Meader v. Incorporated Town of Sibley

197 Iowa 945
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 1, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 197 Iowa 945 (Meader v. Incorporated Town of Sibley) 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
Meader v. Incorporated Town of Sibley, 197 Iowa 945 (iowa 1923).

Opinion

Faville, J.

I. Appellants allege that they are each of them residents and taxpayers of the incorporated town of Sib-ley, and are each consumers of electrical energy produced and distributed by a municipal electric light and power plant owned and operated by said incorporated town. It is alleged that, on or about the 14th of July, 1914, the said incorporated town entered -into a written contract with the Ocheyedan Electric Company, .a private corporation, and with the incorporated towns of Harris and Lake Park, by the terms of which written contract it is alleged that said incorporated town of Sibley undertook to deliver electric current to the appellees the Ocheyedan Electric Company and the incorporated towns of Harris and Lake Park, at a fixed rate, as provided in said contract, for and during a period of twenty years. Appellants allege that electrical current has been and is now being furnished under said contract to the said appellees, and that the same will be furnished in the future during the life of said contract unless the performance of said contract is enjoined. It is alleged that the ■said contract is now being performed by the incorporated town of Sibley at a loss of $630 per month. Appellants allege that the rate provided under said contract is confiscatory, and that, as individual resident consumers of electrical current in the incorporated town of Sibley, they are required to pay a higher rate because of the existence of said contract than they would otherwise be compelled to pay for* the electrical current used by them. The petition also alleges that the contract in question is void for want of mutuality, and that the action of the incorpo[947]*947rated town of Sibley in entering into tbe same was ultra vires, and that tbe contract is in contravention of tbe statutes of the state, and is illegal and void.

ít is further alleged in tbe petition that tbe incorporated town of Sibley has established within its corporate limits a monopoly for tbe purpose of furnishing these appellants and others, as residents and taxpayers of said municipality, all commercial electrical energy needed by them; that it is the only person, firm, corporation, or establishment furnishing electrical energy for sale within the corporate limits of said incorporated town of Sibley, Iowa, or from whom the same can be had. It is also alleged that:

“These plaintiffs and other residents and taxpayers of said incorporated town of Sibley, Iowa, are so situated that they are, of necessity, compelled to obtain their electrical energy from the said incorporated town of Sibley, Iowa, and will be so compelled to secure the same during the remainder of the period of time for which said contract, Exhibit A, has yet to run, and at such prices and rates as the said defendant, the said incorporated town of Sibley, Iowa, may charge, unless otherwise regulated by this court.”

It is further alleged that, if the incorporated town of Sibley is compelled to carry out said contract and furnish electrical energy at the rates provided therein to the other defendants, said incorporated town of Sibley, Iowa, will, “as a result thereof, be compelled to, and will, charge these plaintiffs, as resident consumers and taxpayers, not less than three (3) cents per kilowatt hour, in addition to the said proper, reasonable, and compensatory rates that should, of right, be charged these plaintiffs, as resident consumers and taxpayers, to make up the deficit for its said loss; that the said sums that will be so lost to the defendant the said incorporated town of Sibley, Iowa, if electrical energy is continued to be furnished by it at said rates provided for in said contract, to the other said defendants, must be paid, if so paid, by these plaintiffs, as resident consumers of electrical energy and taxpayers, by their paying, in addition to the said proper and reasonable charges that should be charged them, all of said loss, except that portion thereof which may be raised by the collection of taxes levied for other than proper electric [948]*948light purposes, namely, each and all of the other municipal departments; and that the same cannot be and will not be obtained in any other or different way.”

Appellants further allege that, unless the relief prayed for is granted, appellants and other residents and taxpayers of said incorporated town of Sibley will be compelled to pay the losses so occasioned by the carrying out of said contract, and that this will result in taking the property of appellants without due process of law and without compensation to them.

Appellees’ demurrer challenges the sufficiency of the allegations of the petition to entitle plaintiffs to the relief demanded. The grounds are specific.

Appellants contend that the contract in question, between the incorporated town of Sibley as party of the first part, and the Oeheyedan corporation and the towns of Lake Park and Harris as parties of the second part, is wanting mutuality, and is unilateral, and therefore void.

At the threshold of this question, we are confronted with the proposition that appellants are not parties to this contract. They are seeking to enjoin the performance of a contract which the parties thereto, under allegations of the petition, have recognized and carried out in the past, and are now performing and will continue to perform in the future. It has been held that the objection to a contract that it is wanting in mutuality can only be made by one of the parties thereto, and not by a stranger to the contract. Underwood v. Texas & P. R. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.), 178 S. W. 38.

Without passing on that question in this particular case, we are, however, disposed to consider the question in regard to the mutuality of the contract in question. The contract provides as follows:

“1. The said parties of the second part, for the consideration hereinafter named, hereby agree to construct,' maintain and operate for a period of twenty years from date when current is first used upon the hereinafter described transmission line, a high-voltage, electric-current transmission line, together with substation required at the town limits of Sibley, Iowa, and all equipment required therefor, except meter, for the purpose of [949]*949transmitting electric current from tbe corporate limits of tbe town of Sibley, aforesaid, to sucb points as tbe parties of tbe second part may deem necessary for tbe distribution and sale of electric current in tbe village of Allendor'f, and the incorporated towns of Ocbeyedan, Harris and Lake Park, all in tbe state of Iowa, and to any other points outside of tbe present corporate limits of tbe town of Sibley, and east of a north and south line three miles east of said town of Sibley, and within eight miles of said transmission line;
“2. Tbe said party of tbe first part agrees to furnish within ninety days from tbe date hereof electric current of three-phase, sixty-cycle of the nominal voltage of twenty-three hundred volts, for twenty-four hours each day in each and every day of the year during the term above specified. The above stated three-phase circuit shall show a balanced or equal voltage between any two wires of said circuit at the point where sold to the party of the second part. The exact voltage of such electric current delivered shall be determined at such time as complete specifications for the above transmission line are prepared; and when determined, will be maintained at such a voltage with an allowable variation of two per centum above or below normal.

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197 Iowa 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meader-v-incorporated-town-of-sibley-iowa-1923.