leet Township to connect with this main for the purpose of securing a supply of water and his application was granted. Subsequent to the date named, applications were made by other residents of Leet Township to con *429 nect with the mains, one on February 11, 1876, another on October 25, 1877, a third on April 18, 1882, and a fourth on October 10, 1891. All of these applications were granted, the connections were made and water was furnished. Prior to June 21, 1883, the Sewickley commissioners were supplying four buildings in Leet Township with water and had agreed to supply an area of approximately sixteen acres adjoining their borough. The territory covered by these applications includes all of the property now owned by the Edgeworth Club. Between 1891 and 1895, five-inch and six-inch mains were laid in portions of this territory, which mains became the property of the Sewickley Water Works and certain residents of the territory have been furnished with a supply of water by the commissioners from that day to the present, and for many years after 1895 they furnished the only available source of water supply in this territory. From time to time these mains were extended and connected and service connections were made to the buildings constructed in the territory they covered until a total of twenty-seven service connections were made to these mains. Four other service connections were made by properties in Edgeworth Borough to a six-inch pipe on Academy Avenue, the center line of which forms the dividing line between the Borough of Sewickley and the Borough of Edgeworth. Prior to 1903 or 1904 the Edgeworth Water Company had not extended its mains into this section. It made its first extension into a portion of the territory in the years named. Further exten-. sions were made about 1909 to Academy Avenue, but it was not until the summer and fall of 1929, and after the purchase by the Edgeworth Club of its new property that mains were extended to the club property. The Edgeworth Club was formerly located on the Sewickley side of Academy Avenue and was served with water by the commissioners. In June, 1929, the club purchased a tract of ground on Academy Avenue in the Borough of Edgeworth. A six-inch pipe line of the Sewickley Wa *430 ter Works is laid across this property parallel with Academy Avenue and within from six to twelve feet of the location of the new club house. The club acquired its property with knowledge of the existence of this six-inch main, having in contemplation the water service which it rendered. The contractor for the new club house, in the fall of 1929, applied for a service connection with this main and such connection was made. The Edgeworth Club, now completed, desires the commissioners to make a service connection from the six-inch main to the club house to supply the club with water. The furnishing of a water supply by the Sewickley Water Works to the Edgeworth Club will involve merely a service connection of a few feet on the property of the club from the six-inch main laid by the commissioners prior to 1896, which has served the territory surrounding the club with water continuously from that date to the present. The existence of the mains of the Sewickley Water Works in this territory since 1895 and the service rendered by the commissioners there are matters of general public knowledge to persons in Leet Township and the Borough of Edgeworth and particularly to the officers of the Edgeworth Water Company. About the year 1910 through, its solicitor, it expressly consented to the making of an extension in the vicinity of the Edgeworth Club and the continuance of the service then being rendered. From that year until just prior to the filing of this bill in June, 1930, no protest or objection was made by the plaintiff to the service being rendered by defendants, although they have continued to serve the territory and from time to time have made new service connections to their existing mains.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 523, 309 Pa. 425, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgeworth-water-co-v-sewickley-boro-pa-1932.