Public Supply of Water ex rel. Coal Companies

10 Pa. D. & C. 570
CourtPennsylvania Department of Justice
DecidedDecember 5, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Pa. D. & C. 570 (Public Supply of Water ex rel. Coal Companies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Department of Justice primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Supply of Water ex rel. Coal Companies, 10 Pa. D. & C. 570 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Baldrige, Att’y-Gen.,

This department is in receipt of your letter of recent date, asking to be advised whether certain bituminous coal companies are supplying water to the “public” within the meaning of section 3 of the Act of April 22, 1905, P. L. 260, which reads as follows: “No . . . private corporation, company or individual shall construct water-works for [571]*571the supply of water to the public . . . without a written permit, to be obtained from the Commissioner of Health. . . .”

The circumstances under which this water is supplied you describe as follows :

“In the bituminous coal regions of Pennsylvania, it is believed to be a common practice for a coal company to select a spring, well or surface stream as a source of water, or to make a contract for a supply of water with a nearby water company or municipality, and convey such water, by means of a system of pipes, to the village wherein the coal company’s employees dwell.
“Sometimes the water is supplied to the inhabitants of the village by means of hydrants in the streets or on the premises; sometimes the water is piped within the houses; sometimes, apparently, no charge whatever is made for the water; sometimes it is understood that the rent of the houses includes furnishing the water, and sometimes water rent is specifically mentioned in the lease for the house and constitutes a charge separate from the rent of the house.”
“Water-works” has been defined as “a term that includes streams, springs, wells, pumps, engines and all machinery, lands, buildings and things for supplying, or used for supplying, water:” 40 Cyc., 846. See, also, Randall v. Smith, 51 So. Repr. 917; 8 Words and Phrases, 7417.

It may properly be assumed that the coal companies referred to have constructed water-works and are furnishing water for human consumption. The more difficult question for determination is, are these coal companies engaged in the “supply of water to the public” as contemplated by the Act of 19057 If so, they should obtain written permits from the Secretary of Health.

The word “public” does not have a fixed or definite meaning. It is variously used, and a reference to the cases will show that it has widely different meanings as used in acts of assembly whose objects are dissimilar. As stated in Huston Township Poor District v. Benezette Township Poor District, 135 Pa. 393, 398: “The word ‘public’ is a convertible term, and when used in an act of assembly, may refer to the whole body politic; that is to say, to all the inhabitants of the State, or to the inhabitants of a particular place only; it may be properly applied to the affairs of the State or of a county or of a community. . . .”

In the case of State v. Luce, 32 Atl. Repr. (Del.) 1076, the court said: “When, with reference to an alleged nuisance, the people or citizens of a neighborhood, or the public, are mentioned, it does not mean all the people, or all the public, but only such considerable number of them as to show that more than a few merely are meant. . . . The term ‘public’ does not mean all the people, nor most of the people, nor very many of the people of the place, but so many of them as contradistinguishes them from a few. . . .”

On the other hand, there are many definitions of the word “public” which, if considered alone, might seem to indicate that the coal companies here in question are not supplying water to the “public.” These latter definitions, however, do not involve the word “public,” as used in a statute which has been enacted as a police regulation, “for the protection of public health.”

The Supreme Court, in the case of Com. v. Emmers, 221 Pa. 298, in discussing the Act of 1905, said: “. . . The statute was passed in the exercise of the police power of the State. That power undoubtedly extends to all regulations affecting the health, good order, morals, peace and safety of society. All sorts of restrictions and burdens are imposed under this power, and when these are not in conflict with any constitutional prohibition or fundamental principle, they cannot be successfully assailed in a judicial tribunal. That [572]*572the preservation of the waters of the State from pollution, involving danger to health, is a proper subject for the exercise of the police power cannot be seriously questioned.”

The purpose of the legislature in enacting the statute is shown quite clearly in the language found on page 312 of the above opinion: “. . . This statute required every individual, corporation or municipality supplying the public with water to file in the ofliee of the Health Department of the State a statement of its source of supply. It requires every municipality which, at the time of the adoption of the statute, was maintaining a system of sewerage to file in that department a plan thereof. These provisions necessarily result in making a matter of public record, in the office of the Commissioner of Health, the sources from which the public water supply of every community in the State is taken, and a like record of every opening of a public sewer system into the waters of the State. Should an epidemic develop in any community, the health authorities immediately have accurate information as to the source from which the public water supply of that community is derived and whether any public sewer system is discharged into the water. The State legislation requiring physicians in municipalities to make reports to the health authorities of all cases of diseases will place at the disposal of the Commissioner of Health information as to the health conditions existing in the municipalities using the various public sewer systems. The Commissioner of Health and officers under his control will thus constantly have a large part of the information necessary to deal with the health conditions of any community.”

Thus the purpose of this legislation as above defined would seem to embrace as well the case of a supply of water to the inhabitants of a mining village living in “company” houses, which water is supplied by such company to its own tenants and none other, as to the case of the supply of water to all the people requiring such service in an entire “town, borough, city or district” by a company incorporated, under paragraph 9 of section 2 of the General Corporation Act of 1874, for “the supply of water to the public.” Whether the people served live in “company” houses and receive their supply of water from the company for which they work or whether they receive it, along with other members of the community in which they live, from an incorporated water company would not seem to be a fair test of whether or not they are comprehended within the meaning of the word “public” as used in this statute, which has to do with the important problem of the protection of “public” health. The public complexion of the group served and the general public injury that might follow from serving impure water to such a group of people should not be permitted to be obscured by a reference to the powers, purposes and obligations of the corporation serving.

In support and explanation of the foregoing, the following text excerpts, well fortified by authority, may be cited:

“It is well settled that, in construing any statute, all the language shall be considered, and such interpretation placed upon any word or phrase appearing therein as was within the manifest intent of the body which enacted the law.

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Related

Huston Tp. Poor D. v. Benezette Tp. Poor D.
19 A. 1060 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1890)
Commonwealth v. Emmers
70 A. 762 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1908)
Commonwealth v. Kennedy
87 A. 605 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Dixon v. Sheffer
46 Pa. Super. 452 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. D. & C. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-supply-of-water-ex-rel-coal-companies-padeptjust-1927.