The following issues are presented on this appeal:
(1) Was the PSC order granting Richland Center’s application for permission to construct facilities to connect to the Dairyland system in violation of seс. 196.495 (1), Stats.; and
(2) Is appellant a person whose “legal rights, duties or privileges” are “directly affected” within the meaning
Applicability of Sec. 196.U95 (1), Stats.
In its simplest form the apрellant’s position is that sec. 196.495 (1), Stats., is applicable to wholesale sales of electric energy and that Richland Center and Dairyland are thus рrohibited from constructing additional facilities, unless the conditions of that section are fulfilled. The respondents (Richland Center and PSC) contend that the prohibition of the section applies only to those providing energy at retail.
Sec. 196.495 (1), Stats., states:
“(1) No public utility, and no co-operative association orgаnized under ch. 185 for the purpose of furnishing electric service to its members only, shall (a) extend or render electric service directly or indirectly to the premises of any person already receiving electric service directly or indirectly from another public utility or another such co-operative association, or (b) make a primary voltage extension to serve the premises of any person not receiving electric service and to which such service is available frоm the facilities of another public utility or another such co-operative association through a secondary voltage extension, unless the other public utility or co-operative association consents thereto in writing or unless the public service commission after notice to the interested parties and hearing finds and determines that the service rendered or to be rendered by such other public utility or co-operative аssociation is inadequate and will not likely be made adequate, or that the rates charged therefor are unreasonable and are not likely to be made reasonable.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The appellant’s contention as to the interpretation of this section focuses on the words “directly or indirectly to the premises of any person” and is apparently twofold.
Accеptance of either of these contentions would render the duplication of the appellant’s wholesale facilities within the proscriрtion of the statute. In support of its contention that such is the purpose of the statute, the appellant maintains that since the statute does not specifically refer to either retail or wholesale sales, it must be construed in accordance with the underlying purpose of the public utilitiеs law.
This underlying purpose, in the appellant’s view, is to eliminate unnecessary duplication between supplies and the resulting economic waste. It thus contends that no reason exists for distinguishing between retail and wholesale supplies. Although this court stated in
Wisconsin Traction, Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Menasha
(1914),
Under the appellant’s second alternate interpretation of “premises” it is contended that, by virtue of its wholesale sales to Richland Center, it is “indirectly” serving the consuming public. This court, however, has held that wholesale sales to a municipality do not constitute “indirect” sales to the public. In
Central Wisconsin Power Co. v. Wisconsin Traction, Light, Heat & Power Co.
(1926),
“. . . Manifestly, the plaintiff dealt with the public in no respect whatever. If it can be said under such an arrangement as was here entered into between the city of Clintonville and the plaintiff that the plaintiff furnished light, heat, and power to the public indirectly, that wоuld be equally true of a coal dealer who erected acoal chute for the purpose of delivering coal to the.generating plant owned by the city. The statute expressly declares that a city owning and operating an electrical plant such as the city of Clintonville owned and operated is a public utility, so that we have in this case one public utility dealing with another. . . .” (p. 567.)
It thus appears that neither the policy underlying the public utilities law nor the actual wording of sec. 196.495 (1), Stats., require such statute’s application to facilities used in wholesale sales of energy.
Since sec. 196.495 (1), Stats., is not applicable to the instant case, the appellant is merely in the position of one who by reason of expenditures for facilities has a financial interest in the application of Richland Center. In
Milwaukee v. Public Service Comm.
(1960),
A like decision was rendered in
Wisconsin Hydro Electric Co. v. Public Service Comm.
(1940),
We conclude that the trial court was correct in holding that sec. 196.495 (1), Stats., does not apply to the instant case and that appellant lacks standing to contest the PSC order granting the application of Richland Center.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
