Weller v. City of Gadsden

141 Ala. 642
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 141 Ala. 642 (Weller v. City of Gadsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weller v. City of Gadsden, 141 Ala. 642 (Ala. 1904).

Opinion

TYSON, J.

By section 1 of an ordinance adopted November lltli, 1902, tlie governing board of the city of Gadsden, to obtain for the use of the inhabitants of that city a supply of water for all purposes, granted to R. A. Mitchell, his associates, successors or assigns “the right and privilege to construct, maintain and operate water works for public and private use of water within said city, for a term of thirty years from the date of the completion of said water warks,” together with the right to lay pipes, erect hydrants, fountains and other structures and appurtenances, in any and all of the streets, alleys, lanes, parks and other public places of and in said city, as they then existed or might thereafter be laid out or extended, and as might be requisite'for the distribution of water or the operation of said water works system.

By section 2 of the ordinance, it.was provided that the condition upon which the foregoing privileges and franchises vvere granted, Avere made the subject of a contract between the said city and the grantees, which formal contract Avas thereby made a part of and embodied in the ordinance. After inserting the contract, it was, in conclusion, ordained “That the city of Gadsden, Alabama, hereby approves, ratifies and confirms the above ordinance and contract in all its terms and provisions,” and it was further provided how the “ordinance and'contract” should be executed, both by the city of Gadsden and the grantees and contractees, and it Avas duly signed and executed by both parties, in the manner prescribed by the ordinance; R. A. Mitchell “for himself his. associates, sxiccessors or assigns,” at the end of the ordinance, assenting in Avriting to all the terms of the ordinance contract, “with all its provisions, restrictions and requirements.” In the formal contract, embodied in the ordinance, the undertakings of Mitchell and associates are set forth in ten paragraphs.

Briefly, and as far as now necessary, their obligations may be thus stated: (1) To supply pumping engines; [654]*654(2) to lay adequate mains; (3) when ordered by the, city, to extend mains, and place additional fire hydrants thereon; (4) to furnish a supply of water from a designated source or sources, sufficient for present and future needs of the city and private consumers; (5) to place upon the lines of mains or distributing pipes not less than sixty (60) hydrants, at such points as the city authorities may direct, for public use only, the city to first establish grades of the highways before pipes are laid; (6) to begin construction of the system twelve months before the expiration of the existing contract of the’city with the Gadsden Water Works Company, on or before January 1st, 1905, and to complete same ready for use by December 31st, 1905; (7) to discharge, when required, certain streams through hydrants and to maintain a certain pressure, which test, if successfully made, will entitle them to an acceptance of the works; (8) to furnish water for domestic and manufacturing purposes, at prices not exceeding a fixed schedule, and to furnish certain quantities of water for sprinkling, for drinking fountains, and for city buildings, free of charge; (9) to deposit a certified check, for one thousand dollars, to be forfeited if the work of construction is not commenced and completed within'the stipulated time, which check, the bill alleges, was deposited by the complainants and collected by, the city.

Thereupon, in consideration of the agreements and obligations of the other parties (having alréady in section 1 of the ordinance made a simple grant of the right, to construct and operate water works for thirty years, and to use the streets, etc., for pipes, etc.,) the city of Gadsden stipulated, in four paragraphs of the formal contract, embodied in the ordinance, as follows: (1) To grant the exclusive right to construct and ’ operate water works in said city for thirty years from date of acceptance!, with a proviso that the franchise and contract may be revoked at the option of the Mayor and Aldermen, whenever the works failed to furnish a proper and adequate supply of water and such condition continued for three months,;. (2) to grant the right to enter upon the streets, alleys, etc., to lay pipes, erect hy[655]*655drants 'and do other necessary work of construction; (3) to pay an annual rental, for thirty years, of forty-two dollars for each of the first sixty hydrants set and put in usei, and forty dollars for each hydrant on the •extension of mains which the city may order; (4) to .grant the right to make' needful rules and regulations in regard to the use and waste of water, and to collect from consumers in advance a tariff of rates, not exceeding those specified. Delays in the beginning or completion of the work , due to certain named canses, are to operate as an extension equal to the time so lost.

The provisions of the contract which have mainly been the subject of discussion by counsel, are the grant of the franchise to use the highways and public places of the city for the operation of the water works and the delivery of the water to the city and its inhabitants, for the period of thirty years; the agreement that the grant of the right “to construct, maintain and operate water works, and conductors,” for the like time, shall be exclusive; and the obligations of the city to use and pay for hydrants, at a fixed price:, during the life of the contract. The contention of the city is that the agreement for the exclusiveness of the franchise, and the obligation to take water from hydrants for so long a time: as thirty years, are both invalid and that they, one or both, so infect the entire transaction with invalidity, as to destroy all rights under the ordinance. It is further insisted by the city, that if the foregoing contentions are not sound, then the ordinance was a mere offer or proposition, supported by no consideration, and that it was subject, for that reason, to repeal at any-time before work under it had actually begun; and, furthermore, that in any event, the franchise and -contract were, by virtue of section 22 of the Constitution of 1901, subject to revocation by the city authorities, at the time of the passage of the repealing ordinance of June 1st, 1903.

Under the Constitution, (Sec. 220) and its charter power over its highways and public places (Acts, 1882-83, p. 292, Sec. 22, sub. Sec. 10,) the city of Gadsden had authority to grant to complainants, the right to contract and operate a system of water works, including therein [656]*656the right to use the streets, etc., for mains, pipes and hydrants.

By -Sec. 228 of the Constitution, the period of thirty years is recognized as proper for the duration of such a franchise in towns and cities of more than six thousand population; a fortiori would it be unobjectionable in a town or city containing less than that number of inhabitants, as to which the section fixes no time limit? Even if it may be maintained that it would not be proper to bind a city to take water, at a fixed price, for so long a time as thirty years, the considerations leading to that conclusion would not be applicable to the grant of a franchise to operate the system for the same length of time, since the large expenditure necessary to such an enterprise would scarcely be made for a franchise of shorter duration.

Whatever may be said as to the agreement to pay for hydrants, at a fixed price, for thirty years, and whatever conflict may exist in the authorities, as to the extent to which a court should go,

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Bluebook (online)
141 Ala. 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-city-of-gadsden-ala-1904.