Iowa Southern Utilities Co. v. Town of Lamoni

11 F. Supp. 581, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1424
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Iowa
DecidedAugust 6, 1935
Docket41116
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 F. Supp. 581 (Iowa Southern Utilities Co. v. Town of Lamoni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Southern Utilities Co. v. Town of Lamoni, 11 F. Supp. 581, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1424 (S.D. Iowa 1935).

Opinion

DEWEY, District Judge.

The Iowa Southern Utilities Company, a corporation, brings this action in equity seeking to enjoin the town of Lamoni, Iowa, and its executive officers, who are made defendants, from contracting with the Public Works Administration to secure funds to finance a municipal power and light plant. The town is seeking to so construct and establish such a plant and distribution system with the aid of federal funtls to be loaned and granted by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works. None of the officers of the government are made parties defendant.

The complaint is that the officers of the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works are without power or authority to make the grant or loan for the erection of this municipally owned plant, that the town through its officers are acting beyond their power and authority in endeavoring to contract with the Public Works Administration for the procuring of such loan and grant, and that such a contract is illegal and its consummation will result in unlawful competition to complainant’s injury.

Complainant does not own an electric power and light plant in the town of Lamoni, Iowa, but distributes such electricity in a great number of the towns and cities in the southern part of Iowa and has a large general power and distributing system. It maintains a local distributing system, including electric light poles, etc., in the town of Lamoni, which it alleges are of the value of about $25,-000. It formerly had a franchise from the town to operate therein, but such franchise has expired. It claims that if the contemplated municipally owned electrical project is permitted to be established, complainant will be compelled to •abandon its distribution and street lighting system in the town and this will result in a direct pecuniary loss of $25,-000.

More specifically, the grounds upon which it is claimed the municipality proposes to illegally obstruct and interfere with the rights of the complainant are:

First, that the National Industrial Recovery Act, section 701, title 15, U. S. ■ C. (15 USCA § 701), docs not authorize the Public Works Administration to grant or loan funds of the United States for this purpose.

Second, that the project .of the municipality has no relation to interstate commerce, does not relieve unemployment, or reach any of the objects intended to be attained by the National Industrial Recovery Act and to loan or grant to the town money as contemplated would duplicate and destroy the value of complainant’s property without due process of law and would amount to the taking of private property for a public use without just compensation.

Third, that the Administrator of Public Works has not prepared a comprehensive program of public works as required by section 202 of the National Industrial Recovery Act (40 USCA § 402), and loans or grants without such program are ultra vires and void.

Fourth, that the extension of such aid to the town is without the limitation of the constitutional power of Congress, and in so. far as the National Industrial Recovery Act purports to authorize the use of public moneys for that purpose, it is ultra vires and void.

Fifth, that the provisions of section 202 and section 203 of title 2 of the National Industrial Recovery Act (40 USCA §§ 402, 403) are invalid for the reason that they involve an unlawful delegation of legislative power by the Congress to the Public Works Administration.

These specific complaints and perhaps others of a like nature set up in the bill are all directed at the power or authority of the Public Works Administration to loan or grant money for the completion of the proposed project by the municipality.

Other charges of illegality of the proceedings have reference to the actions, power, and authority of the town to enter into a contract with the Public Works Administration in the loaning or granting of the money for the purposes intended.

The town proposes to construct a municipally owned electric light and power plant and distribution system therein under the authority granted by the Legislature of the State of Iowa, under an *584 act locally known as the “Simmer Act,” now sections 6134-dl to 6134-d7, inclusive, Code of Iowa, 1931, providing for the authorization to the towns, after being authorized by the electorate, to construct and maintain an electric light and power plant and distribution system therein, payable entirely out of the net earnings of the property. No particular complaint is alleged as against the actions of the town in their proceedings so far had in endeavoring to establish, construct, and maintain such a plant within the town under this act; the objection and claim of illegality being directed solely as against the attempt on the part of the town to borrow the money from the Public Works Administration, and in accepting the grant for the promotion of public works under the National Industrial Recovery Act.

And the charges i-n the complaint, in so far as the town is concerned as acting illegally and injuriously to the property rights of the complainant corporation, are:

First, that the town of Lamoni and its officers are without authority under the Constitution and statutes of Iowa to construct a municipally owned electric light and power establishment and pay for the same with funds donated by the United States, as no such authority is expressly delegated to it by the statutes of the state.

Second, that the questions submitted to and voted upon by the legal electors of the town provided only for the establishment of an electric power and light plant “to be paid for solely and only out of the net earnings of said plant,” and that the voters were not advised and did not vote upon the question of whether the town should construct and maintain the power plant and pay for the same from funds obtained from a loan and partly from a grant of federal funds from the United States of America.

Third, that the contract entered into or to be entered into between the town of Lamoni and the Public Works Administration requires that as a part of the consideration of financing the project by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works the town surrender to the said administration its powers, functions, and discretions vested by the laws of the state, and that by reason thereof said contract is ultra vires and void, as the town is without legal authority or right to delegate any of its powers, functions, or discretions vested by the laws of the state of Iowa.

The proposition submitted to the electors of the town of Lamoni, Iowa, with reference to the establishment and operation of an electric power plant and distribution system, and which was voted upon favorably by such electors, is as follows: “Shall the Town of Lamoni, Iowa, be empowered and authorized to establish, erect, maintain and operate a municipal electric light and power plant, with all the necessary poles, wires, machinery, apparatus, buildings, site, and other requisites for such plant at a maximum expenditure for the establishment thereof not exceeding the sum of $100,000; said plant to be paid for solely and only out of- the earnings of said plant, without the incurring of any indebtedness therefor by said Town of Lamoni, Iowa?”

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Supp. 581, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-southern-utilities-co-v-town-of-lamoni-iasd-1935.