PacifiCorp v. City of Ashland

749 P.2d 1189, 89 Or. App. 366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 10, 1988
Docket86-0553-J-1; CA A41718
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 749 P.2d 1189 (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, 749 P.2d 1189, 89 Or. App. 366 (Or. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinions

[368]*368RICHARDSON, P. J.

Both parties petition for review and ask that we reconsider our previous decision. 88 Or App 15, 744 P2d 257 (1987). ORAP 10.10. We deny plaintiff s petition, grant defendant city’s petition and modify and adhere to our former opinion.

City’s petition challenges our remand of the summary judgment for it on plaintiffs first claim. We based that holding on our conclusion that, contrary to city’s argument, the authority to regulate public utilities and to provide utility services, which various provisions in ORS chapters 221, 223 and 225 confer on cities, does not render the territorial allocation statutes, ORS 758.400 to 758.475, inapplicable to cities in their capacity as providers of utility services and does not permit them to furnish utility services in areas which have been allocated to other providers. The areas affected by that holding were allocated to plaintiff when they were in unincorporated portions of Jackson County and were later annexed by city.

The regulatory statute on which city relies principally in its petition is ORS 221.420(2)(a), which permits cities to

“ [determine by contract or prescribe by ordinance or otherwise, the terms and conditions, including payment of charges and fees, upon which any public utility, electric cooperative or people’s utility district may be permitted to occupy the streets, highways or other public property within such city and exclude or eject any public utility therefrom.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The focus of city’s concern with our former opinion is our statement that

“the city is not correct in its view that its unexercised authority under [ORS 221.420(2) (a) and other] statutes [setting out city regulatory powers] is relevant to the question presented in plaintiffs first claim. The mere existence of those powers does not permit the city, acting in its capacity as a provider of utility services, to act in violation of the allocation statutes to which it is expressly subject in that capacity. The city has not exercised its authority to regulate plaintiff or to exclude plaintiff from its territory * * *.” 88 Or App at 21. (Emphasis in original.)

[369]*369City argues that that statement is erroneous in two basic respects. It contends, first:

“Until the appearance of that passage in the Court of Appeals’ opinion, the determinative point litigated by the parties in the trial court was not whether any authority in ORS chapters 221, 223, or 225 had been exercised — a point perhaps prudently ignored by [plaintiff] — but simply whether the authority existed.
“To conclude, as did the Court of Appeals, that the City loses because it has failed to ‘exercise’ certain authority necessarily presumes the existence of that authority. But once the Court of Appeals recognized that the City possesses authority, for example, to ‘exclude or eject’ [plaintiff] from the city limits (ORS 221.420(2)(a)), the inquiry draws to a close, because it is the existence — not the exercise — of that power that was the dispositive issue litigated in the trial court.
“* * * * *
“What has now happened is that the Court of Appeals’ opinion inexplicably construes the dispute to involve the factual question of whether the City has ever actually exercised any enabling authority (such as the statutory power to ‘exclude or eject’), rather than the question litigated below as to whether [plaintiff] is correct that, as a matter of law, the City lacks authority apart from the allocation statutes to provide electric service to its own residents in annexed-but-allocated territory. And what is worse, the Court of Appeals then resolves the non-litigated fact issue against the City.” (Emphasis city’s.)

City’s second point is that, if the exercise, rather than the mere existence, of its regulatory authority and authority to furnish services is relevant, the authority has been exercised. City contends that it has provided and does provide and that plaintiff has never provided electric utility services in the allocated areas which are the subject of plaintiffs first claim. The presence of city services and the absence of services by plaintiff in those areas, according to city, has endured through a period of more than 20 years. City argues that it has therefore exercised its authority under ORS 221.420(2) (a) to exclude or eject plaintiff from the areas.

We concluded in our former opinion, and adhere to the conclusion, that the mere existence of the authority of the city under ORS chapters 221, 223 and 225 does not give it the [370]*370lawful right to act as a provider in territory allocated to another provider. We went on to suggest that, if a city had excluded or ejected a provider from the latter’s allocated territory, that city might be able to serve the territory. We stated, however, that the city had not exercised any authority to exclude or eject plaintiff.

City argues that the existence of the authority under the enumerated chapters was the only issue which the parties litigated and that we erred by going beyond that to the question of whether the authority had been exercised. Plaintiff does not agree that the issue of whether the authority had been exercised was not presented to the trial court. Be that as it may, city’s argument is self-defeating. If we should not have considered the exercise question, it could be no more relevant to our decision if city had exercised its authority, as it now argues that it did, than if it had not; and if, as city argues, we may only consider the effect which the existence of that authority has on city’s ability to provide utility services in the territory allocated to plaintiff, we answered that question adversely to city in our first opinion and have reiterated that answer here. In essence, city’s contention is that we should have confined our inquiry to an issue that we decided against it and that we should not have addressed an issue which —given our conclusion on the first — had to be decided in its favor for it to prevail on plaintiffs first claim.

However, we do not agree that we are precluded from considering the legal effect of the exercise of city regulatory powers as well as their existence. Our disposition of plaintiffs first claim turns on the meaning of statutes and the interrelationship of two statutory schemes. Although it is correct that courts should not make the parties’ arguments for them, it is equally correct that the parties cannot compel a court to misconstrue a statute by arguing only incorrect interpretations of it. The balance between those principles is not always easy to strike. The appropriate answer might sometimes be that a party which would benefit from a statute if it were correctly construed, but which does not urge that construction, is not entitled to prevail. City would be in that position if that were the answer here.

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PacifiCorp v. City of Ashland
749 P.2d 1189 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
749 P.2d 1189, 89 Or. App. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacificorp-v-city-of-ashland-orctapp-1988.