Application of Northern States Power Company

171 N.W.2d 751, 1969 N.D. LEXIS 87, 1969 WL 177825
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1969
DocketCiv. 8550-8554
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 171 N.W.2d 751 (Application of Northern States Power Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Northern States Power Company, 171 N.W.2d 751, 1969 N.D. LEXIS 87, 1969 WL 177825 (N.D. 1969).

Opinion

*754 STRUTZ, Judge,

on reassignment.

Each of the above five cases was started when Northern States Power Company made application for authority from the Public Service Commission to extend its electric service lines to the named consumer in each case, all located in a rural residential development some two miles west of the municipal limits of the city of Minot, known as the Little Ponderosa Subdivision. Northern States Power Company, by franchise, furnishes electric service to the city of Minot. Although there are five separate applications for such extension of service, because of the similarity of the five cases and because all five cases will be controlled by the same statutory provisions, they were consolidated on appeal to this court for purposes of argument and briefing of the law.

The record discloses that Northern States Power Company constructed an extension of its distribution lines into the Little Ponderosa area in 1964. At that time, Verendrye Electric Cooperative had distribution lines on three sides of the Little Ponderosa Subdivision, to wit, on the east, south, and west. These lines had been installed in approximately 1950. In 1964, Verendrye Electric Cooperative also had one electric supply line running into the Little Ponderosa area, which it had installed pursuant to a 1963 easement. Service over this line, however, was subsequently discontinued at the request of the customer, and electric energy no longer was being furnished over the line at the time when Northern States Power Company extended its lines into the area.

In 1964, when Northern States Power Company extended its lines into Little Ponderosa, the law permitted a public utility to extend its lines into territory contiguous to a municipality being served by it, without first securing from the Public Service Commission the authority to do so and without a determination by the Public Service Commission that public convenience and necessity required such extension. The law at that time merely provided that if any public utility, in so extending its lines, unreasonably interfered with the service or the system of another public utility or of any electric cooperative, the Public Service Commission, on corm plaint of the one claiming to be injuriously affected, could, after hearing, make such order as circumstances warranted. Sec. 49-03-05, N.D.C.C. No complaint was filed by Verendrye, however, protesting the extension of Northern States Power Company’s lines into Little Ponderosa in 1964.

In 1965, the law was amended by enactment of the so-called Territorial Integrity Act, Chapter 319 of the Session Laws of 1965. After such amendment, a public utility could not extend its lines beyond or outside the corporate limits of any municipality it was serving, nor could it serve any new customer where the place to be served was not located within the corporate limits being served, until such public utility had obtained an order from the Public Service Commission authorizing such extension and also a certificate that public convenience and necessity required that permission to extend the lines be given.

The five customers situated within the area of the Little Ponderosa Subdivision are not within the corporate limits of Minot. Therefore, when the five applications here under consideration were filed, it was necessary for Northern States Power Company to obtain orders from the Public Service Commission authorizing the extensions. It was also necessary to obtain certificates from the Public Service Commission that public convenience and necessity required that permission to extend its lines to such customers be given.

On this record, the Public Service Commission found in each case that Northern States Power Company had not previously rendered electric service to the locations described in each of the applications; that each extension, if approved, would be made *755 from existing facilities of Northern States Power Company located in the Little Pon-derosa Subdivision, the earliest of which was constructed in 1964; that Verendrye Electric Cooperative has supply lines on three sides of the Little Ponderosa Subdivision; that Verendrye was the first supplier in the Little Ponderosa Subdivision, having installed lines to serve a corral in the subdivision in 1963; that at the time of the hearing before the Public Service Commission, Verendrye Electric Cooperative served no location in Little Ponderosa, while Northern States Power Company was serving six such locations, two of which had been served prior to the enactment of the 196S amendment but subsequent to the time Verendrye had extended its lines into the area to serve the corral; that both Northern States Power and Ver-endrye are operating in the general area of Little Ponderosa; that authorizing the extensions requested by the applications would unreasonably interfere with the service and the system of Verendrye Electric Cooperative, and that authorizing Northern States Power Company’s applications for extensions of its lines as requested would not be consistent with the orderly growth and development of electric service in the area; that public convenience and necessity does not require that the area be served by Northern States Power Company; and therefore that public convenience and necessity will best be served by having Verendrye Electric Cooperative furnish electric service to the sites in Little Ponde-rosa described in the applications.

The Public Service Commission, on such findings, entered its order denying each of the five applications, and Northern States Power Company thereupon appealed to the district court from each of such orders. The district court found from the above facts that the extensions do not unreasonably interfere with Verendrye Electric Cooperative and that public convenience and necessity would not be served by requiring the removal of the existing facilities contrary to preference of the customers named in the applications. The district court thereupon reversed the orders of the Public Service Commission and remanded the five cases to the Commission for disposition in accordance with its findings.

From the judgment of the district court, the Public Service Commission and Veren-drye Electric Cooperative have appealed to this court, demanding trial de novo and a review of the entire proceedings.

Upon appeal to • the Supreme Court from a judgment of the district court, entered in an appeal from the decision of an administrative agency, the scope of appeal is limited. The district court, and this court on appeal from the district court, must affirm the decision of the agency unless the court finds that the decision of the agency is not'in accordance with law, or that it is in violation of the constitutional rights of the appellant, or that any of the provisions of the Administrative Agencies Practice Act have not been complied with in the proceedings before the agency, or that the rules of procedure of the agency have not afforded the appellant a fair hearing, or that the findings of fact made by the agency are not supported by the evidence, or that the conclusions and decision of the agency are not supported by its findings of fact. Sec. 28-32-19, N.D.C.C.

Thus, upon appeal to the Supreme Court, even though the appellant demands trial de novo, the scope of the appeal is limited by the above statutory provision.

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Bluebook (online)
171 N.W.2d 751, 1969 N.D. LEXIS 87, 1969 WL 177825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-northern-states-power-company-nd-1969.