Birmingham Electric Co. v. City of Bessemer

186 So. 569, 237 Ala. 240, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 9, 1939
Docket6 Div. 347.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 So. 569 (Birmingham Electric Co. v. City of Bessemer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Electric Co. v. City of Bessemer, 186 So. 569, 237 Ala. 240, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 164 (Ala. 1939).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This is a bill filed by .the appellant, the Birmingham Electric Company, against appellees, the City of Bessemer, a municipal corporation, its Mayor and Aldermen, Clerk and Treasurer, and the individuals incumbent in said offices, seeking to restrain and permanently enjoin said defendants from proceeding with the construction of a proposed electric transmission line leading from the City of Bessemer to connect with a transmission line operated, or to be operated, by the Tennessee Valley Authority, at' a point approximately fifty miles north of Bessemer; and to enjoin said defendants from constructing and operating a transmission system to serve patrons within and without the limits of said defendant municipality and within the “Birmingham metropolitan area” adequately' served by complainant through its privately owned and integrated system covering said area. And, in the alternative, to enjoin said defendants from proceeding with said proposed enterprise, unless the defendant, the City of Bessemer, obtains from the Alabama Public Service Commission a certificate of convenience and necessity authorizing it to construct, maintain and operate said line and distribution -system.

And, further, the bill seeks to restrain and enjoin said defendants and each of them “from engaging in unfair or unlawful competition with complainant in complainant’s business of. distributing and selling electric energy in any of the territory served by complainant; and further perpetually enjoining and restraining said City and each of said respondents from issuing, signing or delivering any bonds of the City of Bessemer, whether revenue bonds or general obligation bonds of said City, to WPA or anyone else to evidence any loan made to said City for the purpose of constructing said electric transmission line or any electric distribution system without first obtaining authority from the Alabama Public Service Commission by order of said Commission authorizing such issue of said bonds as required by Section 9744 of the Code of Alabama of 1923; and further perpetually enjoining and restraining said City and each of said respondents from further proceeding with any acts in furtherance of the construction or operation of any such proposed transmission line or of any such electric distribution system.”

The basis of- the complainant’s right to invoke the jurisdiction and power of the court to these ends is, in short, that it is a domestic corporation authorized to engage in the business of generating, purchasing and distributing electric energy for light, heat and power, with its principal office and corporate domicile in the *243 City, of Birmingham,. Jefferson County, Alabama. That by the investment of a large sum of money it has acquired arid is maintaining a highly efficient system for the distribution in the metropolitan area, covering the County of Jefferson, and all of the municipalities therein; that it adequately serves all the needs of said territory at reasonable rates, and through the development of its system has anticipated the needs of the future, and its integrated system is capable of meeting the needs of the present and future in said territory; that it enjoys a monopoly in fact, in said field. That it has acquired, possesses and enjoys a franchise granted and confirmed by the City of Bessemer to serve the said City and its inhabitants with electric energy for domestic and commercial uses, and its integrated system is fully equipped and capacitated to meet all the demands for such service, including the operation of a system of transportation within and without the limits of said respondent municipality.

That it owns and maintains valuable property situated within the corporate limits of said municipality, on which it pays taxes, and contributes to the revenue of said City in the payment of large sums annually in excise and license taxes.

That complainant has been so engaged since the year 1924, that its said system is confined to the “Birmingham metropolitan area,” in which it now “owns and operates both a complete electric distribution system in said metropolitan area * , * * and a complete street railway and motor bus transportation system.” That said systems represent an intensive application of the economies of large scale integrated electric distribution, and if complainant be forced to cease or substantially curtail operation in the City of Bessemer and Tarrant City, by the actions of respondents, the result would be to impair seriously “such integration.”

That the complainant has been granted a certificate of convenience and necessity by the Alabama Public Service Commission to engage in said business.

The bill alleges that the defendant municipality has contracted debts, outstanding and unpaid, in excess of the constitutional limit, but that it has made application to federal agencies for funds, part as loans and the balance as contribution for the construction of said system, and that defendant proposes and is proceeding to is-sue revenue.bonds, secured by the earnings of said proposed system and plant, and has held a popular election in said municipality submitting the question “Shall the City of Bessemer construct or acquire, own and operate a municipal electric light and power system?” And that a majority of the qualified electors voting in said election voted in the affirmative.

Also, that the defendant is proceeding to do all the things the bill seeks to enjoin [except issue general obligation bonds], without obtaining such certificate of convenience and necessity, and proposes to operate said power line and distribution system in- furnishing electricity, not only to its own inhabitants, but to the inhabitants of Tarrant City, and others outside of said municipalities in said “Birmingham metropolitan area” served by the complainant, to complainant’s financial hurt.

The Circuit Court sustained the demurrers filed by the defendant to the bill and dismissed the same for want of equity, hence this appeal.

One of the questions brought forward arises out of the insistence of appellee that complainant has not shown such interest as warrants it in invoking the jurisdiction and power of a court of equity for injunctive relief.

It is well settled that a citizen and taxpayer of a municipal corporation, as one of the incorporators, may invoke the aid of a court of equity, “to prevent or avoid illegal corporate acts, whereby the burdens of taxation will be increased.” New Orleans, Mobile & Chattanooga Railroad Company v. Dunn et al., 51 Ala. 128. Or, expressed in other words, “to prevent the abuse of corporate power and keep municipal corporations within subjection to the law.” Wilkinson v. Henry, County Treasurer, 221 Ala. 254, 257, 128 So. 362, 363, 365, 70 A.L.R. 712; Coleman et al. v. Town of Eutaw et al. and Town of Eutaw et al. v. Coleman et al., 157 Ala. 327, 47 So. 703; Gillespie et al. v. Gibbs et al., 147 Ala. 449, 41 So. 868; Inge et al. v. Board of Public Works of Mobile, 135 Ala. 187, 33 So. 678, 93 Am.St.Rep. 20.

The principle underlying the right stressed in the decided cases is that the inhabitants of the municipality are the corporators, and that the governing boards are the agents and trustees of the corporation. Allen v. Intendant and Councilmen of La Fayette, 89 Ala. 641, 8 So. *244 30, 9 L.R.A. 497; City of Eufaula v. McNab, 67 Ala. 588, 42 Am.Rep. 118; Gillespie et al. v. Gibbs, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 569, 237 Ala. 240, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-electric-co-v-city-of-bessemer-ala-1939.