100 Cal. 43 | Cal. | 1893
This action was brought by plaintiff to enjoin the defendant from shutting off or preventing the flow of water into certain mains and pipes of plaintiff. The court granted a nonsuit, and entered judgment for defendant; from which judgment, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
Each of the parties is a corporation organized under the general laws of the state for the purpose of distributing, selling, and furnishing water to consumers in the county and city of San Diego. The contracts and the relations of the parties out of which this litigation came are somewhat complicated. The main facts are as follows: In September, 1890, the respondent (the flume "company) was the owner of a supply of water, which it brought from a long distance by means of ditches, flumes, and pipes to the boundary of the city of San Diego—or, as counsel put it “to the gates of the city”; but it had no pipes or other means within said city by which it could distribute water to the inhabitants thereof. The appellant (the water company) owned a system or plant of pipes by which it could distribute water through
It was stated that the parties were “to combine their
On the thirteenth day of April, 1891, the appellant entered into a written contract with Bryant Howard and several other persons, called exhibit 1, by which the appellant in its own name leased to said Howard and others for the term of twenty years from and after the first day of June, 1891, all their water plant within said city, including all pipes, pipe lines, etc., and also sold and conveyed to said Howard and others three million gallons of water “from what is now known as
The contract last above referred to was made with the express understanding between the parties that Howard and Company were to súblease to the city of San Diego, or to make a contract with said city by which Howard and Company were to transfer to the city all the rights which they obtained under said contract with appellant. And in pursuance of said understanding, five days afterwards, to wit: on April 18, 1891, said Howard and others and said city did enter into a contract called exhibit 2. This contract referred to the said contract of April 13th, and provided that “this agreement is made upon the express condition that in case the contract above referred to shall be terminated under any of the conditions, stipulations, or agreements in said contract contained, then and in that case this contract shall at once cease and determine.” This contract was substantially the same as the one made between appellant and Howard and others. By it Howard and others leased and sublet to the city for the period of twenty years from and after June 1, 1891, all the said plant or system of water-pipes owned by appellant in said city, and three million gallons of water every twenty-four hours from the San Diego flume, and provided that the city should pay appellant for the same as rental nine thousand one hundred and sixty-five dollars and sixty-five cents per month, which amounted to about one hundred and ten thousand dollars a year. It provided, also, for the six per cent and three per cent mentioned in said former contract, and provided further that if the city desired more than three million gallons per day, plaintiff should furnish the desired amount at the rate of five per cent per thousand gallons. It also provided that the city should determine the amount of extensions to be made to said system of pipes. There were other provisions which we do not deem it necessary to here notice.
Upon the foregoing facts counsel discussed a number of important questions, which, under our view, need not be here determined; but in Order to fully present the case, we will notice a few of such questions. Respondent contends, among other things, that the original agreement of November 6, 1890, was void, because it was against public policy, in that its purpose was to prevent the city from acquiring its own water supply,
Some of the foregoing propositions are of very great importance, and their unnecessary determination here might furnish precedents which would foreclose or embarrass the rights of future litigants without a hearing. We will not therefore determine those questions, because we think that the judgment should be affirmed for another reason.
Assuming that the contract of November 6, 1890,, is a valid one, still we think that the rights of the respondent must be determined upon that contract alone. That contract did not give to the appellant the right to make the contract with Howard and others; and certainly the contract between Howard and others and the city of San Diego is one which cannot bind respondent in any way. And the two last-named .contracts are essentially
Appellant contends that even if it be not entitled to an injunction a nonsuit should not have been granted, but that the court should have gone on and taken an accounting between the parties. The prayer of the complaint, in addition to asking an injunction, prays also for judgment against the respondent for ten thousand dollars damages, and also “thatthe rights of plaintiff and the defendant as to the division of the money realized from the amount received from the city under said sublease be ascertained and determined.” But, certainly, appellant showed no case for damages against the respondent, and as the complaint proceeds upon the theory of the validity of the sublease to the city, we do not think that plaintiff is entitled to any accounting based upon the contract with the city. If it be true, as contended by appellant, that some of the members of the corporation respondent encouraged the contracts with Howard and others and with the city, appellant
The judgment and order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Harrison, J., Paterson, J., and Fitzgerald, J., concurred.