City of Cleveland v. Public Utilities Commission

189 N.E. 5, 127 Ohio St. 432, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 432, 1934 Ohio LEXIS 398
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1934
Docket24253 and 24376
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 189 N.E. 5 (City of Cleveland v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cleveland v. Public Utilities Commission, 189 N.E. 5, 127 Ohio St. 432, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 432, 1934 Ohio LEXIS 398 (Ohio 1934).

Opinion

Stephenson, J.

Was the hearing of March 22,1933, as a matter of fact, a rate-making or a charge-fixing proceeding?

If it was a rate-making proceeding, it was and is a nullity pure and simple, as the commission failed to comply with statutory requirements.

If it was a charge-fixing proceeding, was it authorized by law, and if authorized by law was the city of Cleveland, under the facts and the law, entitled to be heard at the time and in the manner insisted upon by its counsel?

Whether such proceeding was authorized by law or not, and whether the city of Cleveland had a right to be made a party, and heard, or not, did the Public Utilities Commission admit the city of Cleveland as a party? If it did so, the city of Cleveland is a party so far as the commission is concerned. Whether or not the city of Cleveland is a necessary party would have to be raised by one or both of the public utilities involved.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio is the representative of the people of the state of Ohio. It is *436 the intermediary between the citizen-consumer on the one side and the public utility on the other. It is a creature of statute, having only such power as the General Assembly has seen fit to confer upon it by statute. But all this does not mean that its powers are not broad, as will be readily seen by reference to the legislative grant of power. The delegation of power to the Public Utilities Commission has been lavish. It was necessary that it should be if the commission was to keep the public utilities within the limits of law and reason. It was the purpose of the creation of . the Public Utilities Commission that it should see to it that the public utilities, in accordance with law, rendered reasonably adequate service to their patrons without discrimination, at a just and reasonable cost, allowing at the same time to the public utilities rendering the service a fair profit on their investments. The cost for service comes to the consumer in the form of a rate, fare, charge, toll, rental, schedule, or tariff. The Public Utilities Commission has complete jurisdiction over every phase of cost to the consumer. Section 614-23, General Code.

The General Assembly sensed a difference between a rate and a charge; else it would not have made such liberal use of the two words in the various sections whereby it bestows power upon the commission. These two words are of much import in these cases, as has been heretofore indicated.

This court will not interfere with an order of the Public Utilities Commission unless such order is unlawful or unreasonable. Lima Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 98 Ohio St., 110, 120 N. E., 330.

Was the order of the commission, made April 21, 1933, unlawful?

The commission on its own motion cited the Ohio Bell Telephone Company and the Cincinnati & Suburban Bell Telephone Company to appear before it on *437 this date and disclose the cost to them of cradle type telephone instruments and-the cost of the installation thereof. There can be no question that the commission had the power to act sua sponte in such matter, and no question is raised along that line.

The city of Cleveland was not a party to this proceeding, but it claims it should have been made a party as it was not only a proper but a necessary party to the determination of the issues before the commission.

This contention could obtain only if the proceeding in question was a rate-making proceeding in fact.

The tempest in these cases was generated by the additional cost of twenty-five cents per month to the subscriber for cradle telephone service. Was this twenty-five cents a rate or a charge?

Of course it could be reduced to a rate, just as any rate could be reduced to a charge. In its finality is the extra cost to the consumer of cradle telephone service of twenty-five cents per month a rate or a charge, as contemplated by the laws of Ohio?

It may be argued with much potency that it is a dangerous precedent to permit a public utility to go over the head of the Public Utilities Commission and enter into private contracts with its patrons. It may likewise be insisted that neither this nor any other court should by judicial legislation convert a rate into a charge or a charge into a rate.

It may not be ill-timed to state that we are dealing with the terms involved in these cases just as we find them in the legislative enactments of the state.

It is likewise impolitic to deny to a citizen of the state the right to an improved service, when such citizen voluntarily agrees to pay the increased cost.

The converse of this proposition was recognized by this court in the case of City of Cincinnati v. Public Utilities Commission, 113 Ohio St., 259, 148 N. E., 817. The law as pronounced in the fourth paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

*438 “A classified service schedule requiring the payment of toll charges for communications between unlimited subscribers contracting for service at a higher rate and limited subscribers contracting for optional service at a lesser cost, each residing in different zone areas, is reasonable, lawful and not discriminatory.”

The case above referred to arose by reason of objections to the “charges” contained in a telephone company’s “schedule.”

A telephone company is permitted under the law to indulge a schedule or tariff in which different cost for different service is listed. This is true of other public utilities. As a matter of law, those public utilities which, by reason of the nature of their business, afford different service or the same service in different Avays, are required to file -with the Public Utilities Commission a schedule of charges. There is an obvious reason for this requirement. Rate-making involves a long, arduous, complex, expensive proceeding, and according to a “legislative formula,” as was held in Columbus Gas & Fuel Co. v. Public Utilities Commission and City of Columbus v. Public Utilities Commission, ante, 109, 187 N. E., 7.

To require a new rate to be made each and every time a new item of cost to the consumer arises, as in the present cases, would not only create such a volume of work as would smother the Public Utilities Commission, but would bankrupt the public utilities, who, in the main, must finance these proceedings. That it will be necessary to take into consideration the advent of the hand or cradle set the next time a rate is made for these companies goes Avithout saying.

In order to minimize the expenditure of time and cost incident to rate proceedings, and take care of the consumer at the same time, the General Assembly enacted Section 614-17, General Code:

“Nothing in this act shall be taken to prohibit a public utility from filing a schedule or entering into *439

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 N.E. 5, 127 Ohio St. 432, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 432, 1934 Ohio LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cleveland-v-public-utilities-commission-ohio-1934.