61 P. 518 | Idaho | 1900
This action was brought by the respondent company against the appellant, who is by occupation a plumber, to enjoin and restrain him from in any manner tapping the mains and laterals of the respondent’s water system, or from in any manner interfering with or molesting its valves, cocks, shutoffs, or other property or appliances, or from approaching within such distance of its mains or laterals, by excavation or
It is conceded at the outset that the waterworks constructed under said franchise were dedicated, to a public use, and are subject to public regulations; but it is not conceded that by such
The fact that private property is affected with a public use does not confer upon the citizen the right to interfere with the management and control of the property. Such management and control is vested in the owner, subject only to the law that authorized and granted the franchise. Under the said franchise the respondent has been granted the right to lay its mains and pipes “over, along, and under” the streets, alleys, and highways of said city for the purpose of supplying said city and its inhabitants with a sufficiency of pure water.
Counsel for appellant rely upon Franke v. Water Supply Co., 88 Ky. 467, 11 S. W. 432, 718, 4 L. R. A. 265. By consent of counsel a copy of the petition and amended petition or complaint were submitted to the court for its inspection. It is alleged therein, among other things: That the city of Paducah gave the water company exclusive right to dig up the streets, alleys, and sidewalks of said city for the purpose of laying its water mains, conduits, and water pipes, and that defendant owns all of the pipes in the main part of the streets and alleys out to the curbstone on the edge of the sidewalk, but does not claim to own any part of the pipes from the curbstones to the abutting iots; and all of the pipes from the curbing along the sidewalk across the sidewalk on into the lots and houses are owned by and are the property of the owners of the lots; and that said pipes, from the curbstone to said houses, are kept in repair by such owners. That the water company adopted an unreasonable rule, by which said company requires all plumbers to obtain a license from it, and give a bond in the sum of $1,000. That thereafter the plaintiff made contracts with citizens to do their plumbing within their lots and across the pavement or sidewalk to the curbstone, but was compelled to cancel said contracts because the water company refused to give a permit to cross the sidewalk, and also refused to connect its mains or pipes with any plumbing the plaintiff might do. That plaintiff informed his employers of those facts, and also informed them if they would get the permit for him to lay their pipes across the sidewalk to the curbstone, and would get the company to connect its water mains with the pipes so laid by him, he would do the work. That they each made application for the permit, and also for the company to connect its mains with