The Northeast Harbor Water Company was chartered by special act of the legislature in 1883 "for the purpose of supplying the village of Northeast Harbor in the town of Mount Desert in Hancock county and the vicinity of said village, with pure water for domestic, sanitary and municipal purposes,” and for said purposes was given the power to detain and take water from Hadlock Lower Pond in Mount Desert and from any streams flowing out of the same, Priv, L. 1883, c. 168. Under that charter a water system was constructed in 1884 and has been in operation since, supplying water now to about two hundred and fifty takers.
By Private Laws 1907, ch. 187, additional powers and rights were conferred® upon the company and, to quote the words of the act, "in addition to the powers now possessed by it, it is hereby authorized and empowered.....to supply water for shipping and for the development of power, to erect dams and other structures for the purpose,” etc., and certain rights of flowage on Lower Hadlock pond were also granted.
The plaintiff is the owner of the Kimball House, a summer hotel at Northeast Harbor and one of the parties supplied by the defendant. In 1898 he installed in the hotel an elevator which has since been run by water power by direct pressure, the water being taken from an eight inch main in the street through a four inch pipe directly to the elevator. In December, 1908, the company notified the plaintiff that in view of the effect during the preceding years upon the water pressure in the pipes of other consumers in the
Two questions are raised :
First; the obligation of the company to furnish water under the facts of this case.
Second ; the reasonableness of the company’s requirements.
The first proposition has been argued only with reference to the additional act of 1907 which gave the company the right to supply water for the "development of power,” and were that act under consideration, as in the eminent domain clause, serious doubts might arise under the decision of this court in Brown v. Gerald, 100 Maine, 351. We do not, however, deem it necessary in this case to consider the force or validity of that act. We think the language and spirit of the original charter are sufficiently broad to cover this case, for in that charter the company was empowered to supply water for all domestic purposes and it requires no wrenching of terms to hold that the use of water for operating an elevator in a private dwelling or in a hotel comes within the terra domestic purpose in its broad and liberal sense. For what purpose is this used if not domestic? It certainly is neither a trade nor an industrial purpose. The power is not employed in manufacturing or in producing any article for sale upon the market. "Domestic” is used as the direct antithesis of commercial or industrial. The word itself, in its derivation from "domus” a house, suggests its inherent purport. It is defined as "belonging to the home or household, concerning or relating to the home or family,” Standard Die; oras Webster has it "of pertaining to one’s house or home, or one’s household or family.” As water is furnished by a public service
If, however, power is developed for commercial and industrial purposes, the realm of the household has been left behind. Then it is- made to operate factories, to drive machinery, to manufacture products for the market. Then it is coined into money. Comfort and convenience are forgotten. Earnings and dividends are alone considered. Then the charter of 1883 would be inadequate, and the broader powers conferred by the act of 1907 would be invoked.
Authorities on this subject are not numerous because the question has not often arisen.
Domestic use was held to include water in a stable for washing a private carriage and watering a private carriage horse, in Busby v. Chesterfield Water Works Co., Ell. Bl. & Ell. 176; for watering a pleasure garden in Bristol Water Works Co. v. Uren, L. R. 15 Q. B. Div. 637, and running a church motor was held to come within the terms of a contract for furnishing all water needed for use in the churches in M. E. Church v. Ashtabula Water Co., 20 Ohio, Cir. Ct. R. 578. In City of Erie v. Erie Gas & Mineral Co.,
The definition given by the Supreme Court of Alabama in Crosby v. City Council of Montgomery,
On this branch of the case the court is of opinion that the use of the water by the plaintiff for operating his elevator was within the term "domestic purposes” in the charter of 1883. It follows therefore, as a well established principle of law that the defendant is bound to supply water to the plaintiff at reasonable rates and subject to reasonable rules and regulations in the conduct of its business. Such rules and regulations must be neither oppressive nor vexatious. Lumbard v. Stevens,
Upon the whole case, therefore, our conclusion is that the entry should be,
Sill dismissed with a single Mil of costs for defendants.
