Long v. Town of Thatcher

153 P.2d 153, 62 Ariz. 55, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 84
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1944
DocketCivil No. 4697.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 153 (Long v. Town of Thatcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Town of Thatcher, 153 P.2d 153, 62 Ariz. 55, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 84 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This case comes from Graham County, Arizona, its -county seat being Safford. It is a suit brought to enjoin the sale of the property of appellee, Arizona General Utilities Company, a corporation. The sale was about to be made to the Town of ■ Thatcher, a municipal corporation, some three miles west of Safford, when the action was brought by the appellants, all of whom were citizens, taxpayers and property owners of the Town of Safford, incorporated and organized under the general laws of the State of Arizona.

The appellee, Arizona General Utilities Company, owns and operates, under a certificate of convenience and necessity granted by the Arizona Corporation Commission, its business, the principal place of which is at Safford, and in Safford there is located approximately 80% of the physical properties of said company, including the generating units, warehouses, etc. Outside of the corporate limits of the Town of Safford are the transmission and distribution lines run *57 ning to Thatcher and other consumers. The Town of Thatcher consumes approximately 20% of the electric energy of the said utility company, and the property of said company within the corporate limits of Thatcher is transmission lines, transformers, meters, etc., consisting, according to the allegations of the complaint, of less than 10% of the physical property of the company.

In August, 1924, the utility company was granted a franchise by the Town of Safford, and under the franchise said company is now occupying and using the streets, avenues and alleys of said town for the operation and maintenance of its electric lines, distribution system, etc. The expiration date of said franchise is August 19, 1949.

The utility company is the only electric utility operating in the Town of Safford, and in that vicinity the only supply of electric energy to the appellants and other residents of the Town of Safford.

The assessed valuation of the holdings and the property of the utility company in the corporate limits of the Town of Safford for the year 1943 was $116,815, making it one of the largest property taxpayers within. Safford.

On May 8, 1942, the question of acquiring said utility was submitted to the property taxpayers of the Town of Safford, and on May 3, 1943, the question of issuing revenue bonds for the purchase of same was submitted to the property taxpayers, and in each instance the taxpayers rejected the proposal.

In June, 1943, the Council of the Town of Thatcher adopted a resolution calling for an election for the purpose of submitting to the real property taxpayers of its town the question of whether or not revenue bonds should be issued in the amount of $465,000 to be used for the purpose of purchasing property of the utility company, including that portion of its *58 property located in the Town of Safford. This election resolution contained a separate section declaring the matter to be an emergency and providing that it should become immediately effective upon its approval. The election was held pursuant to the resolution and the taxpayers of that place voted in favor of the issuance of bonds. The Town of Thatcher immediately entered into an agreement for the purchase of .the property of the utility company, and thereupon thife action was instituted enjoining the officials of the Town of Thatcher from purchasing said property and enjoining the utility company from the sale of same.-.

Later the Town of Thatcher adopted a resolution which proposed the fixing and prescribing the rates of electric energy to be sold by it from said utility and .the action brought alleges that the Town of Thatcher threatens to impose upon appellants and other consumers of electricity outside of the corporate limits of the Town of Thatcher and within the limits of the town of' Safford, rates and charges which are greatly in excess of the rates and charges now in effect and paid by these appellants and other consumers, and it appears that the Town of Thatcher is paying in excess of $50,000 more than the utility is worth.

The purpose of this action was to enjoin the sale of the utility property to the Town of Thatcher and to obtain a declaratory judgment declaring the rights of the parties.

The case was not tried as to the facts, but on motions filed by appellees to dismiss, the trial court, the Honorable 0. C. Faires, of the Superior Court of 0-lobe, Arizona, sitting as the judge at Safford, rendered by an opinion “ Judgment' dismissing amended complaint as to injunctive relief finding that an actual controversy exists between the parties, and deter *59 mining sncli controversy in favor of defendants,” from which judgment this appeal is taken. :

Appellants claim the following errors were committed hy the trial court:

til. The court erred in granting defendants’ motion, to dismiss plaintiffs’ amended complaint insofar as it prayed for injunctive relief.....

“2. The court erred in rendering judgment purporting to declare the rights of the parties to the action, because no answer was filed, and the cause was not at issue and was never tried.

The court erred in rendering judgment declaring the questions presented by the amended complaint in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiffs for, the following reasons:

“.(a) The Revenue Bond Act of 1943 (Secs. 16-2601 to 16-2619, Arizona Code Annotated 1939-1943 Supp.) does not authorize and empower the Town, of Thatcher to acquire and operate the utility described in the complaint in the Town of Safford;

“(b) The Town of Thatcher has no right, power or authority under the Constitution and laws of Arizona,to acquire or hold the franchise granted by the Town of Safford to the Utility Company; . . .

“(d) The acquisition and operation of the utility property by the Town of Thatcher would deprive the plaintiffs and all others similarly situated as consumers of the electricity supplied by the Utility Company, residing outside the corporate limits of the Town of Thatcher, of their property without due process of law, in violation of Sections 4 and 17, Article II, Constitution of Arizona, and in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States; . . . ”

“4. The court erred by finding, adjudging and delaring in its judgment rendered and entered, ‘That the. acquisition by the defendant, Town of Thatcher, of the franchises issued by the Town of Safford and now held by the defendant, Arizona General Utilities Company, and the operation of said utility undertaking, thereunder in the Town of Safford, will not impair *60 the obligations of said franchise contract in violation of Section 10, Article I of the Federal Constitution’; because the acquisition of the Utility Company’s property in Safford and the transfer to Thatcher of the franchise now held by the Utility Company, and the operation of the utility undertaking thereunder in the Town of Safford, does impair the obligations of the franchise-contract held by the Utility Company, in violation of Section 10, Article I of the Constitution of the United States, as well as Section 25, Article II of the Arizona Constitution.”

Referring to assignment No.

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153 P.2d 153, 62 Ariz. 55, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-town-of-thatcher-ariz-1944.