Court Opinion

ID: 7989691
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:29:34.401735+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:19.123503
License: Public Domain

Mayes, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The cases of Ex parte O'Leary, 65 Miss., 80 (3 South. Rep., 144; 7 Am. St. Rep., 640), and Quintini v. Board of Mayor and Aldermen, 64 Miss., 483 (1 South. Rep., 625 ; 60 Am. St. Rep., 62), have no application to this case. The ordinance we are construing is a police regulation, dealing with the public streets of the city of Vicksburg, and having as its object the preservation of the health, comfort and safety of the public, and additionally to compel a proper use of the streets by the waterworks plant. The streets are the common property of the public, and the subject of the proper regulation and protection of the streets and their control is a matter of especial power and *218duty vested in and imposed upon the municipality. If a municipality neglects this duty, and damage results to any one from the neglect, in many instances the municipality is made liable therefor. The control of the streets implies proper, drainage, and the maintenance of the streets in a safe and passable condition, free from filth, slush, stagnant pools of water, and soft, muddy earth, all of which result necessarily from leaky mains. It is to protect against this that the. ordinance requiring all waterworks plants located in the city of Vicksburg to keep their mains from leaking was passed. Such an ordinance deals with a subject which is proper for municipal regulation. In the O’Leary case, supra,, the municipal authorities were not dealing with streets. They undertook to pass an ordinance prohibiting the erection of any hogpen in the city of Jackson, and prohibiting the keeping of any hogs in the city limits on any lot or inclosed place; and the court said that this ordinance, which violated the right of private property and declared it to be a nuisance and abated as such, without reference to the fact of whether it was so in fact or not, was too broad, and therefore void. The Quintini case, supra, was of the sanie character, and undertook to deprive the owner of the lawful use of her property for a supposed public advantage; and the court held that this could not be done, except upon due compensation being first made to the owner. The decision in neither of the cases tends to uphold any contention made by appellant.
We can find no clause of the constitution, either federal or state, that is violated by this ordinance. It is clearly within the power of the municipality to pass it. It discriminates against no one. It is general in its nature and impartial in its application, and affects all of the same class alike. When an ordinance does this, it needs no citation of authority to uphold the proposition that it is a valid ordinance; but, if authority is required, a long list of authorities will be found under fourteenth amendment to constitution of United States (Code 1906, *219note “b”), containing both state and federal decisions, and 21 Ency. ’of Law (2d ed.), p. 983, et seq., note 7.
The ordinance under construction is enacted for the purpose of preventing a bad condition of tbe streets, brought about by leaky mains. It is general in its nature, in that it affects all waterworks plants alike. It is made an offense for any waterworks plant in the city of Vicksburg, or the superintendent, managing director, or manager of any waterworks plant, to allow the pipes, mains, or conduits of the plant to be out of repair or in a leaky condition, so as to permit the water to escape therefrom and flow over the streets, etc., for as long as two days in succession. This ordinance applies to all waterworks plants, whether owned by a corporation, individual, company, or persons. It applies to all alike, and to the manager, superintendent or managing director of any waterworks plant, it matters not by whom it may be owned. “Laws, public in their objects, may be confined to a particular class of persons, if they are general in their application to the cases to which they apply, provided the distinction is not arbitrary, but rests upon some reason of public policy.” Murphy v. Mulgrew (Cal.), 36 Pac. Rep., 857 (41 Am. St. Rep., 200), and authorities cited under note quoted from. This ordinance answers all the requirements of the rule laid down above. It does not apply to private consumers of the water, for reasons of public policy that are obvious ; but, because it only applies to waterworks plants, and not to individual consumers who may own their own pipes, if it be conceded that the consumers own their pipes so as not to render the water company liable, if they are in a leaky condition for longer than two days, it is not discriminatory on that account. It applies to the class it is aimed at without any discrimination. The classification is not arbitrary. The waterworks company traverses every street in the city, and it owns many mains and pipes located in the streets throughout the city. The danger of the streets getting into bad repair by reason of leaky mains *220belonging to it is many times greater than from the leaky pipe of a private consumer. The waterworks company has a franchise permitting it to use the streets to lay its mains, and the ordinance is designed to compel it not to abuse this privilege. The public policy involved in making this ordinance applies to waterworks plants, and not to individual consumers, or, in other words, the reason for the distinction is sound and manifest. I,t is certain that Mr. Grumpier knew of the condition of this street, and that his attention had been repeatedly called to it, aijd that he failed to correct it.
There was no error in admitting testimony showing the condition of the street prior to the time of the affidavit. This testimony was explanatory of the cause, and it was necessary for the city to show a leaky condition of the street for at least two days. Mr. Grumpier cannot be again prosecuted for allowing the mains to be out of order on this street for any length of time prior to the date of the affidavit. 1 Wlgmore on Evidence, 437, notes 2, 5. ■
We notice no other error assigned, except to say that we do not think that the court erred in refusing the application for a continuance. The evidence offered was not material, and furnished no excuse, as it was the duty of the waterworks company to so construct its mains that the leak would be prevented. That this could have been done is shown by the record. This waterworks plant had been in operation since 1886, and owned by the present company since 1900, and it had had ample opportunity to properly construct its mains. The fact that it did not do so doubtless caused the city to pass this ordinance.

Affirmed.