Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Town of Carrollton

142 S.W.2d 849, 346 Mo. 802, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 444
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 16, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 142 S.W.2d 849 (Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Town of Carrollton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Town of Carrollton, 142 S.W.2d 849, 346 Mo. 802, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 444 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

*807 CLARK, J.

Appeal from circuit court of Carroll county. Appellant is the successor to the rights and title of the Water, Light & Transit Company mentioned in Ordinance No. 347 of the Town of Carrollton. The respondents are* the Town and its Mayor and Councilunen. The Town of Carrollton is governed by special charter and contains between 4000 and 5000 inhabitants. Appellant brought two suits which were consolidated and tried as one. The purpose of the suits was to enjoin the Town from constructing a municipal electric and water plant and to procure a declaratory judgment construing certain provisions of said ordinance so as to compel the Town to either purchase appellant’s plant or to renew its franchise. The decree was for the defendants (respondents), the chancellor holding that the Town has the right to construct and maintain a light plant or water plant and that all rights, privileges and franchises of the plaintiff under said ordinance terminated on January 24, 1939.

Ordinance No. 347 was duly adopted by the Council of said Town on January 24, 1919. Its provisions, so far as material here, are as follows: Section 1 granted a franchise to the Water, Light & Transit Company for the construction and operation of an electric plant and waterworks. Section 13 obligated the Town to rent from the company a certain number of fire hydrants, and Section 18 required the Town to take from the company all current it would use for street lights. Sections 24, 26, 30 and 31 are as follows:

“Section 24. COUNCIL AUTHORIZED TO LEVY TAX — This Ordinance and contract shall be binding in all of its terms upon both the Town and the Water, Light & Transit Company upon its ratification by a majority of the qualified voters of said Town.voting at a special election to be called, and held, as hereinafter provided. And if, at said special election two-thirds (2/3) of the qualified voters of said Town voting thereat, vote in favor of the ratification of this Ordinance, then the Council of said Town shall have the right and thereby shall be authorized to levy annually, within the constitutional limits, such rate of taxation on all taxable property situated in said Town as may be necessary for the purpose of paying all bills which may accrue to said Water, Light & Transit Company on account'of water and light service provided for in this Ordinance and contract, which said moneys shall be kept as a separate fund for such purpose and shall not be used or expended for any other purpose and shall be known as ‘Water and Light Fund. ’

“Section 26. TOWN NOT TO ERECT LIGHT PLANT OR WATERWORKS — RESERVE RIGHT TO PURCHASE — The town agrees that it will not erect or maintain a water plant or an electric light plant except that it becomes the owner of the water and light *808 plants of the company and said town thereby reserves the right, at its option, at any time to purchase of said company said waterworks and electric light plant, including all extensions thereof and everything thereto pertaining, in use and useful in obtaining and distributing water and in making, generating and distributing electricity to the Town and inhabitants thereof at the time of purchasing of waterworks and light plant, by paying therefor the fair and equitable price to be ascertained, if said Town and company cannot agree, by the Public Service Commission of the .State of Missouri or any other Board or Commission exercising the same or similar powers now exercised by the last named Commission, or by duly authorized agents of the same. In the event that said waterworks and electric light plant, at the date of purchase by said Towu, shall be incumbered by mortgage, deed of trust, or other lien or incumbrance, such incumbrance shall be subject to the right of said town to purchase as provided herein, and said Town shall, upon purchase, assume the payment of such incumbrance as a part of the consideration of the purchase price, provided that in no case shall said Town assume or become liable for any incumbrance or liability of said company in excess of the fair and equitable value of said property at the time of purchase, and as ascertained as above provided, and said Town shall in no event exercise, the right of purchase without the consent of two-thirds (2/3) of the qualified voters of said Town voting at an election held for that purpose. If at the expiration of this franchise, the Town has not purchased the said property of the company, as herein provided, then, this franchise shall be renewed and the Town will continue to rent fire hydrants from said company and purchase from said company electricity for street illumination.

“Section 30. FRANCHISE TRANSFERABLE — 1The Company shall have the right to assign and transfer this contract and franchise in whole or in part; that is to say, that said company may assign and transfer all the right and privileges under this franchise in so far as it relates to the waterworks, or it may assign and transfer that part Avhich relates to the electric light plant, or may assign and transfer said franchise in its entirety and all rights and privileges hereunder, upon such assignment and transfer, shall vest in the assignee, and such assignee shall file with the Town Clerk his or its Avritten obligation.,to accept and perform all the things required to be done by the company.

“Section 31. TERM — This Ordinance and contract is made for a term ,of Twenty (20) years from the date of the passage and adoption of this Ordinance by the Council of the Town of Carrollton, Missouri, unless sooner terminated by mutual agreement or competent authority.”

The, ordinance was duly submitted to the voters of the Town and approved by more than two-thirds of the votes cast. Since the adop *809 tion of the ordinance the company has continued to furnish electricity and water to the Town and its inhabitants and has spent large sums in maintaining, improving and extending its plant. In August, 1938, the Town Council called an election to be held on September 27, 1938, to vote bonds for an electric plant and waterworks to be owned by the Town. These bond issues were approved by more than two-thirds of those voting at the election. It was shown in evidence that the proposed light and water systems could not be put in operation prior to January 24, 1939. In October, 1938; the Town made an offer to purchase appellant’s electric distribution system and appellant offered to sell its entire light and water properties, but the parties were far apart as to price and nothing came of the negotiations. Other portions of the evidence will be mentioned later. •

As to appellant’s contentions, we quote from its brief as follows:

“ (a) Appellant contends that said franchise contract is a separable contract consisting of (1) a franchise for an electric light plant, (2) a franchise for a waterworks, (3) a contract for street lighting, and (4) contract for water hydrant service; that the failure of the Town to exercise its purchase option prior to the end of the initial term of twenty years of said franchise contract automatically renewed (1) the franchise for an electric plant, (2) the franchise for a waterworks, and (3) the contract for street lighting service, and each of them, for an additional term of twenty years from January 25, 1939, subject, however, to the right of the Town at any time during the new term to exercise its purchase option.”

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W.2d 849, 346 Mo. 802, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-power-light-co-v-town-of-carrollton-mo-1940.