Town of Bristol v. Bristol & Warren Water Works

49 A. 974, 23 R.I. 274, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 27, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 A. 974 (Town of Bristol v. Bristol & Warren Water Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Bristol v. Bristol & Warren Water Works, 49 A. 974, 23 R.I. 274, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 125 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

The town of Bristol, between which .and George H. Norman a contract was made, January 30, 1882, for the building of water-works for the supply of water to said town and its inhabitants, which contract was afterwards assigned to the Bristol & Warren Water Works, brings this bill against the said corporation for the enforcement of an option given to said town by said contract to purchase and acquire the water-works constructed under said contract with the rights and appurtenances belonging to the same.

(1) Upon a hearing of the case upon demurrer, Norman, who had originally been made a party defendant, was dismissed, and certain objections raised by the present defendant, were overruled, and it was decided that the town has the right to exercise the option in question and has sufficiently claimed its privilege to purchase, and that this court has jurisdiction in the premises to fix the value of the property and to order the conveyance thereof. 19 R. I. 413.

It is alleged in the bill that Norman agreed to construct a complete system of water-works for the supply of water to the town of Bristol, and that neither he nor his successor had fulfilled this agreement; but it is admitted that the defendants did construct and the defendant corporation has in operation a system of water-works from which the town of Bristol and also the town of Warren are furnished with water. It also alleges that the water supplied by the defendant is of inferior quality and insufficient in amount and in pressure. Both these allegations of default are denied in the defendant’s answer. On this point we think the master’s finding that the water furnished is of reasonably good quality and ample in quantity in sustained by the evidence. The bill, *276 however, does not insist upon guch alleged failures of performance as grounds of cancellation of the contract and of forfeiture of the privileges granted by it, but prays that it may be ascertained what part of a system of water-works for the supply of the town of Bristol the defendant has power and right to convey and ought to convey under said contract and that the defendant may be compelled to convey the same to the town, and offers to pay a fair and reasonable price therefor.

The issues raised by the bill and answer as to the full performance of the contract were thus waived by the complainant, and it only remained to determine whether the whole or what part of the defendant’s system could be conveyed to the town as reasonably necessary and useful for supplying water to the town and its inhabitants, and what would be a fair and reasonable price for the same.

These questions were referred to a master by decrees entered by consent of the parties, April 2J, 1896, and May 23, 1896, and he filed his report April J, 1900, to which both parties filed exceptions. After the hearing a supplemental report was filed by direction of the court, June 29, 1901, dividing into several items the gross sum which the master had reported.

The questions raised by the exceptions are whether the master has correctly enumerated the property and rights which ought to pass by this purchase and sale, and whether his estimation of values is correct.

His estimation is as follows :

" Lot of land on which is located the standpipe of the respondent, the wrought iron standpipe thereon, together with foundations, by-pass gates, connections, appurtenances, and appliances used or connected therewith................... $4,810 00
“Wrought iron, cement-lined pipe laid between the stand-pipe and the town line of Bristol and in the streets of the town, varying in diameter from one inch to thirteen inches......... 46,-T61 56
*277 “ Cast iron pipe laid in the streets of Bristol.. $491 00
" Three fountains......................... 375 00
" Ninety-five hydrants...................... 3,800 00
" Service pipes, stop cocks, gates, service boxes, connections, fixtures, appurtenances or appliances used or connected with the aforementioned property.................................... 11,600 00
“All the above are situated in the town of Bristol, or between the stand-pipe and the town line.
“Franchise for unexpired term of 37 years. . .. 151,804 44
“Good will of plant........................ 50,000 00
" Enhanced value due to the fact that the plant is a running plant............................ 25,000 00
“ Making a total of.................. $294,651 00
“Taking from this $75,000.00 for damages on account of the failure of Norman and his successor, Bristol and Warren Water Works, to carry out the contract with' the town of Bristol, there is a balance of...............................$219,651 00
which I find is a fair and reasonable price to be paid by the complainant for that part of the water works that it is encumbent upon it to purchase in accordance with the terms of the contract with Norman.”

The master’s method of arriving at the 'values he has assigned for this property was ingenious. He first decides that only a part of the works ought to pass; then he estimates the value of that part, taking, the cost of reproduction less depreciation of the physical plant, adding arbitrary sums for adaptation and good-will, and estimating the value of the franchise as if the elements considered constituted a complete plant, and then deducting an arbitrary sum as damages because the plant, as he constitutes it, is not complete.

In considering his report it must first be observed that the items of $50,000 and $25,000 credited and $75,000 charged should be eliminated. The subject of this sale consists of *278 1st, certain material things, the value of which is to he determined by the cost of reproduction less depreciation ; and, 2nd, the right to use them in a certain business without competition for a certain time, the value of which right is to be determined by the probable profit of such use. The fact that the plant is a running plant and the probable retention of customers, which is what is meant by good-will, are elements which are included in the valuation of the franchise. A monopoly has no good-will, for its customers are retained by compulsion, not by their voluntary choice. The laying of the pipes in their actual position adapted to the use to be made of them is the result of skilled labor, and the skill of arrangement, as well as the labor of laying and material, are all comprehended in the actual cost. So the assessment of damages for non-fulfillment of the defendant’s contract is a matter entirely outside the scope of the master’s duty or the province of the court in this case. To recover such a claim would require a different proceeding from the present suit.

As the elimination of these sums, equal on both sides of the estimate, does not change the result, we need only mention them and pass on to the radical issues in the case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Macfadden v. Jenkins
169 N.W. 151 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1918)
Appleton Water Works Co. v. Railroad Commission
142 N.W. 476 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1913)
Des Moines Water Co. v. City of Des Moines
192 F. 193 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, 1911)
Galena Water Co. v. City of Galena
87 P. 735 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1906)
Kennebec Water District v. City of Waterville
60 L.R.A. 856 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 974, 23 R.I. 274, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-bristol-v-bristol-warren-water-works-ri-1901.