247 F. 183 | D. Or. | 1917
This is a suit against the Public Service Commission of Oregon and the individual members thereof, brought by the trustees named in, and the holders of substantially all the bonds secured by, a mortgage or trust deed given by the J. F. Duse Company on its irrigation plant in Douglas county, to secure a bond issue of $100,000. The relief sought is an injunction restraining the enforcement of an order of the Commission fixing the rates to be charged by the Duse Company for water furnished its customers, on the ground .that such order is void for want of jurisdiction. The suit is for hearing on a motion to dismiss the bill.
In November, 1912, the Sutherlin Land- & Water Company conveyed to the J. F. Duse Company all of the land then remaining unsold and also its interest in uncompleted contracts of sale previously made, and the water rights and irrigation system, and the Duse Company agreed to and did assume all the debts of the Sutherlin Company and all obligations imposed upon it with respect to providing water for the parcels of land theretofore sold. The Duse Company thereupon entered into possession of the irrigation system so conveyed, since which time it has maintained such system and expended large sums of money in the installation and maintenance thereof, and has made contracts of sale for a large number of tracts, of land similar to those made by its predecessor, and has in all respects complied with the terms and provisions of the contracts and conveyances
It is alleged in the complaint that at no time has the Sutherlin Pand & Water Company or the J. Iff Puse Company “sold or furnished or offered to sell or furnish, or held itself out as ready to furnish water to any person whatsoever other than the owners of land purchased from one or the other of such corporations,” except that for a short time the Puse Company permitted the city of Sutherlin to use certain of the surplus waters while the city was engaged in securing a permanent supply for itself; but such arrangement was temporary and at all times subject to the demands and rights of the irrigation company and its purchasers.
In July, 1916, certain purchasers of land filed a petition with the Public Service Commission in which they alleged that the Puse Company was a public utility and that the amounts specified in their contracts of purchase, to be paid by them as a condition precedent to the right to use water was exorbitant, unreasonable, and discriminatory, and praying that the Commission enter an order setting aside and annulling such contracts and fixing and establishing rates to be paid by them.
The Pand Company and the trustees named in the mortgage given by it to secure the bond issue appeared and denied that the Commission had jurisdiction over the matter of annulling or modifying the contracts between the irrigation company and the purchasers of land, or to fix or establish the rates to be paid by them. The Commission, however, assumed jurisdiction, and attempted to fix and establish the rates to be collected by the company at practically one-third of the amount named in the contracts previously made with the purchasers, without, as the bill alleges, any evidence being “produced or received by such commission showing or tending to show that such rates were sufficient to provide a fund requisite to enable the irrigation company to operate the system and continue to furnish water to the purchasers of the land, as required by their contracts and conveyances.”
Paying aside many reasons urged in support of the bill and assuming that the Public Utilities Act applies to irrigation companies, it is clear to my mind that it can only apply to such companies as are engaged in the general sale or rental of water to all who may apply for it within a given area, and not to a private corporation that has no dealings with the public, but which merely undertakes to furnish water in fulfillment of private contracts made with certain individuals selected by it. That is all the Puse Company or its predecessor was doing or offering to do. They were not selling or offering to sell water to all who might apply therefor, and who could be served by their system, and did not hold themselves out as ready or willing to do so. They were engaged in selling certain lands owned by them, and incident thereto agreeing to furnish water to their purchasers and no others. This did not make them a public service corporation and subject to the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission. A public utility is defined, by the act under which the right is claimed to fix the rates to be charged by the Puse Company, to include corporations, etc., who shall own, operate, manage, and control any plant or equip
The distinction between a public service irrigation company and a private concern is so fully covered by the Supreme Court of California in Thayer v. California Development Co., 164 Cal. 117, 128 Pac. 21, and Del Mar Water, Light & Power Co., v. Eshleman, 167 Cal. 666, 140 Pac. 591, 948, that it would be useless for me to attempt to add anything thereto. Nor does the Eastern Oregon Land Co. v. Willow River Co., 204 Fed. 516, 122 C. C. A. 636, or Van Dyke v. Geary, 244 U. S. 39, 37 Sup. Ct. 483, 61 L. Ed. 973, lend any support to defendants’ position. The former was an action by an irrigation company to condemn land for its ditches and canals. The controlling-question was whether its purpose was to serve the public within the meaning of section 6525, Lord’s Oregon Laws, or a purely private undertaking. The trial court and a majority of the Court of Appeals held from the evidence that the land sought to be condemned was for the establishing of an irrigation system to serve the public by furnishing water to persons owning lands adjacent to the plaintiff’s canals and ditches; and in the latter case the court says there was nothing in the record to indicate that the plaintiff was engaged in furnishing water only to the particular individuals, but rather to all residents and inhabitants within a given area.
Motion to-dismiss is therefore overruled.