Crouch v. City of McKinney

104 S.W. 518, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 54, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 104 S.W. 518 (Crouch v. City of McKinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crouch v. City of McKinney, 104 S.W. 518, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 54, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 438 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

*55 RAIKEY, Chief Justice.

—This suit was instituted hy J. P. Crouch and J. P. Burrus to enjoin the City of McKinney and its officers from furnishing electric lights to private citizens to he used in their private and business houses. It was alleged that the furnishing of said light to individuals would decrease the efficiency and effectiveness of the street lights already established and prevent the establishment of other street lights needed by the city; also that it was in contravention of the Constitution of the State and the' charter under which said city is operating; also that it was diverting the revenues of the water plant to the operation of the electric plant, thereby using money procured by taxation for a purpose not authorized, when said revenues should be applied to the betterment of said water system; also that the city is furnishing said lights to individuals at less than the cost of production, and to maintain the said incandescent system will necessitate large expenditure of money that can be derived only from taxation, which will not be used for public purpose, but for private gain alone.

A temporary injunction was granted, and the defendants answered and filed a motion to dissolve. The McKinney Electric Light & Motor Power Company filed a plea of intervention, to which defendants filed an answer. The motion to dissolve was presented to the judge in vacation, and the same was sustained, and plaintiff and interveners excepted. Thereafter motion was made to the court to reinstate, and plaintiff and interveners by leave of court filed their first supplemental petition. The exceptions of plaintiff and interveners were overruled and they duly excepted, and the cause was continued without prejudice. At the September term following, the motion to reinstate was overruled, to which exceptions were duly taken. The case was tried before a jury and verdict and judgment were rendered for defendants, and plaintiffs and interveners appeal.

The first and second assignments of error complain of the actior of the court in overruling the motion to reinstate the injunction On the hearing of the motion to reinstate no statement of the evidence is embodied, if any was adduced, or incorporated in the record, and as the case was tried on its merits we will only consider the case from the evidence and proceedings on the trial in determining whether there was error committed.

The city of McKinney is operated under the general laws of the State incorporating cities and towns. Article 431, Eev. Stats., reads: “To provide for lighting the streets and erecting lamp posts therein, and regulating the lighting thereof, and from time to time create, alter or extend lamp districts, to exclusively regulate, direct and control the laying and repairing of the gas pipes and gas fixtures in the streets, alleys, sidewalks and elsewhere.”

The city established an electric light plant in connection with its water plant and installed thirty-one arc lights in different parts of the city. It granted to certain corporations a franchise to install an electric light plant to furnish the citizens lights for their private and business houses. This franchise is now held by intervener, The McKinney Electric Light & Motor Power Company.

It is conceded by appellants that the city had the power to install *56 the electric light plant for the purpose of lighting the streets, but that its power ceased there, and that it has not the power to furnish electric power to individuals for lighting private and business houses, until all portions of the city are furnished street lights. There are some portions of the city that are not supplied with street lights, but this condition exists for the want of funds to install them. The people of the city voted the issuance of bonds for installing the electric light plant. The proceeds of the sale of said bonds were exhausted in installing said plant and the thirty-one arc' street lights and no funds remain for the extension of the street lights. The capacity of the electric plant is much greater than necessary for the lighting of the streets and the excess or surplus is used by the city in supplying. lights to individuals for their private use. When the city has a surplus of power after discharging its duty to the public, there seems to be no question of its authority to sell the excess to private citizens. Nalle v. City of Austin, 21 S. W. Rep., 380; City of St. Louis v. The Maggie P., 35 Fed. Rep., 204; Joyce on Electric Law, sec. 237; Pikes Peak Power Co. v. City of Colorado Springs, 105 Fed. Rep., 1.

But it is contended that as long as portions of the city remained unlighted there could be no excess of electricity that could be disposed of by the city. This contention we do not think tenable. The government of the city has been intrusted to a mayor and board of aldermen, and so long as the affairs of the city are conducted in a reasonably judicious manner their acts will not be interfered with. Mo fraud is alleged on the part of the council in conducting the city government, and “unless the council is transcending its powers, or some clear right has been withheld or wrong perpetrated or threatened,” the parties are not entitled to invoke the power of the court. Dillon Mun. Cor., vol. 1, sec. 95 (4th ed.). All the proceeds derived from the sale of the electric light bonds had been consumed in the installation of the plant and street lights. The council had used their discretion in placing the lights for the streets and it was not practicable to extend them to other parts of the city. Under these conditions, rather than to have let the surplus power of the plant remain idle, it was better to sell such surplus of the electricity that was produced, for private use.

The appellant complains of the 3d paragraph of the court’s charge which reads as follows: “3d, If therefore you believe from the evidence that the said electric light plant owned and operated by the city, has no more power than is necessary to furnish a sufficient number of arc lights’ for the reasonable lighting of the city’s streets, alleys, and other highways, looking to the necessities and conveniences of the inhabitants of said city, and looking also to the financial ability of said city to furnish said lights, and if you further believe from the evidence that the maintaining of the present system of commercial lights materially impairs the usefulness of said plant for so lighting said streets and alleys of said city, you will find for plaintiffs, and also for the intervener, The McKinney Electric Light & Motor Power Company, but in any event, you will find against the intervener, J. W. Webb,”

*57 The propositions submitted under this assignment are in effect, that it placed the burden on plaintiffs to show that the plant had no more power than was necessary to furnish a sufficient number of arc lights for the reasonable lighting of the streets, and also that the maintenance of the present system of commercial lights materially impairs the usefulness of said plant for lighting the streets, whereas if either proposition was established plaintiffs would be entitled to recover. That it also placed the burden on appellants of showing that the city had the financial ability to furnish lights for the streets. We do not think the charge was more onerous than the law required.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W. 518, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 54, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crouch-v-city-of-mckinney-texapp-1907.