City of Gainesville v. Gainesville Gas & Electric Power Co.

62 So. 919, 65 Fla. 404
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 So. 919 (City of Gainesville v. Gainesville Gas & Electric Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Gainesville v. Gainesville Gas & Electric Power Co., 62 So. 919, 65 Fla. 404 (Fla. 1913).

Opinion

Whitfield, J.

The city of Gainesville obtained an injunction restraining the Gas and Electric Company “from closing down or discontinuing its public service business” of furnishing electricity to the city and its inhabitants. A demurrer to the bill of complaint was interposed. This appeal is from an order “that the injunction be and the same is dissolved, with the right of the complainant to amend the bill in ten days from this date or the bill may be dismissed without prejudice to such other action as the complainant may be advised is proper.” The question to be determined is whether there was error in' dissolving the injunction.

The bill of complaint alleges in effect that the municipality has all the usual powers of cities in this State, and is authorized “to provide for the lighting of the streets of said city and to provide for the lighting of the said city by gas and other illuminating material and to do and perform all such other acts as shall seem necessary and best adapted to the improvement and general interest of said city, or as shall be necessary for the health, convenience and safety of its citizens;” that a charter was granted by the State to the defendant as a corporation, authorizing the corporation to exist for 99 years and, among other things, to engage in the business of manufacturing, generating, and selling electric current for lighting and [407]*407power purposes, such business to be engaged in the City of Gainesville; that thereafter the company erected “and constructed within the corporate limits of said City of Gainesville an electric lighting and power plant and by and with the permission of said city aforesaid, erected and constructed its poles and wire for the distribution of electric current over and along a large number of the streets of said city and from that date until the present time has been continuously engaged in the manufacture and sale of electricity for illuminating and power purposes ; that during all that time and to this date the said Gainesville Gas and Electric Power Company have been continuously furnishing electricity to said city for the lighting of the streets, public places and public buildings of said city and are now furnishing electricity therefor, and that during all of said time it has furnished electricity to the inhabitants of said city who desired to procure the same and who paid therefor and that complied with the rules and regulations of such company, and that continuously from the time when said Gainesville Gas and Electric Power Company began the manufacture, generation and sale of such electricity it has sought to increase the number of consumers of its products among the inhabitants of said city and to induce them to abandon other systems and methods of illumination and to become consumers of its electric products, and that at the present time there are about six hundred and sixty (660) dwellings, stores and other buildings within said city which are supplied by it with electricity as the only means of illumination ; that in addition thereto, said Gainesville. Gas and Electric Power Company have been furnishing and selling electric motors for the furnishing of power for the operation of manufacturing plants and ginneries and has equipped and supplied its motors to cotton gins in [408]*408said town which, it is estimated will gin during the coming season in the aggregate about 1,000 bales of cotton.

That there is also located in said City the University of the State of Florida, a State Institution of learning, which now consists of two dormitories with the aggregate of one hundred and fifty-six (156) bedrooms, four academic buildings completed and in use, two others that will shortly be completed and ready for use, at which University there will be in the coming scholastic year, beginning with the month of September, an attendance of from three hundred and fifty to four hundred students from about forty-four counties of this State; that in some of the academic buildings electricity is a necessity for the operation of machinery and appliances used in the course of study pursued therein, and in all thereof it is the sole and only means of illumination; that the said Gainesville Gas and Electric Power Company has been supplying said University of Florida with electricity for illumination and power purposes since the location and construction thereof within said city and that all the buildings thereon have been constructed soley for the use of electricity for the illumination thereof, and that the said Gainesville Gas and Electric Power Company has been receiving from said University between two hundred and two hundred and fifty dollars per month in payment for the electric current it has furnished therefor;” that said company is the only “person, firm or corporation in the said City of Gainesville engaged in the manufacture, generation and sale of electricity, that it has acquired and holds a valuable easement from said city in the permission granted it to use and in the use of the streets of said city wherein it has erected its poles and placed its wires for the purpose of conveying and by means of which it conveys its electric current and that [409]*409as a corporation authorized by the State of Florida to engage in the business of supplying a public utility it is the duty of said Gainesville Gas and Electric Power Company to continue to supply electric current as aforesaid to said city and those of its inhabitants who are consumers thereof, and that it is without power or authority to cease and discontinue such service to the said city, or such of its inhabitants who are consumers thereof, and that said City of Gainesville Avill be Avithout ability to light the streets, or to properly protect the lives and property of its inhabitants, that such of its inhabitants Avho are consumers of electric current will be without adequate means for the illumination of their homes and places of business, that the producers of cotton who rely upon the ginning thereof by the ginneries located in said city will be obliged to haul their products for long distances to reach other ginneries and that the operation of the University of the State, the giving of its course of study and the opportunity properly to pursue the same will be greatly impaired and retarded in the event the said Gainesville Gas and Electric Power Company shall cease the manufacture and sale of electricity as it has announced its intention so to do, and that neither the said City of Gainesville, nor the other consumers of electricity among its inhabitants as aforesaid, can be adequately compensated in damages in the event of the Avrongful discontinuance of the manufacture and sale of electricity by the said GainesAdlle Gas and Electric Power Company, and that your orator is without adequate remedy at law in the premises;” “that the company has published its intention to discontinue the public service it has undertaken to perform.”

The policy of the law is to require by mandatory process the performance by public utility corporations of [410]*410their duties to the public. State ex rel. Ellis v. Tampa Water Works Co., 57 Fla. 533, text 539, 48 South. Rep. 639.

A corporation engaged in furnished electricity to a municipality or its inhabitants and using public streets or exercising other franchises or privileges in doing so, is thereby performing services of a public nature, within the meaning of the constitution and laws of this State, and such a corporation is subject to lawful governmental regulations to enforce its duties to the public it undertakes to serve.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 919, 65 Fla. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-gainesville-v-gainesville-gas-electric-power-co-fla-1913.