Allied Chemical Corp. v. Railroad Commission

660 S.W.2d 124, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 5008
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 7, 1983
Docket13698
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 660 S.W.2d 124 (Allied Chemical Corp. v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allied Chemical Corp. v. Railroad Commission, 660 S.W.2d 124, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 5008 (Tex. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

We review a district court judgment that affirms a final order entered by the Texas Railroad Commission in an administrative proceeding denominated “Gas Utilities Docket 628” (GUD 628). We reverse the judgment and remand with instructions to the district court for further remand to the Commission.

Allied Chemical Corporation supplies natural gas to Houston Chemical Company and Gulf Coast Machine and Supply Company, at unit prices set by various contracts between them. (Some of the contracts were entered into by a “division” of Allied, “Union Texas Petroleum Company,” but we shall hereafter refer to Allied as the contracting party.) Allied obtains natural gas from Lo-Vaca Gathering Company pursuant to a contract between them.

In another Commission proceeding denominated “Gas Utilities Docket 500” (GUD 500), Lo-Vaca petitioned the Commission to review Lo-Vaca’s contracts with its customers and reform the contracts by increasing the unit prices set therein for natural gas sold by Lo-Vaca. Pending a final hearing in GUD 500, the Commission entered an interlocutory order setting the higher prices for Lo-Vaca’s customers, which included Allied. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. arts. 6058, 6054 (1962).

Initiating GUD 628, Allied requested that the Commission authorize Allied to charge Houston Chemical and Gulf Coast a pro-rata portion of Allied’s increased cost of natural gas attributable to the Commission’s interlocutory order in GUD 500; which is to say, in the words of the parties to this appeal, Allied sought to “flow through” to Houston Chemical and Gulf Coast the increased cost of the gas, to the extent Allied furnished them natural gas taken from the Lo-Vaca system.

The Commission’s final order in GUD 628 authorized the “flow through” but did so in terms unsatisfactory to Allied as well as to Gulf Coast and Houston Chemical. Allied sued in district court for judicial review of the order, as did Gulf Coast and Houston Chemical. The district court consolidated the two suits and entered a single judgment that affirms in all respects the Commission’s final order in GUD 628. Allied, Gulf Coast, and Houston Chemical assign numerous points of error in their respective appeals. The Commission, of course, defends on appeal both its final order in GUD 628 and the judgment of the district court.

THE COMMISSION’S INTERLOCUTORY ORDER IN GUD 500

On March 25, 1973, Lo-Vaca filed in the Commission an application requesting the Commission’s review of its contracts to supply natural gas to its customers and a “cost adjustment” with respect to the gas. Allied participated in the subsequent proceedings, denominated by the Commission as GUD 500. Houston Chemical and Gulf Coast are not customers of Lo-Vaca in the ordinary sense but take Lo-Vaca gas to the extent their supplier, Allied, furnishes them gas purchased by Allied from Lo-Vaca. Houston Chemical and Gulf Coast do not appear *126 on a list, dated May 3, 1973, showing the parties who appeared in GUD 500.

The Commission, on September 27, 1973, pursuant to Lo-Vaca’s request, entered an interlocutory order in GUD 500 wherein the Commission found “that a public emergency and imperative public necessity require temporary suspension of the rules of practice and procedure for the Gas Utilities Division in order that temporary rates may be established....” The order then established for Lo-Vaca and its customers, including Allied, a formula by which higher prices were to be charged Lo-Vaca’s customers. The order is expressly made “applicable to all customers of Lo-Vaca now paying a lower rate” and provides further:

[njothing contained herein is intended to affect the rights and obligations of the parties to this proceeding as between themselves or otherwise, except to the extent of affecting rates during the effective period of this interim rate.

Approximately seven months after the date of the foregoing interlocutory order, the Commission found it necessary to “clarify” the order.

In a letter to an addressee named “Union Texas Transmission Company,” dated April 29, 1974 and entitled “In Re Gas Utilities Docket No. 500; Clarification of the Interlocutory Order dated September 27, 1973,” the Commission stated:

The Commission’s Interlocutory Order was entered to avert or mitigate human suffering, particularly during the winter heating season, due to the serious shortfall of gas on the Lo-Vaca system. The order was not intended to place the pipeline customers of Lo-Vaca in the same position occupied by Lo-Vaca [sic] prior to September 27, 1973. The ultimate beneficiaries of any improvement in Lo-Vaca’s gas supply situation due to the Interlocutory Order are the end-users or ultimate consumers of the gas, and the only fair and equitable means of administering [sic] the additional gas cost is to allocate it among such ultimate consumers or end-users. Accordingly, direct or indirect pipeline customers of Lo-Vaca should be allowed to ñow-through any additional gas cost, incurred by such pipeline customers as a result of the Interlocutory Order. The direct or indirect pipeline customers of Lo-Vaca will allocate the cost of the Lo-Vaca gas among all of its customers benefitting from such gas, and any increased charges to its customers will be subject to Commission review,

(emphasis added). The genesis of the present dispute lies, of course, in this “clarification” letter, wherein the Commission declared that Lo-Vaca “pipeline customers” such as Allied were to “allocate the cost of the Lo-Vaca gas among all of [their] customers benefitting from such gas,” subject to review by the Commission, notwithstanding that the interlocutory order itself purported to be applicable only “to all customers of Lo-Vaca” then paying a rate lower than that derived from the formula established in the interlocutory order, and notwithstanding that at least two of Allied’s customers, Houston Chemical and Gulf Coast, were not designated parties in GUD 500.

About a month after the date of the “clarification” letter, Allied commenced and has continued to bill Gulf Coast and Houston Chemical in amounts determined by the unit prices stipulated in their contracts, plus a pro rata part of the increased costs Allied has been required to pay Lo-Vaca under the Commission’s interlocutory order in GUD 500.

THE COMMISSION’S FINAL ORDER IN GUD 628

The proceedings in GUD 628 originated in still another Commission proceeding, denominated “Gas Utilities Docket 495” (GUD 495). In that earlier proceeding, Allied had petitioned the Commission directly to abrogate the natural gas prices stipulated in Allied’s contracts with its customers, including Houston Chemical and Gulf Coast, and to establish higher prices for the gas sold under such contracts. On June 16,1975, the Commission entered its final order in GUD 495. It denied Allied’s request for revision of the contract prices, basing its order on the ground that Allied had failed to demon *127 strate that a denial of its request would adversely affect the public interest, which the Commission considered to be a prerequisite to any exercise by the Commission of its power to revise contract prices. High Plains Natural Gas Company v. Railroad Commission of Texas,

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Bluebook (online)
660 S.W.2d 124, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 5008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-chemical-corp-v-railroad-commission-texapp-1983.