67 F. 196 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas | 1895
This is a suit in equity, brought for the purpose of accounting upon certain bonds and coupons issued by the defendant water company, and for the foreclosure of a certain deed of trust given to secure payment of the same. The facts, briefly stated, as gathered from the pleadings and evidence, are as follows: «
The defendant the city of Arkansas City is a city of the second class, under the laws of the state of Kansas. The defendant the Arkansas City Water Company is a private corporation organized for the purpose of constructing and operating a system of waterworks in said city. On the 21st day of December, 1885, the defendant city undertook to confer a franchise upon the Interstate Gas Company, also a private corporation, whereby a system of waterworks was to be erected and maintained in said city for a period of 21 years; providing for the construction of a plant, laying of pipes, and the erection of certain fire hydrants thereon, and making of certain extensions from time to time thereon, requiring of the said Interstate Gas Company that all such fire hydrants should have a certain standard of efficiency for the purpose of fire protection. Thereafter the plant was constructed, upon which were located 50 fire hydrants, being the number provided at the time such franchise and privilege were granted. ' Thereafter the defendant the Arkansas City Water Company succeeded by purchase to all of the rights, franchises, property, and duties belonging to and devolving upon the Interstate Gas Company. At the time of the construction of the original plant of 50 fire hydrants, the Interstate Gas Company issued bonds to the amount of $200,000, a,nd executed a deed of trust upon the plant, property, and franchise and incomes of the system to secure payment of the same. And, after the transfer of the works to the defendant the Arkansas City Water Company, it executed its bonds in the sum of $150,000, and the deed of trust upon all of the property, rights, and franchises of said company to secure payment of the same, the said $150,000 of bonds and deed of trust being the same declared upon by the complainant in this suit. One hundred thousand dollars of such issue was used for the purpose of retiring the $100,000 in bonds issued by the said Interstate Gas Company. The proceeds of the remaining $50,000 in bonds was paid over to the defendant water company. Thereafter, from time to time, extensions were made to the original plant, and about 135 fire hydrants were added to the system, which extensions were made of four-inch mains. The said extensions were made upon application of the president of said water company, one J. B. Quigly, and were not made upon any formal resolution or ordinance of the defendant city. Afterwards, on the 16th day of September, 1891, the defendant the city of Arlcansás City purchased from the Arkansas City Water Company said entire system of works, and all
The court having heretofore heard this cause, and decreed that the said city should pay hydrant rental for the original 50 fire hydrants located upon the works, as originally constructed, and should not be required to pay hydrant rental for said additional hydrants as were added thereto, thereupon one George E. Hopper, receiver in charge of said works under order of this court, applied to the court for additional hydrant rental, averring that the said hydrants on said extensions were efficient, and in all respects complied with the conditions and requirements of the provisions of said Ordinance No. 27; and thereon testimony was taken, and submitted to the court, regarding such efficiency. Thereafter, for good cause shown, the decree, as heretofore placed of record in this cause, was set aside, and the case reopened for further consideration and argument, and is now before the court upon the printed briefs of solicitors for complainant and the receiver in charge, and counsel for defendant city.
Upon the trial of this cause it was not seriously contended by counsel for complainant that the defendant city had assumed the payment of, or was in any way personally liable for, the bonds in suit, and there is no evidence to warrant such finding. The evidence also fails to disclose that there was any fraudulent intent or wrongful purpose on the part of the defendant city in the purchase of the works.' It does, however, clearly appear from the evidence that the bonds in suit and the trust deed were duly made and executed by the defendant water company, and constitute a valid first lien upon all the property, rights, and franchises of the Arkansas City ¥/ater Company, defendant, in said city; that the interest upon said bonds had been defaulted prior to the bringing of this suit, by reason whereof the whole amount of said bonds had become due and payable, and the complainant entitled to a decree of foreclosure.thereon.
