Purnell v. Maysville Water Co.

234 S.W. 967, 193 Ky. 85, 23 A.L.R. 223, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 29, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 967 (Purnell v. Maysville Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purnell v. Maysville Water Co., 234 S.W. 967, 193 Ky. 85, 23 A.L.R. 223, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 189 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

The appellee, Maysville Water Company, which was incorporated in 1879 and installed its plant and began to furnish water to the city of Maysville in 1880, and has since been at all times and is now so engaged, brought this action in the Mason circuit court on the 21st day of May last, praying an injunction restraining EL P. Purnell, as judge of the Mason county court,, from proceeding [86]*86to try and from-trying seventeen warrants or any one or more of them, issued by the said judge against the water company for failure to obey an order of the State Board of Health to build and install in connection with its water system a filtration plant and to restrain and enjoin Dr. A. T. McCormack and other members of the State Board of Health, their officers and agents from instituting or causing to be instituted other criminal proceedings against the water company and from prosecuting the said company on the warrants already issued. The case was elaborately prepared and the lower court granted the relief sought by enjoining County Judge Purnell and the State Board of Health from trying the water company on the existing warrants and from issuing new warrants or instituting new criminal proceedings against said company for its failure to obey the order of the board of health to install a filtration plant. With the petition is filed a copy of the franchise ordinance granted in 1879, with the later additions and extensions made by the city of Maysville and accepted by the water company. By the franchise it is provided that the water company should install and have two vertical engines of certain design and capacity as pumping machinery, and that the said water company “shall take the water for the supply of said city, and the inhabitants thereof, from the Ohio river, at a point above the mouth of Limestone creek, and shall carry it thence through a force main which shall be independent of the distributing system of pipes, to a reservoir composed of two basins, each of a capacity of holding one million gallons of water, located on Newdigate’s hill, at or near the head of Limestone street, out of which reservoir the said city, and its inhabitants, shall be supplied with water through a pipe system.”

No provision whatever was made by the ordinance for sedimentation, filtration or chlorination of the water and no arrangements were made by the water company for the clarification or purification of the water except as provided in that part of the ordinance quoted above. At a later date arrangements were made by the water company for the treatment of the water supply with liquid chlorine and the water was taken from wells or shafts near the river’s edge and not from the river, so that the water percolated through the soil or earth into the wells or shafts, and was somewhat clearer and freer from germs harmful to the human organism.. Thereafter the State Board of Health, having become convinced that the water [87]*87supply of Maysville was contaminated with bacteria known as coli-b, and was the cause of sickness in that city, gave the following written notice to the water company in April, 1920:

‘ ‘ Gentlemen:
“Having been duly advised by the county health officer of the existence throughout the past year of numerous cases of typhoid fever, an epidemic and communicable’disease, amongst persons furnished with water by you within the city of Maysville, in Mason county,'Kentucky, and having caused an investigation to be made by Captain C. N. Harrub, of the United States Public Health Service, who is acting state sanitary engineer of the state of Kentucky, the results of which were published in the bulletin of the State Board of Health, vol. ix, No. 5, dated July, 1919, copy of which is attached hereto.
“Now, therefore, be it known, that the State Board of Health of Kentucky, being fully advised, hereby notifies you that repeated analyses of the water furnished by you to the people of Maysville show it to be a nuisance, source of filth and cause of sickness, and you are requested within forty-eight hours from the service hereof to ameliorate the same by 'Causing such water to be treated with liquid chlorine so that the filth therein may be rendered less harmful to the consumers thereof, and, further, you are requested within 120 days from the service hereof to install such sedimentation basin or basins, filter and chlorination plant as will, when and if the plans for which, approved by the state sanitary engineer in writing, abate and remove the said nuisance, source of filth and cause of sickness in the piesent water supply of the said citv of Maysville. ’

The company was making, or soon thereafter made, quite a number of improvements in its plant looking to the purification and betterment of the water supply for the city, but it did not install, as directed by the notice of the board of health, a filtration plant, but it did provide an efficient chlorination plant and also arranged sedimentation basins, so that its water was not only clear and good in appearance but was free from bacteria in such number as to he harmful and dangerous to human beings, and at the same time was pleasant to the taste and good for domestic purposes. Before these improvements were completed and after the lapse of more than one hundred and twenty days from the giving of the notice by the- board [88]*88of health the board sued out before Judge Purnell of the Mason county court the seventeen criminal warrants mentioned above, charging the defendant company with maintaining a nuisance by failing to comply with the order of the board of health to install a filtration plant as set forth in the notice above copied. A trial of the defendant on one of the aforesaid warrants before said judge resulted in its conviction and the infliction of a fine of $15.00, from which judgment no appeal would lie. As the board of health and the judge of the county court were preparing to and about to try the defendant upon the other sixteen warrants charging the same offense committed as alleged on different days, this, suit was instituted by the water company as aforesaid to restrain both the judge of the county court and the-board of health from so doing and from instituting other prosecutions. The lower court having granted the relief sought and enjoined the judge of the county court and the State Board of Health from proceeding* with the trials and from instituting new prosecutions, Judge Purnell and the board of health have appealed to this court and are here insisting that the injunction be dissolved.

The evidence is long but contains few contradictions. With it are filed a number of exhibits, bottles of water taken at different times and from different faucets connected with the appellee water company’s system, showing more or less matter in solution. While the water furnished by the company to the city and its inhabitants was muddy and impure at different times from the installation of the plant in 1880 until after the institution of the criminal prosecutions mentioned above, it is admitted by the parties and satisfactorily proven in the evidence that the water supplied by the appellee company to the city of Maysville and its inhabitants at all times since February 1st last and at the time of the institution of this action and now is not only clear and free from sediment but is pure and wholesome and suitable for the purposes for which it is used by the city and its said inhabitants.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 967, 193 Ky. 85, 23 A.L.R. 223, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purnell-v-maysville-water-co-kyctapp-1921.