Homer Electric Association, Inc. v. City of Kenai

423 P.2d 285, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 193
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1967
Docket675
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 423 P.2d 285 (Homer Electric Association, Inc. v. City of Kenai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homer Electric Association, Inc. v. City of Kenai, 423 P.2d 285, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 193 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

This appeal concerns the relationship between a municipally owned and operated electrical utility and a public utility which has been certified under the Alaska Public-Service Commission Act. 1

Appellant, Homer Electric Association, instituted an injunction action in the superior court seeking to restrain appellee, city of Kenai, from paralleling any of its-electrical distribution system located within *286 “the corporate limits of the city of Kenai. Appellant then obtained an ex parte tem■porary restraining order. 2 The matter thereafter came before the lower court for a hearing as to whether a preliminary injunction should issue. At the conclusion of the hearing the superior court denied appellant’s request for a preliminary injunction and ordered further briefs from the parties in regard to appellee’s motion for ■summary judgment, which was directed Against appellant’s cause of action for a permanent injunction.

After the additional briefs were filed, the superior court entered findings of fact, 3 conclusions of law and a judgment denying appellant’s prayers for both preliminary and permanent injunctions and granting appel-lee city of Kenai’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm the judgment which was entered by the superior court.

The basic issue here is whether the Public Service Commissioner’s issuance, to appellant Homer Electric, of a certificate of public convenience and necessity providing for a service area which encompassed within its territory the city of Kenai, precluded the city of Kenai from furnishing electrical energy within its own city limits, in competition with appellant’s electrical distribution system. 4

When the Alaska Public Service Commission Act first became law in 1959, municipal utilities were within its coverage. 5

In 1963 the Governor submitted a bill designed to strengthen the Public Service Commission Act. This bill (House bill 158) died in committee after its introduction. During this same session of our legislature the House Commerce Committee introduced House bill 228 which was enacted into law. 6

The Commerce Committee’s bill prohibited any public utility from operating after January 1, 1964, without first having obtained from the Public Service Commission “a certificate declaring that public convenience and necessity require or will require the operation and delineating the *287 area where service is to he provided.” 7 The 1963 act also provided for the issuance of certificates of public convenience and necessity to existing utilities. 8 The amend-atory act also empowered the Public Service Commission to “grant a certificate to provide service in an area already served by a certificate holder only when the existing public utility or utilities serving the area are not providing and will not provide service to the satisfaction of the commission.” 9

Crucial to the determination of the issues in this appeal is the 1963 act’s amendment of AS 42.05.640(2), 10 This amendment specifically excluded municipally owned and operated utilities from the coverage of the Alaska Public Service Commission Act. 11

Against this truncated legislative history of the Alaska Public Service Commission Act a brief examination of the factual circumstances of the case at bar is appropriate. In May of 1960 the city of Kenai was incorporated as a home rule city. In February of 1962 the city of Kenai granted a franchise to the Kenai Power Corporation which had, since 1950, been in the business of furnishing electrical energy to portions of the area which is presently incorporated within the limits of the city of Kenai. Subsequently, in 1963, the city of Kenai purchased all of the facilities of Kenai Power Corporation. 12

Appellant, Homer Electric Association, Inc., is a nonprofit cooperative, organized under the Bureau of Electrification of the United States Department of Agriculture. In February 1965, appellant was granted, under the grandfather provisions of AS 42.05.194, a certificate of public convenience and necessity by the Public Service Commission. Pursuant to this certificate appellant was accorded the right to operate an electrical distribution system throughout the western portion of the Kenai peninsula. As indicated previously, the service area delineated in appellant’s certificate of convenience and necessity included the geographical area lying within the limits of the city of Kenai.

Homer Electric Association first constructed and operated electrical distribution lines within portions of the area that is now encompassed within the city of Kenai in 1956. 13 The total value of appellant’s entire electrical distribution system on the *288 Kenai peninsula is $6,100,000. 14 At the time this action was instituted below, appellant’s total investment within the city of Kenai was $160,000, and it was serving a total of eighty-five consumers within the city. 15 The evidence adduced at the preliminary injunction hearing demonstrated that the city of Kenai had duplicated portions of appellant’s electrical distribution system located within the city of Kenai and had succeeded in persuading eleven of appellant’s customers to subscribe to its own electrical service. The record also discloses that at no time had the city of Kenai •ever granted a franchise to appellant Homer Electric Association to operate within its ■city limits.

We are called upon to decide the effect ■of the 1963 amendments to Alaska Public Service Commission Act. More particularly, we must determine whether the issuance of a certificate of public convenience and necessity to appellant is a grant of an exclusive right, or monoply, within the delineated service area, which is entitled to protection against competition from the city of Kenai’s utility which is exempt from the Public Service Commission’s regulation. The 1963 amendments to the Alaska Public Service Commission Act are silent on the question of whether the grant of a certificate of public convenience and necessity was intended as a grant of a monopoly to the regulated utility.

In support of its contention that it received a monopoly by virtue of its certificate, appellant relies on the general policy behind state regulation of utilities and the legislative history of the 1963 amendments (House bill 228) to the Alaska Public Service Commission Act. 16

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

Related

Hartung v. State, Department of Labor
22 P.3d 1 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2001)
Tlingit-Haida Regional Electrical Authority v. State
15 P.3d 754 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2001)
State v. Alex
646 P.2d 203 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1982)
McClellan v. Kenai Peninsula Borough
565 P.2d 175 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1977)
Chugach Electric Association v. City of Anchorage
476 P.2d 115 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
423 P.2d 285, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homer-electric-association-inc-v-city-of-kenai-alaska-1967.