92 P.2d 346 | Utah | 1939
Plaintiff, Home Owner's Loan Corporation, has appealed from a judgment of the District Court of Cache County dismissing its petition for a writ of mandamus against the defendant Logan City. Appellant sought to compel respondents herein to furnish water to certain dwellings owned by appellant. Logan City refused to so so until certain water bills, incurred by former tenants and owners of the premises had been paid, relying on Section 916A, Revised Ordinances of Logan City 1927. This ordinance reads, in part:
"Water must not be turned on to any premises, until all charges against such premises that are due and payable to the city, on account of any of the following items, have first been paid: (1) Account due for water service received by the same or previous owner, tenant, or occupant of premises."
Appellant urged in the district court, and now urges to this court, that the provisions above quoted are not authorized by statute and therefore the ordinance is invalid. Numerous authorities are cited by appellant to the effect that without express statutory authority a city cannot, after turning off the water supply of a delinquent owner or tenant, refuse to turn it on for a subsequent owner or occupant until all arrears are paid. To this general statement of law respondent city agrees. But it contends (1) that part of the water rents were incurred while plaintiff and appellant was the owner of the premises; and (2) that the ordinance under which the city acted is authorized by Sections
Section
Section
It is clear that Section
"No city or town which is the owner or in control of a system for furnishing water to its inhabitants shall be required to furnish water for use in any house, tenement, apartment, building, place, premises or lot, whether such water is for the use of the owner or tenant, unless the application for water shall be made in writing, signed by such *239 owner or his duly authorized agent, in which application such owner shall agree that he will pay for all water furnished such house, tenement, apartment, building, place, premises or lot according to the ordinances, rules and regulations enacted or adopted by such city or town. In case an application for furnishing water shall be made by a tenant of the owner, such city or town may require as a condition of granting the same that such application contain an agreement signed by the owner thereof, or his duly authorized agent, to the effect that in consideration of the granting of such application the owner will pay for all water furnished such tenant, or any other occupant of the place named in the application, in case such tenant or occupant shall fail to pay for the same according to the ordinances, rules and regulations enacted or adopted by such city or town."
This section itself provides a way whereby the city may insure, to a great extent, the collection of its water bills. The city need not furnish water for use in any building or on any property, whether for the benefit of the owner of such premises or a tenant thereof, unless the owner agrees to pay for all water furnished to said premises. Section
It follows from the above analysis that a subsequent purchaser of premises, from which the city has cut off the water supply, is under no duty to pay the arrears owed by a prior tenant or owner, or both, as a condition precedent to having the water turned on for use on his property, unless he has agreed to be liable for the payment of the same. Section
Therefore, it becomes immaterial whether the water bills involved in this litigation were incurred before or after the appellant became the owner of the premises. It is clear that at no time did the appellant agree to pay, or be liable for the payment of, the bills for water furnished to prior owners or occupants of the premises. Hence, the city cannot invoke the procedure of Section
To the extent that Section 916A, Revised Ordinances of Logan City 1927, quoted above, prohibits the turning on of water for use on premises where bills have been incurred and remain delinquent, as against an owner who was not the occupant of the premises when the water bills were incurred and who never agreed to pay or be liable for the payment of those bills, the section is invalid and contravenes the statute. Such an ordinance may be directed only against those who have made themselves personally liable for the payment of water charges by agreement or occupancy, i.e. by use.
There is no contention here that the statute (or ordinance) imposes a lien on the property for the payment of the water bills. Respondent Logan City states in its brief, "Our statute doesn't go that far." That is correct. Under Sections
A further question is raised on this appeal. It goes to the problem of whether mandamus is the proper remedy. The trial court found that plaintiff had a "plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law in this case, inasmuch as the City was ready to turn on the water at any time when said back water rentals were paid, which the plaintiff could have paid under protest and sued at law to recover the money." Appellant assigns this as error, urging that if the water charges had been paid under protest, any suit brought for the recovery of the money so paid "would be as doubtful as could be imagined, and, if recovery were had, would not afford appellant the specific relief to which it is entitled."
While it would have been possible for appellant to have paid the delinquent water bills under protest and then sued to recover them on the ground that the ordinance under which they were paid by appellant was invalid, yet appellant should not be required to do this in order to obtain his rights. Mandamus has long been held the proper remedy to compel a public service corporation to supply an applicant with electricity, gas, or water where the reasonable rules of the corporation have been 5-7 complied with. American Water Works Co. v. State,
"It is the general rule in this state as well as most, if not all, of the others, that a corporation which occupies streets and highways, with its mains, pipes, or wires, and is engaged in the business of furnishing gas or electricity for light, heat, fuel, or power, is under a legal duty to supply the same to any person who applies therefor and complies *243 with its reasonable regulations, and, if it wrongfully refuses to do so, mandamus will lie." (Citing numerous authorities).
For the purposes of this action, we see no distinction between a public service corporation and a municipality itself. Where a municipality is engaged in supplying water to its inhabitants, it acts in its business or proprietary, rather than its governmental, capacity. Home Owner's Loan Corporation ofWashington, D.C. v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, Md.,
"A resident filed a petition for mandamus to compel the municipal authorities to supply water at her residence. It was alleged that the municipality had established a water system, with which the applicant's residence was connected, and was serving the public generally, but without cause had stopped applicant's supply of water and refused to serve her, although she was due nothing for water rent, and tender of payment in advance was made for the service desired. Held, that the petition was not subject to dismissal on the ground that the plaintiff had a specific legal remedy."
In the very recent case of Home Owners' Loan Corporation v.Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, supra, the Court of Appeals of Maryland had before it the same situation as exists in the present case. Mandamus was brought by the Home Owners' Loan Corporation to compel the City of Baltimore to supply water to certain premises owned by the plaintiff. The lower court dismissed the petition, and an appeal was taken. On appeal the judgment of the lower court was reversed, the Court of Appeals holding that "if the purpose and intent" of the municipal water company's rules "was to authorize the corporation to discontinue its service to property because the owner thereof failed or refused *244
to pay the water rent due for service to a former owner, the rule was unreasonable and void. Title Guarantee Trust Co. v. 457Schenectady Avenue,
The theory on which mandamus will lie appears to be that an applicant is not under the duty of complying with unreasonable rules or unlawful regulations in order to obtain the service of a public service corporation (or a municipality acting in the same capacity). The fact that he may submit to such unlawful regulation by paying the assessed charges under protest 8 and suing to recover the money thus paid on the grounds that the regulation was unlawful, does not establish that he has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law. Mandamus was, therefore, proper in this case.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to enter judgment in accordance with the views herein expressed. Costs to appellant.
MOFFAT, C.J., and LARSON, McDONOUGH, and PRATT, JJ., concur.