Resh, Inc. v. Oklahoma Electric Cooperative, Inc.

1973 OK 81, 516 P.2d 803, 1973 Okla. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 3, 1973
Docket44739
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1973 OK 81 (Resh, Inc. v. Oklahoma Electric Cooperative, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Resh, Inc. v. Oklahoma Electric Cooperative, Inc., 1973 OK 81, 516 P.2d 803, 1973 Okla. LEXIS 369 (Okla. 1973).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

This is an appeal by defendant, Oklahoma Electric Cooperative, Inc., a corporation, from an adverse judgment in the District Court of Cleveland County, Oklahoma, in favor of Resh Incorporated, a corporation, and E. R. Reece, Intervenor. Parties will be referred to as they appeared below.

The trial judge by memoranda succinctly stated the facts, which will be related in part:

“Plaintiff brought this action as owner of land, seeking to enjoin defendant from constructing an electric distribution line along the west side of it, alleging that a portion of the construction was off the roadway. easement and on plaintiff’s land, and that it had no right to expand its services.
“At hearing held, it was shown by defendant that it was servicing an area that it was in before such was annexed into the City of Norman. That it was now serving about ten times as many customers as it did at the time of annexation, and that the present load required the installation of new circuits, even though it had already had one just across the road and parallel to the one they were constructing on plaintiff. It was further shown that defendant had made no effort to obtain easement from plaintiff, but plaintiff’s evidence made it clear that such would have done no good, as they were dealing with another utility company for underground service. Plaintiff urged that it had no adequate remedy at law, and that defendant should be enjoined from constructing the line.
*805 "* * *, the undisputed evidence showed the necessity for expansion of defendant’s facilities * * *.
“* * * T^e Oklahoma Legislature many years ago allegedly gave utilities the right to use highway easements for their utility purposes.”

Pursuant to this referenced legislation, the Cooperative, to whose existence defendant succeeded, obtained consent of the county to do things necessary to transmit electrical energy within the county.

The trial court found that plaintiff had no adequate remedy at law and could seek an injunction.

Following hearing on the matter and while the court had it under advisement, E. R. Reece, taxpayer and resident of the City of Norman, was permitted to intervene with the claim that defendant had no right to serve new customers within the city limits of Norman without a franchise, that defendant had none, and that defendant’s use of the streets of the municipality for public utility purposes was a denial to intervenor of his right to vote on the granting of a franchise as provided for in Article 18, Section 5(a) of the Constitution of the State of Oklahoma.

Thereafter, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and permanently barred and enjoined defendant from installing any lines, poles or other equipment over and across the public road abutting on plaintiff’s property, and ordered defendant to remove any - such equipment already installed on it.

Judgment was also given to intervenor, and defendant was permanently barred and enjoined from installing any lines, poles or other equipment over and across the public road abutting on intervenor’s property.

The trial court also decreed that to the extent that Title 18 O.S. 437.2 (k), or any other provision of the Rural Electric Cooperative Act of 1939, as amended by the Laws of 1961, would purport to grant to defendant a state franchise, or to authorize said defendant to expand its services and operations within the boundaries of the City of Norman after annexation over and beyond those existing as of the date of any such annexation, the same was void and invalid as being violative of provisions of Article 18, Section 5(a) and (b) of the Constitution of the State of Oklahoma.

The trial court also ordered that defendant’s supersedeas bond of $6,000.00, theretofore posted, be considered a supersedeas bond for purposes of appeal of the judgment.

Execution of the judgment was stayed pending appeal.

The factual manner of defendant’s operation in the annexed area subsequent to its annexation, and the basis therefor as understood by it, comes more distinctly into focus from the testimony of its general manager:

“Q. Now, Mr. Rudolph, did you seek any permission from the City of Norman to put up the line in question here today?
“A. No, sir, we did not.
* * * * * *
"Q. Now, Mr. Rudolph, how many members do you have in that Northwest Quarter, if you know?
“A. I think there is only one connection, at the present time, in the Northwest Quarter.
“Q. Is this new power line necessary, convient (sic) or appropriate for that one member, presently existing?
“A. No, I don’t believe so.
* * * * * *
“Q. Well, why, in your opinion, is this power line in question necessary, convient (sic), or appropriate?
“A. * * * But this is basically the result of long range planning, as a co-operative, in an effort to provide adequate dependable electric service to the community and the general public, for which it serves. * * * Whereas (sic) the sys *806 tem on the west side of Norman grew, ... we continued to study it. . so that the west side of Norman to be adequately served . . . , must be, by necessity, have additional source of power in that area. And we normally refer to that as a sub-station .
* * * * * Have new members been added since 1961 in this annexed area to this power line in question? a
Oh, yes, yes. >
Would you say many as just a few or - - - ©
I would say many. >
Now, these areas that were added, were they substitute members or were they altogether new members? ©
Well, a little bit of both. In other words, a rent house where people move in and out would constitute basically the same load, but a load such as Clark’s Department Store— Clark’s Discount Store or the Pontiac agency, or the Buick agency, our own warehouse facilities, and many more — apartment houses and so forth, have been added to this area out there, and must be ac-comodated — these must be accom-odated some way. >
* * * * *
How many members would you estimate, or if you know, did you have in existance (sic) in 1961, in that area? ©
I wouldn’t have any way of knowing what that would be nine years ago. >
Would you estimate that you have something like ten times as many members now as you did in 1961? ©
* * * * *
Well, I would guess, probably, that would be a safe figure.

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Bluebook (online)
1973 OK 81, 516 P.2d 803, 1973 Okla. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/resh-inc-v-oklahoma-electric-cooperative-inc-okla-1973.