113 Mich. 215 | Mich. | 1897
(after stating the facts). The charter of the defendant provides for furnishing water to the owners or occupants of houses and other buildings. It does not contemplate that the defendant shall furnish water to each tenant who occupies a separate room in any house or building. It also provides various methods for enforcing collection of the rates. Counsel for complainant concede that the rates are a lien upon the building, and that the building can be sold for nonpayment of the rates by any tenant. The rules and regulations provide for dealing with the owners, and not with tenants. The application is required to be made by the oivner or some person duly authorized by him. The defendant has supplied only one service pipe from the street main to the building, and has provided for one shut-off in the street. This has been the universal custom. It is not, and cannot be, contended that defendant, under its charter, is not vested with the power and right to treat alone with the owner or occupant of the building as an entirety. If such owner or occupant rents rooms to tenants, he has not the right, under the charter, to compel the defendant to deal with his tenants,
The authorities cited in behalf of complainant do not sustain his contention. In Red Star Line Steamship Co. v. City of Jersey City, 45 N. J. Law, 246, the sole question was the right of the company to charge consumers with the cost of expensive meters, and it was held that no such right was conferred by the charter. In U. S. v. American Waterworks Co., 37 Fed. 747, the waterworks ordinance provided that the company should furnish water to its citizens residing along the line of. its
It needs no argument to show that these authorities are not decisive upon the question before us.
We find nothing in the action of the defendant which was unreasonable, or which will result in depriving complainant or any other tenant of the use of water. The object is apparent, — to relieve Morrison & Scott of the collection of the rates from their tenants, and to impose that duty upon the defendant.
The decree is reversed, with the costs of both courts, and the bill dismissed.