City of Anchorage, a Corporation v. Richardson Vista Corporation and Panoramic View Corporation

242 F.2d 276, 17 Alaska 23, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2791
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 21, 1957
Docket15082
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 242 F.2d 276 (City of Anchorage, a Corporation v. Richardson Vista Corporation and Panoramic View Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Anchorage, a Corporation v. Richardson Vista Corporation and Panoramic View Corporation, 242 F.2d 276, 17 Alaska 23, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2791 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

*278 ROSS, District Judge.

This case comes to us on appeal from Alaska, and concerns the proper application by the City of Anchorage of its electric power rate schedules to certain apartment houses owned and operated by the plaintiffs in the City of Anchorage. The District Court upheld the contentions of plaintiffs that the City had erroneously applied its schedule of rates. From this judgment the City appeals.

Richardson Vista Corporation and Panoramic View Corporation, hereinafter referred to as “Vista” and “Panoramic” are two housing corporations owning and operating multiple apartment buildings in Anchorage, Alaska. Vista owned nineteen separate apartment buildings with twenty-two units in each, for a total of four hundred eighteen separate apartments, the project being situate on a twenty-three acre tract of land. Panoramic owned and operated fourteen separate apartment buildings over a seventeen acre tract, with twenty-two, sixteen and twelve units per building, with a total of two hundred sixty-four apartments. Electric energy was furnished to these apartment house buildings by the City of Anchorage, a municipal corporation, engaged in the proprietary business of operating an electrical power generating and distribution plant.

The meter panel in each separate apartment building contained a meter for each individual apartment in the building, plus a so-called “house” meter. We are not concerned with the “apartment” or “tenant” meters and no further reference will be made to them. The “house” meter reflected power consumption of the common facilities maintained by plaintiffs in each building for the common use of the tenants such as hallways, basement, operation of heating system, etc., the cost of which was borne by the plaintiffs. Consequently there were nineteen separate “house” meters used in connection with the nineteen buildings operated by Vista and fourteen in the fourteen buildings operated by Panoramic.

The plaintiffs were charged and billed under the City’s “Schedule (C) Commercial” of its published rates in the same manner as though there had been a separate ownership of each of the total thirty-three apartment houses. It is obvious that under this method and practice of “separate” billing the plaintiffs did not enjoy the benefits that would have accrued had Vista’s nineteen “house” bills, and Panoramic’s fourteen “house” bills been totalled, and the decreasing sliding scale charge for KWH consumption contained in Schedule C been applied. The plaintiffs contend that the action of the City in billing them as single customers as to each 1-point connection in each building, and refusing them the benefits of “combined” billing to which they insist they are entitled, constitutes, as to them, an erroneous application of Schedule C. In their complaint against the City it is alleged:

“(Par. XII) That by virtue of defendant’s erroneous and incorrect application of its commercial rate to plaintiffs’ consumption of electrical energy, each of plaintiffs have paid for electrical energy in an amount grossly in excess of what plaintiffs should rightfully pay had defendant’s commercial rates been properly applied to plaintiffs’ consumption, * * * that defendant in the application of its electrical rate to plaintiffs, has acted arbitrarily, unjustly, unequally, unreasonably, discriminatorily, non-uniformly, and confiscatorily to its unjust enrichment and will continue said practice unless restrained.”

In the following paragraph XIII it is alleged “that other electrical consumers * * * similarly situated * * * are given the benefit of but one application of Schedule C * * * ” However the record fails to support this allegation. There are no like groups of *279 apartment houses receiving different billing treatment than plaintiffs.

The prayer of the complaint is that (A) the City “be enjoined from charging each of plaintiffs defendant’s commercial electrical rate or tariff in the manner aforedeseribed,” that is with a single separate billing for each separate apartment house, “and ordered to apply the commercial rate of each of plaintiffs’ total consumption,” namely, that it be required to total or “combine” all of the separate billings for each plaintiffs’ total number of apartment houses into one “combined” bill, “and be ordered to desist from charging each of plaintiffs’ buildings as if they were separate consumers of defendant.” (B) “That the City * * * be ordered and directed to repay plaintiff Richardson Vista Corporation the sum of $2,530.-97,” later increased to $20,590.66 plus $400.00 per month subsequent to December, 1954, in a supplemental complaint, “with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from date of each respective protest until so repaid, and similarly the amount of $1,408.77 to plaintiff Panoramic View Corporation.” This amount was also increased in a supplemental complaint to $14,436.27 plus $200.00 per month subsequent to December, 1954. All power bills were paid by the respective plaintiffs under protest.

In its answer the City denies all allegations of the complaint relating to discrimination and wrongdoing, admits the practice of “single” billing, a separate bill for each separate building, asserts that Schedule C was properly applied; and that such method of rate application and billing was entirely proper.

Plaintiffs do not here challenge the legality of the rates, rules and regulations set forth in Schedule C. There is no question raised that the rates are excessive, or that the rules are in themselves discriminatory. It is merely said, paragraph XII of the complaint, that the defendant, in the application of its electrical rate to plaintiffs, “has acted arbitrarily, unjustly, unequally, unreasonably, discriminatorily, non-uniformly and confiscatorily,” and that this came about through an “erroneous and improper application of its commercial rate,” Schedule C, “to plaintiffs.” (Italics ours.)

It is obvious, too, that the record does not support the complaint insofar as a cause of action is set out in paragraph XIII on discrimination. No discrimination is shown either against plaintiffs individually, or as members of a class discriminated against.

The case was heard before Judge Fol-ta who filed his opinion but came to his death before entering findings of fact and conclusions of law, and judgment. Judge McCarrey entered judgment for plaintiffs. F.R.Civ.P. Rule 63, 28 U.S. C.A. He took the position that the opinion was sufficiently comprehensive to take the place of the customary findings of fact and conclusions of law. F.R.Civ. P. Rule 52.

We think it proper to comment on the matters set-out in the opinion and to that end quote such parts thereof as we deem pertinent, and necessary, to make our remarks understandable.

“The City contends that the installation and maintenance of a separate service drop and meter at each building warrant the classification made and points to the fact that all identical housing projects, as well as more than 200 multimeter consumers within its corporate limits, are similarly dealt with.
“ * * * but as I view the case, out of the welter of contentions only two questions emerge, (1)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 F.2d 276, 17 Alaska 23, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-anchorage-a-corporation-v-richardson-vista-corporation-and-ca9-1957.