Pacificorp v. City of Ashland

744 P.2d 257, 88 Or. App. 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 21, 1987
Docket86-0553-J-1; CA A41718
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 744 P.2d 257 (Pacificorp v. City of Ashland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacificorp v. City of Ashland, 744 P.2d 257, 88 Or. App. 15 (Or. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinions

RICHARDSON, P. J.

Plaintiff brought this action for declaratory and injunctive relief against the defendant city. It contends in its first claim that the city has unlawfully provided electric service to customers who reside both within the city and within areas that, before the city annexed them, the Public Utility Commissioner (PUC) had allocated to plaintiff as an exclusive service territory, pursuant to ORS 758.400 to 758.475. In its second claim, plaintiff contends that the city has no condemnation authority over property of plaintiff located within the city and used by plaintiff in connection with its utility service to customers, which the city intends to acquire and put to the same “public use” as plaintiff now does. Both parties moved for summary judgment on both claims. The trial court denied plaintiffs motions, allowed the city’s and entered a judgment declaring the parties’ rights accordingly. Plaintiff appeals and assigns error to the rulings on the motions for summary judgment. We reverse and remand on the first claim and affirm on the second.

ORS 758.400 to 758.475 gives the PUC authority to allocate service territories exclusively, under defined circumstances, to providers of utility services. The areas in question were allocated to plaintiff by a 1962 PUC order, as modified by a 1965 order. The city has since annexed the areas and, between 1965 and the present, has constructed distribution facilities and provided electric utility service in them. Plaintiff argues that the city’s doing so violates the territorial allocation statutes. ORS 758.450(2) provides that, after territory has been allocated to a “person,” under circumstances of the kind present here, “no other person shall offer, construct or extend utility service in or into an allocated territory.” ORS 758.400(2) defines “person” to include municipalities. However, ORS 758.470 reserves certain municipal powers and, in certain ways, restricts the application of the allocation statutes to cities. It provides:

“(1) ORS 758.015 and 758.400 to 758.475 shall not be construed or applied to restrict the powers granted to cities to issue franchises, or to restrict the exercise of the power of condemnation by a municipality; and when a municipality has condemned or otherwise acquired another person’s equipment, plant or facilities for rendering utility service, it shall [18]*18acquire all of the rights of the person whose property is condemned to serve the territory served by the acquired properties.
“(2) ORS 758.015 and 758.400 to 758.475 shall not be construed to restrict the right of a municipality to provide utility service for street lights, fire alarm systems, airports, buildings and other municipal installations regardless of their location.
“(3)' ORS 758.015 and 758.400 to 758.475 shall not be construed to confer upon the commissioner any regulatory authority over rates, service or financing of cooperatives or municipalities.”

The city argues that those reservations, together with the affirmative authority conferred on cities by ORS 221.420(2) (a), 223.005,225.020 and 225.030, give it the right to provide service to customers in the incorporated portions of the territory allocated to plaintiff. ORS 221.420(2)(a) provides that every city may:

“Determine by contract or prescribe by ordinance or otherwise, the quality and character of each kind of product or service to be furnished or rendered by any public utility, furnishing any product or service within such city, and all other terms and conditions upon which any public utility may be permitted to occupy the streets, highways or other public property within such city and exclude or eject any public utility therefrom.”

ORS 223.005 provides:

“Any incorporated city may:
“(1) Appropriate any private real property, water, watercourse and riparian rights to any public or municipal use or for the general benefit and use of the people of the city, including but not limited to appropriation for an aviation field, park, city hall, city buildings, jail, or to protect the city from overflow by freshets.
“(2) Appropriate any real property, water, watercourse and water and riparian rights, including power sites, to any public or municipal use or for the general benefit and use of the people within or without the city, and to build dams, reservoirs and conduits for the purpose of storing and using water to aid in developing the necessary power to generate electricity for the use and benefit of the people within or without the city.
[19]*19“(3) Condemn for its use private property for the purpose of erecting and maintaining electric lines thereon for the purpose of generating and conveying power to light and heat the city, and to be used and sold by the city for manufacturing, transportation, domestic and other purposes, either within or without the corporate limits of the city, and for the purpose of constructing electrical systems for municipal uses.”

ORS 225.020 provides:

“(1) When the power to do so is conferred by or contained in its charter or act of incorporation, any city may build, own, operate and maintain waterworks, water systems, railways and railroads, electric light and power plants, within and without its boundaries for the benefit and use of its inhabitants and for profit. To that end it may:
“(a) Acquire water systems and use, sell and dispose of its water for domestic, recreational, industrial, and public use and for irrigation and other purposes within and without its boundaries.
“(b) Build, acquire, own and operate railways operated by steam, electric or other power within and without its boundaries and running from such city to other towns, cities and points without its boundaries.
“(c) Acquire right of way, easements or real property within and without its boundaries for any such purpose.
“(2) In exercising such powers, any city may bring actions for the condemnation or taking of private property for public use in the same manner as private corporations are now authorized or permitted by law to do.”

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Related

Linn Cnty. v. Brown
443 P.3d 700 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2019)
PacifiCorp v. City of Ashland
749 P.2d 1189 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
744 P.2d 257, 88 Or. App. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacificorp-v-city-of-ashland-orctapp-1987.