Capital Electric Power Ass'n v. Hinson

92 So. 2d 867, 230 Miss. 311, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 374
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1957
Docket40404
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 867 (Capital Electric Power Ass'n v. Hinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Electric Power Ass'n v. Hinson, 92 So. 2d 867, 230 Miss. 311, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 374 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

*315 Hall, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Warren County entered on the verdict of a jury in two suits brought by appellee against appellant for the recovery of damages, which suits were by agreement consolidated for trial.

The first suit was filed on August 25, 1954, seeking-damages for the cutting and destruction of 67 trees on the lands of the plaintiff, and was in four counts, one *316 being for the statutory penalty, one being for a willful trespass and appropriation of private property, seeking actual and punitive damages, one being for the actual value of the timber, and one being for a wrongful representation to appellee’s neighboring landowner that she was depriving him of electric power and service.

The second suit was filed on September 15, 1954, alleging ownership of the same land, the renting thereof to Mrs. Gertrude McGuffee on August 21, 1954, at a monthly rental of $30.00 per month to commence on September 1, 1954, on condition that the said Mrs. Mc-Guffee would have electric service in the house situated on said premises; that said house had been served with electricity for a considerable number of years past but had been disconnected by the appellant; that on or about August 30, 1954, the said Mrs. McGuffee made proper application to the appellant to be served with electricity at the home on said land and paid all fees required in advance and agreed to all of the terms imposed by appellant as a condition to having the meter connection immediately made to said premises; that later on the same date the appellant advised her that no electricity would be furnished to Mrs. Hinson or to any tenant of hers or to any other person occupying the home on said premises, as had formerly been done, until and unless Mrs. Hinson dismissed a suit which she had brought against the appellant and that;< notwithstanding its initial commitment to Mrs. McGuffee the appellant returned her deposit and has arbitrarily and unlawfully declined to make any electric connection to said premises. The declaration further alleged that there was then pending the aforesaid suit filed on August 25, 1954, that appellee, as an American citizen, has a right to present her grievances to the court and to have them passed on; that the actions of appellant in declining to furnish electricity to said home unless plaintiff dismissed her lawsuit were unlaAvful, arbitrary and capricious and *317 were actuated by malice and ill will; that the appellant serving said area had no right to make such a requirement as a condition to making electrical service available and that the same infringed. upon and destroyed her basic rights and liberties; that Mrs. McGuffee, not being able to get electricity, has not begun the occupancy or rental of appellee’s property and that appellee has been put to great trouble, inconvenience, hardship and humiliation thereby and has lost in the rental of her property from September 1, 1954, to the time of the filing of said suit and is entitled to recover not only actual damages but also punitive damages.

In the case of Capital Electric Power Assn. v. Mrs. Gertrude McGuffee, 83 So. 2d 837, not yet reported in the State Reports, tiñere was involved by virtue of a suit for injunctive relief and damages to Mrs. McGuffee and her husband the wrongful refusal of appellant to furnish electric service to them because of pending litigation by Mrs. Hinson against the appellant. In that case we referred to Chapter 184, Laws of 1936, known as the “Electric Power Association Act”, and we held that the appellant organized under said act was vested with many of the attributes of public service corporations, and that persons living along the routes served by such association and readily accessible to its existing lines, who apply for membership in the association and agree to use electric energy supplied by the association are entitled to have such electric service furnished to them upon a nondiscriminatory basis. We further held that an order of the board of directors of appellant adopted January 10, 1945, which provided that “the manager shall be instructed not to render electric service to property while in litigation” was unreasonable, arbitrary and discriminatory, and afforded no justification for appellant’s refusal to supply electric energy for the McGuffees on the ground that Mrs. Hinson had filed an-action for damages against the appellant for *318 the wrongful cutting of timber on her land, and we further held that there was no error in the action of the chancellor in holding that the McG-uffees were entitled to have’ electric service restored in the dwelling house which they had rented from Mrs. Hinson.

In the case of Capital Electric Power Assn. v. Mrs. Emma Hinson, 84 So. 2d 409, not yet reported in the State Reports, we had before us the record on the trial of the first declaration involved on this appeal as hereinbefore set out. It developed upon the trial of that case in the lower court that the appellant claimed the right to cut the trees by virtue of an easement -which had been granted to the appellant in 1938 by W. O. Aldridge and wife, who were then the owners of the land in question and the predecessors in title of M?s. Hinson, and we discussed in detail the rules of law applicable to such easements and held that the easement in question did not grant an unlimited right to extend the power line beyond the point of its original construction. We held that Mrs. 'Hinson was entitled to a peremptory instruction for the actual value of the trees cut by appellant but was not entitled to a directed verdict for the statutory penalty, but that the easement should be admitted in evidence on the issue of good faith, not as evidence of appellant’s right to cut the trees, for appellant had no such right, but for what it would be worth to the jury on the issue of good faith, and the cause was remanded to the lower court for another trial.

After the remand of the last mentioned case, it was consolidated, by agreement, as above outlined with the suit filed on September 15, 1954, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $7,000.00 from which this appeal is prosecuted. The jury did not undertake to separate the actual damages awarded from the punitive damages awarded and it is evident that the verdict covers both actual and punitive damages.

*319 The géneral manager for the appellant testified that appellant had the easement from W. O. Aldridge hut that he made no investigation before the timber was cut as to whether Aldridge still owned the land, that appellant had been servicing Mrs. Hinson since 1945 but did not know that she owned the land. The general manager approved a sketch of the power line extension as prepared by appellant’s staking engineer. The line was to run beyond its present location a distance of 475 feet in one direction and an additional distance of 175 feet in another direction across Mrs. Hinson’s land, and it was for the purpose of building a line on down to the property of Mr. R. J. Sanders so as to service his home and the homes of six other families.

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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 867, 230 Miss. 311, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-electric-power-assn-v-hinson-miss-1957.