This is an action to enjoin the city of Los Angeles and certain officers constituting its board of public service from continuing to supply water from the Los Angeles aqueduct to its inhabitants for domestic uses. The court, after an elaborate trial, gave findings and judgment for the defendants. The plaintiff appeals.
The complaint sets forth that the city has constructed an aqueduct whereby it carries water from the Owens Eiver, in the counties of Mono and Inyo, for a distance of two hundred miles to Los Angeles, and there distributes the same for domestic use to its inhabitants, including the plaintiff and his family; that said water is polluted and unfit for human consumption and that the city is so furnishing it without having obtained any permit to do so from the board of health of the state of California. The claim of the plaintiff is twofold. First, that the supplying of unfit water, such as that described, for domestic use, is per se a public nuisance, and, second, that the city is without authority to furnish any kind of water for public use unless it has.first obtained a permit . from the state board of health. For the latter point plaintiff relies on the statute providing that the continuation of such supply may be enjoined at the suit of any person who receives water of that character for domestic use from the person sought to be enjoined. (Stats. 1913, p. 793.) ■
The court expressly found that the water furnished and supplied by the city through its aqueduct and distributing system “is safe, wholesome, sanitary, healthful, potable, and fit for human consumption,” and, further, that the city was not supplying to the plaintiff for domestic or other uses any water that was not fit for human consumption. These findings are fully supported by the great preponderance of the evidence. Indeed, it may be said that the evidence to the contrary is so inconsiderable that there is no serious conflict.
In view of these findings it is clear that the court was justified in refusing to grant any relief based upon the theory that the plaintiff as a private individual was maintaining an action to abate or enjoin a condition which constituted a public nuisance. “A private person may maintain an action for a public nuisance, if it is specially injurious to himself, but not otherwise.” (Civ. Code, sec. 3493.)
The only foundation upon which the plaintiff can sustain his action is found in the act of 1913, aforesaid. This act makes it unlawful for any person or corporation, private or municipal, to furnish water to any person, for domestic uses, “which is polluted or dangerous to health.” It requires any person or corporation desiring to furnish water for domestic use, or, being already engaged in that business, who desires to continue so doing, to apply to the state board of health for permission to do so; directs that an investigation of the plant and water supply may be made and that hearings may be had at the expense of the petitioner, whereupon if the board finds that the ‘water to be furnished is of a character which does not endanger the lives or health of human beings, and that it is, under all the circumstances and conditions, the purest and most healthful water obtainable or securable, it shall grant permission for such applicant to furnish, or continue to furnish, such water. The clause upon which the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action depends is, in effect, that any person or corporation whose supply of water for human consumption or domestic use is taken or received from any person or corporation, municipal or private, engaged in such water furnishing business without having an unrevoked permit to do so as provided in the act, may maintain an action to enjoin such water furnishing person or corporation from furnishing or continuing to furnish water for such purposes, or that it or he may be enjoined at the suit of the state board of health in the same manner.
The respondent contends that this act is unconstitutional so far as it applies to Los Angeles, and also that it is unconstitutional on general grounds as an unreasonable exercise of the police power.
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With respect to the first proposition it is argued that any municipal corporation is authorized by the constitution to establish and operate public works for supplying its inhabitants with water (article XI, section 19); that the Los Angeles charter confers upon that city the power to make all regulations necessary and expedient for the preservation of health and prevention of disease within the city and to establish a health department with power to enforce such regulations; also to establish and operate waterworks for the purpose of supplying its inhabitants with water, and, in short, with full powers over the entire water system pertaining to that city; and that the subject of providing and furnishing water by the city for its inhabitants is a municipal affair with respect to which the charter is the exclusive law. In this behalf attention is called to the fact that by an amendment of the charter approved on January 16, 1917, adopted under the provisions of sections 6 and 8 of article XI of the constitution as amended in 1914, the city has become entirely independent of the state with respect to its municipal affairs, so that a general law is of no force therein, as to such affairs, whether the charter of the city contains provisions regarding it or not.
(Civic Center Assn.
v.
Railroad Com.,
The act gives the board no discretion. No matter how pure and healthful, short of absolute perfection, the water supply may be, nevertheless, if better water can be obtained by any expenditure of money and effort of which the purveyor to the public use is capable, the permit must be refused; the board has no power to grant any permission; the continuance of the water service at once becomes a public nuisance; it is the bounden duty of the proper state officials to immediately stop it, and any consumer forthwith is invested with the right and power to maintain an action to enjoin the continuance of such water service.
It seems obvious from the mere statement of the case that such a law, at least so far as it applies to a water service already in operation, must be held to be unreasonable and *28 invalid. The climate of this state is so arid, the rainfall so light and variable, and the intervals of drought so long, that the denizens of practically every community, from a village having 250 service connections up to the largest city, have and can have no private water supply, 'but are compelled to depend upon some kind of public water service. It is safe to say that in the majority of such places the water served is not detrimental to the health of the inhabitants. There can be little doubt that in a large number of such cases it would be possible for those engaged in the public water service to find, somewhere available, water of a better quality than that which is being supplied. If, such fact could be established, and even if it could not be shown that better water was not obtainable, then, under this law, no permit to continue the original service could be issued by the board and any consumer could at once enjoin the further service and immediately deprive himself and all other inhabitants of the region of any water from that source until the better quality of water was secured and delivered to them. In the practical result the inhabitants would be deprived of any water at all in all such cases. Apparently this part of the law is based on the theory that it is better for the urban population of the state that they should die of thirst than that they should quench it with ordinary healthful water, which is not the very purest that can possibly be obtained. The law, in this respect, amounts to absolute prohibition of a business, lawful in itself, and not injurious to health.
There is another reason which fully justifies the affirmance of the judgment. We have said that a private person cannot maintain an action to enjoin a public nuisance unless it is specially injurious to himself. The plaintiff in this case is taken out of the operation of this rule solely because of the permission given to him by the state in this act to maintain this action on its behalf, without showing special injury to himself. The state may, of course, grant this permission to any citizen to act in its behalf. But it must be presumed that the legislature did not intend to change in any other respect the principles of equity regarding injunctions, and consequently that when a citizen applies to a court of equity for relief, under such authority, his rights are no greater with respect to the merits of the ease and the duty of a court of equity to grant relief, than in any other action of equitable cognizance. The general principles of equity governing the issuance of in
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junctions in such a case must he the same and like reasons must be shown as in other eases of the same character.
In this case the right of the plaintiff, such as it is, is wholly technical and unsubstantial, and to enforce it would produce very great mischief, both public and private, not only to himself, but to many of his fellow-citizens within the city, and to the municipality as well. The court in its discretion was fully authorized to deny the injunction under such circumstances.
The judgment is affirmed.,
Olney, J., Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Melvin, J., Angellotti., C. J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
