after stating the facts: The plaintiff contended that it was not bound by the franchise-contract with the town of Henderson to furnish any water free of charge to the public sehpols under the control and management of the defendant, the *175Board of Trastees of tbe Henderson. Graded Schools. It based its contention before us upon tbe following grounds: (1) That the stipulation in tbe franchise-contract, to-wit, “Water shall be furnished free of charge, etc.; also for churches, public schools,” was invalid, because ultra vires of the town of Henderson. (2) That those words can embrace only public schools established and maintained by the corporation, the town of Henderson, and do not include public schools within the corporate limits not so established and maintained; and the schools controlled by the defendant, a separate and distinct corporate body, are not within this meaning. (3) That the territorial area for educational purposes under the control of the defendant is much larger than the corporate limits of the town of Henderson, and that, although it is sought to compel it to furnish water, free only to the public schools within the corporate limits of the town of Henderson, yet persons other than those children living within said corporate limits have a legal right to attend these schools in the corporate limits of the town, and do attend them.
By section 24, chapter 241, Private Laws 1889, the Board of Commissioners of Henderson are authorized, among other powers specified, “to provide water and lights for said town, and to contract for the same.” The plaintiff does not seek to annul the entire contract with the town, but questions the validity of the stipulation for free water to the public schools. The determination'of this question necessarily involves the validity of the contract and the extent of its obligatory force; for if the town was without power to make the contract, and it was void, the entire contract would be a nullity; and if the whole falls, each stipulation. must likewise fall. Contrary to the decisions of this Court in the earlier cases in which this question was considered, it is how established by the later decisions that the supplying of water and lights by á city or town is a “necessary expense,” and that this power, even in th,e absence of express grant, is a power necessarily and reasonably implied in its general grant of powers, ánd can be exercised by-its governing authorities, unless expressly forbidden by the provisions of its charter. If the charter prescribes the particular mode in which the power can be exercised, that mode is exclusive and must be followed. Fawcett v. Mt. Airy, 134 N. C., 125, overruling Mayo v. Comrs., 122 N. C., 5; Davis v. Fremont, 135 N. C., 538; Robinson v. Goldsboro, 135 N. C., 382; Wadsworth v. Concord, 133 N. C., 587, overruling Edgerton v. Goldsboro, 126 N. C., 93; Smith v. Goldsboro, 121 N. C., 350; Gas Co. v. Raleigh, 75 N. C., 274; Greensboro v. Scott, 138 N. C., 181; Elizabeth City v. Banks, 150 N. C., 407. But the power, it would seem, is denied to a city to grant a valid fran-*176cbise to individuáis or to a corporation to tear up its streets and lay water and gas pipes thereunder for the sole purpose of supplying water or gas to its inhabitants. This is determined by this Court in Elizabeth City v. Banks, supra. In that ease this Court, in construing the charter of Elizabeth City, said: “We find no grant of power to make provision for furnishing lights, power or fuel, or for establishing plants for that purpose. No question is presented upon this record in regard to the power, by implication, for providing for lighting the street. This would doubtless be found, by necessary implication, in the power to regulate the streets, provide for the safety of the people, etc. This, under the more recent decisions of this Court, would be not only an implied power, but a duty, the discharge of which would involve a necessary expense. Fawcett v. Mt. Airy, 134 N. C., 125; Davis v. Fremont, 135 N. C., 538, and other cases reversing Thrift v. Elizabeth City, 122 N. C., 31. It will be noted the contract with defendant Banks makes no other provision for furnishing light for the streets than a permission to make a contract with the city for that purpose. He is under no obligation to do so. This question is therefore eliminated from the discussion. The purpose of granting the franchise is to permit defendant Banks to supply light, fuel and power to the citizens of the town.” The present case is distinguished from Elizabeth City v. Banks, supra, not only in the matter noted in the above quotation from that case, for in the present case the plaintiff obliges itself to furnish water for public purposes and uses, but by the further difference of more enlarged powers of the town of Henderson in its charter, and that in that case the contract had not been performed, while in the present case the contract has been executed; the plaintiff has enjoyed its benefits, but seeks to escape its burdens. Even if the franchise-contract was ultra vires of the town of Henderson, because its board of commissioners could not, under the power it possessed at the time of entering into it, make a contract for forty years, as suggested in the concurring opinion of Clark, C. J., in Wadsworth v. Concord, supra, and as held in Thrift v. Elizabeth City, 122 N. C., 31, yet the plaintiff could not recover for the performance of its own obligation for the time the contract had been executed and for the time it had enjoyed the benefits and advantages accruing to it under the contract, contrary to its express stipulation. Trustees v. Realty Co., 134 N. C., 41; Wadsworth v. Concord, supra, at p. 599; Hill