I dissent. The complaint contains two causes of action. The first, which is not demurred to, alleges: That the plaintiff is a resident and householder of the city of Mechanicville, leasing and occupying as a dwelling, with his five minor children, the premises No. 613 Chestnut street. The defendant, for two years prior to March 1, 1918, supplied drinking water to plaintiff and his family for a compensation paid to defendant, but wasnegligent in so supplying water, causing the plaintiff and hischildren to become ill with typhoid fever.
The second cause of action alleges the same state of facts and further that in furnishing such water the defendantwarranted the "same to be pure, wholesome and fit and properfor human consumption and free from poison and disease breedinggerms;" that plaintiff relied on this warranty, which was broken, causing the plaintiff and his family to become ill with typhoid fever.
The plaintiff's theory in the second cause of action is that when a city sells water for human consumption, it impliedly warrants that the water is fit to drink; that a city upon engaging in a separate corporate enterprise not connected with its governing powers subjects itself to the same rules of law which affect individuals or business corporations engaged in a similar business. It is not claimed that there is an express warranty as to the quality of the water.
The first important question is as to whether the city of Mechanicville was acting in its public, governmental function or in its private capacity in supplying water. The rule is general that a municipal corporation is not liable for torts or injuries inflicted in the fulfillment of *Page 483 its public functions for, when acting in such capacity, its character is that of a sovereign. (Missano v. Mayor, etc., ofN Y, 160 N.Y. 123; Lynch v. Mayor, etc., of New York,76 N.Y. 60.)
In Illinois, it has been held that a city selling water is not exercising a public but a private power. (City of Chicago v.Selz, Schwab Co., 202 Ill. 545; Wagner v. City of RockIsland, 146 Ill. 139.) We have held in Oakes Manfg. Co. v.City of New York (206 N.Y. 221, 228) that when the city of New York "undertook to maintain a municipal water system and to supply water to private consumers at a fixed compensation, it was not acting in such capacity as above stated (of a public corporation). It entered on an enterprise which involved the ordinary incidents of a business wherein was sold that which people desired to buy and which might become a source of profit, and under these circumstances it became liable for breach of contract or for negligence as the proprietor of a private business might become."
The question whether this particular municipality in operating this same water supply system was performing a governmental or private function has been before the courts of this state, and the Appellate Division, third department, has characterized it as a private, earning enterprise and a "function of transportation and business corporations." (Powers v. Village ofMechanicville, 163 App. Div. 138, 142, 143.)
It is well established in this state that where a city is negligent in failing to supply pure water to its inhabitants, it is liable for injuries. (Stubbs v. City of Rochester,226 N.Y. 516.)
In its brief, the defendant concedes that the first cause of action is well pleaded. This concession removes all question upon this appeal as to the character of the act being a private one and the defendant is bound in the same manner as any private party engaged in supplying water for general consumption. *Page 484
The next question to be considered is whether there was a bargain and sale between the city of Mechanicville and the plaintiff, with the usual incidents accompanying a sale between tradesman and customer. Is water a commodity — a property? This court once said: "Like air, light, or the heat of the sun, it (water) has none of the attributes commonly ascribed to property, and is not the subject of exclusive dominion or control." (Sweet v. City of Syracuse, 129 N.Y. 316, 335.) That case, however, referred to the waters and basin of Skaneateles lake and its appropriation to public use for a natural reservoir and feeder to the Erie canal when subsequent thereto the legislature permitted the city of Syracuse to divert whatever waters were not thus needed in order to supply the city of Syracuse with water. This was held not to be an appropriation of public property for private use, because the state could not acquire the mass of natural, flowing water, although it did and could acquire the right of its use. The flowing water of a natural stream does not admit of absolute ownership. (40 Cyc. 553; Quill v. Mayor,etc., of N.Y., 36 App. Div. 476, CULLEN, J.; Oakes Manfg. Co. v. City of New York, 206 N.Y. 221, 228.) Water in a natural basin formed by the hand of nature is free and not property, but when taken and collected so that control is exercised over its accumulation and outflow, it becomes the subject of possession and property.
