78 N.J.L. 77 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question in this case is the validity of a contract made by the board of street and water commissioners of Jersey City, by which the city agreed to obtain and supply to- the Pennsylvania Railroad Company during a continuous term of twenty-five years from. January 1st, 1908, all the water which the railroad company desired to purchase for use within the county of Hudson outside the limits of Jersey City. The object was to secure a supply of water for what are known as the Meadows shops, which are situate on the edge of the territory of the town of Kearny, remote from the rest of the town.
We think power to make the contract was given to the city by the act of 1897. Pamph. L., p. 232. That act makes it lawful for the governing body of any municipal corporation owning or controlling water works to make a contract with any adjoining municipal corporation or with any private corporation therein to furnish a supply of water for a term of years. Kearny adjoins Jersey City and it is not questioned that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company is a private corporation therein within the meaning of the statute. The question raised is whether Jersey City owns or controls water works. There is no doubt that it .owns the old pumping station at Belleville, now disused, and the pipe system needed for the distribution of the water, and also the Bergen reservoir. We agree, however, with the contention of the prosecutors that the power ought not to be rested on these facts. That would be following the act in its letter but not in its spirit. We think that when the legislature gave this authority to vend water to a municipal corporation owning or controlling water works, it intended to confer the power upon those municipalities, and those only, that had an available water-supply. We agree also that in view of the existing pollution of the Passaic river, which made necessary the abandonment of the source of supply at Belleville several years since, the power of Jersey City cannot rest upon the possibility of its obtaining water at that point. It must therefore rest upon the right of Jersey City to the new supply from the Boonton reservoir. We are therefore called upon to determine whether Jersey City owns or controls that water-supply.
The decree in the suit brought by Jersey City against the Jersey City Water-Supply Company for specific performance
Section 2 of the act of 1897 enacts that where the water works are under the control of a board of water commissioners, no contract shall be made for a term exceeding three years without the consent of the governing board of the city owning said water works. It is urged that this section invalidates the present contract, which was not assented to by the board of aldermen. Section 2 evidently applies only to a city which owns its water works, and that is not the present ease. If this view is too narrow and lays undue stress upon the words with which the section closes, the same result is reached by taking the broader view of the peculiar powers of
We cannot say that the contract is improvident. Even if the price at which the water is sold to the railroad fails to make proper compensation for the cost of the plant and the expense of maintaining the water department, it does not follow that the bargain is a bad one for the city. It enables the city to dispose of millions of gallons of surplus water that would otherwise go to waste, and the “increase in the amount of sales decreases the average cost per million gallons of the -whole. The price to be paid by the railroad is- very much more than the price paid by the city for the water alone. Whether the contract makes a sufficient- allowance to cover the other items of cost of delivery is a matter of business judgment which perhaps does not admit of nice mathematical calculation, depending as it does on various uncertain elements. We are not to substitute our judgment for that of the municipal authorities unless the contract is clearly improvident, and that is not proven.
We think the act of 1907 (Pamph. L., p. 676) does not sustain the position of the prosecutors. Section 1 forbids any person, firm or corporation to supply water to any other person, firm or corporation for use within the municipality without the consent of the board having charge of the water-supply. The collocation of corporation in this section with the words “person” and “firm” indicates that a private corpora
Section 2 of the act does not make it illegal to contract for a supply of water from a source outside the municipality; what it forbids is the obtaining of water from an outside source by means of pipes and conduits by a corporation within the limits of the municipality without the consent of the board having charge of the public water-supply within the municipality. No penalty is imposed for a violation of this section. It is not declared in specific terms illegal, and the only remedy given by the act is an action at law or in equity to enjoin the violation of its provisions. A corporation in a case within this section which chooses to make such a contract may perhaps be exposed to the risk that it never can obtain the water contracted for by reason of inability to secure the necessary consent of the municipality within whose limits it is doing business, but that consent is not made a condition precedent to the right to contract. It may even be doubtful whether the legislature has the constitutional right to make a contract for the purchase of water dependent for its validity upon the consent of a third party. The right to prohibit, as this statute does, the obtaining of water by means of pipes and conduits, if it is to be justified, must rest upon the fact that ordinarily those pipes and conduits are placed in the public streets of which the municipality has control. Whether the legislature can go further and prohibit one who buys water outside the municipality from bringing it within the municipal limits by means of pipes and conduits laid wholly on private property, is a question that does not now call for discussion. If such an exercise of power is to be sustained, i t must be upon the theory that the legislature has the right to give a municipality the monopoly of the supply of water within its bounds — a right which was sustained in the ease of a private water company. New Orleans Water Works Co. v. Rivers, 115 U. S. 674. Such a monopoly could probably only be sustained in a case where the munici
All that is before us for review is the resolution and agreement of April 22d. They were within the power of Jersey City to adopt, and the proceedings are therefore affirmed, with costs.