v. Railroad, 143 N. C., 539, at p. 582. To what time the ratification of the contract by the town of Henderson, if the contract has been ratified, since the enactment of subsection 6 of section 2916, Revisal 1905, has prolonged or will prolong the life of the contract, *177we will not attempt to determine in the present case, as it is not necessary for the .determination of the questions decisive of it. The validity of the franchise-contract, as far as necessary to be determined in this case, being settled-by the cases cited, is the plaintiff obliged by- its express stipulation to supply water free of charge to the public schools, and, if so, what public schools? The fact that a compliance with the stipulation was burdensome to the plaintiff can be no reason for changing its relation to it after performance. The purpose of this stipulation was certainly not immoral; it was not contra bonos mo'res. This duty is a continuing duty, imposed, not on the town, but on the plaintiff, and no reason was suggested to us why the plaintiff was not competent to assume it by its own voluntary act. Nor can we see why it should be beyond the scope of the contractual powers of the town, after it had provided for all its own uses, as a public corporation and administering a public trust, to take within its benefits, without additional cost to it, another public corporation whose duties and responsibilities so vitally concern its own growth, good order and even existence. If the plaintiff consented and agreed to it for the consideration furnished at the time by the town, what could vitiate this benefit ? Eegardless of how this might be determined in an action between other parties, we do not think the plaintiff ought to be permitted to recover as upon a quantum meruit for water already furnished under its stipulation for free water. When the ordinance of, the town was accepted by the plaintiff, the execution of the contract was complete; by it valuable rights were granted the plaintiff and important duties imposed. An acceptance of those rights is an assumption of those duties. As it is a contract which binds the town not to interfere with those rights, so likewise it is one which binds the plaintiff to the discharge of those duties. Railroad v. Railroad, 47 Fed., at p. 21. The public schools and the-churches of the town of Henderson are beneficiaries, by express words, under the contract, entitled to free water, and they have such interest in the contract as entitles them to maintain an action for a violation of it, injurious to them. Jones v. Water Co., 135 N. C., 553, and cases cited.
But the plaintiff complains that the town of Henderson furnished the consideration which supports the contract, and that the town could not legally do this for the public schools and churches. How can the plaintiff complain of this? It was entirely competent for it to make this stipulation, unless by its performance it entirely disabled itself to perform its duties to the town. It is in receipt of the consideration from the town, *178in tbe enjoyment of tbe benefits of tbe contract supported by it. Tbe plaintiff is not tbe proper party to complain, in tbe absence of proof tbat it bas thereby disabled itself to perform its public duties. In tbe cases of Water-works v. School District, 23 Mo. App., 227, and 48 Fed., 523, cited by tbe able counsel of tbe plaintiff, tbe State and Federal courts differed as to tbe interpretation of tbe words “public buildings,” used in a contract between tbe plaintiff and tbe authorities of Kansas City, obliging tbe plaintiff to furnish, free of charge, water “for all public buildings and offices of tbe city,” tbe Federal Court bolding tbat these words embraced public school buildings in tbe city, and tbe State Court bolding contra. In those cases tbe school buildings and tbe school system were under tbe control of a different corporation, and the school district was not coterminus with tbe city limits. In tbe case of Water Supply Co. v. Albuquerque, 9 New Mexico, 441, tbe plaintiff agreed to furnish 12,000,000 gallons of water to the defendant for “city purposes,” and it was held tbat tbe supply of water to tbe public schools of tbe city, being under tbe control and management of a distinct and different corporation, was not a “city purpose,” within tbe meaning of tbe contract, and tbat action related to future, not past, performance. In tbe present case tbe words “public schools” do not admit of any misconception. Tbe plaintiff further contends tbat tbe present public schools were not in contemplation of tbe parties at tbe time tbe contract was entered into, and invokes this principle of construction, thus formulated in Smith v. Kerr, 108 N. Y., 31; 2 Am. St. Rep., 362: “In construing contracts, tbe court should put itself, as near as may be, in tbe situation of tbe parties, and, from a consideration of tbe surrounding circumstances and tbe occasion and tbe apparent object of tbe parties, determine tbe meaning and intent of tbe language used by them in their agreement.” At tbe time-tbe contract was made, tbe public schools in tbe town of Henderson were not under tbe control of tbe town or maintained by it; tbey are not now so, and never bave been. At tbat time tbey were, as now, under the control and management of a separate and distinct body. It does not appear tbat tbe town, by its corporate limits, was a distinct and separate public school district; that there were, as now, public schools in tbe corporate limits of tbe town. There were then, as now, churches in tbe town of Henderson, and these tbe town could not in any way control or manage. It is true tbe public school buildings were then constructed of wood; tbey are now structures