228 P. 271 | Idaho | 1924
The material facts in this case are that the Humbird Lumber Company is the owner of extensive lumber plants at Sandpoint and Kootenai; years ago it constructed and installed at each of these plants complete water systems for use in its operations and for fire protection. Water-tanks have been erected at each plant from which water is forced through the systems. At each place it has installed a steam pump of one thousand gallons capacity per minute and an electric pump of five hundred and fifty gallons capacity per minute. These plants have been erected upon the lands of the lumber company outside of the corporate limits of Sandpoint and Kootenai, and are adjacent to Lake Pend D'Oreille, from which the water is pumped. At both Sandpoint and Kootenai, and adjoining the respective plants of the lumber company the Northern Pacific Railway Company, on its own lands, has depots, roundhouses, cattle-pens, offices, section-houses, etc.; and it has a complete water system at each place through which water is furnished from standpipes or tanks for the trains *509 and engines of the railway company and for its various other uses. The Sandpoint Water Light Company's system formerly connected with the water systems of the lumber and railway companies, but prior to the commencement of this proceeding, the lumber and railway companies discontinued the water company's service. The lumber company connected its water systems with the water systems of the railway company, and has since supplied the railway company with water.
The water company is a public utility, and sought by the proceeding instituted before the Public Utilities Commission to secure an order of the commission directing the lumber company to refrain from furnishing water to the railway company. The commission found that the lumber company was functioning as a public utility; that it had not secured a certificate of public convenience and necessity; and made and issued order No. 475, requiring the lumber company to cease and desist from furnishing water to the railway company. A writ of review was issued out of the district court of Bonner county to review the proceeding, and this appeal is from the judgment of the district court, in effect, sustaining the commission. The proceeding on review was commenced before the enactment of chap. 72, Laws of 1921. The lumber company has filed in this court a very elaborate brief in which it has assigned and discussed a number of alleged errors, most of which it will not be necessary to discuss. Neither the commission nor the water company has appeared in this court and we are not favored with the views of the water company with respect to the questions necessary to be determined.
The question with which the Utilities Commission was confronted, and which we are to determine, is whether the furnishing of water to the railway company constituted such a public use as to bring the lumber company within the definition of a public utility.
It is stipulated that:
"During all of the time that said water has been so furnished by the Lumber Company to the Railway Company, *510 the said Railway Company has been and now is a close neighbor of the Lumber Company and the Lumber Company has at no time supplied or furnished any other person, company or corporation with water to be used for any other purpose at or in the vicinity of Sandpoint (Kootenai) and never has offered to supply or furnish any other person, firm or corporation with water to be used for any other purpose and does not intend to engage in the utility business or has not offered to and does not intend to offer to engage in such business in any manner whatsoever."
"The term 'water corporation' . . . . includes every corporation . . . . owning, controlling, operating or managing any water system for compensation. . . . ." (C. S., sec. 2392.) "The term 'public utility' . . . . includes every . . . . water corporation . . . .: Provided, That the term 'public utility' as used in this chapter shall cover cases both where the service is performed and the commodity delivered directly to the public or some portion thereof . . . ." (C. S., sec. 2396.) The jurisdiction of the commission is restricted to the supervision and regulation of public utilities. (C. S., sec. 2450.)
The evidence does not justify the conclusion that the lumber company is "operating" its water system "for compensation." The lumber company constructed its water system as a part of its lumber manufacturing plant before the water company came into existence, and it is conclusive that the water system of the lumber company was operated in connection with and as a small but necessary incident of its general plant. It is a matter of common knowledge that the fire risk of sawmills and lumber manufacturing plants is great, and the fact that the lumber company constructed its water system primarily for fire protection and general mill use is conclusively established. The fact that it has fifty-three hydrants scattered throughout one of its plants and yards is strongly indicative of the purpose of the water system. The capacity of its pumps is greater than is necessary to supply water for manufacturing purposes, but the evidence does not disclose and we cannot say that capacity *511 of the pumps is greater than is required for fire purposes. And the fact that the lumber company receives compensation for the water supplied the railway company is merely an incident, and is not sufficient to justify a finding that the water system of the lumber company is operated for compensation. There is ample justification for the conclusion that the water system of the lumber company is not operated primarily for compensation.
