Cole v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

22 A.2d 121, 146 Pa. Super. 257, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 216
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 24, 1941
DocketAppeal, 72
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 121 (Cole v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 22 A.2d 121, 146 Pa. Super. 257, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 216 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, J.,

This is an appeal by complainants from an order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission which was to the effect that it was unlawful for the Latrobe Water Company to continue to serve unfiltered water to the public, including complainants, and that it was unreasonable to require the company to serve filtered water to complainants and certain others who indicated their desire for water service. The commission dismissed the complaint.

The Borough of Latrobe, in Westmoreland County, lies between Derry Township on the east and southeast, and Unity Township on the north, west, and southwest. Approximately five miles to the southeast, and, at that point, adjacent to both Unity and Derry Townships, lies Ligonier Township.

The Latrobe Water Company was chartered November 13,1883, “for the purpose of supplying water to the public at the Borough of Latrobe in Westmoreland County and to persons, partnerships, and associations residing therein and adjacent thereto as may desire the same.” On June 26, 1884, the Derry Township Water *259 Company was chartered for the purpose of supplying water to the public in Derry Township, and on April 8, 1885, the two companies merged. In July, 1906, under the authority of the Act of May 21, 1901, P. L. 270, the Latrobe Water Company extended its service territory to include the community of North Latrobe, situated in the portion of Unity Township immediately north of the Borough of Latrobe.

Previous to 1920, the company drew its supply from the waters of Loyalhanna Creek, which flows northwest through the entire area. For this purpose it operated a pumping station at Kingston, on the north bank of the creek in Derry Township, by which water was pumped a distance of three thousand feet to a filtration and chlorination plant, and thence distributed through the service mains of Latrobe, North Latrobe, and the part of Derry Township served by the company. In 1920, it constructed a large storage reservoir on Trout Eun, in Ligonier Township, eight miles, more or less, from Latrobe, and more than five miles from the pumping station. A transmission main or pipe was constructed to carry the water from the reservoir to the pumping station, where it passed into the line to the filtration plant and on to the consuming communities.

When this reservoir was constructed, the company received from the Department of Health of the Commonwealth a waterworks permit, signed by the Commissioner of Health, approving the reservoir as a source of supply on certain express conditions, as follows:

“Second: The approval of Trout Bun as a source of public water supply is given with the distinct understanding that all water therefrom served to the public must be subjected to filtration and chlorination. The intake on Loyalhanna Creek may be maintained so as to provide an auxiliary supply but its use is subject to conditions set forth in a prior permit approving said supply.
“Third: Within thirty days of the date of this per *260 mit, the company shall submit to the State Department of Health for approval, plans of scheme for serving filtered water to all consumers between the dam on Trout Run and the filtration plant.”

The Department of Health was advised on December 1, 1920, in a letter on the company’s letterhead, signed by one J. J. Grace, and sent from Scranton, that all consumption of the unfiltered or “raw” water along the transmission line had been cut off as a satisfaction of the above conditions of the permit.

The record shows that this was not the fact. Long before 1920 there had been connections along the line from the pumping station to the filtration plant, and after construction of the main from the reservoir others were made until in 1936 there was a total of forty-one connections along the entire line by which a total of eighty-eight consumers were served with unfiltered water. Although there was some testimony that the existence of some of these connections was at one time known to a director of the company and its secretary-treasurer, the larger number of them appeared to have been made unon the order of J. J. Walker, the superintendent of the company, given orally to one or another of the company’s employees. The irregularity of this practice seems to have been clearly established. These were the only service orders not issued on the printed forms used for connections in Latrobe or the other communities served; some of these consumers paid nothing for the service; others were charged a flat rate of $10 per year, for which no statement was ever rendered but which was collected in cash by Walker or various employees of the company, who turned the collections over to Walker; on Walker’s instructions, no receipts were' ever given for these payments; and if payment was refused service was continued nevertheless. No record of these payments was made on the books of the company, and this raw water consumption appeared on the records of the company only in the statements issued *261 the Ligonier Valley Railroad Company, including the supply to the Kingston station. The only other writing ever shown to have passed through the company office with relation to these connections was a check for $10 sent by one consumer on an occasion when the employee sent to collect by Walker found him away from home.

Walker left the employ of the company on July 1, 1936, and C. C. Wedemeyer, who as resident manager succeeded him on that day, having discovered the consumption of raw water, revealed the practice to the district engineer for the Department of Health. The department insisted that its permit be complied with. The company was unwilling to erect a supply line leading back toward the reservoir from its filtration plant, and the controversy was thereupon brought before the commission on a complaint by the consumers of the raw water asking that the company be ordered to continue service to them.

Of the eighty-eight consumers of raw water, fourteen lived in Derry Township, twenty in Unity Township, and fifty-four in Ligonier Township. More particularly, they were distributed in the area on both sides of the pumping station and in that immediately below the reservoir, with an intervening stretch of several miles marked by only one consumer. There was testimony that wells driven in the areas of consumption were highly unsatisfactory, but there was also an expression of opinion by the engineer for the Department of Health that a tributary of Loyalhanna Creek could, with purification, be acceptably developed as a substituted source of supply. The engineer for the company testified that, in his opinion, to furnish these areas with reasonable service from the company’s filtration plant would require the construction of a line 30,370 feet long of eight-inch cement-lined cast-iron pipe, at a total cost of $89,800, exclusive of rights of way, maintenance, or service connections. He admitted *262 the feasibility of a small chlorinating and filtrating plant for the area near the reservoir, but pointed out that the saving of construction cost in the adoption of this type of facility would be counterbalanced by the cost of employment of personnel to operate it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 121, 146 Pa. Super. 257, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1941.