Appalachian Power Co. v. Town of Pulaski

108 S.E. 885, 130 Va. 612, 1921 Va. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 108 S.E. 885 (Appalachian Power Co. v. Town of Pulaski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appalachian Power Co. v. Town of Pulaski, 108 S.E. 885, 130 Va. 612, 1921 Va. LEXIS 179 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The essential facts out of which this controversy arises are these: On March 18, 1911, the council of the town of Pulaski granted a franchise to the Appalachian Power Company, whereby the power company, a public service corporation, entered into a contract to furnish electric light and power to consumers in the town, upon conditions expressed in the ordinance. The only clause of the franchise here involved is section 7 which reads thus:

“The meter rates charged by the............, its successors or assigns, for domestic and commercial lighting shall not exceed ten (10) cents per kilowatt hour, and the rates charged for power shall not exceed the rates charged in other places by said................, its successors or assigns for similar service under like conditions as to cost of supply.”

On August 12,1911, the council received by mail the paper signed in type “Appalachian Power Company,” which is embodied in the ordinance of August 15, 1911, reading thus:

“Pulaski, Va., August 15, 1911.
“Council met in special meeting this 15th day of August, 1911, at 4 p. m. Present: John T. Loving, mayor and councilman, Dr. G. G. Painter, John W. Eckman, Robert Bunts, J. H. Ratcliffe, J. W. Holmes and J. Smith. The meeting was called to order by the mayor, who explained that it was called for the purpose of receiving and considering a new schedule of rates for supplying the light consumers of the town with electric current, offered by the Appalachian Power Company, submitted August 12, 1911, which read as follows, to-wit:
[615]*615“To the Honorable Mayor and Council, Town of Pulaski, Va.
“The Appalachian Power Company respectfully requests you to grant them permission to change the rates for lighting as specified in their franchise, substituting therefor the following:
“Schedule for Lighting Rates.
“First 15 KWH at 10 cents each.
“Next 85 KWH at 8 cents each.
“All over 100 KWH at 6 cents each.
“5 per cent discount allowed for payment on or before the tenth of month in which bills are issued.
“This request is made for the following reasons. There appears at present to be some misunderstanding as to how the rate now in effect should be figured. When the sliding scale rate is used it is contended that the rate is slightly in advance over the former one and when the overlapping method is used an extreme unfairness results, as a consumer using 99 KWH pays considerably more than one consuming 101 KWH.
“Furthermore, the Appalachian Power Company desires to put in effect similar rates throughout all its properties, and this proposed rate is one already in use at Bluefield and several of the other plants.
“With the new rate in effect a fairer charge may be made to all consumers and a slight reduction will result in the majority of the bills.
“Respectfully,
“APPALACHIAN POWER COMPANY.
“After duly considering the proposition as set forth by the Appalachian Power Company it was moved and seconded and unanimously carried that the old rate for furnishing electric current to town consumers as agreed upon [616]*616by council and said company be rescinded, and that the schedules presented by said company as of August 15, 1911, be adopted instead as set forth by them and made a part of this record to govern future charges by said company for electric lights.”

Thereafter the rates therein named were made effective, and so continued until the company, on August 12, 1919, filed its schedule of higher rates to become effective September 15, 1919. This schedule reads thus:

“The State Corporation Commission of Virginia:
“Appalachian Power Company.
“Residence and Commercial Lighting Rate.
“Schedule B-6.
“Applicable to all consumers served in the State of Virginia.
“Rate:
“First 50 KWH per month at 10 cents per KWH
“Next 250 KWH per month at 8 cents per KWH'
“Next 800 KWH per month at 7 cents per KWH
“All over 600 KWH per month at 6 cents per KWH
“Minimum charge seventy-five (75) cents per month.
“Discount of 5 per cent bills are paid on or before the 10th of the month following that in which service is rendered.
“Re-connection charge, one dollar ($1.00).
“APPALACHIAN POWER COMPANY.
“By R. E. SCOTT, Attorney.”

The town thereupon filed its petition for mandamus against the company, claiming that by virtue of the action of the council on August 15,1911, in response to the request for permission to change the rate authorized by section 7 of the original ordinance, that section of the original ordinance had been rescinded and that the rates fixed on August [617]*61715, 1911, controlled the company and constituted the contract rates under the franchise which could not be exceeded. The petition prayed for a mandamus requiring the company to observe these rates.

The answer of the company, on the other hand, claimed that section 7 of the original ordinance had never been amended, and that by authority of that franchise the company had full power to charge reasonable lighting rates to consumers in the town of Pulaski within the limits fixed by the original ordinance — that is, not in excess of ten cents per kilowatt hour; that if the action of the council on August 11, 1911, was intended by the council to operate as a rescission of section 7 and as an amendment of the original franchise, that such a result had never been intended or contemplated by the company, and that the ordinance of 1911 so relied upon by the town had never been communicated to the company or accepted by it as an amendment of the franchise, and that no one had ever been authorized by it to propose any amendment of the original franchise.

At the meeting in August, 1911, G. C. Wilder, then district manager of the Appalachian Power Company in the district of which the town of Pulaski formed a part, appeared and requested action on the communication referred to. Wilder- was succeeded as district manager two days later by one R. L. Pierce, on August 17, 1911, who was then told by Wilder that he had attended a council meeting on August 15, and shown the communication which he said he had written to the mayor and the town council on August 12, asking permission to change the rates for lighting, and that the council had given their permission for the change. At this time one M. Kahn was the general manager of the ■company, and H. M. Byllesby & Co., of Chicago, acting under the control of the board of directors, were in the ■charge of the company. On August 22, 1911, Kahn, the [618]

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108 S.E. 885, 130 Va. 612, 1921 Va. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appalachian-power-co-v-town-of-pulaski-va-1921.