Carpenter Steel Co. v. Metropolitan-Edison Co.

270 F. 255, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1470, 1921 WL 49555
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1921
DocketNo. 2113
StatusPublished

This text of 270 F. 255 (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., 270 F. 255, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1470, 1921 WL 49555 (E.D. Pa. 1921).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

The proofs have added nothing to the fact findings which might be made on the admissions of the parties, except possibly one, which we decline to make. The findings made are embraced in the following history of the case:

The plaintiff had an agreement with the defendant by which the latter was to supply the former with power. The refusal or failure to furnish the supply means plain ruin to the plaintiff. The defendant threatens the plaintiff with such ruin. The bill was filed to restrain against this irreparable, injury. The refusal of the defendant to supply power is justified by the averred refusal of the plaintiff to pay. The contract to supply fixed the price. The bills rendered largely exceed what they should be at the contract rates. This is explained by the circumstance that after the contract was made the defendant, in accordance with the provisions of the act of assembly which established the Pennsylvania Public Service Commission, published a tariff or schedule of rates, the legal effect of which was to abrogate the contract rate. After the tariff rates became effective, the rate payablé by the plaintiff was no longer the contract-rate, but the tariff rate until such time as the Public Service Commission, on complaint that the [257]*257tariff rates were unreasonable, should so find, and establish the lawful rate.

The plaintiff (with other consumers) made this complaint, and the reasonableness of defendant’s tariff rate is now before the commission, but as yet undetermined. It is conceded that the law of Pennsylvania is that the published tariff rates are the rates to be paid until the Commission has found them to be unreasonable. Thus far there is no controversy between the parties, other than the one pending before the Commission, and no dispute over the proposition that the rate controversy is one which the Commission, and the Commission alone, can determine.

The defendant continued to supply power after the new tariff rates were established and published as the effective rates. The correctness of the amounts of the bills rendered was disputed by the plaintiff. This dispute was attempted to be adjusted, and for a time was adjusted, through an arrangement reached at a conference of all the counsel concerned, that the bills should be paid as rendered upon the defendant giving a refunding bond for the return of all moneys paid over and above the sum eventually found to be payable. The payments were then made and the bonds given, covering three periods of six months each. The defendant then refused to give bond thereafter, and the plaintiff retorted with a refusal to pay the bills, on the ground that they were in dispute. This position of the plaintiff'was met by notice from the defendant that it would shut off the supply unless the disputed bills were paid.

The plaintiff thereupon filed the present bill, basing its cause of action upon the inequity of the defendant’s threatened act, in that it had agreed not to use this means to enforce payment of any bills which were in dispute, and had adjusted the dispute by its further agreement to accept payment under an agreement to refund any payments made in excess of the sum found to be justly payable. In answer the defendant sets up that the tariff rate is the rate justly payable, and that in consequence the collection of the sums of money thus indicated is not inequitable; that the contract of the defendant to fore-go collection by the strong hand until the amount of its just claim was determined had been abrogated (as was its rate contract) by the published schedule of rates and regulations; and that it had not agreed to continue the working arrangement referred to indefinitely, and had the right to withdraw from it at any time.

Inasmuch as the plaintiff, in meeting its obligation, to show its willingness to do equity before asking for equitable relief, has offered to give bond to pay any sum found to be due defendant, to pay the undisputed part of the bill and give bond for the disputed part, to pay the whole bill upon being assured of the return of the part of it found not to be justly payable, and to do anything which might be equitably required of it, we confess to an utter inability to discover anything of any practical, or even academic, importance in the present dispute. At the most, the difference between the respective positions of the parties is that between a remedy which the law affords for the col[258]*258lection of a bill and an extrajudicial remedy which the creditor may have at hand.

.We have already indicated the real question involved as we analyze the case, and the proper answer to it. The question and its answer are embraced in these propositions:

[1] (1) The plaintiff has a right to its day in court to have the amount of its indebtedness to the defendant determined.

[2] (2) The defendant, having agreed to supply power during the pendency of any dispute over the correctness of its bills, is, under the facts of this case, bound to do so upon being assured of payment of the sum due to it as soon as the sum is determined.

[3] (3) This court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter and (on the ground of diversity of citizenship) of the cause, and also of the parties by service and appearance.

[4] (4) The fact that other courts have concurrent jurisdiction, or (if that also be the fact) that the Public Service Commission has the like jurisdiction, affords no ground for this court to refuse to grant the relief prayed, no other tribunal having thus far exercised its jurisdiction.

■ None of these propositions have any interest, because of their novelty or importance in their application. Great importance, however, for some reason, is attached-to the case by the parties. It has been very fully and ably discussed by counsel. Because of this we will meet every issue raised.

[5] 1. We find ourselves to be in full accord with the defendant in all the ultimate propositions of law involved. There is, indeed, no dispute concerning them. The defendant, on these propositions, advances very confidently the conclusion that the plaintiff in this proceeding has no defense to the defendant’s claim, and that any court will so adjudge. The answer to this presents the whole question in a nutshell. If this be so, why not test this by asking some court to so find? Why resort to a strong-hand extrajudicial remedy, which you agreed to forego? Of course, if the court could so find in this proceeding, there would be no equity in the prayer of the plaintiff that the defendant be restrained from enforcing the collection of a bill which it was found was justly owing. This, however, is a finding which the court, in this proceeding, as the case is presented, cannot make. The defendant, for some reason, refuses to submit the justness of its claim to any court for decision, but insists upon being the sole judge of the sum due. The amount of the debt could have been determined by a simple expedient in this very proceeding. All that was necessary was that the defendant file an answer by way of a cross-bill, ' averring what the sum due was, and praying for this to be decreed. As the sum due would thus be found, the court would not restrain the defendant from the collection of a debt thus found to be due and payable. The same finding of what was due could be made in an action brought in any court having jurisdiction.

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270 F. 255, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1470, 1921 WL 49555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-steel-co-v-metropolitan-edison-co-paed-1921.