Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Galesburg

133 U.S. 156, 10 S. Ct. 316, 33 L. Ed. 573, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1898
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 27, 1890
Docket887
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 133 U.S. 156 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Galesburg) 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
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Galesburg, 133 U.S. 156, 10 S. Ct. 316, 33 L. Ed. 573, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1898 (1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatcheord

delivered the opinion of the court.

The city of Galesburg, Illinois, a municipal corporation,-by an ordinance of its city council, passed May 12, 1883, and. approved by its mayor May IT, 1883, entitled “ An ordinance providing for a supply of water to the city of Galesburg and its inhabitants, authorizing Nathan Shelton or assigns to .construct and maintain water works, securing protection to said works, contracting with said Nathan Shelton or assigns for a supply of water for public use, and giving said city an option to purchase said works,” granted a franchise to Shelton and his successors or assigni, for thirty years from the passage of the ordinance, to construct and maintain, within and near the city, water works for. supplying it and its inhabitants and-, those of the adjacent territory “ with water for public and private uses, and to use the streets, alleys, sidewalks, public grounds, streams, and bridges of the City of Galesburg, within its present and future corporate limits, for. placing, taking up and repairing mains, hydrants, and other structures and devices for the service of water.”

Section 2 of the ordinance provided that there should .be two pumping engines, having a specified capacity, a standpipe, and not less than eight miles of mains for the distribution of water, of a sufficient size to furnish all the water required for the wants of the city and its inhabitants, and limited the range in size of the mains. It also provided for a specified test of the mains at their place of manufacture, and for the character of the fire hydrants to be rented by the city, and that there should be a test of the capacity of the water works on their completion, when Shelton or his assigns should “ cause to be thrown from any six hydrants six simultaneous streams, each through fifty feet- of two-and-one-half inch hose and a one-inch nozzle, to a height of one hundred feet.”

*159 Section 4 provided that “ the water supplied by said works shall be good, clear water, and the source of supply shall not be contaminated by the sewerage of said city.”

Maximum rates' for charges for'water to consumers by Shelton or his assigns were specified.

Section 7 reserved to the city the right to purchase the water works, on certain conditions, at any time after the expiration of fifteen years from the passage and approval of the ordinance.

By section 8 it was provided that in consideration of the benefits which would be derived by the city and its inhabitants from the construction and operation of the water works, and in further consideration -of the water supply thereby secured for public uses, and as the inducement to Shelton or his assigns to accept the provisions of. the ordinance, and contract and to enter upon the construction of the water works, the franchises thereby granted to and vested in Shelton or his assigns should remain in force and effect for thirty years from the passage of the ordinance ; and that, for the same consideration and as the same -inducement, the city thereby rented of Shelton or his assigns, for the uses thereinafter stated, eighty fire-hydrants of the character thereinbefore described, for the term of thirty years from the passage of the ordinance, and agreed to locate them promptly along the lines of the first eight miles of mains within the city limits, under direction of the city council, as soon as Shelton or his assigns should have located the line of the mains under the direction of the city engineer. The city' further agreed to pay rent for the eighty hydrants, to Shelton or his assigns, at the rate of $100 each per year, and to pay rent at the same rate for any additional fire hydrants, up to one hundred, directed by the city-council to be erected, and certain specified rates for additional hydrants over one hundred, such rent to be paid in half-yearly instalments, in January and July of each year, beginning from the date when each of the hydrants should be in successful operation, and to continue during the thirty years, unless the city should sooner become the owner' of the water works, provided that it should not be liable for any hydrant rents for such *160 time as the works should not be able to supply the required amount of water. '

It was also. provided, by section 13, that the ordinance should become binding, as a contract, upon the city, on the filing with the mayor of Shelton’s written acceptance of its terms and conditions, and .that, after such acceptance, the ordinance should constitute a contract, and should be the measure of the rights and' liabilities of the city and of Shelton or his assigns.

• On the 16th of May, 1883, Shelton and John C. Stewart, then mayor of the city, executed the following contract: “ It is agreed that Nathan Shelton shall purchase of the city of Galesburg all the ten and six-inch water mains now laid in the streets of said city that he can use in the water works he proposes to build in said city, at the price that it will cost him to buy and lay new mains, less the depreciation in value of said pipes, which depreciation is to be determined by Mr. Shelton and the finance and water committee of the council of said city, and less the cost of relaying, recaulking and repairing said mains, should they have to be taken up, relaid, recaulked. or repaired, and less the cost of recutting for cross-connections, and the city agrees to sell to Mr. Shelton, in case he shall erect his proposed water works as .above, and deduct the pay' for the sainé from the first hydrant water works rent accruing from said city to said Sheiton. This agreement for the sale of ■yvater mains does not include any mains that are imperfect. It is further agreed that said mains now in use shall not be disturbed further than shall be necessary to cut and make connections with said pipes, until the pipes are laid and ready for use in the adjacent streets.”

On the 11th of May, 1883, the mayor signed the ordinance, and on 'the 19th of May, 1883, at the meeting of the city council, the following communication from Shelton was received and ordered to be filed: “ITon. John C. Stew,art, mayor of the city of Galesburg: I hereby accept the terms and conditions of the ordinance of said city, entitled An ordinance providing for a supply of water to the city of Galesburg and its inhabitants, authorizing Nathan Shelton or assigns to *161 construct and maintain water works, securing protection to said works, contracting with said Nathan Shelton or assigns for a supply of water for public use, and giving said city the option to purchase' said works,’ passed by the city council of •said city May 12th, 1883, to all intents and for the purposes as by the 13th section of said ordinance-1 am to do. Nathan' Shelton.” The contract between Shelton and the mayor for the purchase by Shelton of the water mains from the city was thereupon approved by the city council.

. Shelton then organized a joint-stock corporation, under the general law of the State of Illinois, under the name of the Galesburg Water Company, with a capital stock of $150,000, of which stock Shelton owned the amount of $147,500.

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Bluebook (online)
133 U.S. 156, 10 S. Ct. 316, 33 L. Ed. 573, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-galesburg-scotus-1890.