B. O.R.R. Co. v. Pa. P.U.C.

7 A.2d 488, 136 Pa. Super. 517
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 2, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 A.2d 488 (B. O.R.R. Co. v. Pa. P.U.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. O.R.R. Co. v. Pa. P.U.C., 7 A.2d 488, 136 Pa. Super. 517 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Argued May 2, 1939. The order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (successor to the Public Service Commission) appealed from by the carriers in this proceeding is dated July 11, 1938, and resulted from the filing on March 13, 1935, at Complaint Docket No. 10610, by Central Iron and Steel Co., Harrisburg, Pa., Phoenix Iron Co., Phoenixville, Pa., and Lukens Steel Co., Coatesville, Pa., (intervenors and consignees of many carloads of fire brick), of complaints looking toward the securing of reparation for the exaction by the carriers of alleged unjust, unreasonable, excessive and oppressive rates for the transportation of that commodity. *Page 519

The complaints (consolidated for hearing) were filed under the provisions of Section 5 of Art. V. of "The Public Service Company Law" of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, 66 P. S. § 511, and the shipments upon which reparation was sought were those made during the statutory period of two years preceding the filing of the complaints, viz., since March 13, 1933.

Evidence, including a number of exhibits, was presented at a hearing before an examiner. The present commission found upon the record presented to it that the rate of $2.95 per net ton collected during the above two-years' period upon shipments from points in the Clearfield-Mt. Union district to Harrisburg had been unreasonable and extortionate to the extent of 55 cts. per ton, and that the rate from the same points to Phoenixville and Coatesville of $3.15 per ton had been excessive and unreasonable to the extent of 30 cts. per ton.

Pursuant to the practice indicated by this court in Centre Co.Lime Co. v. P.S.C. et al., 103 Pa. Super. 179, 157 A. 815, it directed that the matter be set down for further hearing, at a time to be designated, for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of damages sustained by each complainant.

The present proceeding was pending upon June 1, 1937, the effective date of the new "Public Utility Law" of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053. That act repealed the above cited section of "The Public Service Company Law" governing reparations. Section 313 of Art. III, of the Act of 1937, relates to "Refunds" and supplies Section 5, Art. V. of the Act of 1913. Material changes made are, inter alia, that an order of reparation may be made "in any proceeding involving rates," if the commission shall determine that any rate received by a public utility was "unjust or unreasonable," and the commission "need not find that the rate complained of was extortionate or oppressive." As the petitions for reparation here involved were filed prior to the effective *Page 520 date of the new law, and in connection with a pending proceeding under Section 3 of Art. V. of the old law, 66 P. S. § 492, instituted for the establishment of reasonable rates for the future, which was terminated on November 25, 1936, (Mfrs' Assn.of Lancaster v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 15 Pa. P.S.C. 495), this appeal must be considered and disposed of under the law as it stood at the time the petitions were filed.

The proceedings under Section 3 of Art. V, to which we have just referred, resulted in an order reducing the rates complained against in that proceeding and which had been in existence since 1928, and prescribing $2.40 per ton as the just and reasonable rate to be charged from and after November 25, 1936, from the Clearfield-Mt. Union district to Harrisburg, and $2.85 to Coatesville and Phoenixville — a reduction of 55 cts. in the Harrisburg rate and 30 cts. in the rate to Coatesville and Phoenixville.

It is clear that the effect of the order now appealed from, entered under Section 5 of Art. V. and involving only the exaction between March 13, 1933, and March 13, 1935, of rates alleged to have then been excessive and unreasonable, is to carry back to that period the reductions made in November, 1936, for the future.

The distinctions between proceedings under Section 3 of Art. V. and those under Section 5 were indicated at length in Centre Co.Lime Co. et al., v. P.S.C., 96 Pa. Super. 590, 599, andCentre Co. Lime Co. v. P.S.C., supra, [103 Pa. Super. 179,189, 157 A. 815].

We now have before us a conclusive adjudication by the former commission, made in the exercise of its quasi-legislative powers under Section 3, finding that the respective rates of $2.95 and $3.15 were unjust and unreasonable on November 25, 1936, and would be subsequent to that date, and fixing $2.40 and $2.85 as the just and reasonable rates to be charged thereafter; and also an adjudication (from which the pending appeal *Page 521 was taken) by the present commission, made in the exercise of its quasi-judicial powers under Section 5, that the rates condemned on November 25, 1936, were equally unjust and excessive during the period between March 13, 1933, and the same date in 1935.

If the rates charged during that period of two years had been established by the appellant carriers through tariffs voluntarily filed by them in the exercise of their corporate power to fix rates, the commission would have had jurisdiction to entertain the present complaints and petitions of the intervening consignees for reparation and to dispose of them upon their merits.

That, however, is not the situation here present. The complainants are met at the threshold of their case with the proposition that the rates collected from them during the specified two years were the exact rates determined, fixed and prescribed by an order of the former commission, dated August 31, 1928, (Alan Wood Iron and Steel Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 9 Pa. P.S.C. 319), as the maximum, just and reasonable charges to be demanded, charged and collected for the services here in question from and after the date of that order. This order remained in full force and effect until superseded by the order of November 25, 1936.

By the fourth assignment of error it is charged, inter alia, that the order appealed from is "unlawful and arbitrary in view of prior orders of the Public Service Commission prescribing the assailed rates as reasonable." As the sustaining of this assignment would end the case we turn to its consideration. Counsel for the commission admit the above stated facts, but, citing the provision of Section 1[f] of Art. II. of the Act of 1913, 66 P. S. § 43, reading, "that no rate . . . . . . which shall have been determined by the commission shall be changed or discontinued by the public service company . . . . . . within a period of three years after such determination, without application to and the approval of the commission . . . . . .," contend the appellant carriers *Page 522 were, as a matter of law, protected from such action as has been here attempted only for a period of three years from August 31, 1928. In other words, it is the position of the present commission that a utility which has been charging the rate specifically prescribed by the former commission may be punished for charging such commission-made rates during any two years between the expiration of the period of three years specified in the statute and the date of a subsequent order of the commission changing the rates.

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Bluebook (online)
7 A.2d 488, 136 Pa. Super. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-orr-co-v-pa-puc-pasuperct-1939.