Union Electric Company v. City of Crestwood

499 S.W.2d 480, 1 P.U.R.4th 312, 1973 Mo. LEXIS 760, 1973 WL 297085
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1973
Docket56709
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 499 S.W.2d 480 (Union Electric Company v. City of Crestwood) 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
Union Electric Company v. City of Crestwood, 499 S.W.2d 480, 1 P.U.R.4th 312, 1973 Mo. LEXIS 760, 1973 WL 297085 (Mo. 1973).

Opinion

FINCH, Justice.

The issue presented herein is whether a municipal ordinance which prohibits thereafter any aboveground construction of utility transmission lines is valid. The trial court upheld the ordinance. We reverse.

The pertinent facts are these: Union Electric Company (UE) is an electric utility company serving a considerable area, including the City of St. Louis and the numerous municipalities located in St. Louis County. It has eleven generating plants, located as far north as Keokuk, Iowa, and as far west as Bagnell Dam. All of the generating plants are interconnected by a large grid of transmission lines at voltages of 138KV or higher. In addition, the company has connections with other utility companies whereby power can be supplied in the event of emergency. When the 138 KV lines reach consumption areas, the voltage is reduced and then distributed to business and residential customers. Bulk stations and substations which reduce the voltage are located with little or no regard for municipal boundaries and may serve all or parts of several communities.

In 1958, the voters of Crestwood, Missouri, approved an ordinance whereby UE was granted a 20-year franchise to construct its “poles, towers, wires, conduits, * * * in, along, across, over and under the streets, roads, alleys, sidewalks, * * * and other public places in the City of Crestwood” for the purpose of “transmitting, furnishing and distributing electricity.” Since that time, UE has operated in Crestwood pursuant to that franchise. With the exception of its distribution lines within the Crestwood Plaza, a shopping center, all lines have been installed aboveground.

The Marshall bulk substation, located west of the City of Kirkwood, serves Crestwood and other communities. Power is transmitted therefrom at 34KV on feeders to various substations, including Crest-wood substation. There, and at other perimeter substations located outside of Crestwood but serving customers in Crest-wood, the voltage is further reduced and then transmitted on distribution feeders to business and residential customers.

The company maintains a long-range planning section in order to forecast needs and to design the necessary lines and equipment to meet those needs. Pursuant to its long-range plan, UE proposed to install a new 7-mile 138KV main transmission line from the Marshall bulk station to a new bulk station known as Lakeshire. It *482 was to help relieve various overloaded substations. The proposed line, consisting of single pole structures, was to carry the 138KV line plus a smaller 34KV subtrans-mission line and was to be located on the right-of-way of the Missouri Pacific Railroad. 1.8 miles of the line would be within the city limits of the City of Crestwood. The rest of the proposed 7-mile line was outside of Crestwood.

Sometime in 1968, officials of Crestwood had a conference with officials of UE relative to the possibility of placing all UE lines underground, hut UE discouraged the idea on the basis of the additional cost involved. Subsequently, and before UE started construction of the proposed 138KV line, the Board of Aldermen of the City of Crestwood passed its Ordinance No. 1119, the ordinance here in question. This ordinance prohibited future above-ground construction of transmission lines in the City of Crestwood and made violation of the ordinance a misdemeanor. This declaratory judgment suit by UE followed adoption of that ordinance.

UE’s petition in that action asserted that (1) the ordinance is ultra vires in that it exceeds the authority of the city and invades the field of regulation of utility companies which the state has vested in and reserved to the Public Service Commission; (2) the additional cost of placing these lines underground would be so much greater that it would prevent UE from performing its statutory duty to render adequate and safe service at a reasonable cost; (3) the ordinance exceeds the police power of the city in that it does not reasonably relate to the health, safety and welfare of the' public; and (4) the ordinance results in a partial taking of UE’s vested property and contract rights as granted to it by the existing 20-year franchise.

The trial court overruled these contentions and upheld the validity of the ordinance, relying primarily on § 71.520 1 (which governs the granting of municipal utility franchises), § 79.410 (which relates to police and health regulations and authorizes the city to regulate the placement of poles on or the making of excavations through or under streets, alleys, sidewalks, or other public places in the city) and § 393.010 (which relates to companies supplying electricity and provides that such corporations shall have the power to lay conductors for conveying electricity through the streets, alleys and squares of the city, with the consent of the municipal authorities, under such reasonable regulations as are prescribed).

Years ago, by statutes now incorporated in Chapter 386, the state created the Missouri Public Service Commission, conferring on it jurisdiction over various public utilities, including electric power companies. Section 386.250 recites the general area of jurisdiction of the Commission, and subsequent sections detail particular authority of the commission with respect to electric power companies. Such powers of supervision and regulation are sweeping, covering such matters as the quality of service supplied, methods used in manufacturing, transmitting and distributing power, rates to be charged, records to be kept, reports to be made, and indebtedness which may be incurred. 2

We conclude, as did the Supreme Court of New Jersey with respect to its comparable statutes in the case of In re Public Service Electric and Gas Co., 35 N. J. 358, 173 A.2d 233, 239 (1961), that the statutes relative to the Public Service Commission constitute “a legislative recognition that the public interest in proper regulation of public utilities transcends municipal or county lines, and that a centralized control must be entrusted to an agency whose continually developing expertise will assure uniformly safe, proper *483 and adequate service by utilities throughout the state.”

Subsequently, the New Jersey court at 173 A.2d l.c. 240, went on to say: “It is rather difficult to conceive of a subject which more requires uniform regulation at a high and broad level of authority than the method of transmission of electric power, especially where it must be generated in a single location and distributed and used in many and distant places. Were each municipality through which a power line has to pass free to impose its own ideas of how the current should be transmitted through it, nothing but chaos would result, and neither the utility nor the state agency vested with control could be assured of ability to fulfill its obligations of furnishing safe, adequate and proper service to the public in all areas.”

The validity of the foregoing conclusion is demonstrated by the evidence in this case. It disclosed that to construct the 1.8 miles of 138KV line aboveground would cost $217,000, and the 34KV line would cost $84,300. However, to place these underground for the 1.8 miles located in Crestwood, the cost would increase to $1,560,000 and $496,600, respectively.

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Bluebook (online)
499 S.W.2d 480, 1 P.U.R.4th 312, 1973 Mo. LEXIS 760, 1973 WL 297085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-electric-company-v-city-of-crestwood-mo-1973.