United States v. City and County of San Francisco

23 F. Supp. 40, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2110
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedApril 11, 1938
Docket4173-R
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 F. Supp. 40 (United States v. City and County of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. City and County of San Francisco, 23 F. Supp. 40, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2110 (N.D. Cal. 1938).

Opinion

ROCHE, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity wherein the United States of America, as plaintiff, seeks to restrain the City and County of :San" Francisco, as defendant, from continuing an activity which is • alleged to be in violation of a restriction attached to a grant of lands by the plaintiff to the defendant. The grant is known as the Raker Act (38 Stat. 242), passed by Congress on December 19, 1913. The restriction in question, contained in section 6 of the act, 38 Stat. 245, reads as follows: “That the grantee is prohibited from ever selling or letting to any corporation or individual, except a municipality or a municipal water district or irrigation district, the right to sell pr sublet the water or the electric energy sold or given to it or him by the said grantee.”

Pursuant to the Raker Act the City and County of San Francisco built a water and power system. Because the defendant lacked an electric distribution system within its territorial limits and was not able to build or purchase one. at the time that electric energy was ready for delivery to consumers, it entered into a contract on July 1, 1925, for the disposal of electricity to the Pacific Gas & Electric Company. The plaintiff claims that under this contract the defendant is disposing of electrie energy, developed and transmitted by it through its utilization of the rights granted the defendant in and on government lands by the Raker Act, in violation of the condition or restriction attached to that grant by the above-quoted provision in section 6 of the act. Plaintiff is proceeding to compel compliance under section 9(u) of the act, which reads as follows:

“That this grant is made to' the said grantee subject to the observance on the part of the grantee of all the conditions hereinbefore and hereinafter enumerated: * * *

“u. * * * That the grantee shall at all times comply with and observe on its part all the conditions specified in this Act, and in the event that the same are not reasonably complied with and carried out by the grantee, upon written request of the Secretary of the Interior, it is made the duty of the Attorney General in the name of the United States to commence all necessary suits or proceedings in the proper court having jurisdiction thereof, for the purpose of enforcing and carrying out the provisions of this Act”

Hereinafter for convenience the plaintiff will be designated as the Government, the defendant, as the City or S. F., and the Pacific Gas & Electric Company, as the Company or the P. G. & E.

*43 On August 24, 1935, the Secretary of the Interior rendered an opinion which declared that the City’s disposal of electricity under the contract with the Company was in violation of the quoted part of section 6 of the Raker Act. The City, upon being advised of the Secretary’s opinion and requested to cease its activity, gave notice that it intended to continue disposing of its electricity under the contract of July 1, 1925, until restrained from so doing by court action. Thereafter the necessary steps were taken by the Secretary to place the matter in the hands of the Attorney General of the United States, who commenced these legal proceedings as provided for in the Raker Act.

The complaint of the Government alleges that the City is presently selling the electric power, generated by utilization of the grants of the Raker Act, to the P. G. & E. for resale, and that such activity is in violation of the limiting provision of section 6 of the act. The City denies this allegation and sets up the con-' tract with the Company as Exhibit A of its answer as a primary defense for the activity which the Government contends is a sale for resale. In addition S. F. maintains that, even if the contract should be construed to be an arrangement for the sale of electricity for the purpose of resale, there are mitigating circumstances which make the issuance of an injunction improper. Estoppel, good faith, and reasonableness of actions, balance of conveniences, change of conditions, and impossibility are urged as equitable defenses. Invalidity of the restriction, as in excess of the powers of Congress, is also claimed. These various defenses the court regards as secondary and will subsequently refer to them as such.

Before examining the facts and the law pertaining to the issues raised by the parties, it is necessary to understand the background for the litigation. Therefore the court will present a brief history of the Hetch Hetchy project, with particular reference to the City’s activities in the generation and transmission of electric energy. Thereafter the court will dispose of its problems by an examination of them in the following order: (1) The restriction in section 6 of the Raker Act; (2) the question raised by the City’s secondary defenses—the legal effect of the restriction in the grant; (3) the nature of the contract between the City and the Company; (4) certain arguments made by the City as to the construction of the contract.

History of the Project.

On December 19, 1913, the Raker Act was passed by Congress. It granted certain federal lands and rights to S. F. upon the condition that the water and power to be obtained from the contemplated project would be sold by the City directly to its inhabitants. 1

The act was the culmination of persistent efforts on the part of San Franciscans to assure themselves of adequate water and low rate electricity for their growing city. Work was begun on the Hetch Hetchy dam and power stations in the Yosemite region of the high Sierras soon after the act became law. By 1923 the City was disposing of electric energy which it derived from the Early Intake power station (built as a preliminary unit for the construction of Hetch Hetchy itself). 2 On May 8th of that year the National Park Service started proceedings through the then .Secretary of the Interior against the City. San Francisco’s mode of distribution of Early Intake electricity through the facilities of the P. G. & E. was questioned. After proper hearings, it was determined that energy was being sold to the Company in violation of the provisions of the Raker Act. Since the Moccasin Creek Power Plant (the chief future source of power for S. F.), was nearing completion at the time this decision was rendered, it was essential that a new plan for distributing electricity be adopted'as soon as possible.

To avoid further violation of the law governing Hetch Hetchy power, S. F. entered into a contract with the P. G. & E. in 1925, whereby arrangements were made for the utility company to distribute the *44 City’s energy on its behalf. The contract of July 1, 1925, was an attempt to set up an agency agreement which would comply with the terms of section 6 of the Raker Act Under this contract, City power was to be turned over to the Company at its Newark substation, about 35 miles southeast of S. F. The Company was to pay the City on a 75 per cent, load factor basis for electricity made available by the Hetch Hetchy power plants. 3 Line losses, estimated at 24 per cent, of the energy received by the Company at Newark, were to be deducted from the electricity actually delivered, in determining payments due to the City.

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23 F. Supp. 40, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-city-and-county-of-san-francisco-cand-1938.