85 So. 291 | Ala. | 1920
Lead Opinion
Where the bill of exceptions does not purport to set out all, or substantially all, of the evidence, reasonable presumptions will be indulged in favor of the ruling of the trial court. Crow v. McKown,
The question of primary importance sought to be presented, whether the waterworks company may make and enforce discriminatory rates to the several members of a class, has been answered in the negative by our court. B. R., L. P. Co. v. Littleton,
On the trial the questions, "Do you know whether or not they have been furnishing water for the same people for $2.25 since that?" (turning the water on), and "State whether or not, after the water was turned back on, the defendant accepted $2.25 minimum charges per quarter, or the same amount you had tendered them before they cut the water off," were sought to be propounded by plaintiffs, to which defendant's objections were sustained, and exceptions reserved. The purpose was to show that the $2.25 tendered was the minimum charge per quarter to customers of the class of which was their landlord, and to which plaintiff insists they were entitled. Such evidence tended to show that the $6.75 minimum quarterly charge, demanded by defendant of the plaintiff at the time such tender was made, was discriminatory against them as tenants. The owner of the building testified he had leased the entire building to plaintiffs and that "they were the owners during the lease."
We take judicial knowledge of the ordinances of the city of Birmingham (Acts 1915, § 7, p. 294; Birch v. Ward,
"Section First. Flat Rates. * * * For dwelling of three rooms, or less, $1.50 per quarter. * * * Store, shop, office or restaurant, each, according to size and occupation, $1.50 to $2.00 per quarter"
— and:
"Section Second. Meter Rates. * * * Where a meter is placed upon a service pipe supplying water to two or more stores, shops, offices or restaurants (the owner paying the water bill for the entire premises) the minimum quarterly charge shall be two dollars and twenty-five cents ($2.25) for three stores, shops, offices or restaurants, or less, and proportionate thereto, based upon the total number, where there are more than three stores, shops, offices or restaurants so supplied by one service pipe."
The premises in question were described by its owner as being a double house —
"two stores under one roof, with separate entrances to the two stores, then there was in the middle a stairway upstairs eight rooms upstairs, all entrances separate, the eight rooms were ordinary size, all building had altogether one meter."
He indicated the course of water from the street as follows: *53
"It comes from the street to the right-hand store, and through the second store and upstairs; had a closet and sink in the store. * * * The same service pipe went around to the other store * * * (where there was a closet and a sink); then the same service pipe went upstairs; water-closet and bathtub upstairs. There were three departments of the store, each having separate entrances, and all supplied by the same service pipe, each having a plumbing equipment in it;" that the building had "altogether one meter"; that when plaintiffs moved therein "the water was on," but was cut off by defendant after tender of a service charge of $2.25 was made by plaintiffs to an officer of the waterworks company; that the minimum meter rate to the owner of such building was $2.25 per quarter. The fact that the building and water service line from the street through the building were equipped with only "one meter," and the "water was on" when plaintiffs moved into the building, and that the owner had immediately theretofore paid according to the meter rate, was a tendency of evidence that the meter rate obtained when plaintiffs tendered the minimum charge for water service before the water was cut off.
The fact that defendant furnished water to plaintiffs under the same ordinance, at and for the sum of $2.25 per quarter minimum meter charge, immediately before defendant had refused to continue the water service, and that the company thereafter accepted the same, was, or would have been, a circumstance to be considered by the jury in determining whether plaintiffs had offered to pay or tendered to defendant the amount of the minimum charge for water service before that service was discontinued. So of the questions seeking to elicit the fact whether defendant had been furnishing water under said ordinance to the plaintiffs for $2.25 since the water was turned on, after instant suit was brought.
As an element of damages, plaintiffs should have been permitted to offer evidence of how long the water remained cut off, and whether plaintiffs had lost rents (and, if so, the amount of such losses) for any part of the building by reason of defendant's failure to furnish water after the proper charges had been paid or tendered to defendant.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.
Addendum
We are not prepared to say that the tender made was not referable to the contract of Hudson and Gilmore, doing business as partners; but if such was not the case, the variance was not called to the attention of the court as was required by rule 34 (175 Ala. xxi). Bowdoin v. Ala. Chemical Co.,
We should have stated of the evidence sought to be elicited by foregoing questions that it did not tend to change the terms of the ordinance contract having application, but to show the class to which plaintiffs, as consumers of water, belonged, and the rate obtaining as to such class.
Application for rehearing overruled.