Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. City of Havre

94 P.2d 660, 109 Mont. 164, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 29
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1939
DocketNo. 7,971.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 P.2d 660 (Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. City of Havre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. City of Havre, 94 P.2d 660, 109 Mont. 164, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 29 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought to enjoin the city of Havre and its officers from executing and delivering revenue bonds to the Federal Public Works Administration and to enjoin them from carrying out certain contracts and resolutions pertaining to the construction of a gas distribution system and pipe line and the purchase of natural gas for distribution in that city, on the principal ground that the proposed project will result in unlawful competition to plaintiff.

Plaintiff is a taxpayer on real and personal property in Havre, where it is engaged as a public utility in distributing natural gas to its customers therein under a thirty-year franchise granted by the city to the Havre Natural Gas Company in 1914, and which was later acquired by plaintiff by assignment with the consent of the city. It transports its gas by a pipe line a distance of twenty-four miles from what is known as the Bowes Structure in Blaine county. Judgment went in favor of defendants, and plaintiff appealed.

The important facts are uncontradicted and may be fairly depicted by giving a brief résumé of the court’s findings, which were in substance as follows:

That defendant McMaster is the duly elected and acting mayor of the city; White, the city clerk; Harlan, the city treasurer, and Koerner, Hontz, Soderberg, Lanham, Oglesby and Sowa, its aldermen; that on September 10, 1935, the city council by resolution authorized its mayor and city engineer to file an application with the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works (hereinafter referred to as the P. W. A.), for a loan and grant to finance the construction of a municipal gas distribution system and supply line; that on September 10, 1935, defendants C. O. Moore and C. O. Moore Company were employed by the city as engineers to obtain and furnish *168 information to the P. W. A. in connection with the application and to furnish plans and specifications in connection with the proposed project and have ever since acted in that capacity; that on November 24, 1936, the United States, acting through the P. W. A., made an offer to the city (which was by its terms required to be accepted by the city within ten days) to aid in the proposed project by offering to make a grant in the amount of 45 per cent, of the cost of the project upon completion, but not to exceed the sum of $73,636, and by purchasing at the principal amount, plus accrued interest, obligations of certain designated description, in the aggregate principal amount of $90,000. On December 7, 1936, the city by resolution accepted the offer, and on that date the city entered into a contract or agreement with the United States, acting through the P. W. A., wherein the city agreed to acquire and construct a natural gas distribution system, complete with supply lines and necessary equipment, including a natural gas supply, and the United States, acting through the P. W. A., agreed to finance the same as hereinabove stated. On May 4, 1937, the city entered into a gas purchase contract with defendant Browne, Trustee, by the terms of which Browne agreed to sell and the city to buy for a period of twenty years from wells to be drilled on certain described lands and on other lands that might be acquired by him as Trustee at prices and upon conditions therein stated, up to the city’s full requirements. On September 30, 1937, by a supplemental contract, the agreement of May 4th was modified to make it clear that the city must buy gas from Browne exclusively so long as he was able to fill its requirements, and to give him thirty days to make provision if the city should require a greater supply of gas than theretofore estimated (stated in the bid proposal to be five hundred million cubic feet annually).

The original contract for the purchase of gas was let after an election was held at which the voters by their favorable vote authorized the city to enter into a gas purchasing contract. The election was held on April 5, 1937, at which the voters were called upon to vote for or against “authorizing *169 the City Council of the City of Havre, Montana, to enter into a contract for the purchase of an adequate and suitable supply of natural gas to fully satisfy the needs and requirements of domestic, commercial and industrial consumers of the said City of Havre and vicinity that may apply and be presently connected to the City’s Municipal Gas Distribution System presently to be built, at a cost of not to exceed 5$ per thousand Cubic Feet at the gas well, or not to exceed 12$ per thousand Cu. Ft. for industrial (meaning consumers using 200 M. C. F. or more each day) and 15$ per thousand Cu. Ft. for all other gas required by other consumers without classification to be delivered to the City of Havre’s gas supply line and measuring station within ten (10) miles of the corporate limits of the City of Havre, Montana, such contract to extend over a period of not exceeding twenty (20) years, and to be on such terms and upon such conditions as may be agreed upon by the City Council of the City of Havre, Montana, and the party or parties agreeing to furnish said natural gas supply after competitive bidding therefor and compliance by the City Council of the City of Havre with the preliminaries prescribed by law.”

On November 20, 1937, Browne, Trustee, with the consent of the city, sold and assigned to defendants Catlett, Hobson and Smith the right to supply gas under the contract and the supplemental contract from certain designated lands owned or controlled by them, with the proviso that they drill thereon such wells as might become necessary to supply the gas. On November 30th thereafter the city accepted a proposal of defendant McLaughlin to build and finance the necessary pipe line to connect the project with the gas supply, and on the same day Browne, Trustee, granted an option to McLaughlin whereby Browne, Trustee, agreed to sell to McLaughlin all of the balance of his right, title and interest in the gas purchase contract and supplemental contract, being the right to transmit the gas from the wells to the city’s ten-mile line. On December 31, 1937, the city entered into a supplemental gas purchase contract with Catlett, Hobson and Smith (designated *170 as the “producers”) and McLaughlin (designated as the “contractor”), under which it was agreed that the producers “shall not be deemed liable to furnish gas in excess of the amount which can be produced from their respective holdings as set forth in their said agreements with Frank Browne, dated November 20, 1937,” and providing that the producers’ rights and liabilities were fixed by the new agreement, and that its provisions should apply if in conflict with the provisions of “said gas purchase contract, supplemental gas purchase contract, or said agreements with Frank Browne, Trustee” (the assignment agreements of November 20, 1937). By this agreement the city released Catlett, Hobson and Smith from their absolute engagement to furnish it the required gas, except such as they might be able to produce from the designated land.

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Bluebook (online)
94 P.2d 660, 109 Mont. 164, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-dakota-utilities-co-v-city-of-havre-mont-1939.