State ex rel. City of Chadron v. Intermountain Railway, Light & Power Co.

194 N.W. 793, 110 Neb. 720, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 285
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1923
DocketNo. 23266
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 793 (State ex rel. City of Chadron v. Intermountain Railway, Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. City of Chadron v. Intermountain Railway, Light & Power Co., 194 N.W. 793, 110 Neb. 720, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 285 (Neb. 1923).

Opinion

Colby, District Judge.

This action is an appeal by the respondents, Inter-mountain Railway, Light & Power Company, a corporation, and Edward N. Libby, from a judgment awarding to the relators, city of Chadron and others, a peremptory writ of mandamus and from the writ issued, in pursuance of the judgment the writ commanded respondents as follows:

“To equip the 59 ornamental light posts or standards comprising the white-way with top light and side lights and globes thereon, and furnish the same with the full amount of electricity called for in the said franchise contract, and to paint the same in substantial compliance with the franchise contract, and to monthly render bills for such fluid supplied at the rate prescribed in the said franchise ordinance without surcharge, and to furnish to Milton B. McDowell and John H. Regan for the operating of their X-ray machine, and all other purchasers of power, residents of the city of Chadron, electricity for power for any and all purposes at the rate of $1 per H. P. per month and a current rate not exceeding 6 cents, and to furnish every inhabitant now connected with the plant of said respondent or its wire transmission lines electricity for illuminating purposes, and to charge therefor a minimum charge of $ 1 per month when not metered, and, when metered, additional current charge up to 20 K. W. H. per month of 12 cents per K. W. H., and to furnish service connections from the feed wires of the respondent company to the owners, also to ¡building of any customer or any resident who shall apply to become a customer, without charge or advances for the said material and without surcharge to any customer or prospective customer.”

[722]*722■ It appears from the record that on December 22, 1910, the city of Chadron, a city of the second class, made a contract by ordinance No. 229 of said city with Kass & Klingaman for the nse for 20 years of the public places of the city to maintain their system of distribution of electric lights to the city and its citizens, and fixed rates for the city’s street lights and for citizens at a 12 cent per kilowatt, monthly, meter rate, and this contract was made binding upon the assigns of Kass & Klingaman. Some years later Kass & Klingaman sold their plant and contract rights to the respondent Inter-mountain Railway, Light & Power Company, and ordinance No. 287 was passed by the city of Chadron at the request of respondent company, and its terms were accepted in writing by said company. By its terms this contract under ordinance No. 287 was for the period of 25 years from the date of its final passage , on January 19, 1917.

It appears that all parties acted upon and carried out the terms of said contract until some time in November, 1918, when the respondent company notified the city of Chadron that it would, on and after said date, collect from the city and all consumers in said city the maximum rates provided for in said ordinances and contract, and in addition thereto a surcharge of 33 1-3 per cent, thereon, and that, thereafter and up to the time of the commencement of this action said surcharge was collected from the city and all consumers therein, until stopped by the restraining order issued in this case at the commencement thereof. '

Among the first objections made by the respondent is that the district court erred in granting an injunction or restraining order with the writ of mandamus, that the two remedies are inconsistent; find it is contended that an injunction is the proper remedy for the threatened violation of a duty entailing an injury for which the law gives no adequate remedy, while the office of mandamus is to compel the performance of a plain and positive [723]*723duty. It is strenuously urged by respondents’ counsel that in this case the relators really seek the specific performance of a contract aided by injunction, and that if the relator is entitled to any relief the remedy is 'by specific performance and injunction, and not by mandamus.

It is unquestioned that the writ of mandamus is an extraordinary legal remedy and should not be used where there is an adequate remedy at law. Although to a certain extent proceedings by mandamus and by injunction occupy the same field and cover parts of the same ground, yet one of the distinguishing questions presented here at the outset is whether money damages are adequate to compensate the city of Chadron and the public for the failure on the part of the respondent company to carry out the terms of the contract. There is a provision for, and the ordinance requires, a continuity of service in the furnishing of electrical current, and it is very evident that a continued refusal on the part of respondent company to live up to the franchise contract could not be adequately relieved by suits for damages; there would have to be a multiplicity of suits and the public privileges of the city in the lighting of the streets and municipal buildings could not be preserved and the damages from violation adequately reached by legal actions. It appears to us that there is a plain public duty to be performed 'by the public service corporation arising under the terms of the ordinances and the franchise contract, and that the extraordinary legal remedy of mandamus is the only one which would furnish an adequate remedy and reach the desired object, and it seems to be clear and plain from the facts in the record just what the respondents’ duties are to the city and its citizens, and that mandamus is authorized in cases of this kind.

It is also quite generally held that a temporary injunctional order, ancillary and an aid to the writ of mandamus, to prevent an actual or threatened injury, can be issued. In North Carolina Public Service Co. v. [724]*724Southern Power Co., 181 N. Car. 356, it is stated by Justice Stacy that the writs of mandamus and injunction may properly aid each other in actions requiring such relief. See De Lancey v. Piepgras, 141 N. Y. 88; Cline v. Whitaker, 144 Wis. 439, 140 Am. St. Rep. 1039; Danis v. Mayor, 1 Duer (N. Y.) 451; Whigham v. Davis, 92 Ga. 574.

This court in a number of cases has issued the writ of mandamus in the enforcement of contracts where the duty was plain and of a public nature. State v. Lincoln Medical College, 81 Neb. 533; State v. Missouri P. R. Co., 100 Neb. 700; State v. Dahlman, 100 Neb. 416. The third paragraph of the syllabus in the latter ease is as follows: “The act providing for the consolidation requires the consolidated city to perform all valid, unperformed, subsisting contracts made by the city of South Omaha, and a writ of mandamus to compel such performance was properly issued by the district court.”

The general rule seems to be that, when the relatoi is. the beneficiary of a contract, ordinance, franchise or statute, which is of a public nature, the writ should issue. The mandate issued plainly requires the performance of a legal, public duty, and not only is the city of Chadron a proper party, but any and all of the consumers of electrical current and the beneficiaries of such city are interested and may be made parties.

The pleadings upon which this case was submitted to the district court virtually admit the general liabilities, obligations, rights and duties devolving upon the relators and respondents, and the district court had but to apply the established law to the facts in order to come to the conclusions reached and to justify its judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 793, 110 Neb. 720, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-chadron-v-intermountain-railway-light-power-co-neb-1923.