68 Conn. 323 | Conn. | 1896
Lead Opinion
The Board of Water Commissioners of' the city of Hartford is a corporation created by the charter of the city of Hartford, as an agency in the carrying on of the municipal government of that city. So far as the present case is concerned that board is identical with the municipal corporation of Hartford. Special Acts, Yol. 3, p. 386, Vol. 5, pp. 539, 456 and 769 ; also the Acts recited in the statement of facts. W.e have in this opinion referred to the Board of Water Commissioners and to the city, as meaning the same thing.
This case is brought before us by a statutory proceeding, which can be instituted only by “parties to a question in difference, which might be the subject of a civil action between them.” General Statutes, § 1200. The plaintiffs
The Act of the legislature in 1865, set out in the statement of facts, was an amendment to the charter of the city of Ilartford'as it had theretofore existed. Doubts had arisen
The true scope and meaning of the Act of 1865 being thus shown, it is apparent that the defendant had no authority to pass the vote of May 22d, 1894. The board could not put bounds to the duty imposed upon them by the very charter which made them a corporation. That charter made it their duty to furnish water to all those inhabitants of West Hartford who live within a reasonable distance of the line of main pipes. The same duty still remains upon it. If hereafter any inhabitant of that town desires to obtain water from the defendant, and it declines to furnish it to him on the ground that he does not live within such reasonable distance, the question can be decided only by an application to the proper court. And the question should be decided, not alone by the number of rods and feet, but upon a due consideration of all the circumstances in the case as well as the practice of the defendant, and the decision should be such as to be fairly promotive of the purpose which the legislature had in mind in passing the Act of 1865, viz: the furnishing of water to the inhabitants of West Hartford and to the inhabitants of the town of Hartford and the city of Hartford—and not such as to be restrictive or prohibitory of those purposes. The courts of the State must be the judges in such cases. Neither party alone can decide it.
The case presented to this court by the agreed statement of facts, as well as by the briefs of counsel, indicates that the only real difference between the parties is upon the validity of the defendant’s said vote of May, 1894. And as that question is decided by the construction of the Act of 1865, we have had no occasion to consider the Act of 1895.
. We ought to say, however, that we do not assent to the claim made b the defendant, that by the Act of 1865 the city, as to the property now in question, was made a private corporation. That precise question was passed upon by this court nearly twenty years ago, in the case of the Town of West Hartford v. Board of Water Commissioners of Hartford, 44 Conn. 360, 367, 371, heard in 1877. The same par
In answer to the several questions in the agreed statement we say: 1st. We have had no occasion to consider the Act of 1895. 2d. The Act of 1865 is to be construed as set forth in the opinion. 3d. The courts are the judges, if ever that question shall arise. 4th. The Board of Water Commissioners had no authority to pass the vote of May 22d, 1894.
The Superior Court is advised to render judgment accordingly.
In this opinion Torrance, Fenn and Baldwin, Js., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
While concurring in the decision, I cannot see the pertinency of the reference in the opinion to the case of West Hartford v. Board of Water Com'rs, 44 Conn. 367. That case settled no point except the one decided, i. e., that land owned by the city while in actual use for the purpose of supplying its citizens with water, does not come within the meaning of the General Statutes describing property subject to taxation. The essential import of an act' authorizing a city to acquire property for purposes other than' the execution of governmental duty imposed by charter, or imposing on a city burdens outside the range of its municipal duties, was not determined in that case and is not considered in this.