277 N.W. 351 | Minn. | 1938
The theory of plaintiff, adopted by the trial court, was that the city by not promptly shutting off the water supply of the tenant estopped itself from exacting payment from the landlord or owner. The city charter, of which the court below, as well as this court on appeal, must take notice, provides in c. 9, § 14: "The City Council may also make rules for the shutting off of water from any premises where rates are payable and remain unpaid." And c. 9, § 15, reads:
"The owner of private property which property has upon it pipes connected with the city water works to convey water upon such property, shall, as well as the lessee or occupant of the premises, be liable to the City of Minneapolis for the rents or rates of all water from said waterworks used upon such premises; which may be recovered in an action against such owner, lessee or occupant, or against any or all of them."'
So when plaintiff paid the $153.26 under protest, as found by the court, the city received of plaintiff only what it was authorized by the quoted charter provision to recover of it by suit. It is impossible to see how one having a legal claim against another can be estopped by mere delay of less than a year from asserting and enforcing the claim. The ordinances enacted by the city council and the rules adopted in respect to operating the waterworks systems, and particularly to cutting off the water to premises where the charges are unpaid, were enacted and adopted in order to give the city means to enforce payment speedily, and were not intended for the protection of the owner or landlord as against the occupant or tenant. So the fact that servants or agents of the city were slack or remiss in shutting off the water when the charges therefor were not paid cannot serve to estop the city from at any time demanding and enforcing payment from the one liable under c. 9, § 15, of the charter. No provision is found in the charter, ordinance, or rules relating to the waterworks requiring a landlord or owner to be notified of the failure of the tenant or occupant to pay for the city *73 water used on the premises. The city, therefore, was within its rights when it, on March 13, 1935, threatened to turn off the water from plaintiff's premises unless the arrearages were then paid. It follows that the payment made, even though made under protest, cannot be recovered in this action, for the city was clearly entitled to the amount it exacted of plaintiff.
Plaintiff has cited many cases where a public officer has been held liable in damages for failure to perform some official act whereby a person has sustained damage, as for instance not filing a conveyance, or docketing a judgment, or not performing some ministerial act to another's hurt. Samples of these cases are Rosenthal v. Davenport,
"It has been gravely argued that because the city indulged some of its water tenants, and did not turn off the water when it might have done so, it lost the right to do so as a means of enforcing the payment of the arrears thus allowed to accumulate. This is an extraordinary proposition, and unless it is supported by the terms of the ordinance referred to, cannot be sustained. I find nothing in the ordinance to justify such a conclusion."
In that case the plaintiff unsuccessfully sought to enjoin the city from cutting off the city water because of three years' arrearages of water rent accruing before the plaintiff acquired title under mortgage foreclosure sale. Plaintiff also relies on Ford Motor Co. v. Town of Kearny,
It is unimportant in this case whether the ordinance regarding the shutting off of the water from delinquent users be construed as directory or mandatory, for we find nothing therein to indicate that it was the intention to release the claim against the owner for water supplied the occupant after arrears of water rent occurred. We think City of East Grand Forks v. Luck,
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded with direction to amend the conclusions of law that the action be dismissed on the merits with costs to defendant.