State Ex Rel. Dawson County Feed Products, Inc. v. Omaha Public Power District

118 N.W.2d 7, 174 Neb. 350, 1962 Neb. LEXIS 150
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1962
Docket35259
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 N.W.2d 7 (State Ex Rel. Dawson County Feed Products, Inc. v. Omaha Public Power District) 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. Dawson County Feed Products, Inc. v. Omaha Public Power District, 118 N.W.2d 7, 174 Neb. 350, 1962 Neb. LEXIS 150 (Neb. 1962).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This action was instituted by the State of Nebraska on relation of Dawson County Feed Products, Inc., a corporation, relator. By the action the relator sought a writ of mandamus for the purpose of requiring Omaha Public Power District, a public corporation, respondent, to furnish to relator all necessary electrical energy and electricity required in the construction and operation of its plant on certain described real estate in Dodge County, Nebraska, about 1 mile north of the city limits of the city of Fremont, Dodge County, Nebraska, the purpose of which plant was the blending and storage of alfalfa pellets. The City of Fremont, Nebraska, became an intervener for the purpose of responding to and defending against the application of the relator for the writ of mandamus.

The action was tried to the court and at the conclusion of the trial a judgment was rendered granting the writ of mandamus prayed for by the relator. Separate motions for new trial were filed by the respondent and intervener. These were overruled. From the ruling on these motions and the judgment the respondent and intervener have appealed.

As grounds for reversal the respondent and the intervener have set forth in their briefs numerous assignments of error. For reasons which will become apparent later herein these do not require separate recognition or consideration. The case has been briefed at length by the parties and by the League of Nebraska Municipalities as amicus curiae, but the basic matter for determina *352 tion is the true present meaning of section 70-401, R. R. S. 1943, and proper application of that meaning to the issues which have been presented by the record in this case.

The pertinent part of the statute is the following: “All persons, associations or corporations engaged in this state in the generating or transmitting of electric current for sale, or both, for power or other purposes, where the person, association or corporation operates an electric transmission line outside of the limits of incorporated cities or villages, shall furnish facilities, accommodations and service * * * upon application, to (1) any individual or any person who may reside in a territory which may be served by an electric transmission line and who may apply for physical connection and service; * * There are other provisions in this and succeeding sections of the statute but they do not appear to have controlling significance as to issues in this case.

The relator contends that under this statutory provi- ■ sion and the pertinent facts it was and is entitled to the relief granted by the judgment of the district court.

A summary of the petition of the relator, to the extent necessary to be set out herein, is that the relator ■ is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Nebraska, with its principal place of business in Lexington, Dawson County, Nebraska, and engaged in the business of processing alfalfa and the storage of alfalfa products; that the respondent is a public corporation with its principal place of business in Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska, and engaged in the business of generating, transmitting, and selling electrical energy and electricity to the public; that the relator is the lessee of certain real estate 450 feet by 500 feet in dimensions in Section 11, Township 17 North, Range 8 East of the 6th P.M., in Dodge County, Nebraska, which real estate is about 1 mile north of the city limits of the city of Fremont, Dodge County, Nebraska, it being on *353 the right-of-way of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company; that on this real estate the relator intends to and is constructing a plant for the purpose of blending and storage of alfalfa pellets; that in the construction and operation of the plant it is necessary to use electrical energy; that the respondent owns and operates an electrical transmission line located upon the public road right-of-way immediately to the north of this leased real estate; that the respondent furnishes electrical energy to rural and other customers in the immediately surrounding vicinity; that the relator desires to purchase electrical energy from the respondent for the construction and operation of the plant; and that relator requested that it be furnished and offered to pay therefor the regular industrial rates established by the respondent, and also offered to comply with reasonable rules, regulations, and conditions of the respondent, but that the request of the relator was refused.

On the basis of this refusal, which the relator contends was willful and wrongful, the relator made the application for the writ of mandamus which was awarded.

It is stipulated that the real estate of the relator is three-fifths of a mile north of the north line of the city of Fremont.

Other pertinent facts pleaded and which are not in dispute are that the intervener is a legally organized and operating municipality which through a board of public works, under proper authority, has developed an electric power system having exclusive rights to generate and distribute electrical energy within the city limits of Fremont; and that by virtue of contract it furnishes electrical energy to certain territory adjacent to the city of Fremont under the natural and inherent rights of the city to expand its electrical load to the expanding suburban and fringe area of the city, which area potentially is subject to annexation and which is subject to zoning and building regulations, within a one-mile *354 limit pursuant to the provisions of sections 16-901 to 16-904, R. R. S. 1943. The intervener has and does serve customers at locations within a not clearly defined or described area, although in an area of several miles, in which the plant of the relator is located. Likewise the respondent serves customers at locations within this same area.

It is pointed out here that the rights of the two parties to so serve the area are not controverted. It is further pointed out that the real question is not that of which had the right to serve under the circumstances, but rather that of which, if either, had the right to refuse to' serve, more particularly stated, that of whether or not the respondent had the right to refuse.

Some of this service has been rendered over a period of years and some of it is of recent origin. Present determination of which shall furnish requested service, depends upon private agreement in each separate instance of application for service between the respondent and the intervener. No formal agreement in relation to this .subject has come forth and it has not been pointed out that there is any such agreement.

The date or character of the request or demand for service and that of its refusal do not appear, but the parties make no point of this.

After the demand and refusal the relator obtained the necessary electric service from the intervener. The electric current supplied to the relator was delivered first to the intervener by the respondent and by the intervener to the relator. The estimated cost of the current from the intervener was $1,193.50 a month, whereas the estimated cost, if it had been obtained from the respondent, would have been $962.50 a month.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.W.2d 7, 174 Neb. 350, 1962 Neb. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dawson-county-feed-products-inc-v-omaha-public-power-neb-1962.