The Birmingham Waterworks Company, a corporation chartered by special act of the Legislature of date February 13, 1885 (Loc. Acts 1884-85, p. 415), is furnishing water for the use of the city of Birmingham and its inhabitants and for manufacturing purposes under an ordinance-contract of May 31, 1888, which provides that the rates therein fixed shall never be exceeded. The company has entered into contracts with some consumers similarly situated with the relator, by which it has undertaken to furnish to them water at a rate less than the maximum charges allowed by the ordinance. Relator does not complain that he is charged more than the maximum rate, nor even that he is charged more than a reasonable price for the water he uses, but his contention is that he is entitled to receive water at the most favorable rate furnished to any others similarly situated. And he seeks *589the aid of the court to give effect to his contention by its writ of mandamus. Respondent, for this occasion, assumes this court to have held that it is forbidden to furnish water to any of its customers, or even to all of them, at a rate less than the maximum fixed by the ordinance-contract. In Smith v. Birmingham Waterworks, 104 Ala. 315, 16 South. 123, it was said that “the rates for all purposes was the subject of contract between the city and the respondent, and .regulated by it,” and it was held that for water furnished for domestic purposes certain flat rates, as they are called, were fixed, and that for water furnished for other purposes to the inhabitants and for manufacturing purposes the respondent was entitled to charge by measurement. In Mobile v. Bienville Water Supply Co., 130 Ala. 379, 30 South. 445, it appeared that the city and water company Avere operating competing water supply systems. The city also maintained a seAverage system for the operation of which water was necessary. By the device of refusing to fix a rate for water used for sewerage purposes, and charging the same price for the use of both its water and seAvers as for its water alone, the city discriminated against the water company. The court declared this practice to be an abuse, and required the city to fix a rate for its sewer service. In Birmingham v. Waterworks, a case decided by Hon. D. M. Powell, appointed by the Governor upon the inability of the court to reach a conclusion concurred in by a majority, and reported in only 42 South., at page 10, the question was whether the Avater company Avas entitled to charge meter rates for water for sprinkling lawns and pleasure gardens. In the course of the opinion some expressions are used to the effect that water companies are without power to make a contract for unreasonable rates or rates not uniform to consumers.. But no ques*590tion was involved of discrimination in the way of fixing for some customers a rate less than a reasonable charge for the service rendered. The maximum rates provided for in the ordinance-contract in the instant case were fixed for the protection of the public against the exaction of unreasonable charges. The competency' of the parties to so contract is not questioned, nor is it doubted that under the law and the facts the municipality in the exercise of the police power had the right to fix the rates as the maximum reasonable rates chargeable. There is no indication of a legislative purpose to declare that the maximum should also be the minimum rates. Nor does any reason suggest itself why the water company may not. establish a uniform rate less than the maximum fixed by the ordinance-contract, or á rate less than reasonable, if such a thing be imaginable. The acceptance of such a rate uniformly applied by the public will be conclusively presumed.
So, then, the question is whether when the water company grants to one or more consumers a rate less than the legally fixed maximum, and less also than the reasonable rate which it might exact, all other consumers are entitled as of right to receive the most favorable rate granted to any consumer. The business of water companies incorporated to furnish water to the public is naturally monopolistic. Such companies are given the power of eminent domain — a power granted by the public in order that the needs and purposes of the public may be served more effectually. Such a business is therefore affected with a public use. — Mobile v. Bienville Water Company, 130 Ala. 379, 30 South. 445; Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S. 113, 24 L. Ed. 77; Lumbard v. Albina Light & Water Co., 21 Or. 411, 28 Pac. 244, 14 L. R. A. 424; Am. Waterworks v. State ex rel. Walker, 46 Neb. 194, 64 N. W. 711, 30 L. R. A. 447, 50 Am. St. *591Rep. 610; Griffin v. Goldsboro Water Co., 122 N. C. 206, 30 S. E. 319, 41 L. R. A. 240. And it must serve all with equal facilities and without discrimination. In this case no complaint is made that the relator is discriminated against in respect to facilities furnished in the way of getting a supply of water, hut only in respect to the price charged. It would seem that, if the rate granted to favored customers is less than the reasonable rate the company may lawfully demand from all consumers on a basis of uniformity, as on the allegations of the petition we must assume to be the case, the consequent discrimination is enjoyed by those having the favored rate at the expense of the company, and does not impinge upon any right of consumers generally, for they are receiving all they are entitled to have in any event. — Griffin v. Goldsboro Water Co., supra. The granting of a rate to any considerable number of consumers more favorable to them than the rate fixed for consumers generally, in the absence of possible peculiar circumstances of justification, would, be evidential that the general rate is unreasonably high, which would call for municipal or legislative revision to be enacted in a due observance of constitutional limitations. But we do not see our way clear to a holding that 'whenever a water company makes a concession to a consumer it thereby fixes a new schedule of rates for all its consumers. Tf, within the limit of the rates fixed by the ordinance-contract and by its right to a reasonable compensation, the water company capriciously and oppressively, and for ulterior and unlawful purposes, discriminates between its consumers in a manner to work .wrong and injury — as conceivably it may, though , confining its -action within the limits predicated — that would be a plain abuse of its franchise, and the inquiry in that event would be Avhether it might not- be punish*592ed by indictment or process to revoke and annul its franchise. — Lumbard v. Stearns, supra. But that is a question not now to be determined.
In the nature of the case there'must be data from which the reasonableness of charges for water furnished may be estimated with an approximation sufficiently close for every practical purpose; the case differing in that respect materially from the case of a common carrier of goods and passengers. In the last-named case many elements of uncertainty enter. But even in the case of, carriers it has never been held that every special concession established a new rate to be observed in all cases, and the evil growing out of the lack of uniformity in charges has been met by statutes punishing the granting of special rates, rebates, and passes.
On the facts shown, the relator was not entitled to the relief sought, and the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, O. J., and Anderson and Evans, JJ., concur.