of brick, larger and more commodious. Tbe parties were entering into contract to continue forty years; and while its purposes were fixed, it was contemplated that conditions would *179change; that tbe town would increase in population, as it bas done; tbat tbe number of consumers and tbe amount of water consumed would increase; tbat new streets would be opened and old streets extended; tbat, as tbe town grew, tbe number of children would increase, and tbat there would be greater demand for water for those purposes for which plaintiff stipulated it would furnish free water. The larger the town became, the more valuable became tbe franchise granted to tbe plaintiff by tbe town. The contract provides not only'that the town may demand of plaintiff an increase of its pipe lines, but that tbe plaintiff may voluntarily extend them. The growth of the town in the forty years of the life of the contract, and the enlargement and extension of plaintiff’s system, entered largely into the contemplation of the parties, and probably controlled and determined tbe action of each. Shall tbe plaintiff be permitted to avoid tbe duties of its contract because a measure of tbe-contemplated growth has been attained? The fact that the defendant — a separate and distinct corporate body — controls the “public schools,” and not the governing authorities of tbe town, is not decisive of tbe question; this was tbe fact at tbe date of tbe contract. Tbat this fact was not intended by the parties to be decisive will further appear by reading the entire clause in the contract: “Also for churches, public schools, town offices, market houses for city use, and all other town offices, now in use or to be erected.” It will be noted the word town, or city, is used to designate the other buildings coming in the free class, but it is not used for the churches or public schools.
In our opinion, tbe plaintiff was required by its contract to furnish water free of charge, for the time sued for, to the public schools located within the corporate limits of the town of Henderson, and, having performed this obligation, it cannot recover the value of the water so furnished. The fact that other children than those tbat live in tbe city limits are permitted to attend these schools we do not think should relieve the plaintiff of its obligation. The power of tbe Legislature to permit this was known, or ought to have been known, to the plaintiff, and it could by proper words in the contract have restricted and limited its duty and obligation. The schools are public; they are within the corporate limits. The Legislature has, seen proper to entrust their management to tbe defendant, a (forporate body, separate and distinct from the town of Henderson, and extended the territorial area of its control. It has located six public schools in the area beyond tbe 'corporate limits, which do not demand free water and are not beneficiaries of tbe contract, and it bas located two schools in tbe town limits; these schools are open to tbe *180children, who lire in the town and to some others living beyond the town limits. A vefy large majority of the children attending these two schools live within the town limits. This stipulation, while imposing upon the plaintiff, the duty to furnish water ' free of charge, for drinking purposes, for toilet and water-closets in the school buildings, does not, of course, require of the plaintiff to furnish water for sprinkling lawns, yards, play grounds or for bath rooms or bathing pools, but only for the necessary purposes stated above. We are therefore of the opinion that the plaintiff has nothing to justly complain of in his Honor’s judgment. In plaintiff’s appeal we find No error. ■
Between the Same Parties.
( DEFENDANT’S appeal.)
MANNING, J. The facts are set out in the plaintiff’s appeal in this case. What we have said’ in disposing of that appeal indicates our opinion on the defendant’s appeal. The defendant appealed because his Honor, upon the agreed facts, required it to pay one-third of the amount of plaintiff’s bill for water furnished the two public schools conducted in the corporate limits of the town of Henderson, based upon the proportion of the number of school children living beyond the town limits, to the total number of children within the school territory under control of defendant. We do not think this fact sufficient to relieve the plaintiff; for if the contract be so construed and the words of the stipulation so interpreted, the effect would be to make these schools in the corporate limits, in this relation to the plaintiff, public schools as to all children in the town limits and private schools as to those attending it who live without the corporate limits. The “public schools are the units, and the obligation is to furnish these free water for the necessary purposes,” as stated in plaintiff’s appeal. This same section of the contract obliges plaintiff to furnish water free of charge for man and beast at the public fountains, but forbids the taking of water from these fountains for private use. Can it be said that plaintiff must furnish water free for man and beast who inhabit the town and can charge for the men and beasts who drink at these fountains, but who live outside of Ahe town, and the amount of charge can be ascertained by numbering those who live beyond the limits and those who live within the limits? The mere suggestion of such a construction contains its answer. The considerations that •determine one should determine the other. In the one case the stipulation is to furnish water free to the public fountains; in the other, to furnish water free to the public schools. In rendering judgment against the defendant there was Error.