Georgia Power Company filed a complaint for an injunction against Troup County Electric Membership Corporation in the Superior Court of Troup County.
The defendant Troup Electric Membership Corporation is a nonprofit electric membership corporation, organized under the provisions of the Act approved March 30, 1937 (Ga. L. 1937, pp. 644, 659), as amended.
Code Ann. Ch.
34B-1. That Act authorizes electric membership corporations to be organized thereunder for the purpose of "engaging in rural electrification by [among others] . .. (1) the furnishing of electric energy to persons in rural areas . . .” Section 2 (8) of that Act, as amended, provides: " 'Rural area’ means any area not included within the boundaries of any incorporated or unincorporated city, town, or village having a population in excess of 1,500 inhabitants at the time a corporation commences to operate electric facilities or to furnish electric energy in such an area, and includes both the farm and nonfarm population thereof; and the inclusion by annexation or otherwise, of any portion of a rural area, as defined in this Chapter, within the limits of an incorporated or unincorporated city, town, or village regardless of its population, shall not in any respect impair or affect the right of a corporation to continue to furnish electric energy to its member consumers or to new member con
In 1968, the legislature proposed a local constitutional amendment to authorize the General Assembly to provide by local Act for the creation of a charter commission to study all matters relating to the consolidation of the government of the City of Columbus and the County of Muscogee and for the establishment of a successor government with powers and jurisdiction throughout the territorial limits of Muscogee County. Ga. L. 1968, p. 1508, et seq. That proposed constitutional amendment was duly ratified by a majority of the people residing in the City of Columbus and in Muscogee County outside the City of Columbus. Ga. L. 1969, p. 4426. At the 1969 session of the General Assembly a local enabling Act was passed creating the Muscogee County Charter Commission. Ga. L. 1969, p. 3571, et seq. Pursuant thereto, a charter commission was duly formed and drafted a charter which was ratified by the affirmative vote of a majority of the qualified voters of Muscogee County and by the affirmative vote of a majority of the qualified voters of the then existing City of Columbus at a referendum held on May 27, 1970. Thereafter, on November 3, 1970, an election was held to elect members of the governing authority of the county-wide government thereby established. "Upon the election of the members of said countywide government authority and their taking office as the governing authority of said county-wide government, the existing governments of the City of Columbus and Muscogee
On that date a residential subdivision located outside the limits of what had been the City of Columbus, but within Muscogee County, was in the process of development, and Troup Electric Membership Corporation had extended its line for conveying electrical energy into said subdivision. Thereafter, and before commencement of the action in this case defendant further extended its lines a distance of 725 feet into the subdivision in question, installing in the process five poles in order to serve new members in an area where defendant had no lines prior to January 1,1971. The plaintiff in the court below contended that, by virtue of the ratification and adoption by the people of the City of Columbus and the people of Muscogee County of the charter of Columbus, Georgia, the area wherein are located the lines of the defendant in question became an area included in the boundary of an incorporated city having a population in excess of 1,500 and that under the provisions of § 2 (8) of the Electric Membership Corporation Act, quoted above, defendant may not extend its lines in such area in any manner except to make a service drop not exceeding 300 feet from its lines as they existed prior to January 1, 1971. In the order appealed from, the trial court sustained this contention, and we have for decision the question of correctness of that ruling. Held:
1. It is a part of the public policy of this State to suppress monopolies and to encourage competition, and to this end restrictions on the right of any person, firm or corporation to engage in its business and to do business with those members of the public who choose to partake of its services are not favored. Const, of the State of Georgia, Art. IV, Sec. IV, Par. I
(Code Ann.
§2-2701);
Code Ann.
§ 20-504;
State v. Central of Ga. R. Co.,
2. Applying the foregoing principles to the issue in this
3. "Counties are subdivisions of the State government to which the State parcels its duty of governing the people.
Scales v. Ordinary,
4. On the other hand, municipalities are creatures of the legislature, and their existence may be established, altered, amended, enlarged or diminished, or utterly abolished by the legislature.
Churchill v. Walker,
5. Examination of the Muscogee County-City of Columbus Charter Commission constitutional amendment as proposed by the legislature, and ratified by the people of Muscogee County, clearly shows that it was not the intention of the framers thereof, nor of the people who ratified it, to authorize the abolition of Muscogee County as a political arm of the State, because it refers throughout to the "proposed county-wide government charter”; it
6. A careful reading of the Charter of Columbus, Georgia (Ga. L. 1971, Ex. Sess., p. 2007, et seq.) shows that the governmental entity thereby created, while possessing many of the attributes of a city, and being granted municipal powers as extensive as any city, nevertheless also has the powers and attributes of a county in that it retains a sheriff, a court of ordinary, a superior court and many other county-like departments which function in areas not normally associated with municipalities. Under the provisions of § 9-107 of the charter, the governments of both Muscogee County and the City of Columbus, as it formerly existed, are abolished. However, abolition of the forms of government or of the governmental units of the county and the substitution therefor of a new and different form of government or governmental unit does not amount to the abolition of the county itself. The charter of Columbus, Georgia, studiously avoids designating the new political entity as a city, town or village. This court will not declare that to be a city, town or village, which the legislature has not seen fit to designate as such.
Heard v. State,
7. It follows, therefore, that Troup Electric Membership Corporation has non-exclusive rights to furnish electricity to its members in that portion of Columbus, Georgia, and Muscogee County, lying outside the limits of the former City of Columbus as they existed on December 31, 1970, and cannot be restricted in the extension of its lines in the area in question in this case because such lines are not now included within the limits of any incorporated or unincorporated city, town or village as those terms are used in §2 (8) of the Electric Membership Corporation Act. Code Ann. §34B-102 (8). The trial court erred in rendering the judgment and order appealed from.
Judgment reversed.