The facts in this case as conceded by the demurrer to the complaint do not disclose the source of the water supply of the defendant. The fact admitted is that the city of Mechanicville was authorized and empowered "to construct, maintain, manage and control a system of water supply to furnish necessary water for drinking and domestic uses to the inhabitants" and did exercise its powers. It did provide "such water supply and means for conducting the same from such sources through the streets to the dwelling houses" where the same *Page 485 "were delivered and sold" to the inhabitants, including the plaintiff, for a compensation paid therefor to the defendant and that such water was customarily regularly used and drunk by the plaintiff and his household to the knowledge of the defendant. (Charter of the City of Mechanicville, Laws of 1915, chap. 170.)
When a municipality engages in a business, it assumes the same liability as rests upon an individual. We may take judicial notice that in the practical operation of municipal water plants, the water supplied comes from wells, springs or streams, constituting a water basin. The burden of collecting only pure water or of purifying water permitted to flow through pipes for the sanitary and potable uses of the community is upon the corporation controlling the supply.
It will thus be seen that the alleged warranty does not spring solely from the furnishing and taking of the water. The statutes of the state of New York contain ample provisions for the examination and testing of water furnished for drinking purposes for purity and freedom from contamination by disease breeding germs as it enters the distributing pipes. The prevailing opinion correctly says that the people exact a high degree of diligence and care from a municipality which supplies water. The statutory provisions provide a means to protect potable waters used to supply the needs of cities and villages of this state.
Water, in pipes, separated from its source, or from the body of which it was a part, may be bought and sold like other commodities. It is a matter of common knowledge that water is sold in bottles or other containers. It is sold in solidified form as ice.
Water thus sold by the respondent, whether delivered in a container at the plaintiff's door or more conveniently through pipes into his house and controlled by the turning of a faucet, is property. (Bailey v. Mayor, etc., of N.Y., 3 Hill, 531; 2 Den. 433; Dartmouth College *Page 486 v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518; Philips v. Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5; 2 T.R. 352; Allen v. McKeen, 1 Summer, 297; People v.Morris, 13 Wend. 325, 331, 338; 2 Kent's Com. [4th ed.] 275;Bank of U.S. v. Planters Bank, 9 Wheat. 904, 907; Clark v.Corp. of Washington, 12 id. 40; Moodalay v. East India Co., 1 Brown's Ch. 469; 2 Inst. 703; Thursfield v. Jones, Sir T. Jones, 187; Rex v. Gardner, 1 Cowp. 79; Mayor of Lynn v.Turner, Id. 86; Henly v. Mayor of Lyme, 5 Bing. R. 91; 1 Bing. N.C. 222; S.C. in the House of Lords.) The owners of land over which such conduits pass cannot exercise the common law right they possess as to natural streams and use the flow by tampering with the pipe.
The plaintiff invokes the rule that accompanying all sales by aretail dealer of articles of food for immediate consumption there is an implied warranty that the same is fit for consumption. (Race v. Krum, 222 N.Y. 410; Rinaldi v.Mohican Co., 225 N.Y. 70.) But this rule was modified in 1911 by section 96 of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, chap. 41), which provided there is no warranty as to the quality or fitness for any particular purpose of goods sold, "* * * except where the buyer, expressly or by implication, makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, and it appears that the buyer relies on the seller's skill or judgment."
"An implied warranty of personal property is a collateral contract attending a sale thereof, so that, unless there be a sale with the ordinary circumstances of transfer of title and possession of the thing sold, for a price given for that particular thing, the peculiar facts out of which a warranty is implied do not exist, and there is no warranty."
