Lea County Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission

402 P.2d 377, 75 N.M. 191
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1965
Docket7601
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 402 P.2d 377 (Lea County Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lea County Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission, 402 P.2d 377, 75 N.M. 191 (N.M. 1965).

Opinion

MOISE, Justice.

On June 1, 1961, Lea County Electric Cooperative, Inc., hereinafter referred to as petitioner, pursuant to § 68-7-1.1, N.M.S.A. 1953, filed its application for a certificate of convenience and necessity before the New Mexico Public Service Commission, hereinafter referred to as the Commission. Southwestern Public Service, hereinafter referred to as “Southwestern” and New Mexico Electric Service Company, hereinafter referred to as “New Mexico Electric” intervened in the cause.

Petitioner is a rural electric cooperative organized in 1946 under the Rural Electric Cooperative Act (§§ 45 — 4-1 to 45-4 — 32, N.M.S.A.1953) and since 1949 has owned and operated electric generation, transmission and distribution facilities in Lea, Chaves and Eddy Counties, New Mexico, and was found by the Commission to be serving approximately 6,000 member-customers and other customers in the rural areas of the three counties as well as in the City of Lovington, the Town of Tatum, and in several unincorporated communities. Southwéstern owns and operates plants and facilities for rendering electric service to the public in each of the named counties; New Mexico Electric does likewise in the area of Lea County where petitioner seeks a certificate.

An order granting petitioner a certificate of convenience and necessity was issued by the Commission. However, it did not meet with the approval of petitioner and it accordingly filed a petition for review under § 68-9-1, N.M.S.A.1953. The Commission, Southwestern and New Mexico Electric all moved to dismiss on the ground that the petition for review failed to state a claim on which the relief prayed for could be granted. The motions were sustained and petitioner has appealed to this court from the order of dismissal as provided in § 68-9-7, N.M.S.A.1953.

The petition for review which was dismissed set forth that the order of the Commission was unreasonable, unlawful and discriminatory because it failed to delineate the service area of petitioner. In its appeal to this court petitioner relies on one point for reversal and states that the sole question involved is whether the Commission correctly construed § 68-7-1.1, N.M. S.A.1953, in failing and refusing to delineate petitioner’s service area in a situation where part of its system is in an area previously certificated under a blanket certificate to another utility.

By § 2, Chap. 89, N.M.S.L.1961, § 68-3-2, N.M.S.A.1953, was amended to read, insofar as here material, as follows:

“Unless otherwise specified, when used in the Public Utility Act, as amended:
* * * * 5|Í . *
“F. ‘Public utility’ or. ‘utility’ means every person not engaged solely in interstate busin'ess and except as hereinafter stated, that now does or hereafter may own, operate, lease or control:
“(1) Any plant, property, or facility for the generation, transmission, or distribution, sale or furnishing to or for the public of electricity for light, heat, or power-or other uses, including corporations organized tmder Sections 45-4 — 1 through 45-4 — 32 Nezv Mexico Statutes Annotated, 1953 Compilation; known as the Rural Electric Cooperative Act; * * (Emphasis added.)

The emphasized language was included in the section for the first time, and was evidently the answer of the legislature to the holding by this court in Socorro Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Public Service Company, 66 N.M. 343, 348 P.2d 88, decided in 1959, to the effect that a rural electric cooperative was not a “public utility” within the meaning of the Public Utility Act. See Edington v. New Mexico Public Service Commission, 74 N.M. 647, 397 P.2d 300, for a history of public utility legislation in this state.

. Section 68-7-1.1, supra, was enacted as § 8, Chap. 89, N.M.S.L.1961, and .reads as follows:. ; ’ ' •

“A. Within ten.[10] days after the effective'daté of this 1961 act, each utility brought within the jurisdiction of the public service commission for the first time by virtue of this 1961 act, shall file with the commission an application for a certificate of convenience and necessity covering its present plant, lines and system. Upon proof of present existence and operation thereof, the commission shall grant the certificate to such utility.
“B. In the event the certificate granted a utility under subsection A of this section, overlaps or conflicts with a certificate heretofore issued by the commission and exercised within the time required under Section 68-7-2 New Mexico Statutes Annotated, 1953 Compilation, both certificates shall be valid and both utilities shall be permitted to continue service.”

Although § 68-7-1.1, supra, states that the application required to be filed by cooperatives shall be for “a certificate of convenience and necessity covering its present plant and system” and that the commission shall grant “the certificate to the utility” when proof has been presented of “present existence and operation” of the plant and system, it is nevertheless petitioner’s position that because of the overlap in the areas where its plant and system were presently operating with areas included in broad general certificates held by New Mexico Electric, it was incumbent on the Commission to specify what rights the petitioner had in any area of overlap with the intervenor’s certificate.

Petitioner bases its argument on recognized rules of statutory construction, the history of utility regulations in New Mexico, and the benefits sought to be accomplished by the legislature. It is the position of petitioner that when § 68-7-1.1(B), supra, speaks of “overlap or conflicts” between a certificate held by a utility and a certificate for “present plant, lines and system” of a cooperative, necessarily it must have been the legislative intent expressed in § 1, Chap. 89, N.M.S.L.1961 (§ 68-3-1, N. M.S.A.1953) to thereby “provide for the construction, development and extension, without unnecessary amplification and economic waste, of proper plants and facilities for the rendition of service to the general public and to industry.” The argument proceeds a step further to the contention that to accomplish this end areas to be served must necessarily be outlined and delineated.

The Commission responds generally agreeing to the rules of statutory construction advanced by petitioner, but also calls attention to the rule stated in De Graftenreid v. Strong, 28 N.M. 91, 94, 206 P. 694, as follows:

“ * * * What the Legislature intends is to be determined, primarily, by what it says in the act. It is only in cases of ambiguity that resort may be had to construction. Courts cannot read into an act something that is not within the manifest intention of the Legislature, as gathered from the statute itself. To do so would he to legislate, and not to interpret. * * * ”

To like effect are George v. Miller & Smith, Inc., 54 N.M.

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402 P.2d 377, 75 N.M. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lea-county-electric-cooperative-inc-v-new-mexico-public-service-nm-1965.