117 Ark. 132 | Ark. | 1915
(after stating the facts). It is insisted that the court -erred in directing a verdict for appellee, and in permitting the introduction -of testimony -of the former owners of -the plant, -showing the uniform -collection of the minimum fee or readiness to serve charge -of all consumers using meters.
Appellant had nearly twenty lights in his home, which at the flat rate w-ould have cost him fifty cents per month, -each, and by the terms of the ordinance the use of a meter could be agreed upon between the consumer and the company, “and when such meter is used, the rate shall not exceed fifteen cents per kilowatt.” Of course, appellant was bound by the terms of his franchise, and could not make a higher charge for electricity than that fixed therein, under the terms prescribed. It is a well-nigh universal custom, however, for -operators of electric lighting plants to -establish and demand a minimum service fee, or readiness to serve charge of all consumers using meters.
In Little Rock Ry. & Elec. Co. v. Newman, 91 Ark. 91, the court construed an act of the Legislature requiring gas and electric companies to furnish meters free of charge with tables of prices charged per thousand units for commodities consumed to be based upon readings of the meter, and held that the act did not prohibit the companies from making a minimum charge per month where meters were installed for readiness-to-serve, saying, ‘ ‘ The Legislature did not intend to compel the company to put in a meter and hold itself in readiness to serve for all who used none of the commodity to be supplied, and the language of the act does not warrant the construction that the fixing of the minimum 'charge was to be forbidden. * * * The fact that the charge for meters is expressly forbidden negatives, under the maxim expressio unws est exclusio alterius, any intention to forbid any other charge uniformly made against iall patrons using the same quantity of the commodity.”
“A regulation of the charges for such service should be just to the company, as well as to 'all patrons, so as to allow compensation to the former and reasonable, uniform rates to the latter, according to the amount of the commodity consumed. One class of patrons should not be favored at the expense of 'another.”
The testimony shows the operation of the light plant herein had never been a paying, but was a losing, proposition.
There being no prohibition of the right to contract for a minimum monthly charge for the use of the meter, nor to agree to pay for a minimum amount of electricity •at the prescribed rate, and the testimony being undisputed that such contract was made and performed for a long period, appellant can not insist upon the use of the lights without the payment of such charge.
No error was committed in instructing the verdict, and the judgment is affirmed.