Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. City of Seneca

376 S.E.2d 514, 297 S.C. 283, 1989 S.C. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 6, 1989
Docket22958
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 376 S.E.2d 514 (Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. City of Seneca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. City of Seneca, 376 S.E.2d 514, 297 S.C. 283, 1989 S.C. LEXIS 14 (S.C. 1989).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This case involves a city’s provision of electric service to an annexed area which had been previously assigned to another electric supplier. The circuit court enjoined the city from providing this service. The city appeals, and we now reverse.

FACTS

The City of Seneca (“the City”), in Oconee County, owns and operates an electric distribution system which provides electric service to customers within and without its municipal boundaries. Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative, Inc. (“the *285 Co-op”) is a rural electrical cooperative providing electrical service to several upstate counties, including Oconee.

In September 1979, the City petitioned the Public Service Commission (“PSC”) for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to extend service to territory outside its municipal limits. The territory the City sought to service included property owned by the Oconee County School District (“the School District”). The School District parcel was part of an area previously assigned by the PSC to the Co-op for electric service pursuant to S. C. Code Ann. § 58-27-640 (1976). The Co-op opposed the City’s petition.

Over the next three and a half years, the PSC entertained the parties’ arguments in hearings, accepted briefs, and met with the parties in attempts to narrow the issues; in May 1983, closing arguments were held.

On January 14, 1986, the City annexed a portion of the territory assigned to the Co-op; the annexed, assigned area included the School District property. Upon annexation, the School District property was vacant; only a Co-op electric line ran across it to serve the adjoining property.

On January 31,1986, the PSC ruled on the City’s petition. The PSC denied the City its requested Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity and “prohibited and enjoined [the City] from providing electric service to new and additional customers located in territory previously assigned ... to any electric supplier.” No party sought judicial review of this order.

In September 1986, the School District requested that the City provide electric service to its property so the District could construct a new high school. The City extended its facilities and provided temporary electric service to the construction site.

In April 1987, the Co-op sued, alleging that the City’s service to the School District property violated the 1986 PSC order. The circuit court agreed and issued an order which: (1) permanently enjoined the City from further violations of the PSC order; (2) prohibited City electric service to new and additional customers in assigned territories, regardless of subsequent annexation; and (3) directed the City to remove its electric facilities from the School District property.

The City appealed. By Writ of Supersedeas dated April 8, *286 1988, this Court stayed the circuit court’s order pending this appeal.

ISSUES

The parties propound differing statements of the questions presented by this appeal. The City’s basic position, however, is that: (1) it did not violate the PSC order; and (2) even if it did, the circuit court’s enforcement of the PSC’s order contravened our decision in City of Abbeville v. Aiken Electric Cooperative, 287 S. C. 361, 338 S. E. (2d) 831 (1985). We address these arguments in turn.

I. APPLICABILITY OF PSC ORDER

The City first argues that it did not violate the PSC order because the order was inapplicable to municipal functions within corporate limits. The City claims the PSC order addressed only the City’s provision of electrical service to assigned areas outside corporate limits; once the City annexed the School District property — two weeks prior to the PSC order — electrical service to that area constituted service inside corporate limits. We agree and hold the PSC’s injunction was inapplicable to the City’s service of the School District property after annexation.

First, the language of the PSC order strongly suggests that its terms did not implicate City service in assigned areas post-annexation. The PSC confined the order to the City’s four requests for “Certificate[s] of Public Convenience and Necessity to provide electric service in vast areas of territory outside its municipal limits.” (Emphasis added.)

Next, the PSC reasoned that the City was prohibited from providing service within assigned areas by S. C. Code Ann. § 5-7-60 (1976), 1 which states in relevant part:

Any municipality may perform any of its functions, furnish any of its services ... and make changes therefore and may participate in the financing thereof in areas outside the corporate limits of such municipality by contract... except within a service area assigned by the Public Service Commission ...

*287 (emphasis added). Relying on our decision in City of Newberry v. Public Service Commission of South Carolina, 287 S. C. 404, 339 S. E. (2d) 124 (1986), the PSC also ruled that municipal service within an assigned area would be ultra vires and illegal.

Section 5-7-60 and City of Newberry, however, restrict only the exercise of municipal functions outside corporate limits. At the time of service here, the School District property had been brought inside corporate limits via annexation. The injunctive relief framed in the PSC’s order was therefore inapplicable to the City’s provision of electrical service to the School District property after annexation. The annexation of that property eliminated the basis for and continued application of the injunction contained in the PSC order.

II. MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC SERVICE IN PSC-ASSIGNED AREAS SUBSEQUENTLY ANNEXED

The City next contests the circuit court’s enforcement of the injunction against City electric service in PSC-assigned territories “whether or not any such territories or parts thereof are annexed by the City.”

This is not the first time this Court has been called upon to settle a perceived clash between certain “home rule” articles of the South Carolina Constitution 2 and Act No. 431, 1984 S. C. Acts 1865. 3 In upholding Act 431 against a constitutional attack by numerous municipalities in City of Abbeville v. Aiken Electric Cooperative, Inc., supra, we set forth the rights and obligations of assigned electric suppliers as follows:

A franchisee possessing a valid PSC territorial assignment to serve an area subsequently annexed ...
(1) Is permitted to continue service in that area to those premises being served as of the date of annexation ... [and]
(2) Is prohibited, without prior consent of the municipality, from extending or expanding service in that *288

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Bluebook (online)
376 S.E.2d 514, 297 S.C. 283, 1989 S.C. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-ridge-electric-cooperative-inc-v-city-of-seneca-sc-1989.