156 F. 922 | 8th Cir. | 1907
The Omaha Water Company brought two actions against the city of Omaha, the first for hydrant rentals for the six months ending December 31, 1904, and the other for like rentals for the six months ending June 30, 1905. They were brought shortly after the accrual of the sums sued for respectively. The water board of the city of Omaha which had recently been created a corporation by legislative act, and vested with certain powers respecting the municipal water supply, was joined as a defendant in the second action. The aggregate amount claimed was $94,210.48. It was not denied that, aside from the specific defenses in the answers. the sums sued for were due and owing. The answers of the city set forth that the contract between it and the company which was the basis of the actions required of the latter the continued performance of certain duties, and that it had failed in three material particulars: (1) To furnish ample fire protection through hydrants without the aid of hand or steam engines. (2) To furnish pure, wholesome, clear water suitable for culinary and drinking purposes. (3) To install new hydrants upon new mains as ordered by the municipal authorities. The answer in the second action also contained a counterclaim for $81,645.68 for damages for the failure of the company in the first of the particulars mentioned, it being averred that, because of the inadequate fire protection, the city had been compelled to expend that sum in the purchase and maintenance of fire engines, etc. The actions were tried together. At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court upon motion for directed verdicts held that the city had not made out its first and second defenses, and therefore denied recovery upon the counterclaim predicated upon the matters set out in the first defense. On the other hand it held that the company had failed to install new hydrants ordered by the city, that no legal excuse therefor had been shown, and that, while in the position
Upon the theory that if the trial court should have directed the verdicts upon any ground its action should be affirmed, though it selected the wrong one, we have considered all three of the defenses of the city, and have reached the conclusion that the court was right in its decision upon the first two of them. By the contract and ordinances pursuant to which the waterworks were built in 1880-83 by predecessors in title of the water company, and in which the municipal franchise was granted, the character and style of the works and the source from which the water supply was to be obtained were definitely prescribed. The contract and ordinances left very little to the judgment and discretion of the builder, and practically nothing so far as the efficiency of the system depended upon the correct solution of engineering' problems. Before the ordinances were adopted and the contract was made, a hydraulic engineer was employed by the municipal authorities to study the topography oi the city and devise a plan for a system of waterworks. In May, 1880, he submitted to the city council an exhaustive.report describing with much detail the results of his labors. The report and an amendment thereto were afterwards embodied in the contract, and referred to and made a part of the ordinances. The material features of the report were as follows: The water for all purposes was to be secured from the Missouri river and the point of intake where the pumping station was to be installed was designated. The character of the buildings at the pumping station and the capacity of the pumps were specified. The storage and settling reservoirs were located, their number and capacity given, and the elevations of the former above low water-mark of the river and above the various portions of the city were set forth. The main or pipe system was described in minute detail. The names of the streets in which the pipes were to be laid, the distances to be traversed, the size of the pipes in each street, and the precise location of the first 247 fire hydrants were shown. The report also contained tables showing the discharge capacity of water mains or pipes of specified diameters and lengths, and also the distances fire streams could be thrown with stated pressures at the hydrant heads through hose of different lengths, and nozzles of different diameters. The character of Missouri river water, its excellence for drinking and domestic purposes, and the ease of clarifying it were discussed. In short, the report which concluded with an itemized statement of the estimated cost furnished almost complete plans and specifications for the entire works. The distribution system was designed for both fire protection and private consumption. In other words, there was not to be a separate system of mains and pipes for each. The difficulties in depending wholly .upon direct hydrant pressure for fire protection were pointed out. It was said that in a large, densely populated city it 'could scarcely
It was also claimed that the company failed to perform its obligation to furnish pure, wholesome, clear water, and therefore there could be no recovery upon the contract. No special damages were alleged to have been sustained by the city on this account, but performance by the company was asserted ás a condition precedent to its re
The remaining question arises from the failure of the company to install the additional hydrants ordered by the city. The hydrant rentals sued for were for the last six months of 1904 and the first six months of 1905. During the former period, the city ordered the company to place 117 new hydrants, to do which involved the laying of a large amount of new water mains. The company obeyed the orders to the extent of 49 hydrants and the requisite-mains. On January 1,
