Borough of Johnsonburg v. Public Service Commission

98 Pa. Super. 284, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 192
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1929
DocketAppeal 58
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 Pa. Super. 284 (Borough of Johnsonburg v. Public Service Commission) 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
Borough of Johnsonburg v. Public Service Commission, 98 Pa. Super. 284, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 192 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

The Borough of Johnsonburg appeals from an order of the commission dismissing its complaint against retail gas rates filed by Consumers Gas & Heat Company (hereafter called Consumers Company) to be collected from residents of the borough. The tariff was filed in December, 1924, to become effective January 8, 1925; the complaint was filed before that date; the burden of proving that the rate was reasonable was therefore on Consumers Company, the intervening appellee. Hearings were had and the rate was sustained.

Section 24, Article "VI of the Act (1913, P. L. 1427) provides that if this court should “find that the order appealed from is unreasonable or based upon incompetent evidence materially affecting the determination or order of the commission, or if otherwise not in conformity with law, it may enter a final decree reversing the order of the commission, or, in its discretion, it may remand the record to the commission with directions to reconsider the matter and make such order as shall be reasonable and in conformity with law.” Whether the record shows that the challenged rate is reasonable is a question of law. In the peculiar circumstances of this case, we have concluded that the evidence is insufficient, the order not in conformity with law and that we must remand the record to enable the commission to take additional evidence if the parties have any to offer, and to reconsider the matter.

The Consumers Gas and Heat Company was incorporated in 1890 under the Act of May 29, 1885, P. L. 29, for the production and distribution of natural gas, and until 1920, not only distributed gas to local customers in the Borough of Johnsonburg but also pro *288 duced from land owned and leased by it the gas it sold. In 1920, its gas producing lands, leases and wholesale distributing equipment were sold to the Midland Gras Company, hereafter called Midland. The commission granted a certificate of public convenience approving the sale. The report of the commission in the case now before us states that the Consumers Company “and the Midland Gras Company were under common ownership and control at the time of the sale, the owners of the stock in each company being practically identical both in personality and in the proportionate shares owned.” An agreement by Consumers Company and Midland was made at the time of the sale providing that Midland would sell to Consumers Company for a term of 5 years from January 1, 1920, all the natural gas produced on the land sold by Consumers Company to Midland, if needed, at “a price equal to 75 per centum of the prevailing price in places supplied by the Consumers Company as established by the commission.”

The new tariff increased the rates to patrons in Johnsonburg from 48 to 68 cents per thousand cubic feet, with a discount of 3 cents per thousand for prompt payment. This is the rate complained of and it is with regard to the proof of the reasonableness of the rate that we consider it necessary to take addi- • tional evidence if the rate is to be sustained.

Much the largest element in the operating expenses of Consumers Company, and therefore an important subject of inquiry in the investigation into the reasonableness of the rate to be charged, is the wholesale price to be paid by Consumers Company for gas, which was fixed at 45 cents per thousand by its vendor. The effect of the increase in the rate, as stated by the commission, has been to reduce the number of consumers in the borough from 898 in 1924 to 730 in 1927; gas consumption fell from 130,354 thousand cubic feet in *289 1924 to 78,712 thousand for the year ending October, 1927; gross revenues fell from $58,988 in 1924 to $51,-955 for the year ending October 31,1927, under the new tariff.

The record contains the following statement of the price received by Consumers Company per thousand cubic feet from 1922 to 1926;

Gross Discount
1922— Entire year ...........'....... 38c 3c
1923— January 1st to December 15th .. 38c 3c
December 15th to December 31st 48e 3e
1924— Entire year ................... 48c 3c
1925— January 1st to January 15th ... 48c 3c
January 15th to December 15th 68c 3e
1926— Entire year ................... 68c 3c
The wholesale prices per thousand feet paid by Consumers Company during that period were as follows:
1922 ..................................... 26%c
1923— Part of year..................... 26%c
“ “ “ 33%c
1924— Part of year..................... 26%e
“ “ “ 32%c
“ “ “ ...................... 45c
(as to 5335 M. feet billed to Hanley & Bird for December, 1924)
1925 — Part of year..................... 32%e
“ “ “ ..................... 45c
1926 “ “ “ ....................... 45c

During the 5 years, from 1920 to 1925, Consumers ' Company and Midland, as the commission has found, ' “were under common ownership and control.” These owners were Shaw, Crawford and Miller. We shall assume for present purposes that the arrangement made by them as managers of one company with themselves as managers of the other company, for supplying gas to be sold by Midland to Consumers Company *290 at the wholesale rates charged during that period were reasonable. To sustain the burden of proof that 68 cents was a reasonable retail rate in the circumstances disclosed in this record, it was necessary for Consumers Company to show that the 45 cents wholesale rate thereafter to be paid by it was a reasonable sum to pay, because, of course, in considering the greatly increased operating expense, the large increase in the wholesale cost of the product to be distributed by Consumers Company lay at the heart of the dispute. That Consumers Company understood that it must make such proof is clear, because, to justify its payment, it offered evidence that 45 cents was a prevailing wholesale price for gas in the community.

Appellant’s claim made below, and here, was thus stated and put aside in the report of the commission: “Respondent’s [Consumers Company] claim for operating expenses amounts to $51,469. Complainant’s [appellant’s] attack thereon is centered around the wholesale price paid for gas by respondent to a partnership trading under the name of Hanley and Bird of Bradford........ Hanley and Bird increased the sale price of wholesale gas from thirty-two and a half to forty-five cents per thousand cubic feet. Complainant contends that the reasonableness of the forty-five cent wholesale rate cannot be determined except by a valuation of the vendor’s property. Respondent, however, presented testimony of witnesses concerning wholesale rates in the general vicinity in which it operates, that tend to support this wholesale rate.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Pa. Super. 284, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borough-of-johnsonburg-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1929.