Water Users & Taxpayers Ass'n v. Railroad Commission

205 P. 682, 188 Cal. 437, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 445
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1922
DocketS. F. No. 9997.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 205 P. 682 (Water Users & Taxpayers Ass'n v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Water Users & Taxpayers Ass'n v. Railroad Commission, 205 P. 682, 188 Cal. 437, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 445 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This proceeding was instituted by the Water Users and Taxpayers Association of Merced for the purpose of having reviewed and annulled certain proceedings before the Railroad Commission of California leading up to and resulting in an order of said commission approving a certain contract for the sale of electric energy proposed to be entered into between the San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation and the Merced Irrigation District. The questions to be disposed of arise upon the demurrers *439 of the Railroad Commission, and the Merced Irrigation District. The averments of the petition which are thus taken to be true may be summarized as follows: On June 28, 1921, the Merced Irrigation District and the San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation joined in an application to the Railroad Commission, ivherein it was stated in substance that the said irrigation district was proposing to construct a water reservoir and system for the conservation and distribution of water, and to establish and operate a hydro-electric generating plant in connection therewith at a certain point on the Merced River, and that the said irrigation district desired to acquire certain superior rights and privileges owned by the light and power corporation in and to the use of the waters of the Merced River, and that said irrigation district also desired to sell and the said light and power corporation to purchase energy generated by the said irrigation district’s hydro-electric energy plant, and that for these purposes said parties were proposing to enter into two certain agreements which were attached to and made a part of said application, and the approval of which was sought thereby.

The first of these agreements 'recited that the light and power corporation owned certain interests in the lands along the banks of the Merced River upon which it had constructed a certain hydro-electric generating plant to be used in connection with a certain dam and reservoir impounding the waters of said river, and from which it was entitled to have said waters conducted to the said plant. That the irrigation district proposed and desired to construct certain storage and diversion works upon said river above the said plant of the light and power corporation, whereby, during certain seasons of the year, it would impound and withhold a certain portion or possibly all of the waters at such times flowing in said river in order that it might thereafter for its own use and advantage release said waters for the purpose of irrigating large areas of land in the county of Merced, whereby the said light and power corporation might be deprived of the use, benefit, and advantage of such waters, which would, to the extent thereof, interfere with and lessen-the hydro-electric energy output which it could otherwise produce by the use of said waters with its present installations. In order to reduce such disturbance of the light *440 and power corporation’s rights and privileges to a minimum and to compensate it therefor, it was proposed to be agreed that in case of the diminution of the hydro-electric energy output of the light and power corporation in any calendar year by reason of the said storage and diversion of water by the said irrigation district below a certain quantum measured in kilowatt hours, the irrigation district should compensate the light and power corporation therefor by paying to the latter a sum of money determined according to the terms of and at the rate fixed by any contract which might exist between the parties for the purchase and sale of said hydro-electric energy so produced by the irrigation district, to be approved by the Railroad Commission; or, in the absence of such contract, at a rate to be fixed by the Railroad Commission. There are other. provisions in this contract not necessary to be considered.

The second contract between the parties executed upon the same date, and evidently a part of the same transaction, provided, in the first paragraph thereof, that as soon as the irrigation district had constructed, completed, and put in operation its hydro-electric energy plant, it would deliver and sell to the light and power corporation the entire electric output thereof, except such an amount as should be required for the operation of said plant and of the pumping plants of said district to be maintained ■ and operated for storage, irrigation, and drainage purposes; and for which excess output of hydro-electric energy the light and power corporation agreed to pay according to meter measurements at a fair and reasonable rate to be fixed and determined by the Railroad Commission. It was further provided that this contract should remain and be in full force and effect for twenty years, with the right of renewal by the irrigation district for an additional twenty years upon giving a year’s notice of such intended renewal. In other words, the light and power corporation was, by the first contract, to be compensated for its loss of generating power due to its transfer of its said water rights to the irrigation district, such compensation to be fixed according to the rate for hydro-electric energy purchased by it from the irrigation district to be fixed by the second contract. The effect of these contracts would be that when the irrigation district had built its dam and reservoirs for irrigation *441 purposes, and had installed its hydro-electric energy plant in connection therewith, and had begun operations, and a loss in power, and hence in output, of electric energy resulted to the light and power corporation, it was to be paid in money for such loss, and the amount of such payment was to be calculated upon, the basis of the rate fixed by the Railroad Commission for such hydro-electric energy as it was to purchase and receive from the irrigation district’s hydro-electric energy-producing plant. There would thus be a periodical balancing of accounts between the two parties to these contracts, the light and power corporation being credited with its ascertained' loss in water-power and hence in hydro-electric energy and being debited with the amount of its purchase of hydro-electric energy from the plant of the irrigation district, both credit and debit to be fixed according to the price established by the Railroad Commission for its said purchase of such hydro-electric energy.

[1] The parties to these two contracts have applied to the Railroad Commission for the approval thereof, and, as a necessary condition of such approval, for the fixation of the rate to be paid by the light and power corporation for such of the hydro-electric energy output of the proposed plant of the irrigation district as it would be entitled to have and to use under the terms of the second contract. The petition of the parties to these two contracts having been filed with the Railroad Commission, the Water Users and Taxpayers Association of Merced appeared before said commission to object to the approval by it of said contracts or the fixation of any rate to be paid by the light and power corporation for the use of the hydro-electric energy to be developed at the proposed but as yet unconstructed plant of the irrigation district.

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Bluebook (online)
205 P. 682, 188 Cal. 437, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/water-users-taxpayers-assn-v-railroad-commission-cal-1922.