Lake Charles Ice, Light & Waterworks Co. v. City of Lake Charles

106 La. 65
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 13,512
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 La. 65 (Lake Charles Ice, Light & Waterworks Co. v. City of Lake Charles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Charles Ice, Light & Waterworks Co. v. City of Lake Charles, 106 La. 65 (La. 1901).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

On application for rehearing by

Blanchard, J.

Breaux, J.

Plaintiff brings this suit for the sum of fifteen thousand and fifty dollars, with interest, for supplying water and light, to the city of Lake Charles. Two contracts to this end were entered into, both dated in 1891.

In November of that year, the town council took steps to secure a water supply and, to that end, entered into one of the contracts with the plaintiff company which was not to be considered as completely binding before holding a taxpayers’ election. The election was called, and resulted in favor of the tax. By the terms of this contract, the city became the lessee of a number of hydrants from the defendant company. The city, by special ordinances, obligated itself to appropriate and set aside, each year, an amount sufficient to pay for the year’s supply of water.

Plaintiff performed its part of the contract from October 1st, 1892, to the date of the trial of this suit in the District Court, and the defendant, without objection at any time, received the water supplied. The number of inhabitants and the wealth of the city increased, whether owing to the attraction of the pleasing shores of the lake of the same name and the many advantages which the locality affords, or to the water supply and light furnished by the plaintiff company, we will not stop to enquire, although incidentally referred to in the argument.

The other contract, before maintained, entered into the same year between the city and the plaintiq company was for light. The council, in matter of the details of this contract, did hot submit the question of taxation to the taxpayers, no election by the taxpayers was held to assess the amount, as we infer after having read the voluminous record before us. An appropriation was made and provision adopted to set aside an [67]*67amount to pay for the light during the fifteen years which the plaintiff bound itself to furnish light to the city.

Defendant attacks these contracts, and urges, in defense, that they are illegal and not binding upon the municipality for the reason that the corporation, the defendant, sought to create by the amendment to the town charter attempted in 1881 and again in 1891 was not warranted by the law and that it never had any vitality either as a de jure or de facto corporation and was without authority to create obligations and incur debts; that the officers, after these amendments had been 'adopted, were neither de jure nor de facto officers.

The legal history of the controversy takes us back to the act of incorporation of the town of Lake Charles in the year 1867. In the charter then granted, the limits of the town are well defined. The town was invested with such express powers as were nearly always inserted in acts qf incorporation of municipalities in those days. While there was general power in the charter and a number of special powers delegated, there was none expressly granted to provide for the supply of water and light. Owing to the growth and improvement of the city, in 1881, the thinly inhabited town had become a prosperous little city, and an amendment to the charter of 1867 was submitted to .a vote of the citizens. It was adopted, and the limits of the city were extended so as to embrace considerable additional territory and include, as residents within its limits, an additional large number of voters and tax-payers. The municipality continued in the exercise of its jurisdiction under the original charter and this amendment without change, until 1891, in which year another attempt was made to amend the charter. Both attempts to amend the charter of incorporation proved of no avail. The court decided that they were abortive and completely illegal; that the claim of the corporation of having enlarged its territory according to law was unfounded, for the reasons stated in the opinion. Dees vs. City of Lake Charles, 50 Ann. 356. The defendant now contends that the only municipal corporation which ever had any legal existence was the town of Lake Charles created by its legislative charter of 1867, having no powers except those delegated by that charter, covering no territory except within the limits therein defined, having no other inhabitants than those living in that territory, and no officers except those elected and qualified according to the requirements of that charter; that, in consequence, it became necessary to relieve the' city from the state of suspended animation in which it had existed since the attempted [68]*68adoption of those amendments and to revive its corporate activity, to have officers appointed competent to represent it and to administer its municipal functions; that the officers of the asserted corporation retired and abdicated and the Governor exercised his appointive power and filled the vacancies; that the officers appointed took charge and administered municipal affairs until the election day fixed in the charter arrived, and then a Mayor and five couneilmen were elected by the people of the corporation; that this body refused to recognize the contracts sued on, or to make any provision for their payment.

After all this, by valid proceedings, the charter of 1867 was legally amended, the limits extended, the name changed, and the amended charter adopted. (See Act of 1899.)

Defendant insists that the contracts sued on, because of the informality decreed in the cited case, are not bincKng.

Plaintiff calls our attention to the fact that the change contemplated by the proceedings of 1884 was to annex additional territory and that in other respects the charter of 1867 remained as it originally was, and that the legislative proceedings of 1899 alone, amended the act of incorporation of 1867. Section 8 of the amendment sets out that the municipality shall have all the powers granted under the original charter of 1867, as though the territory annexed had formed part of the territory under the old charter. This provision of the statute has, in our view, an effect which should not be overlooked in passing upon the rights of the parties. The legislative intent evidently was, as far as possible, to remedy the informality which had crept into the proceedings under which an election was held to extend the limits of the city, as before stated. If effect be given to this language of the statute, it follows, in our view, that creditors were to be protected in their claims.

Referring to the charter of 1867, and the powers delegated/ the defendant urges that it embraced no power authorizing the municipality to make provision to supply the city with water and light. "We agree with the statement that the power was not expressed, but we aré decidedly of the opinion that it may fairly be implied that the municipality did not act beyond its powers in so far as it made suitable provision for lighting the streets and for supplying the public with water. Those, in modern cities, have become essential improvements. Lights lessen the opportunity for committing crime, and go far toward preventing disorder. They assist the police authorities in enforcing the ordinances and laws arid afford, in many respects, better protection [69]*69to the owners of property, and add enjoyment to life not felt in dark and gloomy streets where lights are dim and total darkness prevails.

The other claim is covered, we have seen, by a contract having in view the supply of water to the city, as important to the general welfare and interests as lights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 La. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-charles-ice-light-waterworks-co-v-city-of-lake-charles-la-1901.