Oakland Electric Co. v. Union Gas & Electric Co.

78 A. 288, 107 Me. 279, 1910 Me. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 78 A. 288 (Oakland Electric Co. v. Union Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oakland Electric Co. v. Union Gas & Electric Co., 78 A. 288, 107 Me. 279, 1910 Me. LEXIS 104 (Me. 1910).

Opinion

Emery, C. J.

The Union Gas and Electric Company (the defendant) was incorporated in 1897 by ch. 556 of the Special Laws of that year. The purposes of its incorporation are stated in section 2 of the charter which is as follows: "Sect. 2. The purposes of said corporation are the making, generating, selling, distributing and supplying gas or electricity, or both, for lighting, heating, manufacturing or mechanical purposes, in the city of Waterville and adjoining towns, or for either or any of such purposes, with all the rights and privileges and powers, and subject to all the restrictions and liabilities, by law incident to corporations of a similar nature.”

Section 4 of the charter is as follows:— "Sect. 4. Said corporation is hereby empowered to set poles and extend wires in and through the streets and ways of the city of Waterville and the towns of Winslow, Benton, Vassalboro and Fairfield, for the purpose of furnishing electric lights for public and private use in said city and towns, under such reasonable restrictions as may be imposed [281]*281by the municipal officers thereof, subject to the general laws of the state regulating the erection of posts and lines for the purposes of electricity. It is also empowered to transmit electric power for lease or sale to such points in said city and towns as may be feasible,' in such manner as may be expedient, and, subject to the general laws aforesaid, it may erect and maintain all posts, wires and fixtures necessary therefor. Said corporation shall have the right to lay gas pipes in any of the public streets or highways in said city of Waterville and said towns of Winslow, Benton, Vassalboro and Fairfield ; the permit of the municipal officers of said city and towns having first been obtained in writing, and to relay and repair the same, subject to such regulations as the health and safety of the citizens and the security of public travel may require and as may be prescribed by the authorities thereof.”

Dec. 8, 1899, the defendant company entered into a contract under seal with the assignors of the plaintiff company and their assigns, in which it covenanted to erect and maintain a line for the transmission of electricity from its station in Waterville to the Oakland line, (Oakland being an adjoining town to Waterville) and to furnish over said line, for lighting purposes in Oakland, electricity as required by the other party not exceeding one hundred and fifty horse power per year. The contract was to continue for three years and on Dec. 28, 1899, it was assigned to the plaintiff company, a corporation engaged in furnishing electricity for lighting purposes to customers in Oakland.

After the making of the contract the defendant company erected and maintained a transmission line from its station in Waterville to the line between Waterville and Oakland, and, up to June 23, 1901, in accordance with the contract, furnished over that line electricity to the plaintiff company, which latter company received the electricity there directly upon its own line constructed to that point, and passed it to its own customers in Oakland. The electricity passed directly from the station in Waterville to the consumers in Oakland without transformation. At that date, however, June 23, 1901, the defendant ceased to furnish electricity as required by its contract. This action is for that breach of the [282]*282contract. In defense, the defendant company claims that the contract was void in its inception because not within the corporate powers of the company, or, in technical language, was ultra vires.

It would seem from the later opinions of courts and jurists that the doctrine of ultra vires is thought to have been heretofore too often and too strictly applied, especially in cases of contracts of corporations (other than municipal at least) not in themselves harmful to the public. The doctrine is elaborately and exhaustively discussed with many citations of cases, etc., by the learned editor of the American State Reports, in a note to the case, In re Assignment Mutual Ins. Co., 70 Am. St. Rep. 156. A later ample discussion is by the court of Minnesota in Bell v. Kirkland, 102 Minn. 213, 113 N. W. 271, 13 L. R. A. 793.

But, however the doctrine is regarded or applied by the courts when invoked by the State or by stockholders to prevent a corporation from avoiding its duties to the public, or from engaging in enterprises foreign in nature to those for which it was incorporated, its invocation by the corporation itself to avoid contracts found to be unprofitable is regarded with disfavor. In such cases, in most jurisdictions, the defense of ultra vires is not sustained merely because the contract is not within the express terms of the charter, nor where to sustain the defense would work any wrong or injustice. Hawkes v. Eastern Counties, 1 De G. M. G. 737, at page 760 ; Norwich v. Norfolk R. R. Co., 82 E. C. L. 397, at page 445; Third Am Savings Bank v. Dimock, 24 N. J. Eq. 26, at page 28 ; Wright v. Pipe Line Co., 101 Pa. St. 204; Whitney Arms Co. v. Barlow, 63 N. Y. 62.

Also a distinction is made, and is apparent, between contracts foreign in nature to those contemplated in its charter, and contracts merely in extension of some corporate power. Thus a contract by a bank for the construction of a railroad would clearly be foreign to the banking business, while a contract by a railroad company to transport passengers and freight beyond its own line would not be foreign to the railroad business, and would be upheld though the power so to contract was not expressed in the charter. Perkins v. P. S. & P. R. R. Co., 47 Maine, 573.

[283]*283Recurring now to the case at bar; the defendant company was incorporated for the purposes of "making, generating, selling, distributing and supplying gas or electricity or both for lighting (and other purposes) in the city of Waterville and adjoining towns.” The company’s incorporation for those purposes gave it, without further legislation, authority to make and execute any contracts, not in themselves illegal, which would be adapted to the furtherance of those purposes. "It is a general principle of law that every corporation has by necessary implication the power to do whatever is necessary to carry into effect the purposes of its creation, unless the doing of the particular thing is prohibited by law, or its charter.” Thompson on Corp., sec. 5641, and cases there cited. The contract in question was not foreign to the purposes for which the defendant company was incorporated but clearly was in furtherance of them. It provided for the making and selling electricity to be distributed for lighting purposes in an adjoining town, Oakland being an adjoining town. It was not a contract malum in se and hence, unless prohibited by some law or by the charter of the company, it must be held obligatory on both parties.

No clause in the charter or other statute is cited expressly prohibiting such a contract. It is urged, however, that the contract is impliedly prohibited by sec. 4 of the charter which specifically empowers the company to set poles and extend wires through the streets of "Waterville, Winslow, Benton, Vassalboro and Fairfield” for the purpose of furnishing electricity for electric lights in those municipalities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 A. 288, 107 Me. 279, 1910 Me. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakland-electric-co-v-union-gas-electric-co-me-1910.