City of Oakland (A Mun. Corporation) v. Great Western Power Co. (A Corporation)

200 P. 395, 186 Cal. 570
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9274. S. F. No. 9275.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 200 P. 395 (City of Oakland (A Mun. Corporation) v. Great Western Power Co. (A Corporation)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Oakland (A Mun. Corporation) v. Great Western Power Co. (A Corporation), 200 P. 395, 186 Cal. 570 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

We adopt as correct the statement of facts and of the issues prepared by Mr. Justice Richards in the opinion of the district court of appeal, first .district, first division, as follows:

“This action was instituted by the city of Oakland to recover from the Great Western Power Company, a public service corporation, certain moneys alleged to be due the plaintiff under and by virtue of a certain franchise awarded by it to the defendant in the year 1913, after due proceedings for its advertisement and sale. Under the terms of said franchise the defendant was permitted to occupy and use the streets of said municipality for the transmission and distribution of electricity for furnishing light, heat, and power, and for any and all other uses to which electricity may or can be put; and said franchise provided that for the exercise of the rights and privileges granted thereunder, the grantee thereof was to pay to the grantor certain graduated percentages of its gross annual receipts resulting from the sale of electricity under said franchise and during the life thereof within the limits of the municipality.
“Upon the trial of the action, certain stipulations were entered into 'between the parties as to the specific quantities of electric energy involved during the period covered by the plaintiff’s claim for light and heat and power respectively; and also as to the gross annual receipts of the defendant from the sale of these respective forms of electric energy, which stipulations remove these matters from controversy. The issues in dispute between the parties were thus narrowed to the question as to how much of the entire gross annual receipts of the defendant from its sales of electric energy in *573 these several forms within said municipality was received by it for electricity distributed by it under said franchise, and upon which it was bound to pay the percentages to recover which this action was brought.
“The claim of the defendant with respect to this question was, at the trial, and is here, that a large portion of its gross annual receipts were derived by it under and by virtue of its possession of certain earlier franchises for the distribution of electricity within said city, which did not provide for the payment of the percentage which the plaintiff here sought to recover; and the defendant made and makes the further claim that as to a certain quantum of electricity sold by it to a particular customer it was not sold or delivered within said city, and hence, upon that particular transaction, no percentages were due.
“These claims on the part of said defendant were based upon the following facts: In the year 1908, the defendant having been organized as a corporation for the purpose of the distribution of electric energy . . . [installed] a distributing system for the purpose of furnishing electric light to the said city and its inhabitants by virtue of its right to do so under the provisions of section 19 of article XI of the state constitution; and, having installed such system, proceeded to furnish said city and its people electricity for lighting purposes under its said constitutional franchise; in the year 1909 the said defendant applied to said municipality for a further franchise for the supply and sale of electric energy in the forms of heat and power within its limits. This application was made under the so-called Broughton Act (Stats. 1905, p. 777), which expressly provided for the granting by municipalities of franchises for the distribution of electric energy for heat and power; and the same was granted by said city. The franchise thereupon issued provided, in accordance with the terms of said act as it read at the time of said grant, that work under the franchise must be completed within three years. . . . The term of this franchise was fifty years, and it provided for the payment by its grantee of two per cent of the gross annual receipts derived under its exercise, commencing five years after the date of the franchise and continuing at said rate thereafter during its life. The defendant began operations under this franchise, using in the main the same distributing system *574 employed by it under its constitutional franchise for furnishing light within said city. In the year 1911 section 19 of article XI of the state constitution was so amended as to eliminate the so-called constitutional franchise provision thereof, and to commit to municipalities the power to establish and operate their own public works for supplying light, water, power, heat, etc., to their inhabitants, or of granting franchises to private persons or corporations so to do under such conditions as might be prescribed in their organic law. Following this amendment to the constitution the serious question arose as to whether the constitutional franchise or privilege, which was in the course of exercise by many public service corporations in most of the municipalities of this state, had not been thereby terminated, at least in so far as any future extension of their distributing systems established and in use thereunder was concerned. This controversy came before the supreme court of this state in the Matter of Russell, on Habeas Corpus, 163 Cal. 668, [Ann. Cas. 1914A, 152, 126 Pac. 875], wherein it was decided that the constitutional privilege to occupy the streets of municipalities, exercised under the provisions of the original section of the constitution, could not be held to cover or permit extensions of a distributing system in operation thereunder after said amendment, and to streets not occupied and used for such purposes prior to the taking effect of such amendment. The decision of our supreme court to this effect was handed down in September, 1912. The matter was thereupon taken before the supreme court of the United States upon a writ of error for final determination, and was determined by it in the case entitled Russell v. Sebastian, 233 U. S. 195, [Ann. Cas. 1914C, 1282, L. R. A. 1918E, 882, 58 L. Ed. 712, 34 Sup. Ct. Rep. 517, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes], decided April 6, 1914, in which decision the latter court disapproved the conclusion of the supreme court of this state, and in so doing decided that the amendment to the constitution of California above referred to, and the ordinance of the city of Los Angeles passed subsequent thereto, in nowise impaired constitutional franchises in course of exercise prior to such amendment, and under which the holders thereof were entitled to hold, maintain, and extend their distributing system established and in operation prior to such amendment.
*575 “The trial court in the instant case took cognizance of the matters involved, in these two decisions, and made an express finding to the effect that during the pendency of the Matter of Russell in the supreme court of this state and in the supreme court of the United States during the years 1912, 1913, and 1914, the defendant herein took an active part in the presentation of said matter on behalf of said Eussell and with a view to having his contentions sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
200 P. 395, 186 Cal. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-oakland-a-mun-corporation-v-great-western-power-co-a-cal-1921.