City of Tukwila v. City of Seattle

414 P.2d 597, 68 Wash. 2d 611, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 779
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1966
Docket38146
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 414 P.2d 597 (City of Tukwila v. City of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Tukwila v. City of Seattle, 414 P.2d 597, 68 Wash. 2d 611, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 779 (Wash. 1966).

Opinion

Hale, J.

Seattle and Tukwila, as old friends are wont to do, had a falling out. Tukwila enacted two ordinances reducing 85 to 90 per cent the franchised area served by Seattle City Light, thereby leaving Seattle City Light with 10 to 15 per cent of the area and Puget Sound Power & Light Company with 85 to 90 per cent. Seattle claims this to be a unilateral, unconstitutional impairment of its franchise and appeals the decision of the superior court upholding the ordinances. We would have an easier time of it were *612 the record not so replete with nostalgic but diverting references to the growth and development of Seattle’s hydroelectric system.

The legal conflict came about in this way. In 1916, the town of Tukwila granted to the Puget Sound Power & Light Company a 50-year franchise to use the streets and public areas of Tukwila for the transmission, distribution and sale of electricity within the town’s geographical limits. Forty-two years later, October 6, 1958, by ordinance No. 262, Tukwila awarded the city of Seattle a similar franchise, neither being exclusive of the other. Seattle formally accepted this franchise by ordinance and assumed the duties, responsibilities, privileges and rights of a public utility, undertaking to provide electrical service to all customers applying for it within the city limits of Tukwila. Under the franchise agreement, Seattle agreed to pay to Tukwila an annual franchise fee of $5,000, increasing gradually during the franchise term to $15,000 annually, and totaling $500,000 during the entire franchise period.

There were, of course, many reasons for Tukwila to grant Seattle the franchise. Among them was the fact that, in 1958, Tukwila.-had annexed an area peculiarly suitable for commercial and industrial use known as the Andover-South Center tracts'.- The town- council contemplated that two corporations, Andover Industrial Park, Inc., and South Center, Inc., would create an industrial and commercial district there. Seattle, during 1959 and 1960, to carry out its franchise and mindful of this impending industrial and commercial growth and probable population increase in Tuk-wila, purchased a substation site for $175,000, expended $200,000 for filling and grading, additional sums for a right of way to this site, and proceeded with the engineering work essential to the whole scheme.

Meanwhile, Puget Sound Power & Light Company, through its subsidiary corporation, Puget Western, Inc., bought the Andover Industrial Park, consisting of about 325 acres of industrial and commercial sites, with intent to supply electrical service to industrial plants which might locate there.

*613 For reasons not made entirely clear in the record, but ostensibly to assure greater safety to its residents, Tukwila enacted ordinances Nos. 353,and 364, the ordinances in issue, apparently designed to prevent duplication of service by Puget Sound Power & Light Company and Seattle City Light within the same areas. Under these ordinances, Seattle would have exclusive right to transmit and distribute electricity within one described zone and Puget Sound in the other with neither having the right to serve customers in the area allotted to the other. On a geographical basis, Seattle would serve 10 to 15 per cent of Tukwila’s area and Puget Sound 85 to 90 per cent.

Contending that the ordinances, 353 and 364, and the enforcement thereof constitute an unconstitutional and, therefore, void impairment of its franchise to distribute electricity throughout the entire city of Tukwila, the city of Seattle urges this court to declare them unconstitutional and void. Tukwila, however, contends that it possesses the police power to reduce the hazards of electrical distribution, including those arising from wind, snow and ice, by eliminating the duplication of electrical facilities between competing utilities. It claims that segregating the town into exclusive districts for electrical service lessens the danger from transmission and distribution of electricity, and thus falls within its police power to provide for the safety of its residents. It points also to the trial court’s finding No. 3, “That duplication of electrical facilities under the modem concept of economics is not in the best interests of the City of Tukwila and they will be better served by one utility in a given area rather than by two competing electrical utilities,” as an additional factor to be considered in determining the extent of the city’s police power.

An avowed intention by Seattle to supply energy to a customer triggered this case. In September, 1960, the N. C. Machinery Company acquired land within the limits of Tukwila in an area then having no electrical service but which fell within the district reserved exclusively for Puget Sound Power & Light Company under ordinances 353 and 364. N. C. Machinery Company began construction of an *614 industrial building, and, in June of 1964, applied to Seattle City Light for 5 years’ electrical service.

On the basis of estimated demands for energy predicted at 1,100,000 kilowatts annually, Seattle’s engineers computed that N. C. Machinery Company would pay $9,600 per year for electricity to Seattle as contrasted with $14,900 to Puget Sound Power & Light according to the publicly posted rate schedules. Anticipating, too, that the N. C. Machinery Company needed more energy than originally contemplated because of a later decision to air condition its building, the engineers calculated the new load at a total of 2,000,000 kilowatt hours annually, costing $14,000 from Seattle and about $20,000 from Puget Sound, based on the same rate schedules. On Seattle’s insistence of the right to furnish N. C. Machinery Company with electrical power, notwithstanding ordinances 353 and 364 which put the customer within Puget Sound Power & Light Company’s exclusive territory, Tukwila brought this action for an injunction. From a decree of injunction, Seattle appeals.

The evidence concerning the rates of both utilities is undisputed for they are published and available at all times for inspection. Unless the payment of taxes by a public utility to a municipal corporation is one of the factors warranting an exercise of the police power, we see no way in which the city of Tukwila can look to the economics of the matter in support of its exercise of the police power, and no authority has been shown in sustaining that proposition. Therefore, an assertion, valid or otherwise, that the private utility will pay more into Tukwila’s treasury than a publicly owned one cannot be a basis for the police power in prohibiting the latter. We must, thus, look solely to the safety features claimed as a basis for the ordinance.

We are of the opinion that the enactment and enforcement of Tukwila’s ordinances Nos. 353 and 364 limiting Seattle in the exercise of its electrical franchises to a part of the city’s area constituted an unwarranted and unconstitutional impairment of Seattle’s franchise and one not to be countenanced as an exercise of the police power to protect the citizenry from the dangers of electrical trans *615 mission and distribution.

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Bluebook (online)
414 P.2d 597, 68 Wash. 2d 611, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tukwila-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1966.