Citizens Utilities Co. v. United States

149 F. Supp. 158, 137 Ct. Cl. 547
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 6, 1957
DocketNo. 364-55; No. 381-55
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 F. Supp. 158 (Citizens Utilities Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Utilities Co. v. United States, 149 F. Supp. 158, 137 Ct. Cl. 547 (cc 1957).

Opinion

Madden, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs sue the United States for damages because the United States refused to renew their contracts for electrical energy produced at the Iioover Dam on the Colorado River. The two suits have been consolidated since they involve the same issues. The four “third parties” were brought into the case on notices, requested by the United States and issued by the court pursuant to its Rule 19. The facts in the cases appear from undisputed documents, and the cases are suitable for decision on motion for summary judgment.

The Boulder Canyon Project Act, 45 Stat. 1057, enacted in 1928, authorized the construction and operation of Boulder Canyon Dam and related facilities. But the Act required that, before any appropriations were made or any construction was commenced, the Secretary of the Interior should obtain contracts which would bring the United States enough revenue to repay it, with interest, within 50 years, the money proposed to be advanced by the United States for the construction of the dam, together with all expenses of operation and maintenance. The Secretary on April 26,1930, entered into a contract with the City of Los Angeles and Southern California Edison Company, Ltd., hereinafter called, respectively, City and Edison, which are two of the third parties in this suit. Under this contract City and Edison were made, severally, lessees of parts of the proposed dam and the power plant machinery, their two parts constituting the whole, and they were obligated to generate, at cost, electrical energy for themselves and for others with whom contracts would be made. City and Edison also agreed to be responsible for paying for 64 percent of the energy produced at the dam, subject, however, to the rights of the States of Arizona and Nevada to take large amounts of this [551]*55164 percent allotment when and if they so desired, and subject to the rights of several municipalities in Southern California to take 6 percent of this allotment if they made contracts to do so within a specified time. The allotments of City and Edison, amounting in all to 64 percent, were several, but the detailed percentages of their obligations are not relevant here. But they were obliged, between them, to take and/or pay for all of the 64 percent if no other entity exercised its option to take a part of it.

The Secretary of the Interior reported to Congress that the City-Edison contract was sufficient by itself to provide revenues to pay for the project.

On April 26, 1930, the date of the City-Edison contract, the Secretary also made a contract with the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, herein called Water District. It is one of the third parties in these suits. Water District was obligated, by its contract, to take and/or pay for 36 percent of the energy generated at the dam. Water District wanted the energy to pump Colorado River water into the aqueduct which it proposed to build from the dam to the City of Los Angeles. City and Edison wanted to be certain that Water District did not use any of the energy which it bought to compete with them in the electrical utility business in their areas. The Secretary therefore inserted in Water District’s contract a provision that it could use the energy only for pumping water into its proposed aqueduct. That restriction created the possibility that Water District might have to pay for a lot of energy that it could not use. Water District’s contract provided, in that regard, that the Secretary might dispose of Water District’s unused energy by first offering it to City and Edison and, if they did not buy it, selling it to others.

The municipalities in California which had options to take, in all, 6 percent of City’s allotment exercised their options within the time specified, and the Secretary executed contracts with them in 1931. In 1936, before the dam was completed, the State of Nevada chose to take a part of the 18 percent on which it had an option, and the Secretary made a contract with it.

[552]*552Water District’s obligation to begin to take and/or pay for its 36 percent was to become effective when two billion kilowatt hours of energy per annum became available. When that time approached in 1937, Water District advised the Secretary that there would be surplus energy available for resale and that that condition would exist until the end of 1954. The Secretary advised City and Edison that the surplus energy was available, but they did not exercise their options to take it. The plaintiffs negotiated with the Secretary and with Water District, which would be the beneficiary of the resale contracts if made. Ten-year contracts were at first considered, but the plaintiff Citizens thought this was too short a period for it to recover the investment which it would have to make in building a transmission line from the dam to Kingman, Arizona, in order to use the power from the dam. It was then decided that the contracts should run to December 31, 1954, and they were so written. The contracts bound the plaintiffs to take and pay for only a small proportion of the energy which they had the right to take and pay for at their option.

The parties proceeded according to the contracts, and the plaintiffs received the part that they were entitled to, and chose to take, of Water District’s surplus. On May 31,1945, the Secretary made a contract with City and Edison, among others, which, the defendant says, conveyed to those contractors all of Water District’s unused energy, including that which the plaintiffs were getting under their contracts, but, as to that latter amount, the sale not becoming effective until the end of the plaintiffs’ contracts on December 31, 1954.

The plaintiffs, when the termination dates of their contracts approached, applied to the Secretary for renewals of their contracts. These applications were rejected, and the plaintiffs have received no electrical energy under their contracts since shortly after the date of expiration of their contracts. They claim to have been heavily damaged by the Secretary’s refusal to renew their contracts, and sue here for those damages. They base their claim upon section 5 (b) of the Boulder Canyon Project Act which says:

[553]*553The holder of any contract for electrical energy not in default thereunder shall be entitled to a renewal thereof upon such terms and conditions as may be authorized or required under the then existing laws and regulations, unless the property of such holder dependent for its usefulness on a continuation of the contract be purchased or acquired and such holder be compensated for damages to its property, used and useful in the transmission and distribution of such electrical energy and not taken, resulting from the termination of the supply.

The plaintiffs say, correctly, that they were the holders of contracts for electrical energy, and were not in default under their contracts. Therefore, they say, the statute applied to them. The Government says that the plaintiffs read the statute too literally, and thereby miss its meaning. The Government says that the statute intended to grant the renewal privilege only to those who, in effect, underwrote the project, by binding themselves to take and/or pay for electricity from the project at a time when such promises were a condition precedent to the appropriation of money for and the building of the project.

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Related

United States v. Citizens Utilities Co.
355 U.S. 892 (Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 F. Supp. 158, 137 Ct. Cl. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-utilities-co-v-united-states-cc-1957.