Kennedy v. County of San Mateo

179 Cal. App. 596
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1960
DocketCiv. No. 19000
StatusPublished

This text of 179 Cal. App. 596 (Kennedy v. County of San Mateo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. County of San Mateo, 179 Cal. App. 596 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

BRAT, P. J.

appeal from the order and judgment denying the petition for writ of mandate, entered after an order sustaining respondents’ demurrer to the petition without leave to amend.

Question Presented

Would the granting of a permit to petitioners to connect with respondents' main have violated section 4011.6, Health and Safety Code ?

Record

Petitioners sought a writ of mandate compelling respondents to furnish a water service connection to petitioners for the purpose of supplying water for domestic purposes to petitioners’ property in San Mateo County Waterworks District Number 3. Before the organization of the district in 1951 the water mains were the property of a mutual water system organized in 1928. The latter quitclaimed its property to the district when it was organized. In 1951 A. J. Harwood, a predecessor in interest of petitioners, laid a 1-inch main in front of the property connecting it to a 2-inch main of the district, which main was installed prior to 1948 about the same time a connection from the 1-inch main to the property adjoining that of petitioners was made. Ever since the district has been supplying water to that property. All other property in the neighborhood of that of petitioners and the adjoining property can be served, or is being served, by the district from 2-inch mains on other streets. When the district was formed bonds amounting to $25,000 were issued and sold. These bonds were a lien on all real property in the district, including that of petitioners. Taxes on their property paid by petitioners have been used to pay interest on the bonds and to amortize them. April 1, 1959, petitioners, in writing, demanded a water service connection at the 1-inch main and tendered the district $150, the established charge for a service connection. Petitioners proposed, at their own cost, to lay a %-ineh pipe from the main to their property. Their demand was refused. The trial court sustained without leave to amend respondents’ demurrer to petitioners’ amended petition on the ground that the granting of a permit to respondents to connect with the [598]*598district’s main would have violated section 4011.6 of the Health and Safety Code.

Section 4011.6, Health and Safety Code, Would Not Have Been Violated By Granting the Permit.

Section 4011 in effect required the district to obtain from the State Board of Health a permit to supply water for domestic purposes. Section 4011.6 provides: “No person shall modify, add to or change his distribution system for water for domestic purposes as authorized by a valid existing permit issued to him by said board unless he first files a petition so to do with said board and receives an amended permit as provided in this chapter authorizing such modification, addition or change in his distribution system as may be specified in such amended permit, or unless such modifications, additions or changes in said distribution system comply in all particulars with such of the mandatory requirements of the Water Works Standards as pertain to the quality of water supplied to consumers.”

The “Water Works Standards” referred to are defined by section 4010.5 of the Health and Safety Code. “ ‘Water Works Standards, ’ as used in this chapter, means the ‘Standards of Minimum Requirements for Safe Practice in the Production and Delivery of Water for Domestic Use’ adopted by the California Section of the American Water Works Association on October 29, 1948.”

The trial court held that the petitioners did not state a cause for relief because (1) it did not appear that the district had the amended permit to “modify, add to or change his distribution system . . . as authorized by a valid existing permit...” (actually it appeared that both the district and its predecessor had been operating the distribution system without any permit, let alone an “amended permit”), and (2) it appeared that under section 5.4112 of the Water Works Standards, 1-inch mains are not permitted.

It further appears that on June 10, 1959 (before petitioners filed their amended petition, a demurrer to their original petition having been sustained with leave to amend), the district received the permit required by section 4011. The permit was one to operate the system which had been operating without a permit and did not relate to petitioners ’ application to connect with the 1-inch line for water service.

It is doubtful if section 4011.6 requires the district to apply for an amended permit every time an application is made to it by a property owner for a connection. Adding a connection to [599]*599an already established line without extending a main hardly appears to “modify, add to or change” the distribution system. If the Legislature intended that a water district had to apply to the State Board of Health every time a customer wanted water service it would have said so. It would appear that the amended permit which section 4011.6 contemplated dealt with changes in the distribution system other than a direct connection to a new customer. However, assuming that respondents’ contention is correct that the language in that section dealing with an amended permit included mere connections as distinguished from mains, the section provides an alternative—the district must either obtain an amended permit or comply in such change with the mandatory requirements of the Water Works Standards. That portion of the Water Works Standards upon which the district relies provides: “ 1.2 For the purposes of these minimum requirements the use of the word shall indicates a mandatory requirement and the use of the word should indicates a recommendation for good water works practice. . . .

“5.411 The maximum length of run of each size of pipe should conform to existing requirements of proper local authority but in the absence of such locally promulgated requirements and in no case should the maximum run of pipe be greater than the following:

“5.4111 In unreinforced runs (deadends)
“None smaller than 2-inch in diameter” (Emphasis added)

It is obvious that section 5.411 does not refer to connections to mains but only to mains themselves. The district concedes that there is no requirement in the Standards that the connections from a main to the property line be a 2-inch line. The district takes the position that because of the recommendation in section 5.411 that the main not be smaller than 2 inches, it would be violating that section and section 4011.5, Health and Safety Code, if it permitted petitioners to connect to the presently maintained 1-ineh main. There are two very good answers to this contention. One is that neither deal with connections from mains to property lines and the second is that even for mains the recommendation of 2 inches is not a mandatory requirement. Section 4011.6 requires only that to “modify, add to or change” a distribution system (and as we have hereinbefore pointed out permitting a connection to supply water to property fronting on a main is doing neither of those), the district comply with the mandatory requirements of the Water Works Standards. While districts may no longer install [600]*6001-inch mains in their distribution systems, there is nothing in the statute or in the Standards which prohibits a district from maintaining already installed 1-inch mains or from permitting connections thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 Cal. App. 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-county-of-san-mateo-calctapp-1960.