Because of the facts alleged in the complaint and admitted in the demurrer, it seems clear that there was a sale of water by the municipality to the plaintiff. The next question to be considered is: "Was there an implied warranty that the condition of the water was *Page 487 such that it would be fit for human consumption?" An express warranty is not pleaded or claimed. Did not the appellant make known to the respondent the particular purpose for which the goods were required and does it not appear that the appellant relied upon the municipality's skill and judgment? We have held that accompanying all sales by a retail dealer of articles of food for immediate use there is an implied warranty that the same is fit for human consumption. (Race v. Krum, 222 N.Y. 410.) We have also held that where the buyer may assume that the seller has the opportunity to examine the article sold, unexplained, that is also conclusive evidence of reliance on the seller's skill and judgment. There is no allegation here that the appellant relied on the seller's skill or judgment, nor is there an allegation in so many words that the seller had the opportunity to examine the water, but there is an allegation that the defendant (the seller) "did * * * provide, maintain, manage and control source of water supply and means for conducting the same from such source through the streets and to the dwelling houses and other places where the same was delivered and sold to and consumed by the inhabitants of said city, and that the defendant at all such times did furnish and supply water for drinking and domestic uses to the aforesaid premises rented and occupied by the plaintiff."
If the respondent managed and controlled the water supply and furnished water for drinking purposes, it surely had full opportunity to examine its water, the sources of its supply and its condition, so that it could ascertain if it was free from deleterious or injurious matter, just as a druggist selling ice cream can ascertain it to be free from poisonous matter.
As has already been shown, the legislature has provided a means by which water may be protected by the public authorities in order to insure its purity and safeguard the public health. In this day of scientific analysis, the *Page 488 purity of water can be readily ascertained, and the duty of constant vigilance to protect the health of citizens should be imposed on municipalities. The individual injured through misrepresentation that all fair means so to do have been taken should be allowed to recover upon the implied warranty. In fact, because of the position which a municipality holds toward those who receive water from it, undoubtedly there would be greater reliance upon the purity of the water and upon its implied warranty that it was fit to drink than upon that of private parties. Municipalities now place themselves far closer to their citizens than ever before. They furnish many things besides water. This new relationship implies increased duty.
The public welfare demands that a municipality supplying such an important element in the life of the people as water should be held to a strict liability if they fail to fulfill their full duty in this regard. The municipality, through its employes whom it selects, has every opportunity to test the water supply, regulate conditions at the source, examine the springs and wells which maintain the supply and to apply those tests which science has discovered which ascertain whether or not water is pure and fit for the purpose for which it is delivered. The plaintiff had a right to rely upon the skill and judgment of the defendant. A competent analysis would have disclosed impurities in any appreciable quantity and suitable precautions could have been taken. The defendant, the municipality, had every means of ascertaining whether the water which it supplied was fit for the purpose it impliedly warranted it to be, viz., to drink.
The warranty as to the purity of the water supplied to the inhabitants of a city should be implied. When a municipality fails to fulfill the duty placed upon it, and the warranty it makes when it undertakes to supply its inhabitants with the water necessary to human life *Page 489 and by reason thereof certain individuals suffer damage, then the municipality must indemnify such individuals. The taxpayers of the municipality, like the stockholders of a corporation, may be injured by the installation of incompetents in office, but this should not affect the course of justice in rendering relief to those injured by the incompetence or implied misrepresentation brought about by such officials. The remedy of the taxpayer is in the removal of the incompetent official.
Human life and the health of mankind is of the greatest importance because the greatest asset which the state has is the lives of its people and any rule of law which tends to enhance and improve the general health and the life of the people of the state should be upheld.
The order of the court below should be reversed and the order of the Special Term overruling the demurrer should be affirmed, with costs in both courts.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., McLAUGHLIN and ANDREWS, JJ., concur with COLLIN, J.; POUND and ELKUS, JJ., read dissenting memoranda; HOGAN, J., dissents generally.
Judgment affirmed.