Department of Water & Power v. Vroman

22 P.2d 698, 218 Cal. 206, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 483
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1933
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14899.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 698 (Department of Water & Power v. Vroman) 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
Department of Water & Power v. Vroman, 22 P.2d 698, 218 Cal. 206, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 483 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent as secretary of the board of water and power commissioners of the city of Los Angeles to sign a proposed contract between the Department of Water and Power of said City and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The matter is submitted on a general demurrer to the petition.

From the petition the following facts appear :

The Department of Water and Power is an established charter department of the city of Los Angeles (Stats. 1925, p. 1094), and has charge, superintendence and control of works for providing and supplying said city and its inhabitants with electric energy for light, heat, power and other purposes. This department is the successor of the board of public service commissioners of said city (Stats. 1925, p. 1099), which in turn was the successor of the board of water commissioners created by charter amendment in 1903 (Stats. 1903, p. 555). The department is under the management and control of the board of water and power commissioners, of which the respondent is the secretary. The said works consist of hydroelectric generating plants, transmission *209 lines and other facilities located partly within and partly without the city.

Prior to May 16, 1922, the distributing lines of said system were of limited extent and supplied approximately 20,000 consumers, or about one-tenth of all the consumers then served with electricity within said city. On May 16, 1922, the department came into possession, by purchase, of the distributing system and business within the. city of the Southern California Edison Company, and has since operated the combined systems, serving thereby at this time approximately 269,000 consumers, or about two-thirds of all of the consumers of electricity within the city.

Pursuant to an act of Congress known as the “Boulder Canyon Project Act”, approved December 21, 1928, and under certain contracts entered into by the Secretary of the Interior thereunder, the United States is engaged in the construction of a dam on the Colorado River in the states of Arizona and Nevada for the purpose of erecting a reservoir having a capacity of about 29,500,000 acre-feet of water for the storage of the waters of said river, and in connection therewith it is intended to construct certain outlet works, pressure tunnels, penstocks, and power-plant buildings, and to install certain power-plant machinery. The power plants and machinery thus to be installed have been leased to certain lessees. Pursuant thereto the petitioner herein will operate a large portion of said electrical machinery. When said dam and electrical works have been completed, 4,240,-000,000 kilowatt hours per year of firm electric energy will be available therefrom.

' Pursuant to said act of Congress and said contracts the Secretary of the Interior has allocated to the states of Arizona and Nevada and to certain municipalities, a public district, and certain private corporations in California, said quantity of firm electric energy to be generated. Under said contracts the petitioner has the privilege of using the falling water from- said dam to operate the portion of said electric generating works which are to be operated by it for the purpose of supplying the city and its inhabitants with electric energy, and the petitioner is obligated to pay large sums of money for the privilege of taking the energy so generated. It is intended that the generating works to be constructed by the United States will be ready to deliver electric energy *210 to the petitioner on or about September 1, 1935, and during the first year thereafter the petitioner will be obligated to take an approximate maximum of 767,354,000 kilowatt hours of said electric energy so generated, and this maximum possible obligation will increase from year to year until in the fifth year the maximum possible obligation will require the taking of 1,482,307,000 kilowatt hours at the generating plants.

Included in the municipalities to which electric energy has been allocated under the contracts with the Secretary of the Interior are the cities of Pasadena, Glendale and Burbank in Los Angeles County and those cities will be served by means of the transmission lines which the petitioner is required by contract to construct in order to transmit electric energy from the power plants at the dam to the city of Los Angeles, and it is necessary that the construction of said transmission lines and receiving lines and switching facilities be commenced at the earliest possible moment in order that the same may be in readiness to take said electric energy as soon as the same is available at the generating plants.

For the purpose of supplying the funds for the construction of said transmission lines and facilities in connection therewith the petitioner has heretofore made application to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (hereinafter called the corporation), a public corporation organized and existing under the laws of the United States, and being an agency of the federal government for financial aid, among other things, in constructing certain electrical works. On February 1, 1933, the board of directors of the corporation adopted certain resolutions agreeing to advance to the petitioner the sum of $22,800,000 as a loan to be used in paying the cost of said transmission lines and facilities. Thereafter on April 22, 1933, the executive committee of the corporation, by resolution, authorized the execution of a contract providing for said loan on certain terms and conditions, and on that day said contract was executed by the treasurer of the corporation on its behalf.

On April 25, 1933, the board of water and power commissioners (hereinafter called the board), adopted certain resolutions declaring the necessity for the immediate construction of said transmission lines and facilities; that the revenues from the electrical system now operated by the *211 petitioner and from the works to be constructed will be sufficient to pay the expenses of the contemplated work and to pay the principal and interest on all of the outstanding general bonds of the city heretofore issued for the construction and acquisition of electrical works by the city and to pay the principal and interest on the proposed loan from the corporation; that said loan be authorized; that notes of the Department of Water and Power be executed to evidence said loan in installments as made; that a reserve fund be established to insure the application of the proceeds of said loan to the purposes for which they are to be made; that the city council be requested to approve by ordinance that portion of the contract which provides for the fixing of rates and charges for electric service to consumers sufficient to pay the principal and interest of said loan and other obligations of or on behalf of the board, payable out of the power revenue fund; that the city council be requested to express by ordinance its intention with respect to the issuance, within the period during which any portion of said loan remains unpaid, of bonds or other evidence of indebtedness payable out of the power revenue fund, and that a reserve fund be established to insure the payment when due and payable of the principal and interest on said loan.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 698, 218 Cal. 206, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-water-power-v-vroman-cal-1933.