Westerly Waterworks Co. v. Town of Westerly

80 F. 611, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3011
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 25, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 F. 611 (Westerly Waterworks Co. v. Town of Westerly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westerly Waterworks Co. v. Town of Westerly, 80 F. 611, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3011 (circtdri 1897).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

Although these cases are before the court upon motions to dissolve the temporary injunctions, yet as the merits have been exhaustively argued, and as counsel for all parties have requested our decision upon the main questions which determine the substantial rights, we accede to such request and decide the motions accordingly.

The first inquiry is, has the corporation known as the “Westerly Waterworks” any rights which are impaired or threatened by the vote of the town of Westerly in town meeting, on April 11, 1895, directing the town council to contract for and construct waterworks for the town? Or, to state the inquiry in another form, [612]*612does the town’s action impair any obligation of contract to the benefit whereof said waterworks company is entitled?

The company bases its claim of right to preclude the town from constructing waterworks—First, upon a vote of the town council dated June 29, 1885; second, upon acts of the town which are claimed to have the effect of an adoption and ratification of the act of the town council.

In determining what rights were derived from the town council, we have first to find what rights the town council had power to bestow. The authority of the town council is purely statutory, and the effectiveness of its grants and contracts is to be measured by its powers. Whatever may be the language which the members of the town council employ in their votes, however liberal may be their expressions in conferring rights and privileges, only such language can influence our decision as conforms to powers conferred by law. The sole powers possessed by the town council, under which the company can derive the right which it claims, are set forth in Pub. Laws R. I. c. 425:

“Sec. 32. The town council of any town, or the city council of any city, may grant to any person or corporation the right to lay water pipes in any of the public highways of such town or city for the supplying the inhabitants of such town or city with water, and may consent to the ereotion, construction, and the right to maintain a reservoir or reservoirs within said town or city, for such time and upon such terms and conditions as they may deem proper, including therein the power and authority to exempt such pipes and reservoirs, and the lands and works connected therewith, from taxation.”

The meaning of this law has been expounded by the supreme court of the state of Rhode Island in the case of Smith v. Town of Westerly 19 R. I. 33, 35 Atl. 526; and although this decision may not be abso lutely binding upon this court, since the rights of the company accrued prior to the decision, and since it was upon a controversy be tween different parties, and because it is not a final decision, being only on demurrer, yet as the latest utterance of that learned court, and as a thorough discussion and learned exposition of principles sup porting the conclusion of the court, we regard it as of the greatest weight, as did the district judge sitting in this court. See Westerly Waterworks v. Town of Westerly, 75 Fed. 181. Upon the reasoning of the state decision, and the authorities therein cited, as well as upon our independent investigation, we arrive at the same conclusion as was reached by that court, and, following the prior view of this court, find that under chapter 425 the town council had no power to grant to the Westerly Waterworks exclusive rights.

As in the arguments and briefs there has been a somewhat indiscriminate use of the terms “town” and “town council,” and as certain propositions have been enunciated concerning the town which are true only of the town council, and concerning the town council which are true only of the town, it will clear the further discussion of the case to point out that the town and town council are distinct bodies with distinct powers. The reasons for distinguishing between acts of the town and of the town council are substantial, and the differences between the two bodies are not nominal, nor are arguments based upon such differences fairly subject to the criticism that they involve only technical matters of mere form. On the contrary, they [613]*613involve important questions of public right. As is said by Mr. Dillon in his book upon Municipal Corporations (4th Ed. § 28):

“In the New England town proper the citizens administer the general affairs in person at the stated corporate town meetings, and through officers elected by themselves. * * * The New England town is especially interesting as affording, perhaps, an example of as pure a democracy as anywhere exists. All of the qualified inhabitants meet and act directly upon and manage, or direct the management of, their own local concerns. Each citizen has a vote and an equal voice. This form of government was adopted at a very early period, and is firmly adhered to and deeply cherished by the people of the New England states. * * *”

The principle of direct participation by the inhabitants, in matters involving important expenditures of money and public improvements, has been constantly recognized in the state of Rhode Island. In the language of the statutes (Gen. Laws, c. 36, § 1): “The inhabitants of every town shall continue to be a body corporate,” etc. In the case of Smart v. Town of Johnston, 17 R. I. 778, 24 Atl. 830, it was said of the powers of town councils in establishing highways, what might also have been said in relation to the granting of the privilege of laying water pipes in the highways, and of constructing and maintaining reservoirs:

“Town councils are not the agents nor the servants of the various towns which they represent, in the ordinary and legal meaning of that term, in the laying out of highways, but they are public officials forming an important part of the government, and clothed with certain well-defined powers, and charged with certain well-defined duties, by the statute law of the state.”

The power conferred by chapter 425, Pub. Laws R. I., using the language of the court in the above case, “is conferred exclusively upon the town council, and over their action in the matter the town has no control, and cannot be held responsible, at any rate, for their unauthorized acts.” To permit the town council, without previous authority, to act for the town in matters vested only in the town, is to deprive the town inhabitants of their right as corporators to regulate the affairs of the town in the corporate meeting. By electing persons as members of a town council, the inhabitants express their views of their qualifications to act in matters limited by statute. The scope of their duties is important in determining the qualifications of candidates for election. To permit persons chosen for certain duties to bind the town in matters not contemplated by the inhabitants as within the powers of the officers is in principle and practice dangerous.

The rights of the public, the rights of the town, are to be scrupulously regarded; and, though franchises to corporations are to be carefully protected, the source of such privileges must be traced either to the direct act of the legislature, or to the authorized act of the agent acting clearly within the powers delegated by the legislature in express terms. Grants of exclusive rights such as the town council attempted to confer must rest upon the clearest language and upon the most definite authority, and persons dealing with public servants are strictly and justly held to the obligation to inform themselves as to the rights which they may acquire in so doing.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F. 611, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westerly-waterworks-co-v-town-of-westerly-circtdri-1897.