207 Wis. 95 | Wis. | 1932
It is undisputed that the board of trustees of the village of Combined Locks, on the 18th day of January, 1929, granted a franchise to the South Shore Utility Company and that this franchise is the only one ever granted by the village. It is apparently conceded by the respondents that the franchise so granted is valid unless at the time it was granted there was in operation in the village, under an indeterminate permit, a public utility engaged in similar service. Sec. 196.50, Stats. 1927, provides in part as follows :
“No license, permit or franchise shall be granted to any person, copartnership or corporation, to own, operate, man*101 age or control any plant or equipment for the conveyance of telephone messages, or for the production, transmission, delivery or furnishing of heat, light, water or power in any municipality, where there is in operation under an indeterminate permit, as provided in sections 196.01 to 197.10, inclusive, a public utility engaged in similar service, without first securing from the commission a declaration, after a public hearing of all parties interested, that, public convenience and necessity required such second. public utility.”
It is conceded that prior to the granting of the franchise no declaration of public convenience and necessity had been secured from the commission. It is therefore obvious that if, at the time the village granted the franchise, a public utility engaged in similar service was operating in the village under an indeterminate permit, then a declaration of convenience and necessity was necessarily a condition precedent to the authority of the village to grant a franchise. It is equally obvious that if no public utility was in operation in-the village under an indeterminate permit, then no declaration of public convenience and necessity was required as a condition precedent to the granting of a franchise-by the village. -The vital question on this appeal is whether a public utility, engaged in furnishing electric service, was operating in the village under an indeterminate permit. The answer to this question, as we view it, is determinative of the present controversy. The appellants contend that neither the city of Kaukauna nor the Wisconsin-Michigan Power Company was operating in the village under indeterminate permits. The respondents, on the other hand, contend that 'the mere occupation of any part of a town by a public utility company organized under sec. 180.17, Stats., and the. rendering of a service to persons or places in such town, results, under the law, in giving to such utility an indeterminate permit in such town, and that such indeterminate permit so acquired continues to exist, until legally terminated, as to all parts of said town, and even as to portions of said town thereafter
Whether an indeterminate permit in a town may be obtained by a public utility and, if so, in what manner, has not heretofore been passed upon by this court. Although in at least two cases the court has been asked to pass upon these questions, no case has heretofore been considered in which the determination of these questions was necessary to a decision or in which the questions were squarely presented and adequately briefed. In Wisconsin Gas & E. Co. v. Railroad Comm. 198 Wis. 13, 222 N. W. 783, a controversy between the Wisconsin Gas & Electric Company and the city of Plymouth arose as to their respective rights as public utilities in the town of Plymouth. The court below in that action had held that the predecessors of the plaintiff therein had an indeterminate permit in the town of Plymouth result
No statute of this state confers express authority upon towns to grant franchises to public utilities. While the legislature has given express authority-to cities and villages to grant franchises — sec. 66.06 (3) — and has provided how domestic corporations organized to furnish telegraph, telephone service, or transmit heat, power, or electric current to the public or for public purposes, may construct and maintain such lines or systems along highways or through cities or villages, it has definitely provided that “no lighting or heating corporation shall have any right hereunder in any city or village until it has obtained a franchise from such city or village.” Sec. 180.17 (1) and (7). While the legislature has given no authority to towns to grant' franchises, it has in sec. 196.55, Stats. 1927, recognized that a public utility might exist claiming authority to operate by virtue of a franchise granted by a “town” or “other governing body” of a town. It seems very clear to us that the intent and purpose of sec. 196.55, as originally enacted, was for the purpose of bringing within the law every public utility operating in this state at that time, regardless of the source of its authority to operate, and regardless of whether such authority or franchise was originally given to it by a town.
While the respondents concede that a permit to occupy highways authorized by sec. 86.16 is in the nature of a poli.ce-power regulation applicable to both individuals and corporations who desire to construct electric lines within the public highways of a town and may not in any sense be considered as a franchise, yet they earnestly contend that sec. 180.17, Stats. 1927, directly grants to such corporations as are organized under it, certain rights and privileges which constitute rights in the nature of indeterminate permits which, when exercised by such companies by occupying territory of a town and by rendering public utility service therein, results in franchises granted by the state to such corporations, which thereafter have the force and effect of indeterminate permits. There would be much plausibility in respondents’ contention if the legislature had not enacted a public utility law which appears to be as full, complete, and comprehensive as the legislature intended it to be. Sec. 180.17 is found in ch. 180, Stats., which relates to domestic corporations. Obviously the legislature has failed to provide how, if at all, indeterminate permits are acquired in towns. This also is of great significance when it is considered that the public utility law has, since its original enactment, been repeatedly amended. We do not feel that the contentions of respondents as to the-effect of sec. 180.17 are so clear as to warrant us in upholding them.
If the effect of this decision be to place towns in a field where a free-for-all rendering of utility service by different public utilities may be permitted, we can only say that such
We conclude that, under the existing law, a public utility does not obtain an indeterminate permit in a town by simply occupying the highways pursuant to the permit authorized by sec. 86.16, Stats., or by virtue of organization under sec. 180.17, Stats., or by merely extending its service to persons and places within a town. From this conclusion it follows that neither the city of Kaukauna nor the Wisconsin-Michigan Power Company, on January 18, 1929, was operating in the village of Combined Locks under an indeterminate permit, and that no declaration by the commission of public convenience and necessity was required as a condition precedent to the granting of a franchise to the South Shore Utility Company by the village of Combined Locks.
In the view we take of this controversy it becomes unnecessary to pass upon the several other questions raised in the briefs. It follows from what has been said that the order of the commission requiring the South Shore' Utility Company to cease and desist from selling electric light and power to the public in the village of Combined Locks was unreasonable and unlawful and should have been vacated and set aside by the court below.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, with directions to enter judgment vacating arid setting aside the order of the commission herein.