Mississippi Power Co. v. Cochran

147 So. 473, 167 Miss. 705, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 98
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 30205.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 147 So. 473 (Mississippi Power Co. v. Cochran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Power Co. v. Cochran, 147 So. 473, 167 Miss. 705, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 98 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the Mississippi Power Company from a judgment of the circuit court of Scott county awarding the appellee, W. J. Cochran, the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars as damages alleged to have been sustained by him because the appellant wrongfully discontinued furnishing him electric power for the operation of his cotton gin plant.

Prior to the fall of 1928, the appellee owned and operated a cotton ginning plant, using for that purpose steam power. During that fall he installed electrical appliances and began using electric power in the operation of this plant. On April 4, 1929, he became a. customer of the appellant under a contract executed on that date. By the terms of this contract the appellant obligated itself to furnish electric power for the operation of appellee’s gin plant at a fixed price for connected horse power, and a fixed price per kilowatt' for all energy consumed in excess of one hundred eighty kilowatt hours per horse power. The contract provided that “in the event a new and reduced schedule of rates is made effective” the appellee was “to pay for the service delivered during the remainder of the term of this agreement at the rates set forth in the new schedule.”

After this contract was executed, but before the appellee began using the electric power of the appellant, a reduction was made by appellant in gin rates, and the rate to appellee was finally so fixed that he was obligated to use for each ginning season a minimum of eleven thousand two hundred fifty kilowatt hours for which he was to pay five cents per kilowatt hour, and for all over this *710 minimum he was to pay at a rate of three cents per kilowatt hour.

The contract further provided that bills for energy consumed should be rendered monthly, and if not paid within ten days, that the company might, at any time thereafter, upon five days’ written notice, suspend service; and that if not paid within a further period of fifteen days, the company might, at its option, treat the contract as canceled and at an end. It further provided that the electric energy used by the appellee should be measured at the division switch by meters and instruments installed and owned by the appellant; that all transformers, transmission lines, switches, machinery, and materials up to and including the division switch, and all the company’s metering equipment, wherever placed, should be maintained and owned by the company, and should, at all times, be subject to its inspection, repair, or alteration, and removable at its option, and that the appellee should supply without charge suitable buildings and accommodations therefor.

The appellee began using electric power under this contract at the beginning of the 1929' ginning season in August, 1929, at which time the meter installed by the appellant registered zero. He continued to use this power until December 24,1930, at which time service was discontinued by appellant for the reason that appellee refused to pay the November, 1930, bill, which covered service from October 23, 1930, to November 22, 1930, which said bill was dated December 1, 1930. During the period intervening between the beginning of service and the rendition of the November, 1930, bill, the appellee paid all bills for service as rendered. He testified that in November, 1930, he became convinced that the total amount paid by him for service prior to that month was excessive, and that, when the meter was read on November 22,1930, he demanded the privilege of inspecting and reading it. At that reading of the meter it showed that sixty thousand three hundred kilowatts had been consumed. At the fixed rate of five cents per KIWH for a *711 minimum of eleven thousand two hundred fifty KWH per season, and covering two seasons, and three cents per KWH for all over this minimum, the appellee was obligated to pay a total sum of two thousand two hundred fifty-nine dollars for the entire period, according to the meter reading of sixty thousand three hundred KWH for the period. Having ascertained from his canceled checks and records that he had paid to appellant a total sum of two thousand two hundred twenty-one dollars and thirty-five cents for service up to November, 1930, the appellee tendered to the appellant the difference between two thousand two hundred fifty-nine dollars, the total amount due for the entire period according to the meter reading, and two thousand two hundred twenty-one dollars and thirty-five cents, the total amount paid, or thirty-seven dollars and sixty-five cents. The appellant refused to accept this tender in settlement of its November bill, and negotiations between them having failed to produce an agreement, service was discontinued on December 24, 1930.

The contract also provided that it should continue in force for one year from the beginning of service, not later than the 15th of August, 1929, and thereafter until the expiration of at least six months’ written notice by either party of intention to terminate it.

In justification of its act in discontinuing service to appellee, the appellant offered evidence to the effect that, when the meter reading of current consumed by appellee ’s plant for the month of September reached its office, this reading indicated that very much less power had been consumed than would ordinarily be required to gin the number of bales of cotton that were reported to have been ginned during that month; that an investigation was immediately made, and it was discovered that a transformer at or near appellee’s plant was burned out, resulting in the meter failing to register the full amount of electric current passing through it. The- defective transformer was promptly replaced, but the witnesses *712 testified they did not know, and fiad no means of ascertaining, fiow long tfie transformer fiad been defective.

Tfie appellant also offered evidence to tfie effect that at each meter reading of power consumed by gins in the-territory served by the appellant,- tfie number of bales of cotton ginned at each gin plant since tfie previous reading was ascertained, and from this information a general average of tfie amount of power properly -required to gin a bale of cotton was determined; that when it discovered what it conceived to- be an error in the amount of kilowatt hours used by the appellee during tfie month of September, 1930, it applied tfie average bale consumption to tfie number of bales that appellee was reported to have ginned during that month, and rendered him a bill for energy consumed in accordance with this estimate. Tfie appellee paid this bill without protest, and made no objections to any bills rendered until fie discovered, in November, 1930, that for prior months fie had overpaid, according to- tfie. meter reading of current' consumed for tfie entire period of service.

Tfie appellant contends that a contract between an electric company and its- patron providing for compensation upon tfie meter plan, or at a certain rate as measured by meters, presupposes that tfie meters will accurately record tfie current passing through, them, and that, when tfie. meter fails to- accurately measure tfie current consumed, some other practical and efficient means may be used to measure tfie current'actually used; and'further that tfie method adopted in this case was efficient and practical. .

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 473, 167 Miss. 705, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-power-co-v-cochran-miss-1933.