In Re Grand River Dam Authority

484 P.2d 505, 1971 WL 224212
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 20, 1971
Docket44424
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 484 P.2d 505 (In Re Grand River Dam Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Grand River Dam Authority, 484 P.2d 505, 1971 WL 224212 (Okla. 1971).

Opinion

BERRY, Chief Justice.

Under authority of 82 O.S.1961 § 861 et seq., Grand River Dam Authority, a state agency, has applied to this Court for declaratory judgment determining validity, and action to be taken, under contract executed between petitioner and the City of Wagoner, and upon which depends validity of a contract between petitioner and R. S. Goodman Company of Oklahoma, Inc. Petitioner seeks further relief against the district court of Wagoner County, to prevent enforcement of a restraining order issued against petitioner upon application of protesting citizens, respondents herein; and, to prohibit further action in respect to respondent’s prayer for permanent injunction. This proceeding was engendered by matters summarized hereafter.

The City, in a proprietary capacity, owns an electrical distribution system operated by sale of electrical energy purchased from petitioner. Past experience dictated necessity for increased capacity to meet local demands. In July 1969 city officials employed a private engineering firm to survey and prepare plans for improvement of this system. Of primary concern was construction of an additional transmission line to increase capacity and fulfill immediate and anticipated future needs of the City. The completed survey proposed construction of a 69 KV line connected with petitioner’s line at the north city limits. The plan proposed looping this line around the city’s east side, then south outside the platted area until the line reached North Second Street and Sprague Avenue, thence to South Third, one-half block west, a block south to South Fourth Street and thereafter west to a substation to be located near the intersection of Madison Avenue and South Fourth Street. Here it may be noted South Fourth in this area, and extending east to city limits, although originally platted and dedicated, never has been opened or improved as a city street.

A portion of the proposed line along South Fourth will be in a residential area. However, engineering factors established this as the most feasible and economical route for a line to the proposed substation, in best interests of long range planning, and the least disruptive. Two other possible routes for the line were considered. One was rejected because a routing from the north limits through center of the city would not provide a satisfactory line to the substation. An alternative route along railroad right of way would not provide a feasible line to the substation, since peti *508 tioner did not own this right of way, and existing structures along this route made construction of such line unacceptable.

The completed survey was presented August 4, 1969, at a regular meeting of the city council. Although the council did not formally adopt the plan, no objections were made against the proposal, either by city officials or these respondents. On September 9, 1970, a contract was executed whereunder petitioner was to build and supply the line and the City was to purchase electrical energy for resale. Pertinent to issues involved, this contract contained these provisions:

“The Authority shall construct, furnish, install, operate and maintain all facilities, transmission lines and necessary equipment for the sale and delivery of the Customer’s total requirements for electric power and energy at points of inter-connection and points of delivery established by this contract and such additional points as may be agreed upon by the parties.
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“If it becomes necessary for the Authority to locate any of its lines or facilities within the Customer’s limits or on its lands to serve the electric load covered by this contract, the Customer will grant to the Authority rights-of-way and easements over its lands, streets and alleys sufficient for the construction and maintenance of such facilities.
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“The Authority agrees within one year of the date of the execution of this contract to provide loop service from its Whitehorn Substation to existing substation facilities in the City of Wagoner. In this connection, the City agrees to remove poles and to provide right-of-way as. necessary through the City of Wagoner at no cost to the Authority.”

For many years W. R. Holway & Associates, a corporation, has been petitioner’s consulting engineer. Petitioner’s chief engineer submitted the survey to Holway, which made independent reconnaissance of the area, then prepared engineering and structural designs for the entire project, and contract specifications and documents detailing eventual construction. Thereafter (April 20, 1970) petitioner contracted with R. S. Goodman Company of Oklahoma, Inc. for construction of additional facilities to provide necessary improvements for City’s distribution system. The proposed transmission line was required to be designed and constructed in accord with National Electrical Safety Code.

August 12, 1970, respondents, residents and taxpayers, sought and obtained temporary restraining order enjoining petitioner, agents or subcontractors, from performing any construction within the City upon the proposed transmission line. The cause was set for hearing August 25, 1970, upon application for injunction, and petitioner then brought this proceeding seeking extraordinary relief.

Respondents’ answer, in addition to recitation of non-germane, historical matters not of record, allegedly showing petitioner’s disinclination to build the line because of obligation previously incurred, advanced ten separate grounds of complaint against the proposed line. Matters so urged necessitated presentation of evidence to provide basis for this Court’s consideration of the question. Inability of the parties to present these matters by stipulation, or by depositions to be taken at petitioner’s expense, eventually required this Court to appoint a trial judge to conduct an eviden-tiary hearing. The record from his hearing is so extended as to preclude summation of evidence adduced, so that generally we shall refer only to effect of evidence upon the argument considered.

One important evidentiary fact concerns a district court action by which some of respondents’ predecessors in interest secured judgment (August 26, 1966), vacating certain platted streets for non-user. This judgment affected a part of South Fourth Street between the east line of *509 Powell Avenue and west line of Hall Avenue and provided:

“ * * * legal and equitable title to such portion of South Fourth Street * * * is, vested by reversion in and to plaintiffs in fee simple as abutting owners * * *; that the City of Wagoner be, * * * vested with a perpetual easement for the construction and maintenance of public sewer, water and electric lines on strip of land 80 feet in width running east and west between the East line of Powell Avenue and the West line of Hall Avenue. * * * ”

On November 7, 1966, the city council voted to relinquish the north 20 feet of that easement reserved by the judgment above quoted. That judgment provided fee title relied upon by certain respondents in this cause.

Evidence also showed the day following presentation of the engineering survey the city council voted unanimously to request petitioner to change the proposed route without cost to the City.

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Bluebook (online)
484 P.2d 505, 1971 WL 224212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grand-river-dam-authority-okla-1971.