Miller v. City of Los Angeles

197 P. 342, 185 Cal. 440, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 568
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6517.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 P. 342 (Miller v. City of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. City of Los Angeles, 197 P. 342, 185 Cal. 440, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 568 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for defendants in a taxpayers’ action against the city of Los Angeles to enjoin the carrying out of a contract of date May 26, 1919, between the Southern California Edison Company, a corporation, on the one part, and the city of Los Angeles, on the other.

The contract is one whereby, first, the California Edison Company agrees to sell to the city of Los Angeles and the city agrees to buy the entire electric distributing system of the company within the corporate limits of the city at a *442 price of eleven million dollars. Secondly, the contract contains a further provision that the city shall- purchase from the company during a period of thirty years all electric energy necessary for distribution to its consumers on the municipal system in excess of that produced by the power-generating plants owned and operated by the -city, and thirdly, the contract contains a provision that the company shall have the right for a period of fifteen years to purchase from the city all surplus electric power produced at the city’s generating plants and not necessary for distribution to the consumers on the city’s distributing system or for sale to the city of Pasadena for distribution and use within that city.

Other phases of this contract were originally involved in the action, but the three propositions above referred to are all that remain in controversy on this appeal.

The moving parties to the action in the lower court were the plaintiff and two interveners, appearing separately as individual citizens and taxpayers, in opposition to the contract. Judgment was for the defendant as against plaintiff and both interveners. Only the intervener Mary H. Morgan has appealed, and her attack is upon the general provisions of the contract above stated and presents the following three grounds of opposition:

First, that the city has no power to purchase electricity in bulk and resell and distribute the same to its inhabitants; second, that the city has no power to sell electricity to the Southern California Edison Company for resale and distribution by that company to consumers outside of the city of Los Angeles; third, the contract of purchase has never been approved by a majority of voters of the city of Los Angeles.

The provision of the contract against which the first objection is directed is contained in subdivision 7 thereof, as follows:

“Seventh: The company shall sell, furnish and deliver to the city, and the city shall purchase and take from the company, . . . electric energy as follows, to wit:
“ (a) All electric energy which the city shall require each year for and during the period of ten years from and after the date of the transfer and delivery to the city of said properties of the company ... in order to supply consumers served by the city for use within the limits of the city, as *443 aforesaid, in excess of the amount which the city shall generate at hydro-electric plants now or hereafter owned or controlled by it; . . .
“ (b) All electric energy which the city shall require each year for and during a period of twenty years immediately succeeding the aforesaid ten year period, in order to supply consumers served by it for use within the limits of the city, as aforesaid, in excess of the amount which the city shall generate at electric plants of any kind now or hereafter owned or controlled by it; ... ”

Appellant claims that while the city of Los Angeles, under certain provisions of its charter, has authority to acquire by purchase or otherwise the necessary plants, machinery, and equipment for manufacturing and distributing electric light and energy for the use of the municipality and its inhabitants, it is without power to purchase the manufactured article in quantity for such use and distribution.

[1] It is contended by respondent that authority exists for such purchase of electric energy in bulk under subdivision 7, section 2, of article I of the Los Angeles city charter.

That section provides that the city shall have the right and power “to acquire by purchase, condemnation, lease, gift or otherwise, or to construct, extend, maintain and operate, within or without the city limits, any and all plants and property necessary or convenient for furnishing the city and its inhabitants . . . with . . . light, heat, power, or any other public service.”

Stripping this section of the charter of all expressions nonessential to the point in controversy, respondent would have it read' thus: The city shall have the right and power “to acquire by purchase ... or otherwise . . . any and all property necessary or convenient to furnish the city and its inhabitants . . . with . . . light, heat, power.” In a broad analysis of the term it can hardly be disputed that electrical energy as manufactured and supplied for public and private use is property. Electricity is rather an intangible asset, and the word “property” is perhaps not the most apt word by which to describe the supply of electrical energy thus sought to be acquired for the use of the city. However, if it was a water supply to be delivered from without to the mains of the city’s distributing system it *444 might appropriately be so described, and an electric current to be delivered at the main conduit of the city’s electrical distributing system is not essentially different.

Conceding the limitations of the powers of a municipality to such as are expressly granted or necessarily implied from powers expressly given, and that language purporting to define the powers of a municipality is to be strictly construed (Oro Elec. Corp. v. Railroad Com., 169 Cal. 466, [147 Pac. 118]; Hyatt v. Williams, 148 Cal. 585, [84 Pac. 41]; Wichmann v. City of Placerville, 147 Cal. 162, [81 Pac. 537]; 1 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., par. 237), we have here an express authority granted under the city charter to acquire and distribute such property as is necessary or convenient for supplying the city and its inhabitants with light, heat, power, or any other public service, and this general purpose being express and definite, the means for carrying it into effect is within the reasonable discretion of the city authorities.

Counsel for appellant contend that this authority is not general but special and limited; that it is confined by the use of the terms “plants and property” to an equipment for manufacturing its own supply of electrical energy, and they call attention to the more general provision as it existed under an earlier expression of this same section of the charter where the city was in terms given power “to provide for supplying the city and its inhabitants with water, gas, and electricity, or any thereof.” Under the amendment of 1913 this general clause was eliminated and the section re-enacted as hereinbefore quoted, thereby, as appellant claims, restricting the general power of the city. There are other sections of the charter, however, that seem to supply this general authority or at least to justify the broader interpretation of subdivision 7 of section 2 of article I, claimed by the respondent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 P. 342, 185 Cal. 440, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-city-of-los-angeles-cal-1921.