Planters' Oil Mill v. Monroe Waterworks & Light Co.

52 La. Ann. 1243
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,378
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 1243 (Planters' Oil Mill v. Monroe Waterworks & Light Co.) 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
Planters' Oil Mill v. Monroe Waterworks & Light Co., 52 La. Ann. 1243 (La. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Plaintiff’s mill property, situated in' the City of Monroe, Louisiana, was destroyed by fire in February, 1899.

It was partly insured in various fire insurance companies, and these companies paid plaintiff, on account .of the loss, $41,114.32 in the aggregate.

Plaintiff claims its total loss to have been $46,483.97, or $5,369.65 greater than the amount collected from the insurance companies.

When the companies paid, they took from plaintiff a 'transfer and subrogation of his rights and claims, on account of the fire, against .the Monroe Waterworks and Light Company and the City of Monroe.

Plaintiff, for its own benefit to the extent of $5,369.65 (representing the value of its property destroyed by the fire in excess of amount collected from the companies), and for the use and benefit of the several insurance companies to the extent of the $41,114.32 paid' by them, brings this action against the defendant Waterworks Company and the City of Monroe, asking judgment in solido against them for the full amount of the loss, aggregating the aforesaid sum of $46,483.97.

The suit is predicated upon a contract made by the City of Monroe with the Waterworks Company by which the latter obligated itself to furnish a sufficient supply of water for the various purposes of the municipality and its citizens, including the extinguishment of fires, in consideration of the grant to the company by the city for thirty years of the franchise and right of constructing, maintaining and operating its system of waterworks and electric lights in the city, including the right of way over the streets and public grounds of the municipality, and in further consideration of the payment by the city to the company of a stipulated sum per annum for the use and rental of a certain number of fire hydrants and are lights, and of the right and privilege of collecting from the inhabitants of the city certain charges and rates for the use of water and electric lights.

To enable the city to meet its engagement under this proposed contract — -that is to say, to provide the funds for the hydrants, rental and [1245]*1245electric lights specified in the agreement — it was stipulated that the city should levy and collect annually a special tax of 3 1-2 mills, to be known as the fire hydrant, and electric light tax.

Before this tax could be legally levied and collected the proposition had to be submitted to the property tax payers of the city at a special election ordered for the purpose. The election was ordered, the proposition submitted and adopted by the requisite vote.

The proposition as submitted was whether the property taxpayers would direct the Mayor and City Council to levy and collect annually for ten years a five-mill tax upon all the property in the city for the purposes of public improvement and to enable the municipality to contract for water supply, sewerage, drainage and electric lights — 3 1-2 mills of which to be set aside and used for securing water and electric lights for the city, and 1 1-2 mills for drainage and other public improvements.

The 3 1-2 mill tax for the water supply and electric light system having been voted by the taxpayers, the same was levied by the Town Council, has been collected each year since then, and is still being collected, and the proceeds thereof applied to the purposes intended.

The waterworks and the electric light plant were constructed, completed in the early part of 1893 and have been operated by the company since then.

The ground upon which plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant Waterworks and Electric Light Company is that it is a citizen and taxpayer of Monroe; that it has each year paid its pro rata of-the special tax levied for the waterworks and electric light system and to the company the usual rates and charges for its own use of the water and light privileges; that the company obligated itself by its contract with the City of Monroe to supply the water necessary for the extinguishment of fires; that .this obligation enures to the benefit of the citizens of the municipality as well as to the municipality itself, and for the breach thereof the company is liable to the citizen in the event of loss to him as the result of the breach, as well as to the city; that there was a breach of the obligation, and utter failure to supply the water needed, and in consequence the fire department of Monroe was unable to extinguish the fire which started in plaintiff’s property; and that had there been the supply of water contracted for, its property would not have- been destroyed, nor the loss it suffered incurred.

[1246]*1246A further ground upon which recovery against the Waterworks Company is asserted is, t,hat there had been a verbal contract entered into between plaintiff and the company by which the latter, in consideration of one hundred dollars per annum paid to it by plaintiff, agreed to supply and have ready at all times for use in pipes and hydrants erected on the premises by plaintifE as a precaution against fire, water in sufficient quantity and with a specified force of pressure sufficient to'serve the purpose of the extinguishment of fires such as the one that destroyed plaintiff’s property, and that there had been a breach, likewise, of the obligation of this/contract, entitling plaintifE to recover as damages the amount of the loss sustained, which loss, it is alleged, would not have occurred had the water contracted for been supplied.

The ground upon which recovery against the City of Monroe is demanded is that said city having stipulated for a bond from the Waterworks Company, to insure the faithful performance of the company’s obligation under the contract, and the bond having been given, and having stipulated further in its contract with the company that in case of the failure of the company to keep the system of waterworks in good and efficient working order, supplying water as per its contract, the city might itself assume charge and control of the works and operate the same, failed to require the company to fulfill its contract, failed to coerce it in respect to its duty by taking proceedings on the bond, and failed to assume charge of the works and operate the same under the stipulation to that effect for the benefit of the city and the inhabitants thereof, and that because of this delinquency on the part of the officials of the municipality, the latter is liable to plaintiff for the loss it has incurred and which, it is averred, would have been prevented had the Waterworks Company been forced by the city to meet the obligations of the contract, or had the city itself taken charge and operated the works.

The petition charges the reckless disregard and flagrant and wanton violation of its contract by the Waterworks Company, and that the city officials well knew of the same and" yet took no steps'to conserve the rights and interests of the city and of the taxpayers and people in respect thereof.

It is represented that the insurance companies, plaintiffs herein, had local agents in Monroe, and that the several contracts of insur[1247]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 1243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planters-oil-mill-v-monroe-waterworks-light-co-la-1900.