City of Detroit v. Federal Power Commission

230 F.2d 810
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1955
DocketNos. 12351, 12359
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 230 F.2d 810 (City of Detroit v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Detroit v. Federal Power Commission, 230 F.2d 810 (D.C. Cir. 1955).

Opinion

FAHY, Circuit Judge.

The City of Detroit, in No. 12351, and the County of Wayne, Michigan, in No. 12359, petition us to review and set aside orders of the Federal Power Commission issued April 15, 1954, and June 7, 1954.1 Panhandle Eastern Pipe [812]*812Line Company is an intervenor in both cases. This court consolidated the two cases by an order of October 1, 1954. The Commission’s order of April 15, 1954, prescribed, effective May 1, 1954, certain rates and charges for the sale by Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company of natural gas in interstate commerce for resale. The order of June 7, 1954, denied a rehearing. The Commission found the rates and charges prescribed to be “just and -reasonable” within the meaning of section 4(a) of the Natural Gas Act, 52 Stat. 822 (1938), 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 717 et seq., 717c(a). Panhandle is a “natural-gas company”, that is, it is engaged in the transportation of natural gas in interstate commerce and in its sale in such commerce for resale. Its rates and charges accordingly are within the jurisdiction of the Commission, and of this court on review of the Commission’s order. See note 1 supra, and section 2 (6) of the Natural Gas Act, 52 Stat. 822 (1938), 15 U.S.C.A. § 717a(6).

The Commission determined the rates and charges in the following circumstances: Pursuant to section 5(a) of the Act it ordered an investigation of Panhandle’s rates. Pursuant to section 4 Panhandle subsequently filed a revised tariff proposing increased rates aggregating approximately $21,400,000. The Commission suspended this proposed increase, but later permitted it to become effective as of February 20,1952, under a bond furnished in compliance with section 4(e). Upon conclusion of hearings on the tariff and related matters the (Jpmmission on April 15, 1954 issued its order now under review. It prescribed rates which permit an increase, effective May 1, 1954, of approximately $12,780,-000 instead of the $21,400,000 sought by Panhandle. The order also directed that the record be reopened for the limited purpose of introducing evidence on the basis of which the Commission could calculate the precise amount collected by Panhandle under bond since February 20, 1952, in excess of the sum found by the Commission to be “just and reasonable.” The order indicated that this sum, when determined, will have to be refunded by Panhandle with 6 per cent interest.

Panhandle owns and operates a natural gas pipeline through which it transports gas from Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas to Michigan and intervening states. It purchases gas in the field and from other sources, including its own subsidiary, the Trunkline Gas Supply Company, and it also produces gas in the Panhandle-Hugoton gas fields in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. For the year 1952, the test year used by the Commission, 22.6 per cent of its total gas supply came from its own production; 25.3 per cent was purchased from Trunkline, its subsidiary; and the balance, 52.1 per cent, was purchased from others. The jurisdictional sales, that is, sales in interstate commerce for resale, amounted to 275,052,339 Mcf out of a total sales volume of 327,530,405 Mcf. Panhandle’s own production, or 22.6 per cent of its total supply, amounted during the test year to 73,204,677 Mcf.

Both petitioners assert that the Commission erred (1)' in allowing Panhandle the so-called “field price” or “commodity value” for its own produced gas; (2) in not considering profits from Panhandle’s gasoline extraction operations when computing the revenues to be recovered by the rates; (3) in denying petitioners’ motions to reopen the hearing in order to consider newly discovered evidence. In addition, petitioner City of Detroit urges (4) that the Commission erred in its treatment of accelerated amortization.2

We first consider whether the rates approved are “just and reasonable” 3 not[813]*813withstanding the Commission used the “field price” method with respect to Panhandle’s own produced gas. In Federal Power Commission v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 320 U.S. 591, 64 S.Ct. 281, 88 L.Ed. 333, the Supreme Court approved use of the “prudent investment” rate-base method for establishing rates to be charged by natural gas companies. Since then, until the instant case, the Commission has consistently employed this rate-base method, under which rates are considered “just and reasonable” if they will return to the company a certain percentage of profit on its rate base. The rate base is a figure representing the money prudently invested in the properties and equipment utilized in the company’s transmission and production business. The percentage of profit prescribed by the Commission depends upon a variety of factors, such as the risks of the business, the necessity for attracting capital, and the desirability of lower cost of gas to the public. In order to return a profit on the rate base the rates are set high enough to recover all costs of service, including taxes, depreciation, depletion, and all operating expenses chargeable to production and transmission.

In the instant case the Commission substantially modified this traditional rate-base approach by using a different formula for Panhandle’s own producing properties. It computed a “field price” for the gas obtained from this source, based upon the “weighted average arm’s length prices” established by federally unregulated bargaining for similar gas in the fields.4 It then multiplied the volume of Panhandle’s production by that “field price” and included the result in Panhandle’s operating expenses as an amount to be recovered through the rates.5 At the same time the Commission excluded from the rate base the cost of the properties which produce this gas and excluded from recoverable operating expenses the cost of producing it. The Commission states that its purpose is to allow Panhandle to receive for its own produced gas “a price reflecting the weighted average arm’s-length payments for identical natural gas in the fields (and sometimes from the very same wells) where it is produced,” instead of a return on its legitimate investment in the properties and equipment used in producing this gas. The Commission points out that the price or value allowed is below the rates of royalties which Panhandle was currently paying on its own production to its lessors, below the prices at which more recent gas purchase contracts have been negotiated in the Hugo-ton field in Texas and Kansas, and also below the reported recent range of prices in the Panhandle field of Texas and in the Gulf Coast area. It terms the amount allowed “a conservative measure of the commodity value of the gas which Panhandle produces.” The Commission specifies certain adjustments which bring to $3,571,448 the total difference, applicable to jurisdictional sales, between the amount allowed by the method it adopted and that which would have been allowed by entire use of the traditional rate-base method. This amounts to an overall increase of 1.3 cents per Mcf.

The Commission fixed a rate base of $148,609,012 for Panhandle’s other properties. The accuracy of this amount is uncontested. And the 5.75 per cent rate of return fixed by the Commission on this rate base is also uncontested.6 Fur[814]*814thermore, we accept as supported by substantial evidence the findings of the Commission regarding the weighted average arm’s length prices paid at the wellhead.

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Bluebook (online)
230 F.2d 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-detroit-v-federal-power-commission-cadc-1955.