88 Pa. 393 | Pa. | 1879
delivered the opinion.'of the court, May 7th 1879.
This was a bill in equity, filed by the Girard Life Insurance Annuity and Trust .Company, against the City of Philadelphia, and the Chief Engineer of its Water Department, praying for an injunction to restrain the defendants from cutting off the water supply to certain premises which said company had purchased at sheriff’s sale in the year 1876. The bill sets forth that the complainants had tendered the water-rent for one year upon each of the said premises respectively, which was declined, and they were informed by the water department, that water-rent for three years was due on each, together with a penalty of fifteen per centum, and that unless said arrears, with the penalty were paid, the water supply would be stopped under the authority given by the ordinance of March 22d 1862. The complainants refused to pay, and filed this bill for the purpose of preventing the city from stopping off the water. The defendants demurred to the bill, but subsequently withdrew the first six causes of demurrer, whereupon it was agreed that the bill and demurrer should stand as a case stated.
This is a very inartificial mode of stating a case, and is not to be commended. A case stated should consist of a clear statement of the facts upon which the court is asked to pronounce judgment. The forms- of equity pleading are not appropriate; and were not intended for such purposes as this.
The complainants concede the complete power of the city to make ' any conditions precedent to supplying the citizens with water. The -supplying of water and gas to a city is not a municipal duty. Hence, when the city undertakes to do so, it acts, not by virtue of any rights of sovereignty, but exercises merely the functions of a private corporation: Western Saving Fund Society v. The City, 7 Casey 175; Wheeler v. The City, 27 P. F. Smith 338. The introduction of water by the city into private houses is not on the footing of a contract, but of a license which is paid for : Smith v. The City, 31 P. F. Smith 38. It may very well be that when a license has been given by the city to the owner of a house to use the water, Such license may not be withdrawn arbitrarily, or from mere caprice. But it is equally clear that the city may adopt such rules in regard to the use of the water and the payment therefor, as the municipal authorities shall deem expedient. All this is admitted by the complainants. Their contention is, that while councils may so legislate, they have not done so, and that the ordinance of March 22d 1862, does not authorize the water department to demand from them more than the water-rent for one year as a condition of supplying their premises with water.
The ordinance referred to is as follows: “ That all water-rents shall be payable to the Register of Water-rents at his office annually in advance on the second Monday of January; and upon all
With equal reason might a mortgagee complain of arrears of taxes which are sometimes allowed to accumulate on the property mortgaged. For the last few years this has been a more serious peril to mortgagees than the accumulation'of water-rents. The analogy between the cases is believed to be complete, for while, in the latter instance, there is the ordinance referred to for detaching the ferrules, ■ yet, as before stated, that provision was intended solely for the benefit of the city, and not for the water-tenants or their mortgagees. Both evils may be avoided, in my opinion, by a provision in the mortgage, that at stated periods in each year the mortgagor shall produce to the mortgagee the evidence of the payment of taxes and water-rents, and that default in such payment shall make the mortgage-debt become due and payable, with a scire facias clause, as in the case of the non-payment of interest on the mortgage. Indeed I am informed that this is now done in many instances.
It is not true, in point of fact, that the city has limited the amount of arrears of water-rent necessary to be paid by a purchaser at sheriff’s sale to one year. No such limitation is to be found in the ordinance of March-22d 1862, or elsewhere. In the absence of any such restriction, the right of the city to detach the ferrules-for the non-payment of all arrears cannot be successfully questioned.
As before said, the ordinance fixes no precise time when the ferrules shall be detached. - The water-rent is payable annually in advance, and the water may he cut off at any time after the 1st of September. The neglect of the chief engineer to enforce the ordinance may make him personally liable to the city for any loss in consequence of such omission. The water-tenant, however, who receives the benefit of the indulgence, cannot complain; nor can a purchaser of his title at a judicial sale, for the reasons already given. . Judgment affirmed.