Central Maine Power Co. v. Waterville Urban Renewal Authority

281 A.2d 233, 3 ERC 1107, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20594, 3 ERC (BNA) 1107, 1971 Me. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 9, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 281 A.2d 233 (Central Maine Power Co. v. Waterville Urban Renewal Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Maine Power Co. v. Waterville Urban Renewal Authority, 281 A.2d 233, 3 ERC 1107, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20594, 3 ERC (BNA) 1107, 1971 Me. LEXIS 247 (Me. 1971).

Opinion

DUFRESNE, Chief Justice.

The instant case is before us on report. This Court is asked to render such decision as the rights of the parties require based upon the complaint, answer, an agreed statement of facts and on so much of the evidence presented to the Court below, including testimony and exhibits, as is legally admissible. 4 M.R.S.A. § 57, M.R.C.P., Rule 72(a), (b).

The defendant, Waterville Urban Renewal Authority, hereinafter termed the Authority, under the provisions of 30 M. R.S.A. §§ 4801 et seq., recommended for approval to the municipal officers of the City of Waterville the Urban Renewal Plan for the Charles Street Urban Renewal Project. By resolution duly enacted the reference plan was approved by the municipal authorities on February 5, 1963. In turn, the Authority duly and lawfully adopted it by formal resolution of February 26, 1963. In accordance with the terms of the plan and project, the City of Waterville discontinued certain public streets and ways in the urban renewal project area and established a new public street or way therein known as Appleton Street Extension. Parking areas and access ways were also established. All these public streets, ways, parking areas and access ways have or will eventually become the property of the City of Waterville for such purposes. On September 20, 1966 the Authority, pursuant to the approved plan, requested the plaintiff, Central Maine Power Company, hereinafter termed Central Maine Power or the utility, to remove all overhead poles and wires in the urban renewal area (excepting certain designated ones not here pertinent), “necessary replacements for such removals to be installed underground.” To implement its request, the Authority entered into a contract with Central Maine Power whereby the latter agreed to make all proper underground installations for the necessary transmission of electric energy to comply with the projected underground distribution system to and across the urban renewal area and the Authority promised to pay to the company the excess cost which the installation of the underground system would entail over and above the cost of supplying the same service with aboveground poles and wires. The Authority’s obligation was expressly conditioned, as follows: “provided that under the constitution, common law and statutes of the State of Maine the Company could not be legally compelled to install such cables and wires underground at its own expense.” It is stipulated that the additional cost of the underground installations is in the amount of $35,973.97.

The question at issue is: Can Central Maine Power Company be legally required to bear the additional cost incurred by virtue of such underground installations in excess of the cost of an overhead electric system? We answer in the affirmative.

In an analogous situation, our Court has ruled that public service corporations have no right to reimbursement for relocation of their facilities in public ways from a like public authority without express legislative sanction. In The First National Bank of Boston v. Maine Turnpike Authority, to be referred to hereinafter as Maine Turnpike Authority, 1957, 153 Me. 131, at pages 159, 160, 161, 136 A.2d 699, at pages 715, 716, this Court used the following pertinent language:

“The Authority takes its powers immediately from the legislature and the enabling act delegates police power of considered precedence as to utility facilities located in public streets or ways in its route.
Because of the state of the law authoritatively expressed, without an af *236 firmative grant from the legislature, the defendant utilities when submitting to the police power had no right to reimbursement for relocation of their facilities installed in the public ways or for abandonment of them. Conversely the Authority had no right to reimburse the utilities without such legislative sanction.
******
The enabling act does not in the very words state that the Authority may or must pay the relocation costs in dispute here. Nor does the act imply that those costs may or must be so paid. The description and enumeration of costs and properties fall short of containment of payments for expense arising from damages without the invasion of legal right. The rights of utilities to enjoy installations in public streets or ways are positive and very respectable in the status of the law but they are subordinate to public travel and to the valid exercise of the police power. They have, as we have seen, supra, their delimita-tions. The terms, ‘real property’ ‘interest or interests therein,’ ‘land,’ ‘rights,’ ‘easements’ and ‘franchises’ as used in the enabling act prior to its last amendment [not pertinent here] are not sufficiently apt to support the claim of the defendant utilities.” [Emphasis added.]

It is undisputed that, prior to the approval and adoption of the Urban Renewal Plan by the municipal government of Waterville and the Authority in February, 1963, Central Maine Power had been permitted to install and maintain aboveground in the public streets of the urban renewal area its facilities for the transmission of light and power by electricity. Such installations had statutory validation, 35 M. R.S.A. § 2348, and we need not consider whether they otherwise derived legal legitimacy from charter power or other specific legislative authorization. In 1963, permits to place wires and cables and all conduits and other structures for conducting and maintaining such wires and cables “under the surface of those streets and highways in which such companies are empowered to obtain locations for their * * * appurtenances, poles and wires, * * * subject to such rules and regulations as to location and construction as such municipal officers may designate in their permit,” were available under 35 M.R.S.A. § 2347. Such permits are subject to the condition that “[e]very such corporation shall so construct and maintain its poles, lines, fixtures and appliances in, along, over, under and across the roads and streets in which it may obtain locations * * * and along its route or routes, as not to incommode the use of such roads and streets for public travel * * 35 M.R.S.A. § 2355.

In Maine Turnpike Authority, it was further stated (153 Me. 131 at page 151, 136 A.2d at page 711):

“Charters, franchises, statutory grants and permits affording the use of public ways to utility locations are subservient, expressly or by implication, in the exercise of governmental functions, to public travel and to the paramount police power and relocation of utility facilities •in public streets or ways are at utility expense, a common law liability unless abrogated by the clear import of the language used in a particular instance.”
******
(at page 152, 136 A.2d at page 711)
“Without express authority from the legislature the state or municipality cannot pay a utility its expense for relocating an installation in a public street or way.”
******

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The Cedars v. Maine DHHS
Maine Superior, 2016
Qwest Corp. v. City of Chandler
217 P.3d 424 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2009)
Kroeger v. Department of Environmental Protection
2005 ME 50 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2005)
Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Protection
2003 ME 62 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2003)
Guertin v. City of Eastport
Maine Superior, 2002
Help-U-Sell, Inc. v. Maine Real Estate Commission
611 A.2d 981 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1992)
City & County of Denver v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co.
754 P.2d 1172 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1988)
Tisei v. Town of Ogunquit
491 A.2d 564 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1985)
Albertson v. Town of Madison
489 A.2d 1104 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1985)
Carl L. Cutler Co. v. State Purchasing Agent
472 A.2d 913 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1984)
Seven Islands Land Co. v. Maine Land Use Regulation Commission
450 A.2d 475 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 A.2d 233, 3 ERC 1107, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20594, 3 ERC (BNA) 1107, 1971 Me. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-maine-power-co-v-waterville-urban-renewal-authority-me-1971.