82 N.J. Eq. 572 | New York Court of Chancery | 1914
The defendant Somerville Water Company is supplying water to Baritan and Somerville, and to residents along certain roads leading from these towns. The water is obtained from the Baritan river, at Baritan, of which the complainants are lower riparian owners. The average flow of the river during nine months of the year is about two hundred and fifty million gallons per day, and the low-water flow is sixty-one million gallons. At a point about three miles above the defendant’s works the river is dammed and the water diverted into the canal of the Baritan Water Power Company, which extends down to the defendant’s plant and supplies various factories with power. The capacity of the canal is equal to the ordinary flow of the river, which is eventually restored to the bed at and above the defendant’s pumping station. The defendant withdraws ap
“shall not at any time exceed such quantity of water as the said Somerville company may lawfully draw from its present or future sources of supply, less such quantity as the Somerville company may, from time to time, require to supply water to the said towns of Somerville and Raritan and the inhabitants thereof, and shall not at any time exceed twenty million (20,000,000) gallons a day.”
Subject to the above limitation, the Piscataway company agreed to deliver to the Raritan company not more than nineteen million gallons a day, and the Raritan company agreed to furnish to the Elizabethtown company not less than eighteen million gallons a day. Each company was, at its own cost,’ to lay mains within its territory for conveying the water, the delivery of which was to begin on the 1st day of January, 1909, and to continue for ninety-nine years. The four companies are owned or controlled by a single interest and managed by boards of interlocking directors. Avowedly, for the purpose of fulfilling its part of the contract, the defendant, in 1910, laid a thirty-six inch main from its pumping station, skirting Raritan, to Somerville, in all, about five thousand six hundred feet, when it was stopped by the authorities of that municipality. Somerville Water Co. v. Somerville, 78 N. J. Eq. (8 Buch.)
“in any city, town, village or seaside resort in this state, having a population of not more than fifteen thousand and not less than five hundred inhabitants, and for the purpose of supplying' * * * the inhabitants thereof with water.”
The defendant’s certificate of incorporation states that its purpose is to construct, maintain and operate water works in the town of Somerville and also in the adjoining town of Raritan for the purpose of supplying both towns and the inhabitants thereof with water. The restrictive language of the act raises 'a very grave doubt as to whether one company may be formed to operate water works in two or more of the class of towns (Somerville Water Co. v. Somerville, supra), and consequently as to the right to condemn. Hampton v. Clinton, 65 N. J. Law (36 Vr.) 158; Manda v. Orange, 75 N. J. Law (46 Vr.) 251; Sisters of Charity v. Morris Railroad Co., 82 N. J. Law (53 Vr.) 214 In this connection the constitutionality of the acts under which Somerville and Raritan were formed (P. L. 1863 p. p479; P. L. 1868 p. 776) is assailed to furnish grounds for the contention that Bridgewater township, in which the towns
The bill will be dismissed, with costs.