Arizona Public Service Co. v. Town of Paradise Valley

610 P.2d 454, 125 Ariz. 452, 1979 Ariz. App. LEXIS 726
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 18, 1979
Docket1 CA-CIV 4228
StatusPublished

This text of 610 P.2d 454 (Arizona Public Service Co. v. Town of Paradise Valley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arizona Public Service Co. v. Town of Paradise Valley, 610 P.2d 454, 125 Ariz. 452, 1979 Ariz. App. LEXIS 726 (Ark. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION

JACOBSON, Judge.

This appeal requires a determination of whether the legislature has delegated to municipalities the authority to pass ordinances affecting the replacing, removal and undergrounding of public utility poles.

This litigation was initiated by appellee, Arizona Public Service Company (APS), by filing a special action in Superior Court seeking to declare an ordinance of the appellant, Town of Paradise Valley (Town), invalid and to enjoin the Town’s prosecution of a criminal complaint against APS under that ordinance. The Superior Court held the ordinance invalid as being inconsistent with the constitutional and statutory provisions prescribing the powers of the Arizona Corporation Commission. The Town has appealed.

In 1964, the Town passed Ordinance # 30, which in general required new and higher capacity replacement utility lines to be placed underground. While the ordinance is lengthy, its subject matter is “utility poles and wires” which are defined by the ordinance as:

“poles, structures, wires, cable conduit, transformers and related facilities used in or as part of the transportation or distribution of electricity or power or in the transmission of telephone, radio, or television communications.”

There is no argument that by this definition the ordinance was intended to affect “utility poles and wires” of public service corporations. APS is a public service corporation delivering electrical power to most of the state.

The ordinance purports to affect only “new utility poles and wires” which are defined as “such utility poles and wires as are not existing utility poles and wires and shall include such utility poles and wires as in the future may constitute replacements for, or repairs to, existing utility poles and wires” with certain exceptions not applicable here.

The operative portion of the ordinance provides:

[454]*454. . no person shall erect within the town boundaries and above the surface of the ground any new utility poles and wires except after securing a special permit therefor from the Town Council

Failure to comply with the ordinance subjects the offender to criminal penalties.

Apparently APS replaced some existing equipment with equipment having a higher voltage capacity without applying to the Town for a special use permit. As a result of this action, APS .was charged with a misdemeanor criminal complaint before the town magistrate. Prior to that criminal action being heard, APS instituted its special action in Superior Court, joining the Arizona Corporation Commission and the Town. The resulting decision of the Superior Court declared the ordinance invalid.

All parties to this appeal correctly characterize the controlling issue to be whether the Town had statutory authority to control the type of facilities utilized by a public service corporation in delivering its services.1 The Town urges that such authority exists by implication from its general zoning authority (A.R.S. §§ 9-462.01 et seq.); the general grant of authority to control its streets (A.R.S. §§ 9-240 and 9-276); its franchising authority (Art. XIII, § 6, Ariz. Const.; A.R.S. §§ 40-282 and 40-283); and the recognition that such authority exists by such statutory provisions as A.R.S. §§ 40-341 et seq. (providing for under-grounding of utility poles and wires by utilities), and A.R.S. § 40-360 (dealing with high voltage transmission lines). APS, on the other hand, argues that given the general authority vested by the Constitution and statutes in the Arizona Corporation Commission to control public service corporations, these statutes lack the specificity required to vest municipalities with the control necessary to validate the type of ordinance involved here.

Any discussion of the regulation of public service corporations vis-a-vis the state legislature, the Corporation Commission and municipalities must begin with Art. XV, § 3, of the Arizona Constitution. This constitutional provision provides:

“§ 3. Power of commission as to classifications, rates and charges, rules, contracts, and accounts; local regulation
“Section 3. The Corporation Commission shall have full power to, and shall, prescribe just and reasonable classifications to be used and just and reasonable rates and charges to be made and collected, by public service corporations within the State for service rendered therein, and make reasonable rules, regulations, and orders, by which such corporations shall be governed in the transaction of business within the State, and many prescribe the forms of contracts and the systems of keeping accounts to be used by such corporations in transacting such business, and make and enforce reasonable rules, regulations, and orders for the convenience, comfort, and safety, and the preservation of the health, of the employees and patrons of such corporations; Provided, that incorporated cities and towns may be authorized by law to exercise supervision over public service corporations doing business therein, including the regulation of rates and charges to be made and collected by such corporations ; Provided further, that classifications, rates, charges, rules, regulations, orders, and forms or systems prescribed or made by said Corporation Commission may from time to time be amended or repealed by such Commission.” (Emphasis added.)

While at one point in our history there were serious questions concerning the authority vested in the legislature to pass [455]*455laws affecting public service corporations, see State v. Tucson Gas, Electric Light and Power Co., 15 Ariz. 294, 138 P. 781 (1914), those questions were resolved by the case of Corporation Commission v. Pacific Greyhound Lines, 54 Ariz. 159, 94 P.2d 443 (1939). This case held that the only constitutionally exclusive area of non-legislative action lies in the prescribing of “just and reasonable classifications to be used, and just and reasonable rates and charges to be made and collected by public service corporations . . . .” In this area, the Arizona Corporation Commission had exclusive constitutional control. In all other areas, as is pointed out by Pacific Greyhound Lines :

“the paramount power to make all rules and regulations governing public service corporations not specifically and expressly given to the commission by some provision of the Constitution, rests in the legislature, and it may, therefore, either exercise such powers directly or delegate them . . . .” 54 Ariz. at 176-77, 94 P.2d at 450.

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Bluebook (online)
610 P.2d 454, 125 Ariz. 452, 1979 Ariz. App. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arizona-public-service-co-v-town-of-paradise-valley-arizctapp-1979.