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V 2 “The right of an inhabitant or group of inhabitants of a community or territory served by a public service company to demand an extension of service for their benefit is not absolute and unqualified, but is to be determined by the reasonableness of the demand therefor under the circumstances involved* The duty of a public service company to extend its service facilities, and the reasonableness of a demand for such extension, depend in general, upon the need and cost of such extension and the return in revenue which may be expected as a result of the extension; the financial condition of the utility; the advantages to the public from such an extension; and the franchise or charter obligation to make such extension. # * * “In regard to the reasonableness of the cost which an extension will entail, it is not necessary that a particular extension of service shall be immediately profitable, or that there shall be no unprofitable extensions, the criterion being generally whether the proposed extension will place an unreasonable burden upon the utility as a whole, or upon its existing consumers. * * * ** Prom 43 Am. Jur., “Public Utilities and Services“ , § 199: “A public utility is under a duty to make reasonable extensions of its services in accordance with its franchise and charter obligations and the needs of the inhabitants within the territory covered by its franchise; and a public service commission may, where its action is not unlawful, arbitrary, or capricious, order an extension of service for the inhabitants of such territory. While a public service commission may not require a public service corporation to make large expenditures for the extension of its service in a new territory when the necessary result will be to compel the corporation to use its property for the public convenience without just compensation, an order requiring extension of public ser