State Ex Rel. v. Pub. Serv. Comm.

180 S.W.2d 40, 352 Mo. 905, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 562
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 3, 1944
DocketNo. 38680.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 40 (State Ex Rel. v. Pub. Serv. Comm.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. v. Pub. Serv. Comm., 180 S.W.2d 40, 352 Mo. 905, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 562 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cole County (on review proceedings) affirming an order of the Public Service Commission. The order authorized the sale of electrical properties by the Iowa Utilities Company to the Grundy Electric Cooperative. Appellants are electric public utility companies permitted by the Commission to intervene. Our jurisdiction is based on constitutional questions raised.

The following facts are mainly taken (without quotations and with some additions of our own) from the report of the Commission. *Page 914

A joint application was made by the Iowa Utilities Company, (hereinafter referred to as Seller), to sell and by the Grundy Electric Corporation, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as Cooperative), to purchase that part of the electric system of the Seller located in Missouri and used in furnishing electric service to the unincorporated community known as Lineville and the incorporated town of Mercer, and rural customers served by an electric line extending from Lineville to Mercer. All the properties involved in this case are located in Mercer County, Missouri.

An intervening petition was filed by Missouri Public Service Corporation, Missouri Power and Light Company and Consumers Public Service Company, objecting to the approval of the proposed sale and alleging in substance that they are public utilities[42] now serving areas adjacent to the towns in Missouri served by the Seller and that they have an ample generating plant and facilities for supplying electric service to such territory; that the acquisition of the Seller's properties by the Purchaser would amount to unwarranted invasion of the territory served by Intervenors and would also frustrate Intervenors' plans in the area, thus resulting in injury to the electric service rendered to the public. Further objection was made on the ground that the Cooperative, if the sale were consummated, would be required to either operate the Seller's properties as a small isolated unit or to rebuild costly transmission lines.

The Seller is the owner of an electric generating plant located in the town of Lineville, Iowa, and owns and operates electric transmission and distribution properties in the towns of Lineville and Clio, Iowa, and intermediate points, as well as the electric transmission and distribution properties, involved herein in Missouri. It proposes to sell all the Iowa and Missouri property to the Cooperative for $37,750.00. None of the villages or towns now served by the Seller have a population of more than 1500.

The Cooperative, whose principal office and place of business is located in Trenton, Missouri, was originally incorporated under the provisions of Article 28, Chapter 102, (R.S. 1939) Mo. Stat. Ann., but it has, since the execution of the sale contract with the Seller, elected to convert its corporate existence, under the Electric Cooperative Act, into a cooperative, non-profit membership corporation under the provisions of Section 5402, Article 7, Chapter 33 (R.S. 1939) Mo. Stat. Ann. (This conversion has been completed.) It is engaged in the distribution and sale of electric energy to its members located in the counties of Grundy, Harrison, Mercer, Sullivan, Linn and Daviess. It owns a rural electrification distribution system of about 430 miles serving 826 members. It is also licensed to do business in the State of Iowa.

All the outstanding common stock of the Seller is owned by the Utilities Holding Corporation. There are no outstanding preferred *Page 915 stocks, bonds or mortgages against said property. The property proposed to be sold is old, obsolete and in need of repairs and betterments to render adequate service to its customers, and revenues have not been sufficient to make them.

The Cooperative made application for a loan from the Rural Electrification Administration, with which to acquire and improve the system of the Seller and integrate that system with the system now owned and operated by it. A loan in the amount of $118,000.00 was approved. An officer of the Cooperative stated that necessary improvements would be made to the property acquired in order that better and more adequate service may be rendered to the present consumers. The Cooperative proposes to make further extensions from the purchased lines to reach unserved persons in rural areas; and to integrate the properties, with that now owned and operated by it, when materials are available at the end of the present emergency. It already has a line within seven miles. By acquiring these properties, the Cooperative expected to serve farmers in Wayne County, Iowa, (where no cooperative exists) as well as additional farmers in Mercer County, Missouri.

The rates now charged by the Cooperative to its members are shown to be slightly lower, in most instances, than those now charged by the Seller. Seven businessmen and electric users now receiving service from the Seller stated that all its present customers favor the sale of this property to the Cooperative. Ninety-five per cent of these customers, at the date of the hearing, had made application for membership in the Cooperative and all but two or three petitioned the Commission for the approval of the proposed sale. No one now receiving electric service from the Seller, or any person living in the towns and territories it now serves, entered any protest to the granting of the proposed transfer.

The testimony offered on behalf of Consumers Public Service Company, was to the effect that it is a Missouri electric utility, and as such owns and operates an electrical distribution system adjacent to the towns now served by the Seller. Its transmission line extends from Brookfield where interconnection is made with the Missouri Power Light Company's large steam plant. The line of the Consumers Company extends from Brookfield north to Ravanna, and within seven and a half miles of Mercer, where the Seller's transmission lines are. The Consumers Company takes the position that it is ready and willing to purchase[43] the Seller's system and to connect it with its existing system, or, if proper priority orders for building the seven and a half miles connecting system line cannot now be obtained, to install an additional unit in the generating plant at Lineville, which unit it now owns and has available; that it is willing to pay $40,000.00 for the Seller's entire system; that it has such a contract made by its president with the Utilities Holding Corporation; *Page 916 that its acquisition of the system will result in improved and adequate service to the public; and that after connection of the Seller's system to its system the ownership and operation of the Seller's plant at Lineville as a standby or peakload reserve plant will enable it to operate its entire system with greater efficiency and economy, as well as increasing its revenue about $17,000.00.

However, the offer of the Consumers Company to purchase the Seller's property was conditioned upon its ability to completely refinance itself. There was evidence tending to show that at the present time its financial condition is such that it would be unable to buy the Seller's distribution system without a refinancing program. There was also evidence offered tending to show that the service now rendered by the Consumers Company to its own customers, in certain areas, has not been satisfactory.

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180 S.W.2d 40, 352 Mo. 905, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-v-pub-serv-comm-mo-1944.