73 Miss. 598 | Miss. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
In view of the nature and character of the subject-matter of the contract which the board of mayor and aldermen of the city of Jackson was authorized to make by the third section of the act of February 29, 1888, we think the contract entered into with the appellant was within the delegation of power, so far as the time of its duration is involved. The language of the act is 1 £ that the said board of mayor and aldermen be, and they are hereby, authorized and empowered to contract with any reliable corporation, association or individual, for supplying the said city of Jackson with water and electric or gas lights, from year to year, and to levy and collect a tax necessary to discharge the debt in that behalf contracted by them.”
We know that the machinery, mains and appliances required for supplying the city with water are costly to begin with, and of relatively little value if removed when once located. Permanency of the plant is essential to the realization of any profit in the enterprise, and in cities having no greater population than that of Jackson, the use of water for municipal purposes would probably be a prerequisite to secure the investment of the capital necessary to the construction of the plant. The words from £ £ year to year,5 ’ relied upon by the appellee as limiting the
A few days before the passage of the act of February 29, 1888, the legislature had incorporated the water company and conferred upon it the right to lay its mains in the streets of Jackson. A few days after the act was passed, a commission was appointed by the legislature to contract for water for the state institutions, situated in and near the city, for the term of twenty-five years. In this act power was conferred upon all municipalities to enter into contracts, for a term not exceeding twenty-five years, for supplies of water, on a two-thirds affirmative vote of the qualified electors, but the act provided that it should not apply to municipalities whose charters already conferred the power of making contracts for water. The act of February 29, is, in its nature, though not in its terms, an amendment of the city charter. It deals wholly with municipal affairs, and confers powers upon the officers of the city, and a charter is but a grant of power.
In view of the interests involved, counsel for the city and the water company entered into a written stipulation, by which it was agreed that certain questions not properly presented by the demurrer should be submitted to the court, and others which might be decided should be considered as withheld for decision upon final hearing of the cause. The purpose of the agreement is to have an authoritative construction of the contract, to the end that the course of the litigation may be directed unless a satisfactory adjustment of the matters in dispute can be made. Without taking up seriatim the various questions propounded, they will be found to be solvable by the following general announcement of our construction of the contract:
The end and purpose of the contract was that the city and its
The remedy of rescission, which the courts are reluctant to afford when adequate damages for breach of contract may be recovered at law, is peculiarly appropriate in cases of this character. What the city contracted for was a constant supply of water for the protection of the property of its citizens against fire. A failure to afford such supply would result in no injury if no fire occurred, but to say that, because no damage has been sustained, no right, either of an action at law, or in equity for rescission, can be maintained, would hazard the security of the inhabitants, and leave wdthout sufficient remedy the perpetuation of the very danger to avoid which large outlays of public money have been made for years.
In Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Galesburg, 133 U. S., 156, the supreme court of the United States, speaking of the remedy of rescission in a case of this character, said: “ But it seems to us that, in respect to a contract of the character of the present one, the ability of the water company to continue to furnish
It remains but to add that the test prescribed by the fifth section of the contract was intended only to determine the time at which the rental of the fire hydrants should begin, and that the penalty prescribed by section eleyen was not in the nature of liquidated damages for the entire breach of the contract, but a penalty for the occasional and temporary neglect on the part of the company to keep all or any of the hydrants in proper repair. The question whether the company must take.notice of all fires occurring in the town, or is entitled to notice and a demand for direct pressure from its pumps, is answered by the statement that this would depend upon the circumstances and extent of the fire. The burning of a small building in a remote part of the city might be unknown to the employees of the company as well as the fire department of the town, and negligence of duty would not be predicable of the failure to put on the pressure in such case. But the company must take notice of such fires as it would be negligence not to know of, in
The decree is affirmed.