Harding v. City of Dickinson

33 N.W.2d 626, 76 N.D. 71, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 60
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1948
DocketFile 7107
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 33 N.W.2d 626 (Harding v. City of Dickinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harding v. City of Dickinson, 33 N.W.2d 626, 76 N.D. 71, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 60 (N.D. 1948).

Opinion

Grimson, District Judge.

The plaintiff is a citizen and taxpayer of -the City of Dickinson, North Dakota, and brings this action on behalf of himself and all other citizens and taxpayers of the City of Dickinson similarly situated to enjoin the City of Dickinson and its Board of City Commissioners from entering into a proposed contract with the United States for a supply of water for the City. The trial court granted the prayer of *75 the plaintiff and enjoined the City from entering into said proposed contract. The defendants appeal from the judgment.

From the stipulated facts it appears that the City of Dickinson owns and operates a water supply system and distribution facilities but does not have available an adequate supply of water for city purposes; that negotiations were had with the United States of America through the Bureau of Reclamation of the Department of the Interior to obtain an adequate water supply from the proposed Dickinson Dam on the Heart River located about two miles from the City of Dickinson; that these negotiations culminated in a proposed contract which was then embodied in an ordinance enacted by the Board of City Commissioners of the City of Dickinson and approved by a majority of those voting at an election held for that purpose.

Four objections are raised to the completion of this proposed contract. First, that the City has no power to enter into the contract with the United States. Second, that the proposed contract makes the obligations thereunder a general obligation of the City of Dickinson, in contravention of the statute. Third, that there has been no appropriation for the payment of water to be furnished for the first year. Fourth, that the execution of the contract would entail large obligations for watermaihs, ditches, and other installations for which no plans, specifications and estimates have been prepared or provided and no provision made for the payment of the same.

It is conceded that the United States has authority to enter into such a contract. It is.further conceded that the City of Dickinson has only such authority as is given it by statute or •necessarily implied therefrom. Lang v. Cavalier, 59 ND 75, 84, 228 NW 819. Section 40-3316 ND Rev Code 1943, is claimed as the authority for the City to enter into the contract. The question raised is whether or not the City acted within the authority there granted.

That statute reads as follows:

“Municipality May Purchase Water for Distribution. Any city or village owning a system for the distribution of water for fire protection and other public purposes and for selling *76 water to its inhabitants and industries, but for which the water supply is unsuitable or inadequate, may contract to purchase water at wholesale for such purposes from any person, firm, or public or private corporation able and willing to furnish the same, upon such terms and during such period, not exceeding forty years, as the city or village governing body shall deem appropriate. Any such contract shall be authorized by an ordinance submitted to- the voters for approval by a majority of those voting on the proposition before it takes effect. In and by such ordinance and contract, the city or village may bind itself:
1. To establish and maintain rates and charges for supplying water by it to its inhabitants and industries, either according to a prescribed schedule agreed upon or sufficient to produce net stated amounts for specified periods during the life of the contract, or both, and to appropriate and use the same for payments to become due under the contract, and, if the contract so provides, the city or village shall be obligated to pay for such water solely out of such net revenues;
2. To pay, at an agreed rate oy rates, for all water taken by the city under such contract and not resold by it; and
3. To do and perform any other acts or things which, in the discretion of the governing body, are deemed reasonable and appropriate for the procurement of such water on the most efficient and economical basis.
If any payments under any contract are to be made solely out of new revenues, the contract may fix and prescribe the method or basis on which net revenues are to be computed.”

To determine whether the proposed contract comes within the statute its terms must be analyzed and construed.

In construing a statute the ordinary sense in which words are used (§ 1-0202 ND Rev Code 1943) and the context in which they are placed (§ 1-0203 ND Rev Code 1943) and the background for its enactment as far as that can be ascertained from the whole act must be considered. The main object sought in the construction of a statute is to ascertain and give effect to *77 the intention of the lawmakers as expressed therein. Murie v. Cavalier County, 68 ND 242, 278 NW 243; State v. Rother, 56 ND 875, 219 NW 574.

“All statutes must he construed if possible, so as to give them validity, force and effect and carry out the will of the legislator. In doing this respect must always be had to the language of the statute, the plain and obvious meaning of the words used and . . . their objects and purposes.” People v. Sweetser, 1 Dak 308, 46 NW 452.
“There is always difficulty in extending the operation of words beyond their plain import; but the cardinal rule of construction is, that where any doubt exists, the intent of the legislature, if it can be plainly perceived, ought to be pursued. It is also a rule that the whole law is to be taken together, and one part expounded by any other which may indicate the meaning annexed by the legislature itself to ambiguous phrases.” Chief Justice Marshall in Postmaster Gen. v. Early, 12 Wheat (US) 136, 6 L ed 577.

This § 40-3316, supra, was first enaetecl as Ch. 184 of the Session Laws of 1943. The Court will take judicial notice that during the decade between 1930 and 1940 North Dakota suffered a period of drouth and the maintaining of an adequate water supply for some cities and villages became a serious problem. The Water Conservation Law was enacted. The State Water Commission was established. Chapter 184, SL 1943, was introduced by Senator Harry O’Brien of Walsh County by request of the State Water Commission. The title of the act is: “An Act authorizing and relating to contracts by certain cities and villages for obtaining a supply of water for public and domestic uses.” The wording of the whole act indicates that the legislative intent was to give the authority to the cities to contract for a water supply with any entity “able and willing to furnish the same” and on the most “efficient and economical basis.”

The first objection argued is that the United States is not one of the parties with which the City is authorized to con *78 tract under the above section. Specifically the question is whether the United States is included in the term “public corporation”.

In the case of Ableman v. Booth, 21 How (US) 506, 16 L ed 169, the United States is stated to be a political corporation. In Respublica v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.W.2d 626, 76 N.D. 71, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-city-of-dickinson-nd-1948.