Washington County Water Co. v. Mayor of Hagerstown

82 A. 826, 116 Md. 497, 1911 Md. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 A. 826 (Washington County Water Co. v. Mayor of Hagerstown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington County Water Co. v. Mayor of Hagerstown, 82 A. 826, 116 Md. 497, 1911 Md. LEXIS 107 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Washington County, sitting as a Court of Equity, overruling the demurrer to an amended hill of complaint filed by the appellee, The Mayor and Council of Hagerstown, hereinafter called “The City,” against the appellant, The Washington County Water Company, hereinafter called “The Water Company,” asking for an injunction upon the allegations therein contained and for the purposes therein mentioned.

The facts alleged in the hill and as disclosed by the contracts or agreements made by the parties hereto and filed as *499 a part of the bill, are substantially as follows: That on the 31st day of May, 1881, pursuant to an Act of the General Assembly of Maryland passed at its January Session, 1880, Chapter 457, an ordinance, entitled “An ordinance authorizing the Mayor and Council of Hagerstown to make a contract with a joint stock water company,” was passed by the Mayor and Council of Hagerstown, and that by virtue of this ordinance a contract or agreement was entered into on the 31st day of May, 1881, by and between the City and the Water Company by which the Water Company was to supply the city with water. For the purpose of discharging its obligations created by the contract or agreement aforesaid, the water company, about the. year 1880 or 1881, installed a reservoir near Cavetown, Washington County, Md., and by gravity pressure the water of a stream in South Mountain was conducted by use of pipes into this reservoir, and from the reservoir, through pipes in and along the streets of Hagerstown, the water was distributed to the inhabitants thereof for domestic and other purposes. It was found, however, that the amount of water from this source was inadequate to supply the needs of the people of Hagerstown, as provided for in the contract or agreement, and recourse was had by the water company to certain springs near the city and to Antietam Creek. The water obtained from these springs and creek was found to be unwholesome and unfit for use, and the company finding that it could not supply the city with water, in compliance with the terms of its original agreement from the source or stream therein mentioned, it proposed to the' city that an additional supply of water be obtained from certain other streams, known as the Haven Hock stream and Warner Gulch stream, claiming that with this additional supply of water an adequate amount would be obtained for the city uses, unless improvidently used and wasted. Thereupon, on the 29th day of May, 1896, the city passed another ordinance, entitled “An ordinance authorizing and requiring the Mayor and' Council of Hagerstown to enter into a supplementary agreement with the Washing *500 ton County Water Company,” and pursuant to the terms of said last named ordinance another agreement was made and entered into on the 14th day of August, 1896, by and between the parties to the original agreement. This agreement contained the following provisions:

“(1) The said Mayor and Council doth promise, covenant 'and agree, in consideration of the matter and things to be done and performed by the Washington County Water Company as herein stated, that from and after the period of twelve months from the time the said Raven Rock and Warner Gulch streams shall have been fully and entirely connected with the present water supply in the South Mountain, operated by the said Washington County Water Company as aforesaid, and incorporated therewith and made a part thereof, if the supply of water from the sources aforesaid at any time after the said period of twelve months shall be inadequate to supply the needs of the people of Hagerstown for fire and all other purposes, then the said Washington County Water Company may, in its discretion, introduce and use meters for the purpose of measuring the consumption of water by all persons using water supplied by said company for purposes other than purely domestic purposes, and charge therefor at a rate not exceeding thirty cents per one thousand gallons, etc.”
(2) The said Mayor and Council further covenanted and agreed therein that from and after a period of twenty-four months from the time the aforesaid connections had been fully and entirely made, if the supply from said combined sources, at any time after the said period of twenty-four months, be inadequate to supply the needs of the people of Hagerstown for fire and all other purposes, “and the said inadequacy be not due to negligence or the imperfections of the mains and pipes of said Water Company, then the said Washington County Water Company may, in its» discretion, introduce and use meters for the purposes of measuring the consumption of water by all persons using water supplied by the Washington County Water Company for any purpose *501 whatsoever, and charge therefor at a rate not exceeding thirty cents per one thousand gallons of water, or, in its discretion, charge a schedule of rates not exceeding the schedule according to rental value now in force.”

The right to use the meters, however, under the above provisions, was upon the condition that “The said Water Company at the time of said inadequacy of said supply shall have under their control and be actually furnishing a supply of water sufficient to yield daily seventy-five gallons of water for each water taker or permit holder of the Town of Hagerstown.”

That until April 1st, 1910, water was supplied to the inhabitants of Hagerstown at the rate above given, at which time the water company, claiming its right to do so under the terms of the contracts aforesaid, ■ installed meters for measuring the water consumed by the inhabitants of the city, and the use of which, as the bill alleges, they propose to continue, and by the use of them determine the amount that should be exacted of and paid by the consumer of water in the city.

In reference to the provisions of the contract above quoted, the bill alleges that the additional streams named in said contract were to be fully and entirely connected with the existing supply from South Mountain, but it charges that at no time have said streams been so connected with the then existing supply, and that the city has never had the enjoyment of the full and entire supply of the Raven Rock and Warner Gulch streams mentioned’ in said contract, neither separately nor together, with the stream in South Mountain previously in use. And charges that the defendant company has diverted vast quantities of water stored and collected by it from the sources provided for by its contract, and which under the aforesaid contracts the people and inhabitants of Hagerstown are entitled to receive, by furnishing large quantities of water to persons and corporations outside of the corporate limits of Hagerstown, to the injury and damage of *502 the inhabitants of said city and in violation of said contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 826, 116 Md. 497, 1911 Md. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-county-water-co-v-mayor-of-hagerstown-md-1911.