Poole v. Paris Mountain Water Co.

62 S.E. 874, 81 S.C. 438, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 16, 1908
Docket7041
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 874 (Poole v. Paris Mountain Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poole v. Paris Mountain Water Co., 62 S.E. 874, 81 S.C. 438, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 298 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*442 Mr. Justice Jones.

The Paris Mountain Water Company, respondent, is a corporation under the laws of this State and is engaged in the business of supplying water to the city of Greenville and its inhabitants. The petitioner, Poole, is a citizen and resident of the city of Greenville and the dwelling occupied by him, No. 487 Coxe street, was connected by service pipe and meter with defendant’s water mains. William A. Hamby was the owner of the dwelling, and water was supplied under a contract made between respondent and Hamby before petitioner became tenant. The petitioner became tenant of the house on January 2-4, 1907, and finding the water turned on used so* much of it as he desired) during the year 1907. About January 1, 1908, respondent presented petitioner with a bill for $65, based upon the quantity of water as registered by the meter at forty cents per one thousand gallons. The petitioner, claiming that the amount demanded was exhorbitant, refused to pay the same, but offered to' pay $5, the flat rate provided in the schedule for “residences occupied by one family, five rooms,” which was refused by respondent. Within ten days after presenting the bill respondent cut off the water supply from the premises. Respondent offered to adjust the account for twelve dollars, but petitioner refused to pay that amount. Petitioner demanded that respondent supply his premises with water, and offered to sign a contract for the year 1908, on a reasonable basis, and to pay the first quarter in advance, but respondent refused to supply him further with water unless he pay the amount demanded, reduced to twelve dollars.

This proceeding was begum in the Circuit Court to compel respondent to supply petitioner with water, and to> execute a contract for the year 1908, at the rate of $5 per annum, the minimum rate fixed by the city ordinance, upon compliance by petitioner with the reasonable rules of respondent company.

*443 Judge Klugh dismissed the petition, in a decree herewith reported, and the petitioner appeals.

1 Mandamus is an appropriate remedy to compel a public service water company to supply its customers with water, upon compliance with its reasonable rules and regulations. The right of the company to adopt reasonable rules for the conduct of its business, and the duty of the customer to comply with such rules, is not and cannot be disputed. The rule adopted by respondent involved in this case is as follows: “All water rents shall be payable to the treasurer or other authorized person, at the office of the company, on the first day of January, April, July and October of each year. Should the water rent remain unpaid thirty (30) days from the date of bill, the supply of water may be cut off without notice, and the company shall have the right to isue for and recover the amount due for the time that water was furnished prior to cutting off supply.”

2 In the absence of a statute making water rents a lien or encumbrance upon the premises, this regulation is not reasonable, so far as it may be construed' to authorize cutting off water supply should a tenant refuse to pay delinquent water rents due by the landlord or former occupant, as this would coerce a person to- pay the debt of another. Turner v. Revere Water Company, 171 Mass., 329, 68 Am. St. Rep., 432; Burke v. City Water Valley, 87 Miss., 732, 112 Am. St. Rep., 468; Linne v. Bredes, 43 Wash., 540; 117 Am. St. Rep., 1070, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.), 707. But with respect to a consumer, who is under an express or implied contract to pay water rents, it is reasonable to allow the company to protect itself by cutting off the supply from such consumer until he has paid delinquent water rents due by him. People v. Manhattan Gas Light Company, 45 Barb., 136; Sheward v. Citizens Water Co., 90 Cal., 635, 27 Pac., 439; Tacoma Hotel Co. v. Tacoma Land etc. Co., 3 Wash., 316, 28 Am. St. Rep., 35, 30 Encyc. Law, 2d Ed., 419, 420.

*444 3 The petitioner used the water supplied, and he alleges that he was informed, on February 15, 1907, that he would have to pay the water rent, but that he did not know the conditions upon which respondent supplied said place with water; that he went to the offices of respondent to sign a contract therefor, and stood ready and willing at any time to sign a reasonable contract and to pay reasonable charges for what he used. The respondent alleged that it was not aware that petitioner occupied the premises until several months after January 1, 1907; that no application was made to it by petitioner for a contract far water service; that the water was supplied to'the premises under a contract with the owner, Hamby; and that quarterly statements, or water bills, were mailed to said Hamby; and on information alleged that Hamby delivered these bills to petitioner. The petitioner, however, denied, under oath, that any such bills had ever been presented to him, either by Hamby or respondent. These circumstances, we think, justified the Circuit Court in holding that there was an implied contract by petitioner to pay reasonable charges for the amount of water consumed. We further agree with the Circuit Court that petitioner was bound to pay at meter rates. Section 7 of the franchise ordinance provided : “That the said water company should not charge to ■the consumers, during the existence of this franchise, exceeding the following maximum rates, but they shall have the right, at their option, at any time to' insert a water meter into the service pipe of any consumer, and supply him at meter rates. No water shall be supplied to any consumer per year for less than $5.” Then follows a schedule containing the flat rates, among other items: “Residence, occupied by one family, five rooms, $5.” Then the schedule of meter rates, and among other items: “100 to 1,000 gallons per day, at rate of 1,000 gallons, 40' cents.” Under this authority respondent had the right to subject petitioner to reasonable meter rates. Charleston Light and Water Co. *445 v. Lloyd Laundry and Shirt Mfg. Co., post, 475. The contention of petitioner, that he is only liable on the basis of the flat rate, and that he is entitled to a contract for the year 1908 at the flat rate, cannot be sustained.

The Circuit Court was also correct in holding that the reasonableness of the meter rates, as> specified in the ordinance, was not questioned; and, in the absence of any adverse evidence, the rates fixed in the ordinance are presumptively reasonable.

4 We think, however, that the Circuit Court was in error in holding that the reliability of the meter was not questioned. It is alleged that the house occupied by petitioner contained only four rooms; that his family consisted of himself, wife and three small children, aged seven, four and two years, respectively; that he owned no cow or stock of any kind to consume water; and that the consumption of water did not exceed thirty gallons per day.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 874, 81 S.C. 438, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-paris-mountain-water-co-sc-1908.