209 Mo. 600 | Mo. | 1908
Plaintiff sues to recover a sum which it is stated in the petition the plaintiff was compelled to pay for the use of water furnished the plaintiff by the city in excess of the rate prescribed by the city ordinance. By the provisions of the ordinance set out in the petition the meter rate for water, when the quantity used for purely manufacturing purposes exceeded an average of twenty-five thousand gallons per day, was one and one-fourth cents per hundred gallons, provided that when the quantity exceeded fifty million gallons annually the rate should be one
This is the second appeal in this ease. The former appeal was from the judgment sustaining a general demurrer to the petition; that judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. [Am. Brewing Co. v. St. Louis, 187 Mo. 367.]
When the cause went hack to the circuit court, defendant filed an answer, the purport of which was a general denial and a plea that the plaintiff’s payment was voluntary.
The cause was tried hy the court, jury waived. The plaintiff’s evidence showed that in order to obtain water from the city the plaintiff was required to take out a license for which it had to pay in advance for the estimated quantity likely to be used for the ensuing period of six months, and a new or renewed license was to he taken out and paid for in advance every six months. If at the end of a six-months’ period a reading of the meter showed that the quantity used was either more or less than the estimate, the difference was adjusted and the account balanced to date. The plaintiff took out three licenses, each to cover a period of six months, the three covering a whole period of eighteen consecutive months, and paid for the same at the rate of one and one-fourth- cents per hundred gallons, which was the rate it was required to pay. At the end of the time it was shown hy the meter readings that plaintiff used more than fifty million gallons annually. The evidence also showed that after that period the licenses were issued to the plaintiff at the rate of one cent per hundred gallons.
On the former appeal it was held that the plaintiff was not precluded from recovering on the theory that
There remains but one question in the case and that is a question of fact: Was the water used purely for manufacturing purposes? The ordinance prescribing the rates says: “When the quantity used exceeds an average of twenty-five thousand gallons per day, one and one-fourth cents per hundred gallons. The meter rate for the use of water for purely manufacturing purposes and livery stables is hereby fixed at one and one-fourth cents per one hundred gallons; provided, that when the quantity used exceeds fifty million gallons annually by any manufacturing plant, located in one or more blocks adjoining each other, the rate shall be one cent per hundred gallons. ’ ’
There was but one witness on that point, Mr.
The plaintiff was not entitled to recover unless the water was used for purely manufacturing purposes. That fact was an essential averment in the petition and it was traversed by the general denial in the answer. The burden of proof therefore was on the plaintiff.
It is argued that the court should have considered the fact that the ordinances in evidence made it the duty of the city officials to see that a license was not abused by the licensee suffering water to he used for a purpose other than that for which it was issued. The part of the ordinance above quoted shows that whilst the rate of one and one-fourth cents per hundred gallons is given for water to he used for manufacturing and livery-stable purposes when the quantity used exceeds twenty-five thousand gallons per day, yet that rate is not given exclusively for that purpose; the preceding sentence fixes that rate for all water in that quantity passing through the meters, without specifying for what purpose, and as the plaintiff’s license called for the one and one-fourth cent rate it is at least questionable if the city officers had the right to prohibit the plaintiff using the water for any other purpose of its own than manufacturing. Of course they could have prevented the plaintiff from suffering any one else to use water coming through its meters.
The point is advanced that after the eighteen months which constitute the period in which this controversy arose the assessor of water rates recognized that the plaintiff was entitled to the one cent rate and gave it. But the evidence shows that Mr. Harris, the official who gave the rate, did so because it appeared from the hooks in the water-rates office that the plaintiff was using annually more than fifty million gallons of water. He was asked on cross-examination whether
It is also argued that to defeat the plaintiff’s claim it devolved on the city to show that the quantity of water that was used for the saloon or other purposes was enough to reduce the total quantity to less than fifty million gallons. That argument assumes that the burden was on the defendant to show that some and how much of the water was used for other than manufacturing purposes; but that is an erroneous assumption, the burden was on the plaintiff to show that the water it used was for purely manufacturing purposes.
The evidence, as we have seen, was very meager. The plaintiff in its testimony was directing its attention to the refutation of the defendant’s plea that the payments were voluntary, and seems to. have overlooked the question as to the use made of the water, and all the evidence that there was on that point came out in the defendant’s cross-esamination of the plaintiff’s witness who was evidently not prepared to answer the questions, therefore in answer to the questions concerning the water used in the saloon and stable he said that he really did not know. On that testimony the court found that the plaintiff had failed to' prove that all the water that passed through the meters was used for purely manufacturing purposes.
As we have already said, this is an action at law, and in such case the finding of the trier of the fact will not be disturbed if there is any substantial foundation for it in the evidence. This is true as well when the finding is against the party on whom was the burden of proof because of failure to make the proof, as it is where the finding was in his favor because he did make proof to support it. "We do not mean to trench on that rule in this case, and although the testimony on
If the court took the view of the law as was implied in the question, if it gave weight to the testimony thus