Sheridan Co. Pr. Dist. v. C., B. Q.R.R.

157 P.2d 997, 61 Wyo. 365, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 18
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1945
DocketNo. 2315
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 997 (Sheridan Co. Pr. Dist. v. C., B. Q.R.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheridan Co. Pr. Dist. v. C., B. Q.R.R., 157 P.2d 997, 61 Wyo. 365, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 18 (Wyo. 1945).

Opinion

OPINION
This case involves the validity and application of Chapter 127, Session Laws of 1931, now Chapter 87, W.R.S. 1931, and Chapter 51, Session Laws of 1933, Special Session. These are the power district laws of the State of Wyoming and will be referred to in this opinion as the 1931 act or law and the 1933 act or law.

Seventy-three freeholders of Sheridan County filed a petition in the District Court of Sheridan County praying for the organization of the Sheridan County Power District under the provisions of the laws above *Page 371 mentioned. It was proposed in the petition that the power district should be co-extensive with the boundaries of Sheridan County, should include the city of Sheridan, and that the power district to be created should purchase the Sheridan County Electric Company, a corporation, the company now furnishing light and power to the city of Sheridan and outlying territory, it being alleged that said company is a subsidiary of and owned by Federal Light and Traction Company, which company has been ordered by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission to dispose of its interest in the Sheridan County Electric Company. It is further alleged that it is desirable and necessary that the electric company be sold to the proposed district rather than to an outsider so that the consumers of electricity shall receive the benefit of lower electric rates than can and will be furnished by public ownership of the light plant. No Certificate of Necessity from the State Public Service Commission was attached to the petition as the 1931 law requires because, as the petition alleges, it is not intended to construct a new or competing system but to acquire an existing system, and, further, because, under the 1933 law, it is alleged no such certificate is required. It is also alleged that the names of all freeholders in said proposed district are not attached, to the petition, as required by the 1931 law, because this is not necessary where only revenue secured bonds are to be issued which will not constitute a lien on the lands in the district. After alleging the intention of the district to cooperate with the United States and the State of Wyoming in every way possible, it is alleged that the bonds proposed to be issued will be a lien only upon the plant and equipment and upon the revenue derived from operating the plant.

Upon the filing of this petition the court set the matter down for hearing on July 24, 1944, and caused notice *Page 372 to be published. The two respondents were the only objectors to the petition. The Board of County Commissioners of the county and the city by its Mayor and Commissioners joined in the petition. The objections to the granting of the petition were generally upon constitutional grounds and also that the law under which the district was proposed contemplates only rural electrification and not the furnishing of electricity to cities, and that the plan if carried out would be generally detrimental to the citizens.

The District Court at the hearing of the petition denied the same on many grounds, holding that the 1933 act was unconstitutional in several respects; that there was no authority granted by the acts in question to acquire an electric light plant such as the Sheridan County Electric Company; that the acts do not authorize the inclusion of a city within a district formed thereunder; that no sufficient necessity for the creation of the power district appeared; and that no certificate of necessity from the Public Service Commission of Wyoming was obtained and attached to or accompanied the petition, as required by the 1931 act. Regarding this latter finding, after the matter came on for hearing and was concluded, the petitioners asked leave to reopen the case for the purpose of introducing the findings and order of the Public Service Commission. This was allowed and an order of the Commission denying the application for a certificate was introduced. The order of the Commission recited that the application was made by the Sheridan County Power District proposed; that a necessity exists for someone to take over the Sheridan County Electric Company, as it has been ordered sold, so as to furnish electricity to the consumers now being supplied, but that the Sheridan County Power District has no existence, is merely a proposition not created, and that no financial statement accompanied the application of the power district. It *Page 373 might be well to state at this point that Section 1 of the 1931 act seems to require that the application for a certificate from the Public Service Commission should be made, not by the proposed district, which, of course, has no legal entity until created by the court, but by the signers of the petition for the creation of the district, the statute providing that when a majority of the freeholders on lands, etc., which desire to provide for the purchase of electric power, etc., "they shall procure a certificate of necessity from the Public Service Commission of the State of Wyoming" and attach such certificate to their petition. Apparently the chief reason assigned by the Commission for refusing the certificate was that the applicant, the proposed district, was not in being, although the Commission also assigned as a reason that no financial statement accompanied the application and that the application was premature. If the Commission meant, by holding the application premature, that no certificate will be issued to anyone until the power district has been legally formed by the judgment of the District Court, then it would in all cases be impossible to comply with the statute providing for such districts. Under Section 94-145, W.R.S. 1931, as amended by Chapter 28, Session Laws of 1937, it seems to be the duty of the Commission to be satisfied of the financial ability of the applicant before issuing the certificate. Had the application been made by the signers of the petition, it may be the certificate would have been issued. However, this is merely conjecture.

At this point it may be well to state what we consider the proper method of interpreting the two statutes in question, the 1931 and the 1933 acts, when applying them to any given situation. It seems to us that the 1933 statute by its terms answers that question. Section 3 of that act provides: "It shall be construed as cumulative authority for the purposes named in Sections 1 and 2," these being the sections concerning the *Page 374 issuance of revenue bonds, "and shall not be construed to repeal any existing laws with respect thereto, it being the purpose and intention of this act to create an additional and alternate method for the purposes herein named."

It is a well established rule of law that a statute giving additional or different powers or privileges does not repeal any part of a former statute on the same subject unless the latter clearly evinces a purpose so to do. See note 88, American State Reports, page 271; 59 C.J. 918; 50 American Jurisprudence, 556; and Bliler vs. Boswell, 9 Wyo. 57, at 78; 59 P. 798. It therefore appears that the two acts must be read together as though passed as a single act.

As heretofore stated, the District Court held against the petition for several reasons, holding the statute of 1933 unconstitutional on many grounds. However, we do not think it will be necessary for us to pass upon the constitutional questions raised in the court's findings and conclusions.

It is said in Volume I, Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 8th Edition, at page 388:

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Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 997, 61 Wyo. 365, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheridan-co-pr-dist-v-c-b-qrr-wyo-1945.