Raton Waterworks Co. v. Town of Raton

9 N.M. 70, 9 Gild. 70
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1897
DocketNo. 705
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 N.M. 70 (Raton Waterworks Co. v. Town of Raton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raton Waterworks Co. v. Town of Raton, 9 N.M. 70, 9 Gild. 70 (N.M. 1897).

Opinion

LAUGHLIN, J.

The complainant corporation, the Eaton Waterworks Company, filed its bill of complaint in the ■court below against tbe defendant corporation, tbe town of Eaton, and among the allegations it alleged that it entered into a certain contract with tbe said defendant corporation,by wbicb it agreed and bound itself, its successors and assigns, to supply tbe said defendant corporation with water for a period of twenty-five years from tbe twenty-fourth day of July, 1891. This contract was an exclusive grant to complainant corporation by tbe defendant corporation, and was in tbe nature of an oi’dinance adopted and 'approved by the board of trustees of said defendant corporation, and was and is known in tbe record in tbe cause as “Ordinance No. 10;” and sucb parts thereof as seem material to tbe decision of tbe cause are as follows, to wit:

“Sec. 4. Said Eaton Waterworks Company, its successors and assigns, shall lay and extend pipes for carrying said • water to any part of tbe aforesaid town when requested so to do by tbe board of trustees; provided, persons owning property along tbe line of sucb proposed extensions shall take a reasonable amount of water; and provided also, there shall be ordered set in each street or lane by said trustees, on wbicb ■said company or its assigns shall be required to lay pipe, one hydrant for every eight hundred feet of main pipe so laid or extension ordered.”

“Sec. 9. Tbe said town hereby exempts from all taxes for a term of twenty-five years from and after tbe date specified in section 1, July 15th, 1891, tbe property of said waterworks company of every name, nature and description wbicb may be used by it in tbe conduct of its business. * * *

“Sec. 10. In consideration of tbe benefits that will accrue to tbe town of Eaton and its people by tbe erection' and operation of waterworks, and for tbe better protection of tbe town against fires, tbe town of Eaton does hereby agree and bind tbe said town to rent from tbe said Eaton Waterworks Company, or its assigns, for tbe aforesaid term of twenty-five years, twenty-five hydrants for tbe purpose of extinguishing fires and purposes pertaining to tbe fire department, flushing sewers and irrigating public school grounds and parks, and the said town, by the said board of trustees, hereby agrees and binds the said town to pay to the said Eaton Waterworks Company, or its assigns, at the rate of one hundred dollars per year for each of said twenty-five hydrants. That the 'said board of trustees further agree and bind the said town of Eaton to pay said Eaton Waterworks Company, or its assigns, the sum of seventy-five dollars per year for each hydrant for the next twenty-five ¡additional hydrants that may be ordered set and erected by said board of trustees, and fifty dollars per year for each subsequent hydrant ordered set and erected thereafter by said board of trustees; provided, the said Eaton Waterworks Company, or its assigns, shall erect and maintain at all times in good repair double-discharge fire hydrants with four-inch connections to the main pipe, and two and one-half inch hose connections with each hydrant.

“Sec. 11. The said town of Eaton shall pay to the said Eaton Waterworks Company, or its assigns, as follows, to wit: On the first day of January and July of each and every year one-half of the aforesaid money, and for all additional hydrants thereafter in like manner on the 1st day of January and July as aforesaid. The said town agrees to levy and collect a tax sufficient for the purpose of making said semi-annual payments for each and every one of the twenty-five years aforesaid, and in default of making said payment the said town shall pay interest on said semi-annual payments at the rate of ten per cent per annum.”

“Sec.^15. Within thirty days after granting of this franchise the said Eaton Waterworks Company shall file with the town recorder of said town its acceptance in* wilting of. all the terms, provisions and conditions of this ordinance, which acceptance, before filing, shall be duly acknowledged before some officer authorized to take acknowledgments, and the same shall be recorded in the book of ordinances of said town, and safely kept by the said town recorder; provided, the same shall be ratified by a vote of the people of this town as is hereinafter provided.

“Sec. 16. An election for the ratification or rejection of this ordinance shall be held in the town of Eaton, at the hose house on the first day of August, A. D. 1891. * * *”

The foregoing ordinance was ratified by the qualified electors of the defendant corporation as therein provided. And the contract was duly accepted by the complainant corporation, as therein provided.

It appears in the record from the said bill of complaint that at the request of the board of trustees of defendant corporation complainant put in forty-four hydrants, in the manner specified, the semi-annual rentals of which amounted to $1,962.50. It further appears that defendant corporation paid at that rate, semi-annually, to complainant corporation its water rents in money, and by its warrants duly issued for any balance due and for accrued interest, in accordance with said contract and ordinance number 10, up to the year 1895; that on May 23, 1895, the defendant corporation enacted ordinance number 64, under which it declined to pay more than the revenues derived from a two-mills levy on the dollar each year on taxable property within said defendant corporation. Complainant prays for a specific performance of the contract under ordinance number 10, and for 'an order perpetually restraining defendant corporation from enforcing ordinance number 64.

The defendant corporation, in its answer, admits that complainant corporation complied with its part of the contract, as stated in said ordinance number 64. But “defendant denies that said ordinance number 10 became and was and now is valid and operative, and in full force and effect, and obligatory upon both of the parties to this cause.” Also “defendant denies that under said ordinance and contract it became and was and now is the duty of defendant to pay complainant as rental for the said hydrants the sum of $1,962.50 on the first day of January añd July of each year after the making of the said contract or ordinance. Defendant denies that said sum of $1,962.50 is the just sum due under the said contract, and it further and specifically denies that it was and is defendant’s duty under said contract or ordinance to levy and collect a tax sufficient to meet said alleged semi-annual obligations of $1,962.50.” And “defendant denies, however, that said ■ordinance was enacted wrongfully and without authority of law, and, on the contrary, insists that the same is valid, and in full force and effect. Defendant further denies that said ordinance numbered 64 was and is invalid, illegal and void by reason of being in conflict with the terms of said ordinance numbered 59, or any other ordinance.” And “defendant denies that it has at .any time or place refused to perform its duty under the contract and ordinance referred to in complainant’s bill, but, on the contrary, shows that it has performed, and will perform, its obligations toward complainant under said ordinance, so far as the same is binding, valid and of force and effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.M. 70, 9 Gild. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raton-waterworks-co-v-town-of-raton-nm-1897.