Cedar Island Improvement Assn. v. Clinton Electric Light & Power Co.

114 A.2d 535, 142 Conn. 359, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 3, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 114 A.2d 535 (Cedar Island Improvement Assn. v. Clinton Electric Light & Power 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
Cedar Island Improvement Assn. v. Clinton Electric Light & Power Co., 114 A.2d 535, 142 Conn. 359, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 179 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The plaintiffs petitioned the public utilities commission to order the defendants, The Clinton Electric Light and Power Company and The Connecticut Light and Power Company, to serve Cedar Island with electric current as required, it is claimed, by § 5673 of the General Statutes. The petition was denied, 1 and the plaintiffs appealed to the Superior Court, where the commission, upon its own motion, was made a party defendant. The court reserved the matter for the advice of this court.

The stipulated facts can be stated briefly as follows: Cedar Island is located in Clinton Harbor east of Hammonasset State Park. Its easterly end is occupied by the plaintiffs as a summer recrea *362 tional area. The defendant The Clinton Eleetrie Light and Power Company, hereinafter referred to as the Clinton Company, maintains a line, distributing current to Hammonasset State Park, 7500 feet westerly from the recreational area on Cedar Island. The Clinton Company also maintains a line to a point on Grove Street in Clinton about 900 feet north of Cedar Island across the open waters of Clinton Harbor. There are forty-four potential users of current in the recreational area, of whom twenty-five would presently be willing to accept electric service. The area has a density of subscribers for electric service averaging more than two per mile on any line which might be constructed to serve it. The cost of extending a line to the area would be $27,280, not including the cost of a distribution system on the island itself. Maintenance would be difficult and expensive. The cost and the prospective income from the maximum guaranteed return of $13.50 per mile per month, fixed by § 5673 of the General Statutes, would result in a loss to the defendants in the foreseeable future.

The three questions upon which the parties seek the advice of this court 2 raise two basic issues: (1) *363 What is the nature and extent of the discretionary power of the commission under § 5673 of the General Statutes? (2) Has the commission acted in abuse of that discretion?

Section 5673 of the General Statutes provides that the public utilities commission shall “order and direct” the electric utility companies distributing current in this state to extend their lines in their chartered territory to all “unserved areas” having a density of subscribers for electric service averaging at least two per mile on the proposed new lines. 3 In fixing the rates to be charged for service on such new lines, the commission is directed to exercise its statutory powers and to consider the expense and revenues of each company as a whole in arriving at a fair return on the fair value of its properties, except that any guarantee, when required, shall not exceed $13.50 per mile per month. The commission is further directed “to advance the objects of [§ 5673] in every lawful manner.” The plaintiffs insist upon a literal interpretation of this statute. They claim that it is a mandate to the commission to order the companies to extend their lines for a prospective guaranteed rate not in excess of $13.50 per mile *364 per month, regardless of the cost of the extension or the difficulties of maintaining the service. In short, they maintain that, the qualification of at least two subscribers to a mile of extension having been found to exist, the commission has no discretion but to order the service at a guaranteed return not to exceed the maximum fixed by the statute. The defendants, on the other hand, claim that the statute is. a mandate to the commission to order the companies, to extend their service only when it would be reasonable to do so in the light of the cost, the return and the additional burden which might be placed upon other customers of the company if the lines were-extended. Briefly stated, they contend that the commission has discretion to order only those extensions under § 5673 which, in the exercise of the sound discretion of the commission, it finds to be-reasonable.

The resolution of these issues requires us to ascertain the legislative intent expressed in § 5673.. For this purpose we must look to the wording of the-statute and to its history and basic policy as disclosed by pre-existing legislation and the circumstances that brought about the enactment of the law-under consideration. Jennings v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., 140 Conn. 650, 657, 103 A.2d 535, and cases cited. The obligation of an electric utility company to extend its lines to unserved areas is. dealt with in two different sections of our statutes.. Section 5410 provides that if a company “shall unreasonably fail or refuse to furnish adequate service-at reasonable rates to any person” within its chartered territory, that person may petition the commission, which, if it finds, after a hearing, that adequate-service has been refused, may prescribe the terms, and conditions under which electric service is to be *365 furnished. 4 We have construed this statute as requiring only such extensions as the commission may find reasonable under all the circumstances. Levitt v. Public Utilities Commission, 114 Conn. 628, 633, 159 A. 878. This is the generally accepted rule. Root v. New Britain Gas Light Co., 91 Conn. 134, 143, 99 A. 559; 43 Am. Jur. 602, § 48; note, 58 A.L.R. 537. Factors which enter into the determination of the reasonableness of a demand for an extension of service are the need and cost of the extension, the return to be expected from it, the effect upon the company’s revenue, and the advantage to the public to be derived from it. New York ex rel. Woodhaven Gas Light Co. v. Public Service Commission, 269 U.S. 244, 248, 46 S. Ct. 83, 70 L. Ed. 255; Milwaukee Electric Ry. & Light Co. v. Wisconsin ex rel. Milwaukee, 252 U.S. 100, 105, 40 S. Ct. 306, 64 L. Ed. 476; Mississippi Railroad Commission v. Mobile & O.R. Co., 244 U.S. 388, 391, 37 S. Ct. 602, 61 L. Ed. 1216.

Section 5673, originally entitled “An Act concern *366 ing Areas Not Served with Electric Current,” was adopted at the regular session of the General Assembly in 1941. Public Acts 1941, c. 257; Sup. 1941, § 619f. Since that time it has not been amended or considered in any ease in our courts. On the same day it was approved, June 18, 1941, the governor also approved an act entitled “An Act concerning Electric Cooperative, Non-Profit, Membership Corporations,” enacted at the same session of the General Assembly. Public Acts 1941, c. 287; Sup. 1941, §§ 583f-611f.

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Bluebook (online)
114 A.2d 535, 142 Conn. 359, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedar-island-improvement-assn-v-clinton-electric-light-power-co-conn-1955.