164 Ga. 306 | Ga. | 1927
The John P. King Manufacturing Company brought an equitable petition against the City Council of Augusta and Julian M. Smith, mayor, to enjoin the city from enforcing an ordinance adopted August 24, 1924, fixing the rate and price of water-power furnished its customers from the Augusta canal, for the period beginning March 7, 1926, and ending March 7, 1936, at $11 per horse-power for day use and $3.50 per horse-power for night Use, per annum. The application for injunction applies only to 1244.3 horse power, which the plaintiff claims that it has the right to use in perpetuity at the former rate of $5.50 per horsepower for day use. The 1244.3 horse-power is the amount of power which the plaintiff began to use and take from the canal, according to its petition, on December 1, 1883, upon the completion of its cotton mill. The plaintiff also prayed for an injunction enjoining the defendants from contracting away to any other person the water-power, or from interfering with the plaintiff’s right to the same. A temporary restraining order was granted, and the City Council of Augusta made response by way of demurrer and answer. The case came on to be heard on the petition, demurrer, answer, and evidence submitted by affidavits by the parties. The judge rendered a judgment denying an injunction, and also sustained the demurrer and dismissed the' petition. To these judgments the plaintiff excepted.
The controlling question in the case was whether the City of Augusta had theretofore entered into- a contract with John P. King Mfg. Co.' to supply it with water-power at the specified rate of $5.50 per horse-power per annum in perpetuity, or had made a grant to the plaintiff of the right to have a certain waterpower for a specified rate, which right, under all the surrounding facts, the city was estopped from withdrawing. It therefore be-
The plaintiff contends that the foregoing conversations and correspondence between officials of the plaintiff and the City of Augusta, and the action of the plaintiff based thereon, constitute an irrevocable grant by the City of Augusta to the plaintiff to take and use, paying therefor $5.50 per horse-power per annum, water in perpetuity for at least 1214.3 horse-power; and that it also constitutes a contract based upon ample consideration, viz., the inducements held forth by the city, the building and putting into continuous operation of a manufacturing plant. There seems to be no material difference between the parties to the present suit as to the foregoing facts, and it is insisted by the plaintiff that.the judgment of the court below, in denying an injunction and in dismissing the case, is error. The defendants deny that the facts set forth amounted to a contract, contending that the grant was without mutuality, and that even if a contract existed it coaid not be construed as a perpetual contract, and that the city has the right after the lapse of years to change or modify the same, so far at least as the rate charged for water is concerned, on account of changed conditions and the lapse of time. The sole question in this ease is whether the John P. King Manufacturing Company has the right to use the water-power at the rate originally agreed upon, perpeLually. Construing the conversations and correspondence between the City Council of Augusta and the John
After carefully considering the whole case we are of the opinion that the court did not err in refusing an injunction, or" in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the ease.
Judgment affirmed.