108 Ala. 498 | Ala. | 1895
The appellant, Crosby, was prose- • cuted and fined for demanding a higher price for water, than the rates fixed by the city council of Montgomery, and in violation of a city ordinance, which imposed a penalty for such a charge.
On the 7th of October 1885, the city council entered into an agreement for the supply of water for the city and its citizens. Section 15 of the agreement reads as follows: “Be it further ordained, That the domestic rates for water furnished under this contract to citizens of Montgomery, shall never exceed the average rates paid in other cities of similar size; the present basis of
On December 6th, 1889, the city council adopted the following ordinance: “An ordinance to prohibit the Capital City Water Company from charging higher domestic rates than those allowed by their contract with the city. . .
“Be it ordained by the City Council of Montgomery as follows : That any officer, agent or employe of the Capital City Water Company,'who shall demand of any consumer of the water of said company in this city a higher domestic rate than $6.00 per annum for the use of such water for a building of five rooms or less, and $1.00 per annum for each additiona' room, whether the occupants of such building consist of one family or of different families, and. whether one or more faucets are used for domestic purposes, shall on conviction thereof be fined not less one hundred dollars, and shall also be imprisoned not more than one hundred days.” By act of February 26th, 1887, (Acts of 1886-87, pp. 488 — 9), authority was conferred upon the city “to regulate the manner and rates of furnishing water to private consumers.”
The defendant assailed the validity of the ordinance, and also controverted the charge, that he had committed any act in violation of its provision.
The evidence shows that the defendant demanded of the consumer for water $2.50 per quarter, and a charge for. setting a meter $3.00 and for rent of meter fifty cents. The evidence also showed that the consumer occupied a dwelling of six rooms, besides a kitchen, pantry and bath room.”
It is contended in argument for the appellant, that the rates allowed by the ordinance are unreasonable and oppressive, and therefore void. No evidence was introduced to sustain this contention, and the court cannot judicially say the ordinance, on its face, is unreasonable or oppressive. It is further contended that the ordinance having failed to define a “room” or ascertain what constitutes “domestic purposes” is uncertain, indefinite, and void. We are of opinion this criticism is
The rates fixed by the ordinance are for water use! by the family, or families, for “domestic purposes.” It is contended that the term “domestic purposes” is vague and uncertain, and that its meaning has not been ascertained bv law. Although different courts may not have construed “domestic purpose” alike, some extending it to subjects and uses not included m the definition given by others, this would not justify a court, in declaring a statute void because of the use of the word “dtmestic.” The fact that the courts have declared the meaning of the term, and upheld the statutes and contracts using
It appears that express authority to “regulate the manner and rates of furnishing water” was not conferred on the city until long after the adoption of the contract. Appellant contends that it was not within the power of the legislature to authorize the city to punish by fine and imprisonment a violation of the contract, previously made. It is very generally settled, that where a-party agrees to furnish water to a city or the inhabitants thereof by a contract, he assums a public duty, and, we are of opinion, that a willful violation or neglect of a public duty, although growing out of contract, may be declared a misdemeanor and punishable as such, without impairing the obligation of the contract, nor would imprisonment for such a violation of the contract be imprisonment for debt. Such a statute would not take away any vested contract right, nor deprive the party of property without due process of law. — Blan v. The State, 39 Ala. 353 ; Stein v. The State, 37 Ala. 123 ; Spring Valley Water Works v. City of San Francisco, 82 Cal. 286, 16 Am. St. Rep. 116 ; City of St. Louis v. Bell Telephone, 96 Mo. 623, 9 Amer. St. Rep. Although it would be entirely competent to punish by fine and imprisonment a neglect of public duty or a violation of public-duty growing out of contract, yet an ordinance which imposes a fine or imprisonment for the commission of an act, authorized by contract, would be invalid. A city cannot by the pretended exercise of its police power, or
One question has been argued with much earnestness which we do not consider necessarily involved in the case, and that is, in the event the consumer should elect to use a meter, which of the parties should defray the cost and expense of setting the meter? In the case before us, it appears that the consumer was charged three dollars for setting the meter, and a rental charge, in addition, of fifty cents. The ordinanbe has no application when water is furnished at meter rates at the election of the consumer, nor does the ordinance undertake to punish the water company or any agent or officer, for charging a consumer for setting a meter for the use of the consumer. Whether the consumer is chargeable for the meter, or whether it is to be supplied by the company, is a matter of construction of the contract, to be determined when the question is raised. In construing the contract between the city of Birmingham and the Water Works Company (Smith v. Birmingham Water Works, 104 Ala. 315), we held that it was the duty of the company to supply the meters. There is evidence tending to show that the present controversy arose entirely out of the demand for payment for setting a meter and the rental charge for its use, and not on account of the price charged for water. Whether under the contract, the one or the other is chargeable for the meter, the defendant could not be convicted under the ordinance for demanding payment for setting the meter, -if his charges for water did not exceed those provided for in the ordinance, or if the prosecutor had selected to pay by measurement and the parties had agreed, expressly or impliedly, upon the price for water, nor could the defendant be convicted, if the original contract, by mutual agreement, was so modified that the consumer was not entitled to use but one faucet, and for his own convenience used three or four faucets. If the -contract of the city and the water company was that.a consumer should use only one faucet, and he used three or four, the defendant could not be required-to furnish water at the fixed rates, but the parties could agree upon
The court erred in admitting the opinion of the city attorney as to the construction of the contract. It could not be used as evidence before the jury.
The court erred in the instruction given to the jury for the prosecution. The charge is objectionable in that it is argumentative, but its chief vice consists in its invasion of the province of the jury, in determining the legal effect of the failure to reply (if in fact, he did not expressly agree, as some of the evidence tends to show, to take water at the meter rate) to the notice “meter to go in,.” Payment of meter rates during several years without objection, with notice, in connection with other evidence, might reasonably satisfy the jury, that there was an agreement to take water at meter rates, or at the rates charged. The court might properly instruct the jury as to the application of the evidence, but not as to the weight to be given it.
The first and fourth charges requested by the defendant are not in accordance wiih our views >f the law, and were properly refused. The second charge requested was objectionable, in that it confined the jury to a consideration of the facts occurring on the 20th of October. The controversy grew out of an alleged overcharge for the quarter, embracing July, August and September, and the fact that the complaint laid the violation of the ordinance on the 20th of October, did not confine the evidence to that day.
The third charge requested by the defendant was in accord with our views of the law, and should have been given.
Reversed and remanded.