Clarice-Washington Electric Membership Corp. v. Alabama Power Co.

133 So. 2d 488, 272 Ala. 598, 41 P.U.R.3d 227, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 21, 1961
Docket1 Div. 938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 133 So. 2d 488 (Clarice-Washington Electric Membership Corp. v. Alabama Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarice-Washington Electric Membership Corp. v. Alabama Power Co., 133 So. 2d 488, 272 Ala. 598, 41 P.U.R.3d 227, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 520 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

*600 STAKELY, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree sustaining the demurrer of the Alabama Power Company to the bill of complaint as amended filed by Clarke-Washington Electric Membership Corporation, a corporation, in the Circuit Court of Clarke County, in Equity. The complainant seeks to enjoin the respondent from duplicating certain electric distribution lines of the complainant. It seems from the record that the City of Thomasville intervened but did not demur to the bill of complaint, as amended.

The facts alleged in the bill are substantially as follows. The complainant is a corporation organized and incorporated under the Electric Membership Corporation Act of the State of Alabama (Chapter 2, Title 18, Code of 1940). Complainant was subsequently converted to a cooperative under the provisions of Chapter 3, Title 18, Code of 1940.

The respondent, Alabama Power Company, is a public utility corporation organized under the laws of the State of Alabama.

The complainant is engaged in the business of selling and distributing electrical energy to its members, customers, patrons in the counties of Clarke, Washington, Monroe, Baldwin and Wilcox. It has 2419 miles of distribution lines and approximately 8327 customers. Its distribution system cost in excess of four million dollars.

The distribution lines of the complainant in the aforesaid counties have been constructed, maintained and operated in territory which at no time has been served by the distribution lines of the Alabama Power Company, with the exception of certain *601 ■customers initially served by the Interstate Utilities Company, whose distribution lines in the Northwest portion of Washington County were sold to the complainant. None of the customers, patrons or members of the complainant prior to their connection ■to the distribution lines of the complainant were receiving central power service and electrical energy had not been made avail•able to said customers, patrons and members by the Alabama Power Company or any other utility.

The complainant, under the statutes authorizing its incorporation and under permits obtained from Clarke County and the State Highway Commission, had the right and privilege to erect its distribution lines upon the public highways, roads and other public ways of the county. Pursuant to this authorization the complainant, beginning in 1940 and prior to February 24, 1959, erect■ed distribution lines in an area south and west of the corporate limits of the City of 'Thomasville at a cost of $15,000 to deliver electrical energy to approximately 113 members in said area. This area is referred to in the bill of complaint as the “extended area.” The members and customers of the complainant within the extended area did not and could not receive electrical energy from any source until the same was provid■ed by the complainant. The extended area for many years has constituted and now con•stitutes an area whose electrical energy requirements have been served exclusively by the complainant and no portion of which has been served by the respondent.

In or about the years 1946-1947 the respondent agreed with the complainant that the territory lying south of the corporate limits of the City of Thomasville, along U. S. Highway 43, and the territory west of the corporate limits of the City of Thomas-ville lying along the old Grove Hill-Choctaw County (Choctaw Corner) public road should constitute territory, or service area, to be served exclusively by the complainant.

The electrical energy which complainant sells and delivers to its customers over its distribution system, including its distribution system within the extended area, is purchased wholesale from the respondent, under a contract dated May 20, 1953, which contains the following provision:

"Duplication:
“16. Neither party, unless ordered so to do by a properly constituted state regulatory authority, shall duplicate the other’s facilities, except in so far as such duplication shall be necessary in order to transmit electric energy between unconnected points on its lines. When such duplicating facilities are so constructed, they shall not be used by the party owning them to serve existing customers served by, or prospective customers immediately adjacent to, the existing facilities of the other party. Neither party, unless ordered so to do by a properly constituted state regulatory authority, shall distribute or furnish electrical energy to anyone who, at the time of the proposed service, is receiving electric service from the other party, or to anyone having an initial contracted electrical load of less than 67 kilowatts, whose premises are capable of being served by the facilities of the other without extension of its distribution system beyond a distance of two-tenths (0.2) of a mile. The provisions of this Section 16 shall not apply to service by either party to any customer who is located within the corporate limits of a municipality in which such party has an electric franchise.
“The Consumer shall not sell the energy purchased from the Company hereunder to any person, firm, corporation, association or to anyone for resale except with the written consent of the Company.”

On February 24, 1959, by an Act approved on the same date, Laws 1959, p. 99, the corporate limits of the City of Thomasville were extended to embrace the area described in the bill of complaint, as amended, and identified as the “extended area”, and *602 to embrace other areas which are not involved in this litigation.

Reference to Exhibit “A” discloses that the corporate limits of the City of Thomas-ville were extended in a long narrow strip (lying along the highway) for a distance of some three miles to the south, as well as being extended to the northwest of the city, and all of which is embraced in the extended area as defined in the bill, and which constitutes the area which is in dispute in this litigation.

The Alabama Power Company had the opportunity to construct its distribution lines into the area served by the complainant and to serve the inhabitants thereof prior to the construction of the distribution system of the complainant, but failed to do so. It does not now have a certificate for service within the extended area.

The complainant is performing a necessary and useful service in making available electrical energy to its members, patrons and customers who have been unable to obtain electrical energy elsewhere. The system has been operated in an efficient and workman-like manner.

On March 25, 1959, representatives of the Alabama Power Co. informed the complainant that the Alabama Power Co. wished to purchase the distribution system of the complainant within the extended area and that if the complainant did not sell said distribution system to the respondent, the respondent would duplicate the distribution system of the complainant within the extended area in order to furnish electrical energy to the present customers, patrons and members of the complainant. The complainant declined to sell its distribution system within the extended area to the Alabama Power Co.

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Bluebook (online)
133 So. 2d 488, 272 Ala. 598, 41 P.U.R.3d 227, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarice-washington-electric-membership-corp-v-alabama-power-co-ala-1961.