Riemenschneider v. Wilson

6 Haw. 375, 1882 Haw. LEXIS 3
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Haw. 375 (Riemenschneider v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riemenschneider v. Wilson, 6 Haw. 375, 1882 Haw. LEXIS 3 (haw 1882).

Opinion

[376]*376Decision of

Judd, C.J.

This is a petition for a mandamus to command the respondent to turn on the water from the Government pipes to the petitioner’s premises.

The petitioner alleges that he is in possession of a premises on Emma street, Honolulu, being a private residence, the grounds planted with a variety of trees and plants, and that he has had and enjoyed a water privilege therefor from the Government pipes for domestic and irrigating purposes, furnished him at $25 per year, which said privilege has never been modified or limited by the consent of the petitioner. That he has paid to the respondent the full rate for the six months ending on the first day of January, 1883, and claims that he is thereby entitled to the water for this term. The receipt is annexed to the petition. The petition further alleges that on the 18th of October the respondent shut off the water from the premises, and refuses to turn it on again, whereby he is deprived of the use of the water to which he is entitled, and is put to inconvenience and exposed to irreparable damage from the loss of his trees; also, that it is the duty of the respondent, as Superintendent of Water Works, to furnish the water as claimed of which he has deprived the petitioner without right, and that the act complained of was a neglect of respondent’s duty as Superintendent of Water Works; also, that petitioner has no specific remedy in the premises, or, if there are other means of relief, the slowness of ordinary legal forms would produce long delay in obtaining relief.

It is submitted in evidence that the Superintendent of Water Works has, with the approval of the Minister of Interior, issued certain regulations as to the water supply of Honolulu. The first one submitted bears date 1st January, 1876, and limits the hours of irrigation to the hours from 6 to 8 a.m., and from 4 to 6 P.M.

By Section 5, a rate of $25 per annum is charged for a private house and lot of not more than half an acre, where water is used for irrigation as well as for domestic purposes.

[377]*377By Section 12, it is provided that any person found running water for irrigation purposes after the hours above specified, will forfeit the unexpired term of his water privilege;-and by Section 13, in case of fire, irrigation and fountain privileges are to be shut off under penalty of losing their privilege. ¡ •

A notice of 19th April, 1881, limiting the hours as above set forth, was also shown. Probably this republication was deemed necessary, as the rule may have fallen into disuse.

Next is offered a rule dated 23d June, 1882, limiting irrigation after that date to four hours per day — from 6 to 8 A.M., from 4 to 6 in the P.M. — and “permission to irrigate during more convenient hours will be granted on application to the superintendent.” Persons found irrigating except during specified hours will have their privileges suspended without notice.

The next notice is dated 13th October, and suspends all irrigating privileges until further notice, owing to scarcity of water. It was while this notice was standing that the respondent shut off petitioner’s water privilege on the 18th October, for on the 21st a notice appears limiting irrigation to between 6 and 7 A.M., and again on the 24th, a notice limiting the hours from 6 to 8 A.M., and from 4 to 6 P.M. Later rules in conflict with former ones operate a repeal of former ones.

It is agreed that the notice of October 13th, forbidding all irrigation, has no binding force, as not having received the approval of the Minister of Interior.

There is on the back of the receipt for the water rate these words: “The within receipt for water rates is given with the. full understanding that the party holding the receipt will conform to the rules and regulations issued from time to time, by order of the Minister of the Interior. Neglect of such regulations will subject the ratepayer to forfeiture of water privileges.”

The petitioner’s counsel contends that having paid his water rate, the receipt is a contract which binds the Government to furnish him an adequate supply of water for term of six months, and that the notice on the back of the receipt, it not being [378]*378shown that petitioner’s attention was called to it and his consent obtained, is no part of it, and therefore the Superintendent of Water Works has no' right to curtail petitioner’s privilege in the least. Also, that the proviso on the back of the receipt is void for indefiniteness, and that there is no power given by the Legislature to make rules, etc.

" The circumstances in brief are these: The petitioner, knowing the regulation limiting the hours of irrigation to from 6 to 8 A.M., and from 4 to 6 P.M., has generally conformed to them, but during many days after 1st July he has not had a servant employed in attending to his garden, and so has irrigated himself after the designated hours. For ten days previous to the 18th October, but little or no water flowed through his tap during the hours from 6 to 8 A.M. and from 4 to 6 P.M., and as his plants were drooping, he irrigated at noon and at such other times in which there was water in the pipes. On one occasion his tap was left open and the water flowed all night. The petitioner says this was unintentional on his part.

The respondent says that during the ten days previous to October 18th the water was low in the lower reservoir, and that he could only fill it from the upper reservoir at such hours as rate-payers from the upper reservoir were not using it, as the velocity of the water discharging from it prevented their taps from running. Moreover, he could not fill the lower reservoir nights because it interfered with the gas machines run by the water from the upper reservoir, and he had the further difficulty in drawing off the water from the upper reservoir, as certain persons having kalo patches and lands between the two reservoirs, which had the privilege of riparian proprietors from the stream which supplies both reservoirs, would become short of water, unless the overflow from the upper reservoir was allowed to pass back into the stream for their benefit.

Water'is' a public necessity, and especially in our climate.

I am of opinion that the Government, having assumed' the enterprise of supplying the town of Honolulu with water,' and having secured by various acts of the Legislature the right to [379]*379condemn the necessary land and water for the purpose of a system of water works, which prevents private - parties from engaging in this business, it has taken upon itself a certain duty towards the inhabitants of the town. This is, to make available all the water that is reasonably required and that can reasonably be secured, and to distribute the same as equitably as possible to all ratepayers. I think it would not be proper for the Government to extend indefinitely the number of distributing taps to new applicants without correspondingly increasing its supply. But there is no proof that it has done so. •

But the public, receiving the advantages of this water supply from the Government, owe certain reciprocal duties to it, which are to pay the rates as long as they are reasonable, and to obey such rules and regulations as may be made for the public convenience and protection, provided they are reasonable.

The obligation of the Government to the individual rateholder is not alone made by the contract expressed in the receipt for water rates for six months in advance.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Haw. 375, 1882 Haw. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riemenschneider-v-wilson-haw-1882.