(After stating the foregoing facts.) The first question presented for our determination is, whether the Commission has jurisdiction and legal authority to force Georgia Power Company, against its will, to buy or merge with a separate and distinct neighboring electric public utility, or to sell power to such other utility company, although the Power Company has never undertaken as a public utility to provide such service. The Georgia Public Service Commission has only such powers as the legislature has expressly, or by fair implication, conferred upon it.
Zuber
v.
Southern Railway Co.,
9
Ga. App.
539 (2) (
We find no Georgia statute which confers upon the Georgia Public Service Commission authority to require one public utility to buy or merge with another, or to sell or not to sell power to each other. The general rule, as stated in
It also seems to be a well-settled rule that public utilities have the right to enter into contracts between themselves, or with others, free from control or supervision of the State, so long as such contracts are not unconscionable or oppressive and do not impair the obligation of the utility to discharge its public duties. In Halifax Paper Co.
v.
Roanoke Rapids Sanitary District,
For the Commission to order the Power Company to sell the Light Company its power requirements, even if it should appear that it had the available capacity, would be for the Commission
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to usurp the functions and prerogatives of the Power Company, and this it cannot do, for, as was held by this court in
Southern Bell Telephone &c. Co.
v.
Georgia Public Service Commission,
203
Ga.
832, 878 (
The other question for decision is, whether injunction is a remedy available to the plaintiff, and that question is conclu
*230
sively settled by the decisions of this court. In
McIntyre
v.
Harrison,
172
Ga.
65 (
Under the foregoing rulings, the petition stated a cause of action, and the trial court erred in sustaining the general demurrer thereto.
Judgment reversed.
