Graff v. Town of Seward

7 Alaska 341
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedOctober 3, 1925
DocketNo. S-191
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Alaska 341 (Graff v. Town of Seward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graff v. Town of Seward, 7 Alaska 341 (D. Alaska 1925).

Opinion

RITCHIE, District Judge.

It is conceded by counsel in this case that the main issue is the reasonableness or otherwise of the rates for electric lighting and power fixed by Ordinance No. 78 of the town of-Seward for the product of plaintiff’s electrical plant, which is the sole electrical plant in the town of Seward, furnishing light and power to the inhabitants and [342]*342to the town fot street lighting. Incidental questions wc?e argued to some extent in the trial, but they have no particular bearing upon the chief issue.

Prior to the adoption of Ordinance No. 78, plaintiff and his predecessor in business had furnished light and power almost exclusively on flat rates, and it is claimed by defendants, and testimony was given to show, that plaintiff has persistently refused, except in a few instances, to allow electric current to be measured by meters and paid for accordingly. Ordinance No. 78 specifically provided that plaintiff must furnish meters to customers whenever asked, arid that the rate .for lighting purposes should be 12% cents per kilowatt, and a less rate for power. An important difference between plaintiff and the town is over street lighting. All street lights had always been upon flat rates, and a part of the street lighting system was composed of what the electricians describe as a system of multiple lights, a system which is probably not well understood by anybody except electricians. Plaintiff claimed that he' could not install meters for the multiple street lights, except by changing the entire system at great expense.

Shortly before the date fixed for Ordinance No. '78 to become effective, to wit, September 2, 1924, plaintiff instituted a suit asking a permanent injunction to prevent the enforcement of Ordinance No. 78, alleging in his complaint that the rates fixed by said ordinance would be confiscatory of his property, and therefore an invasion of his constitutional rights. A temporary injunction was granted. About the same time the city city asked for a peremptory writ of mandamus from the court to compel acceptance by plaintiff of the ordinance rates and the supplying of electric current under the terms of the ordinance. This case "was afterwards consolidated with plaintiff’s case.

At a preliminary hearing in October, 1924, a stipulation was made between the parties, providing that until the final determination of the suit plaintiff should furnish electric current for lighting purposes at 15 cents a kilowatt, and 10 cents for power. It was also stipulated that it was desirable for those rates to-be tested for a few months for such light as the result might throw upon the reasonableness of the ordinance rates.

The cause came on for trial in the latter part of May, 1925, and continued, after an adjournment, late in June. It was agreed throughout the trial by court and counsel that the court [343]*343had no power to fix rates; thát it could only pass upon the reasonableness of the rates fixed by Ordinance No. 78. At the conclusion of the testimony and argument of counsel, the court announced its 'decision that plaintiff had failed to prove his case, that on the whole evidence it was not apparent that the rates would be confiscatory, but stated, that as that time was the season of the year when there is no darkness in Seward, and consumption of current for lighting is very small, it would probably be unfair to plaintiff, and cause him unnecessary loss, if he were compelled at that particular time to change his system of business and his rates to meet the requirements of the ordinance, and for that reason findings and judgment would not be signed until the last day of September, which would enable the new rates to go into effect on October 1st.

The evidence upon which the decision of the court is based is the following: Plaintiff claims an investment in his business of from $180,000 to $200,000, and asserted that he was entitled to a 10 per cent, return on that investment. Defendants answered, and it is plain, that a town with a population of 700 to 800 could not pay a profit of $20,000 a year for electric service. Three expert electricians testified in behalf of the defendants, one of them the manager of an electrical business in a neighboring town. All of these witnesses agreed that much of the expenditure made by the plaintiff upon his plant was wholly unnecessary to a proper conduct of the business; that some of his improvements were not a necessary part of the business of supplying electric current to the town of Seward.

With these conclusions I am obliged to agree. It is undisputed that plaintiff has an excellent plant and buildings, as he claims. His power house is a two-story cement building. The power plant is on the ground floor. The second floor is equipped ■ for living rooms for plaintiff and his family, and is occupied by them. These living rooms are clearly unnecessary for the conduct of plaintiff’s business, and are no part of the investment devoted to the public service. Plaintiff also has a ‘cement garage, which he explained was built to house a truck with which he intended to do hauling necessary in his business. But the garage is large enough to house several automobiles. A small frame building would have been sufficient to shelter the truck. A great deal of space in the garage is occupied by plaintiff’s Studebaker car, which is used by himself and family. Among [344]*344the items of expense for the last year is the sum of more than $1,000 for fuel which it was stated was coal used to heat the power plant building. It was testified by most of the electricians that it is unusual to have heat in power rooms in electrical plants. I am obliged to accept the view that it is unnecessary; that most of the consumption of fuel was for heating plaintiff's living rooms upstairs. So the item of fuel, or most of it, should be deducted from plaintiff’s statement of the cost of operating his business.

Plaintiff’s power for the generation of electricity by his hydroelectric system is water coming from a gulch between mountains on the upper side of town. At the head of this gulch, several miles above town, is a glacier and perpetual snow. In periods of very heavy rains, or extremely warm weather in summer, when ice and snow melt very rapidly, the stream running through the gulch overflows, and has several times carried out a part of plaintiff’s pipe line. This has caused him a great deal of expense, as well as temporarily cutting off the supply of electric current to the town. In the late winter months the supply of water gets so low that plaintiff is often unable to generate sufficient power for the needs of the town. If the town grows very much, this-water shortage in the late winter will make it impossible for plaintiff to supply the town adequately with current at that season. The supply of water in summer is ample for much more power than the town is likely to need for some years to come. Owing to the frequent difficulties with his water power, plaintiff two years ago went farther up the stream and installed a new intake, built of cement, at a cost of $22,000.

All the other electricians who testified in the case expressed the opinion that this cement intake was a bad investment. They were all of the opinion that his water power supply is uneconomic, and will always remain so, and that necessarily, with the growth of the town, his handicap in that respect will become constantly greater. They were of the opinion, and so am I, that he ought to seek another source of water power, one which at least is available, although it would undoubtedly cost a great deal of money to make use of it.

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Related

Smyth v. Ames; Smyth v. Smith; Smyth v. Higginson
169 U.S. 466 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Georgia Railway & Power Co. v. Railroad Commission
262 U.S. 625 (Supreme Court, 1923)
Smyth v. Ames
169 U.S. 466 (Supreme Court, 1898)

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7 Alaska 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graff-v-town-of-seward-akd-1925.