The serious controversy in this suit arises upon the following propositions: First. Does a city of the second class, under the laws of the state of Kansas, have the power to grant an exclusive right and franchise to a corporation to furnish water for public and domestic use within said city for a period of 21 years? Second. Was the so-called ordinance of defendant city, No. 27, legally enacted; and, if not, what rights, if any, were acquired under the same?' Third. Should the defendant city he required to pay a stated hydrant rental upon any or all of the additional fire hydrants placed upon extensions to the original plant? A decision of the foregoing propositions is necessary, to fully determine the matters in controversy in this suit.
Recurring to the first proposition, I cannot give my assent to the doctrine so ahlv contended for by counsel for complainant in their ex
Whether Ordinance No. 27 was legally adopted, in the opinion of the court, is .practically disposed of by the statute and the undisputed evidence in this suit. Section 765, Gen. St. 1889, reads as follows:
“All ordinances of the city shall be read and considered by sections at a public meeting of the council, and a vote on their anal passage shall be taken by yeas and nays, which shall be entered on the journal by the clerk, and no ordinance shall be valid, unless a majority of all the members elected, vote in favor thereof; provided, however, that when the council are all present and voting and there shall be a tie, the mayor shall have the power to give the casting vote on the passage of any ordinance.”
The evidence shows that, at the time of the consideration of said Ordinance No. 27, the said council of defendant city was composed of eight members, seven of whom were present; four voting in the affirmative, and three in the negative,—the mayor not voting. This being true, the ordinance was thereby rejected. But it appears that the officers of defendant city and the Interstate Gas Company all proceeded upon the idea that said Ordinance No. 27 was duly adopted, and had become a legal ordinance of said city; that the original system of waterworks provided for in said alleged ordinance was put in by the Interstate Gas Company, and accepted by the city, in pursuance of said ordinance, and that there were attached thereto, for public use, 50 public fire hydrants, the efficiency of which was duly accepted by the mayor and council of said city, in pursuance of the terms of said ordinance; and that the city has ever since said time continued to use said 50 fire hydrants for fire protection.
“That the works erected by the Interstate Gas Company, its successors and assigns under this ordinance, are able to throw simultaneously, four (4) streams of water from any four (4) hydrants to be designated by the mayor and city council through one hundred feet of two and a half inch rubber hose, and one inch ring nozzle, at least sixty-five (65) feet high from stand pipe alone and eighty-five feet high by direct pressure from pumps.”
The right of the water company, its successors and assigns, to recover from the defendant the said hydrant rentals for the 185 additional Are hydrants shown by the evidence to have been placed upon extensions for the completion of the original system, is the only remaining question. This is a question, 1 think, important to the parties to this suit, but its determination is necessary from the fact that, in the deed of trust sought to be foreclosed by complainant, such hydrant rentals are assigned as a part of the security for the prompt payment of the bonds and interest thereon; and as the complainant asks a decree of foreclosure and sale of all the property, rights, and franchises and income of the water company, it is important to know what the purchaser at such sale shall acquire by his purchase; and for the further reason, that it appears from, the evidence that no hydrant rental has been paid by defendant city since the year 1891, and the complainant prays for an accounting with defendant city as to the amount of hydrant rentals now due, and a decree for the same. Upon this branch of the suit a large number of witnesses were orally examined before the court, and many of the depositions on file bear upon this question. If this claim, for hydrant rentals for Are hydrants located upon extensions to the original plant is upheld, it Axes a charge of about $8,000 annually upon the defendant city. So great a charge upon the revenues of the city must rest upon some well-authenticated enactment of the common council of said city, or upon a binding and subsisting contract, in which the rights, duties, and liabilities of the respective parties are clearly d&Aned and set forth; and even then—such a contract, if found to exist, being in its nature purely executory—the demanding party takes upon himself the burden of proving a substantial compliance with the terms and conditions of such contract before any recovery will be decreed therefor. A careful review oí the evidence upon this proposition clearly shows that there is no ordinance or resolution of defendant city authorizing such extensions to be made. The evidence does show such