Iowa Power & Light Co. v. Hicks

292 N.W. 826, 228 Iowa 1085
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 18, 1940
DocketNo. 45185. No. 45255.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 292 N.W. 826 (Iowa Power & Light Co. v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Power & Light Co. v. Hicks, 292 N.W. 826, 228 Iowa 1085 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Miller, J.

These two actions by mandamus, to compel the calling of a special election to submit the question whether plaintiffs should be granted an electric franchise, have been consolidated for submission in this court. While the issues were quite involved and several propositions have been argued here, the decisive questions for our determination are readily apparent when we consider the essential facts, about which there is no substantial dispute in the record.

The appellee, Hicks, is the mayor of the town of Montezuma, Iowa. Appellant Iowa Power &. Light Company is an Iowa corporation and appellant Des Moines Electric Light Company is a Maine corporation authorized to transact business in Iowa. The two corporations are closely associated in the production, distribution and sale of electric energy. The Iowa Power & Light Company, is operating in Montezuma, using a distribution system owned by the Des Moines Electric Light Company. The Des Moines Electric Light Company formerly *1087 held a franchise to operate in Montezuma, which expired by its terms in June 1938, and has not been renewed.

On March 6, 1939, a special election was called for April 7, 1939, on the proposition of - constructing a municipal electric light and power plant under the Simmer law. On March 10, 1939, a petition was filed asking for a special election on the proposition of granting a franchise to the Iowa Power & Light Company and such an election was called for May 12, 1939. On April 7, 1939, the proposal for a municipal plant carried by a vote of 431 to 359. On May 12, 1939, the proposal for a new franchise lost by a vote of 473 to 490.

On June 28, 1939, a petition was filed asking for another special election on the proposition of granting a franchise to the Iowa Power & Light Company. No election was called, and, on July 12, 1939, appellants filed a petition in mandamus asking the court to compel appellee to call the election. Trial was had in August 1939, and on September 1, 1939, a memorandum decision was filed which determined that the proposal, on which a special election was sought, was the same proposition which was rejected by the voters of the town on May 12, 1939; a reasonable time had not elapsed since such election; no change of circumstances or conditions was shown sufficient to warrant interference by thé court; it would bfe an idle formality to ask the electors to speak again on the question that had been answered fairly in the negative- the equities were with appellee, and the petition should be dismissed. On the same day, a decree was entered dismissing the petition. On the following day an appeal therefrom was perfected to this court.

On September 18, 1939, another petition was filed asking for a special election on the proposition of granting a franchise to the Iowa Power & Light Company. This petition differed somewhat from the previous ones, but we need not consider such features at this time. Appellee refused to call an election and, on October 9, 1939, a second petition in mandamus was filed. Issues were joined, trial was had in November 1939, *1088 and, on December 15, 1939, tbe court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law wbicb determined that the decree of September 1, 1939, was res adjudieata and a bar to tbe proceedings, and that the proceedings in this court, then pending, were also a bar to such proceedings. On tbe same day a decree was entered dismissing tbe action. An appeal was perfected January 9, 1940. Tbe two appeals have been consolidated here and were submitted together.

I. Tbe first question presented for our decision is whether tbe election of May 12, 1939, precludes appellants from seeking or securing another election on the franchise question. Tbe statutes applicable to tbe question appear in chapters 304 and 312 of tbe Code, 1939. Examination of such statutes reveals that there is no express statutory provision that can be construed to be decisive on tbe question. Also, we are unable to find any former decision of this court wbicb would seem to be decisive. Accordingly, we -have a new question raised for tbe first time in this court.

Tbe statutes of this state provide, in several instances, for an affirmative vote of tbe citizens of a municipal corporation as a condition precedent to the granting of a franchise or constructing of a public improvement. Investigation of such statutes demonstrates that tbe election of May 12, 1939, was not final in such a manner as to preclude a subsequent election on the same or a similar franchise question.

Sections 6131 and 6132, appearing in chapter 312 of tbe Code, 1939, provide for tbe submission, at a general or special election, of tbe proposition of erecting a municipal utility plant as a condition precedent to tbe authorization or establishment of such project. There is no statutory provision precluding a subsequent election on tbe same proposition should tbe proposal be defeated.

Sections 5261 and 5263, appearing in chapter 265 of the Code, 1939, provide for submission, at a regular or special election, of a proposal for constructing county buildings as a condition precedent to tbe ordering of such construction. Section 5271 in said chapter provides that a proposition thus *1089 adopted may be rescinded in a subsequent election, but neither contracts made nor taxes voted prior to the subsequent election can be rescinded. Section 5272 in said chapter makes it mandatory for the board to submit the proposal when petitioned by the necessary voters. There is no provision precluding a second election in the event of an adverse vote.

Section 4753.10, appearing in chapter 241 of the Code, 1939, provides for the submission, at a general or special election, of the proposition for draining, grading or surfacing primary roads. It is a matter of common knowledge that, in the course of surfacing our primary road system, there have been repeated elections in some counties where the proposal was at first rejected, but eventually carried. Apparently, it was assumed that an adverse decision at one election did not preclude the submission, at a subsequent election, of the same or similar proposition. By sections 1 and 2 of chapter 116 of the Acts of the Forty-eighth General Assembly (sections 4773.4 and 4773.5 of the Code, 1939) it is now provided that any county which has authorized the issuance of primary road bonds under chapter 241 or chapter 242 of the Code, 1939, shall have no authority, prior to the year 1950, to authorize an additional county road bond issue, but said provisions do not preclude the voting of an initial county road bond issue in any county which has not previously authorized such a bond issue. The wording of these sections indicates a recognition on the part of the legislature that an adverse vote does not preclude a subsequent election on the same proposition. It is only in the event of a favorable vote that a subsequent election is precluded, and then only until 1950.

Section 6483, appearing in chapter 326 of the Code, 1939, provides for the submission of a proposal to organize a city under the commission plan pursuant to said chapter.

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292 N.W. 826, 228 Iowa 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-power-light-co-v-hicks-iowa-1940.