Solomon v. Wilmington Sewerage Co.

45 S.E. 536, 133 N.C. 144, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 536 (Solomon v. Wilmington Sewerage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solomon v. Wilmington Sewerage Co., 45 S.E. 536, 133 N.C. 144, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 33 (N.C. 1903).

Opinion

Oonnoe, J.

The plaintiffs allege that the defendant company was duly incorporated by the General Assembly of this State with authority to establish a system, of sewerage in the city of Wilmington, and to charge for the use of said sewers such reasonable sums as the board of directors should from time to time adopt, and with the authority to enforce the collection of such charges by severing the connection of such *145 defaulting user with the main sewer. That pursuant to per-missicn granted by the city of Wilmington, the defendant laid its pipes and mains along' and under certain streets of said city upon which the plaintiffs and other persons resided. That the plaintiffs and a great many other citizens of Wilmington living along the streets and alleys upon which, by public authority, the defendant has laid its pipes and constructed its sewerage system were desirous of obtaining the benefit of an efficient sewerage system for their respective premises at what they regarded as a reasonable cost, and each of the plaintiffs and the others so situated made application for connection therewith. That the • defendant company proposed to these plaintiffs, and for all others for whom this suit is brought, that if they would pay to the defendant the sum of fifty dollars for making the connection between the premises of each and every one of these plaintiffs and the others and the pipes of the defendant company, that the defendant would charge each of them so paying the sum of fifty dollars an annual rental, as aforesaid, for the use and service of the sewerage system of the defendant, the sum of two dollars, and no more; or that if persons desiring to connect with and use their said sewerage system preferred it, they might pay twenty-five dollars for connection and an annual rental of four dollars. That each of the plaintiffs and many more, residents and citizens on the streets and alleys along which the sewerage system of the defendant company had been constructed, and on whose behalf this suit is also brought, accepted the first proposition of the defendant company and entered into a contract with the said company by which each of them paid to the said defendant company the sum of fifty dollars for connection, and entered into a contract to pay to the said company an annual rental of two dollars for the use of the sewerage system of said company, and many other citizens, residents on the streets and alleys along which the said sewer *146 age system bad been constructed, accepted tbe alternative proposition of the defendant and entered into a contract by which they paid to the defendant for connection twenty-five dollars, and agreed tO' pay four dollars per annum as rental for the use of said sewerage system; and these contracts so entered into by the defendant and the plaintiffs and all others for whom this suit is brought have been scrupulously kept and performed on the part of both contracting parties up to the first day of January, 1903. That the stock of said company thereafter passed into the hands of persons other than those owning it at the time of the making of said contracts, and that the defendant company on or about the first of January, 1903, in utter disregard and violation of the contract rights of these plaintiffs and all others for whom this suit is brought, undertook to raise the rate of annual rental of said sewerage system to an unreasonable and exorbitant rate, greatly in excess of the contract rates hereinbefore set out, and served a notice on these plaintiffs that unless payment was made in accordance with the advanced charges, unreasonably and unjustly and in violation of the contract rights of the plaintiffs exacted by the defendant, that the defendant company would disconnect the premises of the person so refusing to pay with the main sewer. That these plaintiffs have heretofore and in proper time tendered to the defendant the various sums due by each one of them as an annual rental for the service of the sewerage system, strictly in accordance with the terms of their contract, and it was refused by defendant company. The plaintiffs allege that if the threat of the defendant is carried out and their premises are disconnected with the main sewer, the injury will be to them and each of them irreparable, and an action for damages would be, as they are advised, totally inadequate; that the defendant is insolvent and has an existing mortgage upon its entire system for $150,000, which is greatly in excess of the sum *147 which the system would bring upon public sale; that the rates demanded by the defendant are not only unjust and unreasonable, but they are discriminating, in that some of the patrons of the defendant who are situated with reference thereto as the plaintiffs have been offered more advantageous terms and more reasonable rates than those exacted from the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs ask that the defendant be enjoined from disconnecting the premises of the plaintiffs or in. any manner interfering with the proper use of the sewerage system by the plaintiffs, and from charging or exacting more for the use of their system than, the prices fixed in the contracts.

The defendant company, answering the complaint, says that at the time the alleged contract was made with the plaintiffs the defendant had in force the following by-law: “Article 3. The charge or fee for connecting with the company’s sewer shall be $50 for every connection made for each person or house; it shall be payable strictly in advance. All persons connecting shall also pay a fee of $2 per year, also in advance, for keeping in repair the sewers; any failure to pay this fee for twenty days shall subject the delinquent to a forfeiture of his right, and the company at its option shall have the right to sever the connection.” That on September 15, 1895, the by-laws were amended as follows: “On and after this day the sum! of $50 with an annual rental of $2, or the sum of $25 with an annual rental of $4, shall be charged each resident for a connection, but there shall be no additional charge for servant houses or stable connections with said residence and used by the occupants thereof.” That the rate fixed a.t either of said dates was not, and was never intended to be, a permanent contract that the defendant should never change its rates, but on the contrary they were rates established by a mere by-law, which was changeable at the will of the company; that thereafter the defendant obtained the per *148 mission of the city of Wilmington to extend its system of sewers through all the streets of the city at a very great cost, to-wit, $200,000, and constructed a large and efficient sanitary system, together with the most modem and approved form of disposal plant, and laid down about forty miles of pipes and connections, and thereby found it absolutely necessary to change the rates for sewerage connections in order to obtain a just and reasonable return for the investment made; that on November 3, 1902, they adopted a new set of by-laws conferring upon the board of directors the right to fix a schedule for annual charges for sewer service; that they thereafter adopted the schedule adopted in the answer, and that such charges are reasonable, just and proper. The defendant admits that it did undertake to raise the rental for the use of the sewerage system, as alleged, and that such rates are much lower than many other cities in the United States, and as a comparison with the rates of a number of other cities an exhibit is attached to the answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 536, 133 N.C. 144, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solomon-v-wilmington-sewerage-co-nc-1903.