169 A. 159 | Pa. | 1933
Argued October 2, 1933. The City of Monessen appeals from a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County sustaining a bill of complaint of the Tri-Cities Water Company and awarding an injunction restraining appellant from taking water from plaintiff's supply system *85 to abate nuisances found by the court below to exist in the municipality. The nuisances complained of were the unsanitary conditions which prevailed in seven dwellings, resulting from a want of water service in the premises and giving rise to a dangerous situation menacing the health of the citizens of the community. In five of the seven dwellings found by the lower court to be in an unsanitary condition, the water service was discontinued by direction of the tenant or owner of the premises, and in the remaining two the supply was shut off because of failure to pay for service due and unpaid. The nuisances found to exist by the court resulted from use by the occupants of the several buildings of inside toilets without having a supply of water for flushing purposes; the testimony unquestionably disclosed the presence of a filthy and unsanitary situation in the premises sufficient to justify the findings of the court that each property constituted a nuisance dangerous to the public health. The city council proposed to remedy this harmful situation by opening the house connections with plaintiff's mains, and supplying the premises with water, without making compensation to the company for water so appropriated. The water company, to protect its interests, filed the bill in this case praying for an injunction restraining the contemplated action, on the ground that proceedings of the character proposed would constitute an unwarranted interference with plaintiff's business and a continuing trespass upon its property. After a hearing the court awarded a preliminary injunction which was subsequently made permanent.
There is no doubt equity has power to grant a restraining order preventing actual or threatened trespasses of a continuing and permanent character: Gray v. Phila. Reading Coal Iron Co.,
An alternative course open to the city would have been to apply to the public service commission for relief. Under the provisions of the Public Service Company Law, 1913, P. L. 1374, appellee is forbidden to furnish water to any person or corporation for "a greater or less compensation or sum than it shall demand, charge *87 or collect from any other person or corporation for a like and contemporaneous service under substantially similar circumstances and conditions." The municipality avers that it is unable to pay, as provided in plaintiff's rules, for the water needed to supply the buildings in question, yet had it applied to the public service commission for a suspension of its rules and regulations in the emergency, the city, for ample cause shown, might have obtained the service at reduced rates or under some other equitable arrangement. It cannot, however, seize the property of the water company in the proposed summary manner. If such action is tolerated for the dwellings here involved, it may also be adopted in countless other situations where owners or occupiers refuse or allege inability at the time to meet the financial requirements for water service, with the result that serious loss must necessarily fall upon the water company.
The decree of the court below is affirmed at appellant's cost.