State Ex Rel. W.W.P. Co. v. Sup. Ct.

208 P.2d 849, 34 Wash. 2d 196
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1949
DocketNo. 30837.
StatusPublished

This text of 208 P.2d 849 (State Ex Rel. W.W.P. Co. v. Sup. Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. W.W.P. Co. v. Sup. Ct., 208 P.2d 849, 34 Wash. 2d 196 (Wash. 1949).

Opinions

1 Reported in 208 P.2d 849. This proceeding is by way of a writ of certiorari to review the action of the superior court of Chelan county in an eminent domain proceeding.

Action was commenced by public utility district No. 1 of Chelan county (hereinafter called the district) by which it *Page 198 sought to acquire by condemnation practically all of the property of The Washington Water Power Company (hereinafter called the company), in Chelan county and some of its property in Douglas county. Chelan joint school district No. 129, and the town of Chelan, both municipal corporations, were permitted to intervene in the action.

Demurrers were interposed by the company and the interveners. Application for an order for public use and necessity was brought on for hearing, after which the court overruled the demurrers and entered the order which is the subject of this review.

The property sought to be condemned consists of the transmission lines of the company in Chelan county and some in Douglas county, and the electric generating plant described as the Chelan hydro-electric generating plant, situated on the Chelan river, in Chelan county, and that certain license issued by the Federal power commission, project No. 637, Washington, May 8, 1926, expiring May 8, 1976.

We shall have occasion throughout this opinion to refer to sections of the Federal power act. The entire act is contained in 16 U.S.C. (1946 ed.) § 791 through § 825, and in 16 U.S.C.A., § 791 through § 825. In the interests of brevity, we shall cite the act only by section numbers.

The company relies upon the following points before this court:

"(1) The limitations originally inherent in a license to develop, generate, transmit and distribute hydroelectric power issued by the Federal Power Commission remain restrictions upon a municipality to which the license is transferred by judicial sale.

"(2) Under the statutes of the State of Washington a public utility district does not have the right to condemn a utility property when the system or plan proposed and set forth in the Resolution pursuant to which the right of eminent domain is exercised and instituted, provides that the property shall be paid for by revenue bonds containing covenants repugnant to the United States laws.

"(3) If the Washington statutes re eminent domain proceedings by public utility districts are construed to authorize *Page 199 condemnation by public utility districts of power projects operated under a license from the Federal Power Commission and payment therefor with proceeds of revenue bonds containing (a) a covenant to maintain rates, and (b) a covenant which is contrary to the provisions of the Federal Power Act for regulation and control of rates by the Federal Power Commission in the absence of regulation of the rates charged by such licensee, they are invalid because they are repugnant to the laws of the United States.

"(4) A public utility district cannot acquire property by condemnation when such property is situated in a county other than that in which is situated the superior court of the county wherein the petition in eminent domain is filed.

"(5) The United States of America is a necessary party to an eminent domain proceeding when a hydroelectric generating property is situated in part on property owned by the United States of America and is owned and operated by a public service corporation under the terms of a license issued by the Federal Power Commission pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Power Act.

"(6) Public interest is a necessary concomitant of public use and when a critical power shortage such as now exists in the State of Washington, and such as existed at the time of the hearing on the application for a Decree of Public Use and Necessity, requires the curtailment of the use of electric power and energy, the greater public use requires that all generating facilities be operated so as to produce the maximum amounts of electric power and energy. That being so, a decree of Public Use and Necessity should be denied a public utility district petitioner in an eminent domain proceeding where the evidence indicates that if the public utility district operates the hyroelectric property sought to be condemned, in such manner as to first make adequate provision for the needs of the district as required by law, the people of the State of Washington will suffer the loss of a very large number of kilowatt hours of electric energy, and said facilities will not and cannot be operated for the greatest public use of the inhabitants of Washington.

"(7) The fact that two municipalities (one of them wholly within, and the other partially within, the geographical limits of a public utility district) will each suffer a large loss of income from taxes and have their respective capacities for incurring bonded indebtedness drastically reduced to a point where their capacities for performing essential services to their respective inhabitants are materially reduced, *Page 200 by the removal of electrical properties from the tax rolls in the event of the acquisition of such properties by the public utility district, coupled with the fact that the people of the State of Washington will lose a large amount of electrical energy by reason of the operation of such hydroelectric properties in conformity with law by the public utility district, is a matter of such public interest as to affect the question of whether a decree of public use and necessity should be entered, and would make material, relevant, and competent all of the offers of proof by the Town of Chelan, a Municipal Corporation, and by Chelan Joint School District No. 129, a Municipal Corporation.

"(8) The petitioner is not entitled to a Decree of Public Use and Necessity entitling it to acquire by condemnation the generating capacities of respondent, The Washington Water Power Company, a corporation, because petitioner has contracts for an adequate supply of power."

The first three contentions may be considered together. The substance of the company's argument on those points is that the district, as transferee, takes the Federal power commission license subject to all the provisions and limitations contained therein; that one of those provisions vests authority in the Federal power commission to regulate the services rendered and the rates charged by the licensee; that the district's proposed bond issue contains covenants guaranteeing bondholders that the district will maintain rates sufficient to pay the interest and retire bonds as due; that such a covenant denies the right of the Federal power commission to regulate rates and is contrary to the Federal power act in that it is an agreement to fix or maintain rates.

The license to construct and maintain the Chelan dam was originally issued by the Federal power commission to the Chelan Electric Company, which, with the consent of the commission, assigned its right to The Washington Water Power Company. Article 28 of that license, the provision in question here, provides in part:

"Article 28. The Licensee shall abide by such reasonable regulation of the services to be rendered to customers or consumers of power, and of rates and charges of payment therefor, as may from time to time be prescribed by any duly constituted agency of the State in which the service is *Page 201

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Bluebook (online)
208 P.2d 849, 34 Wash. 2d 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wwp-co-v-sup-ct-wash-1949.