State v. Central States Electric Co.

28 N.W.2d 457, 238 Iowa 801, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 412
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 29, 1947
DocketNo. 47020.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 28 N.W.2d 457 (State v. Central States Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Central States Electric Co., 28 N.W.2d 457, 238 Iowa 801, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 412 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

This action was commenced by the filing of a petition on July 26, 1945, by the acting county attorney of Hamilton County, Iowa, naming the State of Iowa as plaintiff, and against the Central States Electric Company as defendant. The petition did not purport to be filed on the relation of the county attorney or the acting county attorney, or of anyone else, nor at the request of any court, or officer, or private citizen of the state. But from a resolution of the council of intervener, adopted July 17, 1945, it appears that the county attorney was requested to institute the suit in the name of the State of Iowa to secure a final determination of the validity and legality of Ordinance No. 64 of intervener and of the franchise granted thereby to the defendant.

The petition alleged that intervener was an incorporated town, and defendant owned and operated therein an electric light and power distribution system, under an alleged franchise, granted by the town council on March 16, 1939, known as Ordinance No. 64, which, for various reasons alleged, was not legally passed or adopted, and was null and void and granted no rights to the defendant. These reasons will be noted in discussing intervener’s propositions relied upon for reversal.

The prayer of the petition, in substance, was for judgment declaring that the defendant had no right or franchise to operate its said plant, and that said ordinance was “void, illegal and of no effect. ’ ’ There was also a prayer for such other and further relief “as may be deemed just and equitable in the premises.”

*804 On August 17, 1945, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the petition of plaintiff, for reasons stated, in substance, as follows: 1. The facts alleged do not entitle plaintiff to the relief demanded. 2. The cause is commenced by the State, alone, and not by any relator, or by leave of court granted to any citizen. 3. The petition on its face shows that the franchise was granted to defendant, and by reason thereof it is lawfully exercising it. 4. The cause is'barred by the statute of limitations. 5. More than six years had passed since the granting of the franchise, and plaintiff’s action is barred by laches. 6. Defendant has constructed, maintained, and operated its plant in reliance on the franchise, and plaintiff is estopped by its conduct. 7. Plaintiff’s action is a collateral attack on the franchise, and there is no allegation that the Town of Jewell Junction had no power to grant the franchise. 8. Any alleged irregularities in the adoption of the ordinance do not invalidate the franchise] since the ordinance was approved by a vote of the electors; the mayor and one councilman were not disqualified and had they been, they were, nevertheless, de facto officers.

Other divisions of the motion were to strike and to make more specific.

On October 11, 1945, defendant amended its motion to dismiss, and stated as its reasons that: Plaintiff’s counsel, in open court, having asserted that plaintiff was seeking a declaratory judgment in this case, whereas it appeared from the allegations of the petition that it was an action in quo warranto, defendant added the following grounds to its motion to dismiss, to wit: (1) the allegations of the petition conclusively show there is no justiciable controversy entitling plaintiff to seek a declaratory judgment (2) plaintiff is not a party to the franchise agreement between the Town of Jewell Junction and the defendant, and has no such interest in the cause as would entitle it to maintain the action or to obtain the relief prayed for.

Thereafter, and oq October 25, 1945, the Town of Jewell Junction filed its petition of intervention, alleging, in substance, that it claimed the right to intervene in said cause, and it joined plaintiff in seeking the relief demanded by plaintiff in its peti *805 tion, and asserted the same rights as were asserted by the plaintiff ; that it was a duly organized municipal corporation, a user of electric energy, and was the entity from which the defendant claimed to have secured its franchise. It further alleged that it made every allegation of plaintiff’s petition a part of its petition of intei’vention as if fully rewritten therein, and:

* * * that a real and substantial controversy is involved herein, that the interests of this intervenor and the defendant are adverse, and that this action is justiciable in character and that a judgment determining the validity of the alleged franchise claimed by this defendant will determine the future of all parties.
‘ ‘ That the determination of the questions raised in this cause are of great public concern and the final determination of the, questions herein involved will be a guide to public officers of the intervenor in the future, and that it now becomes necessary for this intervenor to ascertain whether this defendant is lawfully using the streets of Jewell Junction, Iowa under a lawful and legal grant bf franchise or whether this defendant is usurping the rights of a franchise and using said streets and other public places without lawful authority to do so.
“Wherefore intervenor prays relief for itself as prayed in plaintiff’s petition and particularly does it pray that the validity of the alleged franchise of defendant be fully and finally determined and that the rights and interests of this intervenor be fully protected and for such other and further relief as may be deemed just and equitable in the premises.”

On October 31, 1945, defendant filed its motion to dismiss the petition of intervention, alleging therein, in substance, many of the grounds of the motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition, and alleging further, that from the granting of the franchise:

“* * « j|. ^3,3 continued to serve the citizens * '* * giving them satisfactory service at rates that are not questioned in this proceeding; * * * and there is no claim made in the petition that this defendant has violate^ any of the provisions of the franchise; that for the reasons aforesaid the Town of Jewell *806 Junction is estopped from pleading its own irregularities as an excuse for questioning the rights of this defendant to carry On its business according to the terms of said franchise * * * [and] is estopped from claiming that its own irregularities vitiated the terms of the franchise, and that it therefore can [not] create an artificial justiciable controversy by reason of its own irregularities when no complaint has been made by the defendant thereof and the franchise has in no way been violated by the defendant; that if any justiciable controversy exists, it is one manufactured by the intervenor.”

On November 13, 1945, and after plaintiff had elected as a matter of record to assert that its action was one for a declaratory judgment, the district court of Hamilton county, speaking through Judge Clock, ruled upon defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition. In sustaining the motion and holding that the county attorney had no right or authority to initiate an action for a declaratory judgment on behalf of the State, the court, in its ruling, said:

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.W.2d 457, 238 Iowa 801, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-central-states-electric-co-iowa-1947.