Miller v. Incorporated Town of Milford

276 N.W. 826, 224 Iowa 753
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
DocketNo. 43962.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 276 N.W. 826 (Miller v. Incorporated Town of Milford) 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
Miller v. Incorporated Town of Milford, 276 N.W. 826, 224 Iowa 753 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

Prior to 1930, the town of Milford and its inhabitants had been receiving electric service from the Iowa Public Service Company which held a general franchise expiring in October, 1933. On September 11, 1928, the town and company entered into a written contract for lighting the streets of Milford. The term of the agreement was for a period of five years, from July 1, 1928, and for five-year periods thereafter until canceled by a sixty-day written notice by either party to the other prior to the end of the term or any fifth anniversary of the effective date of the agreement. On February 21, 1930, the Iowa Public Service Company sold and transferred to the Northwestern Light & Power Company the general franchise, distribution, and street lighting system and all equipment and property devoted to furnishing electric service in the town of Milford, and also transferred as a part of the sale the said street lighting contract.

Neither party to the contract gave notice of cancellation *756 prior to July 1, 1933, so the contract remained in full force and effect until at least July 1, 1938.

One of the contentions of the defendants is, that as the franchise expired in October, 1933, the Northwestern Light & Power Company had no further right to use and occupy the streets and maintain its equipment and property thereon, and therefore the street lighting contract became void.

On February 1, 1934, the town voted to establish a municipal light and power plant to be paid for out of the future earnings of the plant as provided for by Code section 6134-dl. On February 28, 1934, the town of Milford entered into a written contract with the Monroe Electric Company, one of the defendants in this ease, for the construction of the plant. The title to the plant remained in the Monroe Electric Company to secure the contract. In July, 1934, this suit was commenced. In June, 1934, the Northwestern Light & Power Company brought an action against the same persons who are defendants in this case in the federal court which sought substantially the same relief against the defendants as prayed for in the' case at bar.

Another claim of the defendants here is that the decree in the federal case adjudicated all the issues in the case at bar adversely to the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs, as citizens, property owners, taxpayers and users of electric current, brought this suit in their own behalf and on the behalf of all other residents of Milford in said classes in which they sought a judgment and decree finding and adjudicating that: (a) A contract between the defendant town and Monroe Electric Company for the construction of a municipal electric lighting plant is void, and restraining the making of any payments thereunder and the doing of any further acts in performance thereof, including the restraining of the town from operating the plant and restraining Monroe Electric Company from transferring or .collecting the revenue bonds; (b) that the street-lighting contract held by Northwestern Light & Power Company with the town is in full force and effect, and restraining the town from breaching said contract and from cutting off the service thereunder, and from removing the structures, equipment, and appliances on the streets and public places here maintained in the performance of said contract, and restraining the defendants from .interfering with the system of *757 tbe said company; (c) that the plaintiffs are entitled to receive the electric service they are now enjoying, and restraining the town and its officers from cutting the wires furnishing said service and from interfering with the distribution system of the said company.

The answer of defendants stated in substance:

“Plaintiffs are not proper parties, have shown no damage, have no rights to protect, and are not entitled to an injunction; that the franchise of the Northwestern Light & Power Company in the Town of Milford having expired in October, 1933, and said Company having, been notified to discontinue electric service in the Town of Milford and to remove its equipment from the streets and alleys, is maintaining a nuisance upon said streets and alleys; that the plaintiffs are not parties to the street lighting contract and have no rights thereunder; that the street lighting contract is void and not binding on the parties; that all of the issues raised by the plaintiffs, and especially all issues relative to the validity of the contract between the Town of Milford and the Monroe Electric Company for' the construction of the municipal electric light plant being relative to a public question, have been adjudicated and determined in a prior and former action in the Federal Court, and that the findings and decree of the Federal Court on a public question are binding on all parties; that the contract for the construction of the municipal electric light plant is valid and that competitive bidding was had; that by reason of the fact that the contract for the construction of the plant having been completed, said plant accepted by the Town and the revenue bonds issued and delivered in payment thereof, the question of whether or not said construction contract is void was academic and moot.”

Before the trial of the case commenced, the trial court sustained plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss division two of the defendants’ answer which pleaded that the judgment and decree in the federal case adjudicated all of the matters alleged in plaintiffs’ petition adversely to the plaintiffs. At the conclusion of the trial, a decree was entered which found that the contract between the town and Monroe Electric Company for the construction of the plant was entered into without competitive bidding, and was not responsive to the invitation to bidders and extended to the company rights and privileges not within the *758 purview of tbe call, and tbat tbe contract was illegal and void, and restrained tbe defendants from proceeding further in tbe performance of tbe contract, from operating tbe plant, and from making any payment upon tbe bonds issued for tbe purchase price, and from doing any acts pursuant to tbe contract; tbat tbe contract between the town and Northwestern Light & Power Company was valid and that the execution of tbe street lighting contract was not tbe granting of a franchise, and tbat tbe plaintiffs bad a right to have street lighting service furnished under said contract, and restrained tbe defendants from interfering with or disturbing tbe property of tbe power company and from interfering with tbe furnishing of street lighting service under said contract.

I. In paragraph 9, division 2 of the answer, tbe defendants pleaded res adjudieata, alleging that all of tbe several causes of action contained in tbe pleadings of tbe plaintiffs have been fully adjudicated in the case of Northwestern Light & Power Company v. Town of Milford, Iowa, 82 Fed., 2d 45, 47, decided March 19, 1936, in the United States Court of Appeals, and that such adjudication resulted in a denial of tbe relief demanded by tbe plaintiffs which included tbe very matters involved in this action. Tbe plaintiffs moved to strike said paragraph 9. (1) There is not an identity of parties; (2) the action in tbe federal court was not a class action but was brought and maintained by tbe Northwestern Light & Power Company in its individual capacity; (3) tbat tbe judgment and decree was not on tbe merits of tbe case.

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Bluebook (online)
276 N.W. 826, 224 Iowa 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-incorporated-town-of-milford-iowa-1937.