Holston River Electric Co. v. Hydro Electric Corp.

66 S.W.2d 217, 17 Tenn. App. 122, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 217 (Holston River Electric Co. v. Hydro Electric Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holston River Electric Co. v. Hydro Electric Corp., 66 S.W.2d 217, 17 Tenn. App. 122, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 50 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

CASSELL, Sp. J.

Complainant, Holston River Electric Company, filed a bill in the chancery coust of Hawkins county against Hydro Electric Corporation, Hawkins County Creamery, and F. F. and A. A. Hale, to enforce a decree entered by the Hydro Electric Corporation in cause No. 3107, which decree was rendered July 20, 1929, by the chancery court of Hawkins county. In this decree it was *123 adjudged that the Holston River Electric Company had the lawful right and authority to carry on its business in the town of Rogers-ville, Hawkins county, Tennessee, and defendant Hydro Electric Corporation had no right to carry on its business in said town or to secure and render service 1 ‘ to persons, individuals, companies or corporations, lying within or doing business within said town of Rogers-ville.” This decree was appealed to the Court of Appeals for the Eastern Division of Tennessee (12 Tenn. App., 556), and affirmed, and later on the decree of the Court of Appeals was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Tennessee.

It is,alleged in the bill filed herein that defendant, Hawkins County Creamery, which company has a plant located in the town of Rogers-ville, Tennessee, had entered into an agreement with the Hydro Electric Corporation to the effect that the Hydro Electric Corporation, from its transmission line without the corporation limits of Rogei’sville, would furnish electrical energy to the plant and property of the creamery company within said town. This energy was to be transmitted over a line of wires built or furnished by the creamery company from its plant in said town to a point outside of the city limits where the electrical energy was furnished by the defendant Hydro Electric Corporation, and transmitted over the wires of the creamery company to its own business in said town. It is alleged that both of said corporations are corporations chartered under the laws of the state of Tennessee for the purpose of transmitting and distributing electrical energy. It is further alleged that the defendants Hale are large stockholders of the creamery company and of the Hydro Electric Corporation, and, in fact, are in control of both corporate defendants.

An injunction was issued against the Hydro Electric Corporation enjoining them from furnishing electrical energy to the creamery over said line, and the creamery was enjoined from using same.

All of the defendants filed answers, which are substantially the same. "We do not deem it necessary to do more than state the substance of the answers of the defendants of the various companies. It is admitted that the complainant has a franchise to transmit energy and do business in the town of Rogersville, and that the Hydro Electric Corporation is not entitled to engage in the business of transmitting and selling electricity within the incorporate limits of the town of Rogersville, and that it stands enjoined by the defendants from engaging in business within said incorporated limits. The defendant Hydro Electric Corporation, however, denies that such an injunction goes to the extent of depriving it of its right to engage in business with the citizens of the town of Rogersville or to make contracts with such citizens if thereby it does not engage in the businers of transmitting and selling electricity within the town of Rogersville. This defendant, however, states that it is engaged in *124 transmission by high powered lines and sale of electrical energy in Greene and Hawkins counties, and that it has a franchise duly ap.-proved by the Public Utilities Commission of the state of Tennessee authorizing it to use the streets and highways of said two counties (with certain exceptions) for the transmission and sale of its products. It states that it has a high-powered line of transmission running through the town of Bogersville over to several various communities in Hawkins county outside of the town of Bogersville. It is admitted that the Hawkins County Creamery is a corporation engaged in a business of manufacturing butter and milk and selling ice, and that in the manufacture and sale of said articles it is necessary to use electricity for operating its machinery. The creamery plant being located within the said corporate limits, the Hydro Electric Corporation was unable to sell it at its plant, but the contract agreed upon with the defendant creamery company was that, if it would acquire its own private line from its plant in Bogersville to a connection with the high-powered line of the Hydro Electric Corporation outside of the city limits, the Hydro Electric Corporation would furnish to it the electricity needed in its operations. As a result of these negotiations, a written contract was entered into between the Hydro Electric Corporation and the creamery company, which contract speaks for itself, and which is copied herein as a part of this opinion:

“Contract Between Hydro Electric Corporation of the one part, hereinafter called the Electric Company, and the Hawkins County Creamery of the other part, hereinafter called the Creamery, both Corporations, witnesseth:—
“The Creamery is located in the corporation limits of the Town of Bogersville, and in the operation of its plant uses large quantities of electrical energy, which it desires to purchase from the Electric Company.
“The Electric Company is the owner and operates high powered electric line in Hawkins County and adjoining territory, but is not permitted to enter and serve patrons in the town of Bogersville, for want of an approved franchise authorizing it to do so.
“In consideration of the premises the Electric Company agree that if the Creamery will construct and maintain their own private line from its plant within the corporation limit of the town of Bogersville to a connection with the high powered transmission line of the Electric Company where the same crosses highway N 70 about % mile south and west of the corporation limits of the Town of Bogersville and without the same, that it, the Electric Company will there sell and deliver to the Creamery the electrical energy necessary for its use in the operation of its plant, the same to be there metered to the Creamery and to be paid for monthly at the rate or rates now or hereafter applying to the country lines of the *125 Electric Company as now filed or as may be hereafter'filed with and approved by the Public Utilities Commission of the State.
“The Electric Company shall be at no expense in either the construction or the maintenance of the private transmission line of the Creamery at the point mentioned; but it shall furnish and maintain at the connection aforesaid the necessary transformers and meters needed to reduce the current flowing over the Electric Company lines to only 2300 volts and meters the same to the Creamery at that voltage.
“The Creamery agrees that the energy herein agreed to be supplied to it by the Electric Company is for its own exclusive use in the operation of its Creamery and ice-plant, and that it will not sell nor undertake to sell any of the energy herein agreed to be delivered to it by the Electric Company to any third party either within or without the corporation limits of the Town of Rogersville.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Great Lakes Carbon Corp. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission
788 S.W.2d 243 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1990)
Public Service Co. of Colorado v. Public Utilities Commission
765 P.2d 1015 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1988)
Southwestern Electric Power Co. v. Carroll Electric Cooperative Corp.
554 S.W.2d 308 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1977)
CAPITAL ELEC. POW. ASS'N v. Mississippi Power & L. Co.
218 So. 2d 707 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)
Village of Blaine v. Independent School District No. 12
138 N.W.2d 32 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1965)
Missouri Public Service Co. v. Barton County Electric Cooperative
353 S.W.2d 818 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1962)
City of Grafton v. Otter Tail Power Company
86 N.W.2d 197 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 217, 17 Tenn. App. 122, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holston-river-electric-co-v-hydro-electric-corp-tennctapp-1933.