Public Utility Dist. No. 2 of Grant County v. Washington State Power Com'n, 33176

Decision Date18 February 1955
Docket NumberNo. 33176,33176
Citation46 Wn.2d 233,280 P.2d 264
PartiesPUBLIC UTILITY DISTRICT NO. 2 of GRANT COUNTY, Washington, a municipal corporation, Respondent, v. The WASHINGTON STATE POWER COMMISSION, Walter G. Gordon, Roy H. Skill, Tom Quest, Bob Jones and W. Otto Warn, individually and as members of said Commission, Appellants, and Cliff Yelle, as Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Washington, and William Galbraith, Director of Conservation and Development of the State of Washington, Defendants.
CourtWashington Supreme Court

Don Eastvold, Donald E. Watson, Frank P. Hayes, Olympia, for appellants.

Washington & Wickwire, Ephrata, Wood, King & Dawson, New York City, for respondent.

MALLERY, Justice.

Public utility district No. 2 of Grant county began a study of the Priest Rapids dam site on the Columbia river in 1951. The site was then an army engineers' project, but no time for construction had been fixed, and none was contemplated in the near future.

On May 27, 1952, the public utility district No. 2 of Grant county officially adopted by resolution the project of constructing the Priest Rapids dam and hydroelectric plant, and, on May 28, 1952, filed its petition in eminent domain, in the superior court for Grant county, to condemn the site. On July 17, 1952, it filed an application with the Federal power commission for a preliminary permit for the project. The next routine step taken was to secure the introduction in the Congress of the United States on April 28, 1953, of an act deauthorizing the army engineers' project. At that time there was no Washington state power commission. The right of the public utility district No. 2 of Grant county to proceed with the project was subject only to the authority of the Federal power commission over navigable streams.

In this posture of affairs, the Laws of 1953, chapter 281, p. 743, RCW 43.52, created the Washington state power commission. It was organized in December, 1953. It had the unquestioned power to originate hydroelectric projects and to construct them, if no public utility district desired to do so. It did not have the power to supersede public utility districts in their pending projects or impair their existing rights therein. Section 10 of the act, p. 752 [cf. RCW 43.53.450], so provides, in this language:

'The provisions of this act shall be cumulative and shall not impair or supersede the powers or rights of any person, firm or corporation or political subdivision of the state of Washington under any other law. * * *'

A public utility district is, of course, a political subdivision of the state within the contemplation of the act.

Notwithstanding the prior adoption of the Priest Rapids project by the public utility district No. 2 of Grant county and its pending condemnation proceeding for the dam site, the Washington state power commission applied for a preliminary permit for itself on the same project on July 22, 1954. Five days later, Congress temporarily deauthorized the army engineers' Priest Rapids project and set a deadline of July 27, 1956, for applications for a construction license. The large amount of preliminary engineering necessary to a project of that magnitude required the issuance of a preliminary permit by the Federal power commission which both parties had then applied for at the time of the deauthorization. Time became the essence of this situation, and to cope with it the public utility district No. 2 of Grant county first commenced the instant action to restrain the Washington state power commission (1) from pursuing its application to the Federal power commission for a preliminary permit; (2) from making an application for a license to construct the project; and (3) from subjecting it to the administrative provisions of the Laws of 1953, chapter 281, § 7, p. 748 [cf. RCW 43.52.320]. It was granted an emergency restraining order to that effect. It next entered into a stipulation with the Washington state power commission for the issuance to it of a preliminary permit by the Federal power commission. This was done on October 21, 1954, by a form of permit which preserved the rights of the Washington state power commission and recognized the parties as being 'upon an equal footing' in their eligibility for a license to construct the project after the preliminary work was done.

This cause then came on for hearing, and, on October 25, 1954, the trial court held:

'* * * that the acts of the defendant, Washington State Power Commission, in commencing proceedings under Section 7 of Chapter 281 of the Laws of Washington 1953, in relation to the Priest Rapids Hydro-Electric Project, and its acts in applying for and pressing for issuance of a preliminary permit from the Federal Power Commission in connection with said Priest Rapids Hydro-Electric Project, are without authority in law, * * *' (Italics ours.)

It continued its injunction pendente lite. The Washington state power commission thereupon appealed to this court.

The appellant takes the position that the respondent, public utility district No. 2 of Grant county, had no prior rights or powers in the project which could be impaired or superseded under the purview of the statute. The appellant's theory is that prior to the act of Congress deauthorizing the army engineers' Priest Rapids project, the Federal power commission had no authority to issue either a preliminary permit or a construction license thereon to any applicant. All applications, therefore, became effective simultaneously on July 27, 1954, the date of deauthorization by Congress of the project, when for the first time the Federal power commission had the power to act upon them. Prior to that time, they were inchoate applications only.

We do not agree with appellant. The respondent, acting legally pursuant to the prior law governing public utility districts, acquired definite rights by its resolution adopting the project and the commencement of its condemnation suit. Even though the resolution was a preliminary step, it created a legal status and vested rights in the respondent which the appellant could not impair or supersede. Indeed, respondent would not have needed the preliminary permit and construction license from the Federal power commission but for the fact that the Columbia river is a navigable stream. The preliminary permit in question does not create respondent's right and power to proceed with...

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