Board of Public Utilities Commissioners v. Yankee Gas Services Co.

672 A.2d 953, 236 Conn. 287, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 19, 1996
Docket15271
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 672 A.2d 953 (Board of Public Utilities Commissioners v. Yankee Gas Services Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Public Utilities Commissioners v. Yankee Gas Services Co., 672 A.2d 953, 236 Conn. 287, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 52 (Colo. 1996).

Opinion

CALLAHAN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the trial court granting a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief in favor of the plaintiff, the board of public utilities commissioners of the city of Norwich, against the defendant, Yankee Gas Services Company, enjoining the defendant from furnishing gas services to consumers in the town of Preston. The sole question raised by the appeal is whether the defendant has a right to provide gas service to customers located in Preston. The defendant claims to have acquired such [289]*289a right in 1989 when it purchased the gas assets of the Connecticut Light and Power Company (CL&P). The plaintiff argues that the defendant does not possess a right to supply gas in Preston because: (1) CL&P never had such a right and, therefore, the right could not have been included in the purchase of CL&P’s gas assets by the defendant in 1989; and (2) even if CL&P did possess such a right, the defendant was prohibited by legislation from purchasing the right to provide Preston with gas service.

The authorization to provide gas service in Norwich and Preston has been legislated in a series of interrelated special acts over the last century. In 1897, the legislature incorporated the Norwich Gas and Electric Company and granted it a franchise to provide gas and electricity in the city of Norwich and the towns of Norwich and Preston.1 12 Spec. Acts 1049, No. 391, § 6 (1897). In 1904, the city of Norwich purchased the Norwich Gas and Electric Company’s gas and electrical plants. In 1913, the legislature awarded the city of Norwich a gas and electric franchise coextensive with the 1897 franchise that had been held by the Norwich Gas and Electric Company. 16 Spec. Acts 882, No. 232 (1913). In 1919, by special act, the legislature provided that no company could “by purchase . . . acquire the right to sell or distribute gas or electricity within [the territory in which the city of Norwich has the right to sell or distribute gas or electricity] . . . .” 18 Spec. Acts 180, No. 225 (1919). Thereafter, in 1927, the legislature granted CL&P a statewide right to supply and sell gas with the proviso that CL&P “shall not have the power to supply and sell gas within the territory occupied and served by any other company now incorporated unless by consent of such other company . . . .”20 Spec. Acts 223, No. 195, § 1 (1927).

[290]*290Much later, in 1951, the legislature consolidated the governments of the city and town of Norwich into the single municipality of the city of Norwich and established the board of public utilities commissioners of the city of Norwich for the purpose of controlling the production and distribution of gas, electricity and water in the city of Norwich. 26 Spec. Acts 459, No. 573, c. I, § 1, and c. XII, § 2 (1951). The legislature further provided, as it had in the 1919 special act, that no “company or person” could, “by purchase . . . acquire the right to sell or distribute gas and electricity within [the territory in which the board of public utilities commissioners of the city of Norwich has the right to sell or distribute gas or electricity] . . . .” 26 Spec. Acts 459, No. 573, c. XII, § 26 (1951). Thereafter, in 1955, by special act, the legislature granted the Mohawk Gas Services Company the power “to acquire by . . . purchase . . . and to hold, own, use, exercise, enjoy and dispose of the whole or any part of the gas property, rights, privileges, properties, securities, contracts, powers and franchises now or hereafter owned or possessed by any gas company chartered by the General Assembly of the state of Connecticut for the purchase, manufacture, production, transmission, distribution and sale of natural .. . gas and matters incidental thereto.” 27 Spec. Acts 166, No. 218, § 2 (1955). The Mohawk Gas Services Company changed its name to the Yankee Gas Services Company in May, 1989.

Pursuant to the pertinent special acts noted above, the city of Norwich and the plaintiff have been providing gas service to Norwich residents, industry and businesses for nearly a century. The plaintiff presently serves over 7200 industrial, commercial and residential gas customers. It owns and operates approximately 115 miles of gas distribution mains, five gate stations and other related gas facilities. Its annual sales exceed [291]*291$9,000,000. With one minor exception,2 neither the city of Norwich nor the plaintiff has ever provided gas services to customers in the town of Preston. Its customers, rather, are all located within the municipal boundaries of Norwich.

The plaintiff asserts that it has not supplied gas to Preston because of “the economics of extending gas facilities, Preston’s rural nature and [because of] a lack of interest by Preston’s residents in obtaining gas service.” The plaintiff also asserts, however, that in 1994, when several potential major customers located in Preston expressed an interest in receiving gas service, the plaintiff immediately responded by taking affirmative steps to make gas service available to those prospective customers. Specifically, when the plaintiff learned in May, 1994, that the Norwich State Hospital in Preston was considering converting from oil to gas, the plaintiff installed eighty feet of unconnected pipe next to the hospital’s entrance, visited the hospital site, retained consultants to review the hospital’s specific needs, obtained bids for the installation of pipe and submitted a written proposal to the hospital.

In April, 1994, the defendant began installing a gas transmission pipeline from an existing line in the town of Montville through Preston in order to provide gas to the Foxwoods Casino in Ledyard, a town outside the plaintiffs franchise territory. In June, 1994, the plaintiff became aware that the defendant was installing the transmission line but believed that it was being installed to deliver gas to Foxwoods Casino only. The plaintiff subsequently learned that the defendant also intended to utilize the transmission line to service customers in Preston.

Thereafter, the plaintiff instituted this action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to prohibit the defend[292]*292ant from selling or distributing gas in Preston. The trial court granted the declaratory and injunctive relief requested by the plaintiff, and enjoined the defendant from advertising, selling or distributing gas in Norwich or Preston. The defendant appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court, and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to Practice Book § 4023 and General Statutes § 51-199 (c).

For the defendant to prevail on appeal, we must determine that § 2 of Special Act No. 195 (1927) gave CL&P a right to supply and sell gas in Preston. We would also have to determine that the defendant was permitted to purchase that right pursuant to § 2 of Special Act No. 218 (1955), despite seemingly contrary language in § 26 of chapter XII of Special Act No. 573 (1951), which provides that no company can acquire by purchase the right to provide gas service “within the territory in which the board of public utilities commissioners of the city of Norwich has the right to sell or distribute gas or electricity . . .

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Bluebook (online)
672 A.2d 953, 236 Conn. 287, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-public-utilities-commissioners-v-yankee-gas-services-co-conn-1996.