127 Tenn. 509 | Tenn. | 1912
delivered the opinion of -the Court.
This bill was filed by Farmer, as a resident citizen of Nashville, Tenn., to compel the defendant to furnish water for domestic purposes to the premises occupied by him. The chancellor decreed the relief prayed for, and upon appeal the court of civil appeals reversed and remanded the case for further evidence upon certain issues not covered by the pleadings and not included in the agreement of facts made by counsel. The case is before us upon the petition of Farmer for writ of certiorari to the decree of the court of civil appeals.
The record discloses that one Mrs. Young is the owner of a house and lot on Fifth street in Nashville, and that prior to February 14,1911, these premises were occupied by a Mrs. Vaughn. Mrs. Vaughn did not pay a water tax of four dollars assessed by the defendant against Mrs. Young as the owner of the property. Notice of the delinquent tax was given to Mrs. Young, and not to Mrs. Yaughn, and Mrs. Young did not pay. It is not shown whether Mrs. Young received the notice and neglected to pay, or whether she denies her liability for the tax.
The complainant took possession of the premises on
The defendant has power under its charter to construct and maintain waterworks and to furnish water to the inhabitants of the city of Nashville. It has constructed the waterworks plant, and has undertaken the duty of supplying water to all the inhabitants of the city for a price fixed by ordinance. The defendant built its water pipes into the property rented by the complainant, and has undertaken to supply water to the tenants and inhabitants of said house. The complainant is not now, and was not at the time the water connection was cut off, indebted to the city for water furnished him or his family at any time or place or on any other account. There is no well, or spring, or cistern, or other source of water supply upon or appurtenant to the premises occupied by the complainant and his family.
The defendant made the assessment of the water tax
The defendant’s charter provides “that the hoard of public works shall have exclusive power to organize and1 control the waterworks ad its appurtenances, and that it has power to construct and maintain waterworks for the purpose of supplying water to the inhabitants of the city of Nashville.”
Section 151 of Smith & McAlister’s Digest provides • “Hereinafter all assessments for unmetered water con-consumers shall be assessed against the owners of the¡ property in place of against the consumers. . . .”
Section 207 also provides: “Whenever any person, firm or corporation becomes indebted to the city for water and fails, on demand of the city’s authorities to discharge said indebtedness as provided in section 160, it shall not be lawful to furnish water to said firm, person or corporation at the place where said indebtedness was contracted, or any other place within or without the city until said indebtedness is discharged.” .
It is insisted for the city that, under its ordinances* regulating the water service, the defendant has no ac-> count with the occupant of the premises, but assesses the water services against the owner, and hence it was entirely within its rights when it declined to accept from)
Both -the chancellor and the court of civil appeals have settled this controversy against the contention of the city; but the -latter court by a majority opinion remanded the case to ascertain certain facts not covered by, stipulation-of counsel, and which clearly, pertain to issues not raised by the pleadings.
It was settled by this court in the case of Crumley v. Watauga Water Co., 99 Tenn. 429, 41 S. W., 1058, that a water company, having power under its charter to condemn private property for its necessary purposes, and obligated- by the law of its creation to afford to the city of its location and the inhabitants thereof a plentiful supply of .water, is a quasi public corporation, that enjoys and -must exercise its opportunities for gain subject to its obligation to the public to supply water to all who apply therefor and tender the usual rates, and that this obligation is an implied condition of the -grant of its franchises. -
It was also settled in Watauga Water Co. v. Wolfe, 99 Tenn., 429, 41 S. W., 1060, 63 Am. St. Rep., 841, that such a water company is charged with the-public duty
The defendant is not especially authorized by the legislature to enact section 151 of Smith & McAlister’s Digest, interposed as a defense to this suit, and lienee invalidity must be determined by the test of reasonableness.
The distinction between the general power of a legisla five body to make laws and the special power of a mnni cipal corporation to enact by-laws is recognized by our authorities. ■ In respect of the latter, the corporate conn ’ ;cil is restrained to such matters as are not at variance 'with the general laws of the State, are reasonable, and •adapted, to, or proper for, the purposes of the corporation. In Long v. Taxing District, 7 Lea, 137, 40 Am. Rep., 55, the court said:
“Whenever a by-law seeks to alter a well-settled principle of the common law, or to establish a rule interfering with the rights of an individual or the public, the power to do so must come from plain and direct legislative enactment. No implied'power to pass by-laws,, and no express general grant of the power,.can authorize a-by-law which conflicts either with the-national or State constitution, or with the. statutes of the State, or*516 with the general principles of the common law adopted or in force in the State. Ordinances must be consistent with public legislative policy, may regulate, not restrain, trade, and must not contravene common right. These are general principles, universally recognized, and to: some extent illustrated by our own cases. Smith v. Mayor, 3 Head, 245; Maxwell v Jonesboro, 11 Heisk., 257; Trigally v. Mayor, 6 Cold., 382; Hodges v. Mayor, 2 Humph., 61; Raleigh v. Dougherty, 3 Humph., 11, 39 Am. Dec., 149; Mayor v. Winfield, 8 Humph., 707; Robinson v. Mayor, 1 Humph., 156, 34 Am. Dec., 625.”
