Central Power Co. v. Nebraska City

112 F.2d 471, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4940
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1940
DocketNo. 11601
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 F.2d 471 (Central Power Co. v. Nebraska City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Power Co. v. Nebraska City, 112 F.2d 471, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4940 (8th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

The Central Power Company, a Delaware corporation which owns and operates gas, water and electricity utilities in and about Nebraska City, Nebraska, and the Continental National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago and Harold R. Smith, who are citizens and residents of Illinois and the trustees for bondholders under a deed of trust of the Power Company’s property, appeal from a judgment dismissing their action and dissolving and refusing to make permanent a preliminary injunction entered against the City Commissioners of Nebraska City and the members of a duly appointed Court of Condemnation. Alleging'that the parties were of diverse citizenship and that the amount, in controversy exceeded $3,000 exclusive-of interest and costs, the Power Company and the trustees prayed that the defendant City Commission and Court- be-restrained from proceeding to condemn, and acquire under eminent domain certain properties of the Power Company in and about the City of Nebraska City. Plaintiffs stated that the condemnation was unauthorized and illegal and threatened them, with irreparable injury for which they had no adequate remedy at law. They prayed, for a preliminary injunction, which was. granted on the verified bill, the defendants, hiving failed to appear on the day set for-[473]*473hearing. Subsequently defendants appeared and plead to the merits, alleging also that petitioners’ remedy at law was adequate. The trial court decided the case upon the merits but without making any declaration as to whether a remedy existed or was adequate.1

The Central Power Company owns, subject to the mortgage interest of the trustees, utilities property which is centered in the City of Nebraska City, but extends 1 herefrom into adjacent rural districts and nearby incorporated cities and villages. The utilities properties, which are operated as a unit, furnish gas, water and electricity service to the inhabitants of the city and also to intcrurban customers, the greater number of whom receive the service within a radius of ten miles of the city. The Commissioners of Nebraska City, who constitute its governing body, determined in the course of their official [474]*474duties that the interests of the city and its inhabitants would be furthered if the city undertook to own and operate the utilities. The eminent domain powers conferred upon the City by statutes of the State of Nebraska were sufficiently broad to permit the acquisition through condemnation of the greater part of- the properties, and the Commissioners decided that the City should proceed to condemn all of the Company’s property which it could legally own and operate, excluding such property of the Company as was situated .within the boundaries of other incorporated cities and villages. For the purpose of ascertaining whether the judgment an'd desires of the qualified voters of the city coincided with their own, and also to obtain requisite authority to proceed,' the Commissioners passed an ordinance providing for an election and vote . on the question. The ordinance, No. 743, ordained as follows:

“Section 1. The Mayor and Council of the City ■ of Nebraska City, Nebraska, hereby find and determine: That Central Power Company, a corporation, owns-and operates a waterworks, waterworks system, gas plant, and electric light -and power plant, a distribution system and transmission lines which are public utilities and are located and operated partly within and partly without the corporate limits of the City of Nebraska City and serve the City and the inhabitants thereof and the main part of which works, plants and system are within said City; said corporation also owns' transmission lines and distribution lines and systems outside the corporate limits, but which are connected with its electric plant in said City, by which it furnishes electric current and power to consumers outside the City.

“Section 2. At the general primary election to be held on Tuesday, the 9th day of August, 1938, there shall be submitted to the qualified electors of the City of Nebraska City the following question:

“ ‘Shall the City of Nebraska City, in Otoe County, Nebraska, acquire and appropriate for public use by an exercise of the power of eminent domain the public utility properties of Central Power Company, a corporation, the main part of which is within said City, consisting of the waterworks, waterworks system and plant, gas plant, and distribution system and the transmission lines located and operated partly within and partly without the said City, and which serve said City and its inhabitants, including the following described real estate in said City: (herein a description of the property by lot and block); and including also all real, personal and mixed property of all kinds and description owned by said corporation which constitutes a part of or are appurtenant to or are used in connection with said public utility properties in serving said City and its inhabitants, whether such properties be located within or without the corporate limits of said City; and including also the electric transmission and distribution lines of said Central Power Company which lie outside the corporate limits of said City which receive current from the plant in said City and which ■ serve only private consumers outside of other incorporated cities or villages (but not including any transmission lines or distribution systems serving other incorporated cities or villages or the inhabitants thereof) ?’ ■

“Section 3. Notice of the submission of said question shall be given to the qualified electors of the City by publication in The Nebraska Daily News-Press, a legal newspaper published and of general circulation in said City, at least twenty days before said election. The published notice shall set out said proposition at length.

“Section 4. The Clerk shall cause ballots to be printed which shall contain said proposition at length, followed by the words, ‘Yes’ and ‘No’ each of which shall be preceded by a square and electors of the City voting in favor of the adoption of said proposition shall mark an ‘X’ in the square preceding the word ‘Yes’ an'd the electors voting against said proposition shall mark an ‘X’ in the square preceding the word ‘No.’ The Clerk shall cause said printed ballots to be delivered to the Election Boards in the several Precincts. The Clerk shall also procure and cause to be furnished to the Election Boards poll books and tally lists in which the names of the electors voting on said question shall be recorded and the votes shall be tallied when counted by the said Election Boards and such poll books and tally lists shall be returned to the City Clerk. The Clerk shall also make provision' whereby sick and absent voters may vote as provided by law. The Clerk shall retain custody of and preserve the poll books, tally lists and ballots until otherwise ordered by the Council.

[475]*475“Section 5. Electors shall vote in the Precincts in which they severally reside, and the polling places shall be those at which the primary election is held. The polls shall be kept open from eight o’clock A. M. until eight o’clock P. M. of said date. Said election shall be conducted and the vote taken and counted and the return thereof made by tlie Election Boards which conduct the primary elec-lion. The reí urns of tlie vote on said question shall be made to and filed with the City Clerk and the ballots cast on said question, after being counted by the Election Board, shall be returned to the City Clerk.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F.2d 471, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-power-co-v-nebraska-city-ca8-1940.