161 Iowa 307 | Iowa | 1913
I. Plaintiff, the appellant, is the' owner of property in Cedar Rapids which is used for residence purposes and is supplied with water by the city, which owns and operates the waterworks system of that city. The city became the owner of the plant July 1, 1903. Prior to that date plaintiff had been served by the predecessor in ownership of the city, having furnished his own meter, as did many other patrons, and was charged a rate of 25 cents per thousand gallons, with a minimum monthly charge of 25 cents. In June, 1900, the city of Cedar Rapids, by its council, adopted ordinance No. 527, the purpose of which was to fix the rates which the Cedar Rapids Company should be permitted to charge consumers. That rate, so far as it affected property used as was appellant’s, was fixed at 15 cents per thousand gallons. The Cedar Rapids Water Company instituted proceedings to test the validity of the ordinance on the ground that it fixed a rate which was unreasonable and not compensatory. Pend
On July 1,' 1903, a resolution was passed providing that the rates in effect under the Cedar Rapids Water Company at the time of the transfer of ownership to the city should be continued until further action. A schedule of the rates so adopted, as shown by the abstract, fixed the rate for such use as was enjoyed by plaintiff at 25 cents per thousand gallons. This rate was charged to and paid by appellant up to a time shortly preceding the commencement of this action, when by the adoption of a new schedule the city, increased materially the minimum monthly charge for the use of 1,000 .gallons or less. This action, so far as it related to his personal bills, was resisted by appellant, and payment of rendered accounts was refused with the statement that he was willing to and would pay at the rate of 25 cents per thousand gallons. There also were some differences between the parties as to changing meters, which we do not regard as material to the case presented here. Upon appellant’s refusal to pay the accounts rendered under the new schedule, with a refusal by the city to accept the tendered rate, appellant brought this action to enjoin the city from shutting off his water supply, averring a
By amendment to his petition appellant sought recovery of the amount paid by him in excess of the rate of 15 cents per thousand gallons, as fixed in the ordinance regulating the charges permitted to be made by the Cedar Rapids Water Company. Appellant also prayed for the removal of the waterworks trustees upon the grounds that in December, 1907, the city of Cedar Rapids adopted the commission form of government; and that under the law governing such cities there is no power to appoint such trustees, the sole power of control being in the commissioners, and that such could not be delegated; “and that all their acts under the alleged appointment were without legal force, and that such trustees are usurpers.” Upon hearing, the trial court dismissed plaintiff’s petition, and he appeals. . .
The powers granted a city council or to commissioners under the changed form of municipal government are necessarily broader, not, however, to the extent of permitting gross misuse of the taxing power by the indirect method of water rates, but to meet such conditions as must necessarily arise where the taxpayers themselves are the owners of the property which supplies them. We do not at this time attempt to determine the full limit of such powers, but only that there is such a difference' between the rights and powers of a private corporation rendering a public service and a municipal corporation performing the same office that a rule of rates permissible to the one would not necessarily apply to the other. Assuming the fifteen-cent rate to have not been unreasonable as to the Cedar Rapids Water Company, it does not follow that the twenty-five-cent rate which was paid by appellant for many years to the city under the schedule fixed by it was unreasonable, nor that the new schedule adopted in 1910 would under the new condition be unreasonable. We therefore rest our decision as to plaintiff’s right to recover upon the proposition stated above; that it is not shown that the rates which have been charged by the city, or which are intended to be charged by it, are unreasonable.
The ’original appointment of waterworks trustees by the city council was authorized by Code Supp. section 747-a. When the city of Cedar Rapids adopted the commission form of government, all general and inherent powers of the old council were vested in the new organization. Code Supp. 1056-a — 25. While the statute as it then stood did not, with the officers specifically named, include waterworks trustees as among the officers whose powers were thus transferred, nor in express terms authorize the appointment of such officers by the new council, it nevertheless would follow, as a matter of
The decision of the trial court is Affirmed.