McDaniel v. Springfield Waterworks Co.

48 Mo. App. 273, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 98
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 Mo. App. 273 (McDaniel v. Springfield Waterworks Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDaniel v. Springfield Waterworks Co., 48 Mo. App. 273, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 98 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

The plajntiffs. are partners, engaged in keeping a livery stable in the city of Springfield in this state. The defendant is a corporation engaged, as the assignee of a franchise .granted by the city of Springfield to one Perkins, in supplying the inhabitants of that city with water. This is a su-i-t-iu eq-aityior an injunction — t-O' restrain the defendants from cutting off the supply of water from, the , Every etablerofThe plaintiffs. The court granted a provisional injunction, but dissolved it on final hearing, and the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The franchise, .was granted To Perkins by the city in the.ffo-HnU¿í-.-an~ ordinance, the provisions of which were accepted by him. This ordinance, among other [275]*275provisions, contains the following: “And hereby is granted to the said Perkins and assigns the right to make "AlTneedful rules and regulations for the protection of said waterworks and their operation, the tapping of mains, proper size of service pipe, and appliances to ■be used in and upon all outside appliances connected with the said waterworks, in supplying the consumers with water,-andlor shutting off water for non-payment ■of water rent by private consumers, or for waste or any wrongful use of water.”

The ordinance_ also confers upon Perkins, or his assigns, the power"to collect, .as their annual rate for the use of water, a tariff of prices equal to, but not exceeding, the annexed list as follows: * * * “ Livery-horses,^including all of a similar kind, and washing ■carriages, $3; each additional stall, $1.50.” In pursuance of the power thus granted, the defendant corporation established.' a series..of...regulations prohibiting . among other.things the waste of water, and providing that aTviolation of the same would be visited with a loss of dhe water supply, etc. In one of these regulations the company reserved the power to ascertain by meters the quantity of water used in any case, and provided that a meter should be affixed, whenever, in the judgment of the company, it should be deemed • expedient.

The defendants, having satisfied themselves that the .plaintiffs were wasting the water supplied to them at their livery stable, affixed a water meter to the pipe which supplied the stable, and made out bills against the jplaintiffs for the water supplied to their stable, as shown by the meter measurement, in excess of the .amount of twenty gallons per horse per day, which amount included also what was deemed necessary for the plaintiffs to expend in the washing- of.-their carriages and buggies. By these bills the defendants • demand of the plaintiffs about $35 or $30 a month, .roughly speaking, in excess of what the plaintiffs would [276]*276have to pay under the rate of charges..fixed, by the ordinance ’ as above quoted, and about five times" the amount per month which they would be required to pay under that ordinance. The theory of the defendant is that the plaintiffs have a right, at the rate prescribed by the ordinance, to the use of a reasonable amount of water for watering their horses and washing their vehicles and harnesses, and that the, defendants have a right to charge them at meter measurement for any excess of water used by them over such reasonable amount, as being unreasonably wasted in their business. The defendants do not claim the right arbitrarily to fix the amount of water which the plaintiffs shall use in their business, and to charge them for any excess over the amount so fixed; but concede that they are bound» to fix a limit sufficiently liberal towards the plaintiffs to be vindicated in a court of justice.

The plaintiffs, on the other hand, deny the right of the defendants to subject their livery stable to a meter measurement of the water used, and deny their right to place any limit whatever upon the amount of water which they may use; but take the position that, if they are guilty of wasting water supplied to them by defendants, the remedy of the defendants must be in a common-law action for damages for such waste, and that the defendants cannot take the remedy into their own hands by shutting off the water, or by charging the plaintiffs for such amount as the defendants may deem to be waste, under the pain of shutting off their supply of water if the plaintiffs do not pay such extra charge.

The defendants gave no evidence whatever, attempting to justify the limit which they fix at twenty gallons per day per horse, including the washing of vehicles. But the senior partner of the plaintiffs, testifying as a witness in behalf of the plaintiffs, gave evidence which helped the defendants out in this particular, which was to the effect that the average amount of water which a horse will drink in summer is about sixteen gallons, and [277]*277that the average is about half that iu winter; also that the average number of vehicles washed by the plaintiffs is about fifteen per day, and that the average amount required to wash each vehicle is twenty gallons. The other evidence in the case adduced by the opposing parties, stated most favorably for the plaintiffs, shows that there has been on the part'of the plaintiffs a gross waste..of the water supplied to them in their livery •stable. The evidence shows that the manner in which buggies are washed by the plaintiffs, and the manner in which they are usually washed by livery-stable keepers in Springfield, is to prop up the axle so that the wheel will revolve, and then turn a hose upon the wheel, the water running at about half pressure without a nozzle, so as to strike the wheel with a weak current. After it is wet the washer applies a sponge, and by the aid of this jet of water washes the wheel off; after which it is rinsed, dried, chamoised and oiled. The plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that it takes one man about seven hours each day to wash all the buggies which have to be washed in the plaintiffs’ stable. It also shows that it is necessary to keep the hose running less than half of this time. It also shows that the hose, running at the pressure used when washing buggies discharges six gallons of water per minute. If we apply this liberal estimate to the plaintiffs’ stable during the month of October, 1890, when they had therein fifty-one horses, and allow to each horse sixteen gallons of water per day for drinking purposes, we shall find the amount of water necessary for the horses to be eight hundred and sixteen gallons per day ; the amount necessary for washing the vehicles twelve hundred and sixty gallons per day; the total amount necessary for daily consumption two thousand and seventy-six gallons ; making a total amount necessary to be consumed during the thirty-one days of that month, of sixty-four thousand and three hundred and eighty-six gallons. But the amount which was consumed, as [278]*278registered by the defendant’s meter, was one hundred and forty-four thousand and eighty-two gallons. The evidence totally fails to account for this enormous discrepancy. All the evidence tends to show that, while the water meters used by the defendant sometimes get out of order, yet that when out of order they merely fail to register the water which passes through them ; and that they never register inore water than does pass through them. To this there is no opposing evidence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State ex rel. Spanish Lake Service, Inc. v. Luten
500 S.W.2d 46 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)
Steele v. Clinton Electric Light & Power Co.
193 A. 613 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1937)
Ragsdale v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen
80 S.W.2d 272 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1934)
City of Middlesboro v. Kentucky Utilities Co.
72 S.W.2d 734 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)
Sims v. Alabama Water Co.
87 So. 688 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1920)
City of Winchester v. Kentucky Utilities Co.
206 S.W. 296 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1918)
Carter v. the Suburban Water Co.
101 A. 771 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1917)
City of Mansfield v. Humphreys Manufacturing Co.
82 Ohio St. (N.S.) 216 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1910)
Burke v. City of Water Valley
40 So. 820 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1905)
Turner v. Revere Water Co.
40 L.R.A. 657 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Mo. App. 273, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-springfield-waterworks-co-moctapp-1892.