And in speaking of a by-law of this defendant with '• respect to the relation of its water service to its inhabit.ants, this court has said:
*‘It may be said generally that ordinances must be consonant with the constitution and statutes of the United States and of the State, and with the general principles of the common law. They must be authorized by the charter of the corporation or general laws applying thereto, and consistent with the objects and purposes of its creation. They must be general, and applicable alike to all persons and property affected by them, and certain in their application and operation, and their execution not left to the caprice of those whose duty it is to enforce them. They must be just. And they should be adapted to the locality and affairs which it is intended they shall' control and affect. They must not be harsh and oppressive. They must not discriminate in favor of or'against any class or persons or property, but must he general in their nature, and impartial in*517 their operation and effect.” Jones v. Nashville, 109 Tenn., 558, 72 S. W., 985.
In Jones v. Nashville, supra, it was held that a by-law in substance the same, if not identical in terms, as section 207 of Smith & McAlister’s Digest, supra, was reasonable and valid. It will be observed that this bylaw provided that water should be turned off after a particular period of delinquency had expired, and >;the delinquent had been notified to pay and had failed, and then it should be unlawful .for any officer or employee of the city to turn it on again until the entire tax due the city had been paid, and also, in substance, that whenever any water user becomes indebted to the city for water, and fails on proper demand to discharge the indebtedness, it should not be lawful to furnish water to such delinquent user, either at the place where the indebtedness was contracted, or any other place within' or without the city, until the indebtedness was paid. Such a by-law, it is manifest, is nothing more than a means adopted by the city to enforce the payment of charges for water used by the person who has received the benefit of the use. This is all the case decided, and it need not be discussed further.
The question here, however, is whether the city, under its charter obligation to furnish water to all of its inhabitants, can deal alone with the owners of property, so as to require inhabitants who are not owners, but. who occupy property belonging to a delinquent owner, to pay the delinquent charges of the landlord as a condition precedent to his receiving water ser s ices. W.
At the common law, there is no duty or obligation upon the part of the landlord to furnish water to his tenant; and conversely there is no common-law obligation on the tenant to pay the debt claimed, in the absence of an agreement to do so. The ordinance in question, if valid, would enlarge the obligation of the landlord to the tenant to the extent of requiring the landlord to furnish the water and pay the water assessments, in order that the premises might be occupied; and it would likewise require the tenant to pay such a debt of the landlord, thereby denying to him the right of water service in his capacity of an inhabitant of the city.. This is a plain violation of the defendant’s charter obligation to furnish water to its inhabitants.
It is also void because it is an arbitrary discrimination between the inhabitants of the city. If the defendant can limit its water charges and water accounts to the owners of property, and refuse to run accounts or furnish water to tenants, it naturally and inevitably follows that defendant has discriminated between inhabitants of the city who own property and those who do not. So far as the use of water for domestic purposes is concerned, such a discrimination is arbitrary, capricious, and unjust. No reason has been suggested, and none can he conceived, why a tenant family occupying premises which have no other source of water supply does not need, and should not receive, the defeudaut’s water serv:
Another by-law of the city requires that all unmetered assessments should be paid in advance This rule is ample to protect the city against any loss on account of delinquent users, if it is enforced. Hence, the by-law is unreasonable, because unnecessary.
The conclusions just stated are a logical sequence from the cases of Crumley v. Water Co., Wolfe v. Water Co., and Jones v. Nashville, supra. But the exact point was decided by the supreme court of Montana in State v. Butte City Water Co., 18 Mont., 199, 44 Pac. 966, 82 L. R. A., 697, 56 Am. St. Rep., 574. The ordinance involved in the latter case, and which was held to be invalid, was as follows:
“The water company contracts with owners of property, or their authorized agents only, and the property is invariably held for water rent. When water is turned off for any cause, it will not be turned on again until all back rent due on that building is paid in full. Money paid by tenants will be credited to the owner, but in so doing the company does not in any way release the owner from liability under this rule."
We hold both upon reason and authority that the bylaw interposed as a defense to the refusal of the defend¡ant to furnish the complainant water for domestic purposes is unreasonable, unjust, arbitrary, and void. Prom which it results that the decree of the court of 'civil appeals is reversed, and the decree of the chancellor is affirmed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings :in< accordance with this opinion.