Carpenter Steel Co. v. Metropolitan-Edison Co.

268 F. 980, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 947, 1920 WL 47598
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 10, 1920
DocketNo. 2113
StatusPublished

This text of 268 F. 980 (Carpenter Steel Co. v. Metropolitan-Edison Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter Steel Co. v. Metropolitan-Edison Co., 268 F. 980, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 947, 1920 WL 47598 (E.D. Pa. 1920).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This cause presents a number of interesting questions. They are of more interest, perhaps, than of practical importance. The real controversy can be best presented by a contrast of what, under the paper book requirements of the Supreme Court of the state, would be the statements by the respective parties of the question involved; but the objection to doing this is that, as that question is stated, so will the answer be. To give either is in consequence to determine the cause; to state both is to state nothing. This forces us to a statement of the subject of the controversy out of which we must get the question of law involved.

[981]*981From the viewpoint of the plaintiff the parties have a contract for the supply of power by defendant to plaintiff for a defined time and at an established rate. To assure a continuance of supply, if any bill rendered was in dispute, the contract provides that defendant shall not shut off power because of nonpayment, thus limiting its right to the case of the nonpayment of an undisputed bill. In reliance on this contract, plaintiff re-equipped its plant, so that it became wholly and helplessly dependent upon the defendant for the running of its mill. Following a change of management, the defendant filed a new tariff or schedule of rates of charge for service, in accordance with the laws of Pennsylvania establishing a Public Service Commission for the state. The effect of this (assuming it to be at once effective) was to largely increase the cost of the service to the plaintiff, as provided in the contract. The defendant presented bills, in accordance with the increased rates, and demanded payment. The question of what rate the defendant may lawfully charge is before the Public Service Commission, and as yet undetermined. Disputes arose between plaintiff and defendant over the bills rendered. This dispute was, for the time being, adjusted by an arrangement under which the plaintiff paid the bills ss rendered, upon receiving the refunding bond of the defendant to return the part of the amount in dispute to which it could not lay just claim.

The defendant, after complying with this second agreement for several months, refused to longer comply, and served notice upon plaintiff that service would be discontinued unless plaintiff paid the bills as rendered, and that no refunding bond would be given. Plaintiff there • upon, having the right so to do, has applied to this court for relief against the irreparable damage with which it is threatened. It has accompanied its prayer for relief with the expression of its willingness to assure the defendant against the possibility of loss by paying the undisputed part of the bill, and by giving a bond, with any condition deemed to be proper to assure payment of all found to be payable, and, as an alternative, its willingness also to pay the bills as rendered upon being given a like bond that the excess of the sums paid beyond what is due and owing shall he refunded. The strength of the appeal thus made on the showing made is felt.

From the viewpoint of the defendant, however, the plaintiff should be denied all relief. The ground of the denial of the right to relief is not based upon any denial of the fact situation, except in the particular that the only dispute between the parties (with respect to the main controversy) is one over the rates of service, and as the defendant is a public utility corporation, it is subject to the control and must obey the commands of the Public Service Commission in respect thereto, and that this commission has, under the laws of Pennsylvania, full and exclusive jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties (to which jurisdiction the present plaintiff has submitted itself), and that no court has any power to or should interfere with, or do anything which might interrupt, the orderly proceedings before that chosen tribunal.

[982]*982It is further asserted (although this is denied by the plaintiff) that the Public Service Commission is possessed of the legal power to grant to the plaintiff the relief which it asks to have awarded by this court. It is not pretended, however, that any such relief has in fact been prayed, or that the question before us is among the questions pending before the commission.

[1] These opposing statements, so far as they are in opposition, bring into the light the question before us. It is at once apparent that the question is a very narrow one, although one to be determined on very broad grounds. Aside from any questions of rights, either legal or equitable, or of the power and jurisdiction of courts, the policy of law which controls or should control public utility corporations in what may be called their relations to the public is peculiarly a domestic policy, to be determined by the state concerned and to be enforced as so determined.

[2] Moreover, whether the Public Service Commission is an administrative department of the state government, ©r whether it is possessed of judicial powers and functions, and in this respect and to this extent is a court, if there was .pending before it as a tribunal, with power to determine it, a question afterwards submitted to a court of the United States, the latter would not stop to inquire into powers and jurisdiction, but would promptly refuse to interfere, or do anything which might lead to a possible conflict of jurisdiction, leaving the parties to the jurisdiction first invoked, and to their right of removal or appeal to the courts of the United States, or whatever other rights they had.

If, therefore, there is in the instant case anything which is before the Public Service Commission peculiarly within its powers and functions to determine, that comity, which properly has a place in the relation? of all courts, departments of government,, and tribunals with each other, and which the relations between the United States and the states make almost a necessity, commands us to refuse to determine the same cause or question.

[3] Of course, if a right of a citizen of the United States is involved, and he has the further right to invoke the powers and process of a court of the United States to defend or enforce his right, all considerations of comity must give way to our duty to accord him his rights.

Juét here is to be found the touchstone of the instant case. Counsel for defendant have compressed into a sentence everything there is to be said, when they say that the whole controversy between these parties is a question of rates. If it is, counsel for plaintiff admits he is out of this court and before the commission. Paradoxical as it sounds, however, there may be a controversy over rates without involving any question of rates, in the sense in which the commission deals with the subject.

There is a helpful analogy in cases dealing with what the United States Public Service Commission may do and what the courts cannot do. The cases of Texas & P. R. Co. v. Abilene, 204 U. S. 426, 27 Sup. Ct. 350, 51 L. Ed. 553, 9 Ann. Cas. 1075, Texas & P. R. Co. v. American, 234 U. S. 138, 34 Sup. Ct. 885, 58 L. Ed. 1255, and Gimbel Brothers v. Barrett (D. C.) 215 Fed. 1004, afford us an illustration. The case of a dispute over the payment of a bill for service at the [983]

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Related

Armour Packing Co. v. United States
209 U.S. 56 (Supreme Court, 1908)
Gimbel Bros. v. Barrett
215 F. 1004 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 F. 980, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 947, 1920 WL 47598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-steel-co-v-metropolitan-edison-co-paed-1920.