The facts pertaining to this feature of the case arc as follows:. The original contract of 1880 between the city and a predecessor of the company provided for the installation of 250 hydrants at designated places, and that others on new mains might thereafter be required by the city, and, when so required, should be placed and maintained by the company at an annual rental of $60 per hydrant. As the city grew, the number of hydrants put in service greatly increased, until on July 1, 1904, there were about 1,500 of them, requiring payment to the company of about $90,000 a year, payable on the 1st days of January and July. From the time the contract of 1880 was made to 1903 there was power in the city, expressly conferred by legislative act, to levy and collect taxes for the payment of the hydrant rentals. One of the ordinances incorporated in the contract provided that after 20 years the city should have the right to purchase the waterworks at an appraisal by three engineers. The Legislature of Nebraska passed an act, which was approved February 2, 1903, authorizing the city to acquire the works, creating a water hoard for the management thereof, and repealing every' provision of law for the levy and collection of taxes for hydrant rentals. Of course, this act could not impair the obligation of the city in respect of hydrants theretofore installed. But it is, in effect, contended by the company that since the city was not required by the contract of 1880 to order the location of additional hydrants, since it might do so or not as it pleased, it was in respect of the exercise of its discretion subject to the dominant control of the Legislature; that the company had no vested contract right to have new hydrants ordered, and, if the city could say it would not order them, the Legislature could say it should not; finally, that the withdrawal from the city of the means of payment was equivalent to a prohibition against incurring the new indebtedness. We have not, however, found it necessary to determine this question.
Pursuant to the act of 1903, the mayor and council adopted an ordinance February 24, 1903, electing to purchase the waterworks. An appraiser was appointed for the city, the company appointed one, and the two chose a third. During the progress of this litigation and the causes that led to it the appraisers were engaged in the performance of their duties, an appraisement not having been finally agreed upon. When the hydrant rentals became due July 1, 1903, the city defaulted in payment, and the company had to sue for them. Like default was
We pass the question whether the company could lawfully be required to make extensive additions and improvements after the election of the city to purchase and while proceedings for its consummation were under way, or whether the duty of the company in such case was merely to preserve the integrity of the works and efficiently operate them as they stood when the election was made. There was substantial' evidence that the city did not intend voluntarily to pay the rentals either of the old hydrants or of the new ones it ordered. It had recently defaulted in payments, and had compelled the company to engage .in litigation. It diverted the balance in the fund specially collected for the purpose, and it made no definite provision, as the law required, for the indebtedness that was accruing from month to month. When the rentals for the last half of 1904 fell due, the city did not pay them, and the company brought one of these actions for their recovery. We do not think the contention that the city was justified in refusing to pay because the remaining hydrants had not been placed can be sustained. The contract prescribed no time within which new hydrants should be installed on new mains after being ordered by the city, and the company was therefore entitled to a reasonable time for performance of its duty in that particular. Whether the company committed a breach of its contract by failing to install all of the hydrants involves a consideration of the number ordered, and what would be a reasonable time in view of the season of the year. There' were 117 ordered between July 12 and December 20, 1904. Of these the company installed 49, and to do so laid about four miles of new mains before January 1, 1905. We find no evidence that this was not a reasonable performance by the company of its duty. It cannot be assumed that the company broke its contract merely because on January 1, 1905, 68 of the hydrants ordered during the preceding six months had not yet been placed. No contract or ordinance imposed upon the company the duty to place all hydrants ordered within any fixed and limited time. The company not appearing to have been in
A municipal corporation, in respect of its purely business relations as distinguished from those that are governmental, is held to the same standard of just dealing that the law pi escribes for private individuals. One party to a continuing contract of mutual and dependent covenants cannot require the other to perform executory stipulations while he persists in defaults and compels the other to seek the aid of the courts for compensation due for those lie has already executed. Construction Co. v. Seymour, 91 U. S. 646, 23 L. Ed. 341; Cort v. Ambergate, etc., Ry., 17 Q. B. 127.
When the company declined to install the remaining hydrants after the series of defaults in payment by the city, it did not thereby wholly discard the contract and deprive itself of its light of action upon the contract for the rentals previously earned. When there is part performance, an action upon the contract will lie if absolute performance has been dispensed with. District of Columbia v. Camden Iron Works, 181 U. S. 453, 21 Sup. Ct. 680, 45 L. Ed. 948.
The judgments are reversed, and the causes remanded for a new trial.