Wilson v. City of Henderson

461 S.W.2d 90, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 610
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 27, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 461 S.W.2d 90 (Wilson v. City of Henderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. City of Henderson, 461 S.W.2d 90, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 610 (Ky. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinions

CULLEN, Commissioner.

In this action, brought by a representative citizen, taxpayer and inhabitant of the city of Henderson, Kentucky, and by a representative owner of outstanding electric light and power revenue bonds of the city, against the city and its utility commission, judgment was entered upholding the validity of two ordinances of the city providing for the expansion of the city’s existing electric power system by the construction of new generating facilities; for the issuance of revenue bonds to finance the construction; and for the making of contracts with Big Rivers Rural Electric Cooperative Corporation for use of joint facilities, operation of the new generating units, and sale of surplus power. The plaintiffs have appealed from that judgment.

For many years Henderson has operated a municipal electric light and power system. At the present time the system has [92]*92a load requirement of 34,820 kilowatts. Its existing plant has a total generating capacity of 48,000 kilowatts, but its firm capacity (the amount of capacity that would remain available if the largest individual generating unit became inoperable) is only 22,000 kilowatts. However, the city has interconnection agreements with other systems which give it an overall firm capacity of 44,000 kilowatts.

The evidence is that by 1973 the load requirement will have increased to 46,800 kilowatts, substantially equaling its total generating capacity and exceeding its firm capacity.

The expansion plan here in issue calls for the construction of two new generating units, each having a capacity of 175,000 kilowatts. The construction is to be financed through the issuance of revenue bonds in the amount of $76,000,000. The units will be erected on land adjoining an existing generating plant of Big Rivers. Under 30-year contracts, Big Rivers and the city will utilize jointly certain auxiliary facilities such as those for coal handling, water circulation and disposal, barge unloading and rail traffic; Big Rivers will provide personnel for physical operation of the city’s new generating units; and Big Rivers will purchase all of the power generated by the new units in excess of the city’s needs.

The evidence establishes that the annual load growth rate of the Henderson system during the past 16 years has been 10.98% while the national average has been approximately 7%, and that during the past five years the growth rate of the city system has been 12.58%; that Henderson is in an area that is widely held to be the fastest growing industrial area in the nation; and that plans have been made for annexation by the city of some 21,000 acres of territory. The evidence includes projections by fully qualified engineers that the load growth of the city’s system will be such that within 20 years the entire firm capacity of the expanded plant will be needed by the city, and that within 10 years thereafter the total capacity of the expanded plant will be needed.

The theory of the plan for expansion of the city’s electric system is that it will be most economical for the city to construct generating facilities substantially in excess of its present needs because (1) the construction cost per kilowatt of capacity for a large unit is considerably less than it would be for the construction in stages of small units; (2) present costs of labor and materials probably will be lower than those in the future; (3) large units can be operated at less cost per kilowatt hour than small units; and (4) the sale of surplus capacity during the growth period will pay a substantial part of the construction costs. The validity of this theory was attested to by competent engineers, who said that the plan was the most feasible and economical of any that could be used.

In Miller v. City of Owensboro, Ky., 343 S.W.2d 398, this court upheld a similar plan of the city of Owensboro, for construction of generating facilities in excess of the city’s current needs and sale of the surplus to another utility during the growth period. Also, since the decision in the Owensboro case the statute under which the Henderson system is operated, KRS 96.520, has been amended to authorize agreements for the sale of surplus energy. The appellants argue, however, that the amount of surplus energy that will be available at the outset, under the Henderson plan, is so much more than there was under the Owensboro plan that the Henderson plan cannot be considered to be in the furtherance of a public purpose of the city, but rather is for the primary benefit of Big Rivers, and therefore the plan not only is unconstitutional but is not within the statutory authorization of KRS 96.520 for the acquisition by a city of electric light and power facilities for the purpose of “supplying the city and its inhabitants” with electric light, heat and power.

[93]*93In the Owensboro case the estimates were that the city’s load requirements would grow to equal the capacity of the expanded plant within IS years. In the Henderson case the estimates are that the city’s load requirements will grow to equal the capacity of the expanded plant, less one of the new generating units, within 20 years, and will equal the total capacity of the expanded plant within another 10 years. In the Owensboro case we held that the expansion plan was based on a reasonable anticipation of future needs, that it was a matter of sound economic planning to provide initially for a surplus capacity rather than to add to the plant on a piecemeal basis as the needs from time to time should arise, that the plan served a public purpose of the city, and that the sale of the current surplus of energy to Kentucky Utilities Company did not violate the statutes nor was it beyond the scope of a proper public purpose.

If the Henderson plan were to build only one new 175,000 kilowatt unit, instead of two, we could find no significant difference between the Henderson plan and the Owensboro plan. The only difference would be that it would take Henderson 20 years to reach full-capacity use of its new facility, as compared with 15 years for Owensboro. This is not a sufficient degree of difference to be material.

Henderson’s plan is, however, to add two new 175,000 kilowatt units, and here there is a substantial variance from the Owens-boro plan. The variance lies in the fact that Henderson proposes to provide standby or reserve capacity equal in amount to the capacity of its largest generating unit, thus giving its plant a firm capacity equal to its anticipated load requirement in the next 20 years. Owensboro made no provision for standby or reserve capacity, and its new construction did not increase its firm capacity at all, because the largest unit in its expanded plant was the new unit. Our question is, then, whether Henderson’s provision for standby or reserve capacity (to be sold to Big Rivers pending an emergency calling for its use) is not within the scope of a valid public purpose.

Expert engineers testified that “safely under good utility practices” an electric light and power system should have sufficient firm

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Related

State Ex Rel. Mitchell v. City of Sikeston
555 S.W.2d 281 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1977)
Puget Sound Power & Light Co. v. Public Utility District No. 1
565 P.2d 1221 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
461 S.W.2d 90, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-city-of-henderson-kyctapp-1970.