Reading and construing C. S., sec. 2392, sec. 2396 and sec. 2450, together, the legislature has said that a water company to be a public utility, and within the jurisdiction of the commission, must be operating and delivering water to the public or some portion thereof for compensation. The evidence does not show that the lumber company is delivering water to the public or some portion thereof for compensation. It is stipulated that the lumber company has never furnished or offered to furnish water to any person or corporation other than the railway company and that it has not offered and does not intend to engage in the utility business. The furnishing of water to one person or corporation, under a contract, does not constitute a delivery of water to the public or some portion thereof. (Hildreth v. Montecito Creek Water Co.,
It was said by this court in Stoehr v. Natatorium Co.,
"A corporation becomes a public service corporation, and therefore subject to regulation as a public utility, only when and to the extent that the business of such corporation becomes devoted to a public use." (Stoehr v. Natatorium Co., supra;Thayer v. California Development Co.,
"To hold that property has been dedicated to a public use is 'not a trivial thing' (San Francisco v. Grote,
In Stoehr v. Natatorium Co., supra, the company had been furnishing water to certain customers for many years and was then furnishing approximately 276 users, through several miles of pipe laid in the streets of the city. (See Public UtilitiesCom. v. Natatorium Co., supra.) But for the reasons therein set forth, among which was that the company had never offered the water for sale to the public in general nor intended to dedicate it to a public use, this court held that the Natatorium Company was not a public utility, and not within the jurisdiction of the commission. It would seem that the decision in Stoehr v. Natatorium Co. is authority for the decision of the question here presented. And it cannot be said that the holding of this court in the subsequent case of PublicUtilities Com. v. Natatorium Co., supra, that the waters of the same Natatorium Company were not the public waters of the state would affect Stoehr v. Natatorium Co., as authority in this case, because waters originally appropriated for private use may be dedicated to the use of the public. (Const., sec. 1, art. 15.) *513
The test for determining whether the lumber company is a public utility would seem to depend upon whether it has held itself out as ready, able and willing to serve the public generally, or some portion thereof. The stipulation hereinbefore quoted and the evidence show conclusively that it has never done more than serve the railway company, one concern, under a private contract; and that it has never devoted its business, either wholly or partly, to the use of the public. We conclude that the lumber company was not a public utility and was not within the jurisdiction of the utilities commission. Because of this fact, the commission exceeded its jurisdiction in making order No. 475. (PublicUtilities Com. v. Natatorium Co., supra (concurring opinion of McCarthy, J.); Van Hoosear v. Railroad Com.,
Another point of attack by appellant is that the legislature has not attempted to vest in the commission the power to make and issue the order complained of, and that it was made without any authority of law whatever. Appellant contends that the legislature could not vest such power in the commission, and cites Dewey v. Schreiber Implement Co.,
The Utilities Commission cannot exercise a judicial power. The judicial power of this state is vested in the courts, and the legislature cannot vest judicial power in the public Utilities Commission. (Neil v. Public Utilities Com.,
It was held in Neil v. Public Utilities Com., supra, that the commission did not have the power to order a ferry owner to "furnish such facilities and perform such services as may be requisite and necessary to meet all just and reasonable *514 demands." If the commission does not possess the power to require something to be done, it certainly does not possess the power to require that a thing be not done. If it cannot issue a mandamus order, it cannot issue an injunctive order.
By the order, the lumber company was "required to cease and desist from the furnishing of water to the Northern Pacific Railway Company . . . . until it shall have secured . . . . a certificate of public convenience and necessity . . . ." While it is not labeled an injunction, and is not in the language usually employed in a restraining order, it is nothing more nor less than a restraining order, an injunction. The power to issue a restraining order is judicial in character, and can only be exercised by the supreme court and the district courts. (Neil v. Public Utilities Com., supra.)
The ultimate fact sought to be established in this proceeding was that the lumber company was a public utility. The complaint before the commission alleged that "the said lumber company is now operating as a public utility, and exercising the rights and privileges thereof. . . . ." The lumber company, according to the commission's recitation, "denied . . . . that it has at any time or now is exercising the rights or privileges of a public utility. . . . ." The commission found that the lumber company was operating as a public utility and directed it to "cease and desist from the furnishing of water . . . . or in any way operating as a public utility. . . . ." The commission has power to supervise and regulate public utilities (C. S., sec. 2450); and it may without doubt, while acting within the scope of its jurisdiction, exercise judicial functions in determining the question before it, but the law does not authorize the commission to exercise a judicial power or make a judicial order. That power is possessed by the courts and cannot be vested anywhere else. The legislature has not and could not vest such a power in the commission. The order is void. (Dewey v. Schreiber Implement Co., supra; Neil v. PublicUtilities Com., supra; Mt. Konocti etc. Co. v. Thelen, *515
It follows, therefore, that the judgment of the district court quashing writ of review and affirming the order of the Public Utilities Commission in this case must be reversed, and it is so ordered.
McCarthy, C.J., and Budge and William A. Lee, JJ., and Johnson, District Judge, concur.