Colonial Products Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

146 A.2d 657, 188 Pa. Super. 163
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1958
DocketAppeal, No. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 146 A.2d 657 (Colonial Products Co. 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
Colonial Products Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 146 A.2d 657, 188 Pa. Super. 163 (Pa. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, P. J.,

On December 31, 1954, the Colonial Products Company, Dallastown, York County, filed a complaint with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission as to the service provided by the Dallastown- Yoe Water Company. It was alleged that the water company had refused to provide adequate pressure and quantities of water needed for the fire protection of the industrial property of Colonial and for the protection of life and property in the community of Dallastown.

Hearings were held on February 3 and March 11, 1955. Witnesses appeared on behalf of Colonial and on behalf of the water company; neither the authorities of the Borough of Dallastown nor any other customer of the water company appeared. After consideration of the evidence the commission concluded that the existing facilities of the water company were providing adequate public fire protection, and that the cost of the additional facilities desired by Colonial to improve its individual fire protection service would have been an unreasonable and unjust burden upon other customers of the utility.1 The commission gave consideration to the fact that Colonial would not agree to participate with the water company in assuming the additional expense burden involved even though it would have been the major beneficiary of the improvements desired. Accordingly, the commission, by its order of February 20, 1956, dismissed the complaint of Colonial. After the dismissal on August 5, 1957, of its request for reargument, rescission, and modification of the order, Colonial appealed to this Court.

[166]*166In substance the complaint of Colonial related to the amount of pressure and flow of water available for fire protection through the hydrant system and for maintenance of the plant sprinkler system.

Under section 401 of the Public Utility Law, 66 PS §1171, every public utility is required to furnish and maintain “adequate, efficient, safe, and reasonable service and facilities, . .

The Dallastown-Yoe Water Company has furnished water service to the public in the Boroughs of Dallas-town and Yoe since 1918. Dallastown, here involved, has a population of approximately 3,500. The entire water system is operated by gravity from a standpipe having a capacity of 300,000 gallons, located at the highest elevation in the borough. All of the water is purchased from the Bed Lion Water Company, located in. the adjacent Borough of Red Lion, and is distributed through a grid system. In addition to the standpipe storage capacity the water company has available the storag-e capacity afforded by a 1,000,000 gallon storage reservoir of the Red Lion Water Company, located approximately five thousand feet from the connecting master meter.

Colonial manufactures wood products at its principal plant, a two-story industrial type building, located in Dallastown. Wood products are manufactured and stored within the building; rough lumber and inflammable finishing materials are stored outside. A monthly inventory of approximately |500,000 is maintained.

Colonial receives water at two connections which are supplied principally by three routes or systems of mains. The commission found that water is supplied to Colonial through the grid system of water mains extending generally throughout the borough; through approximately 1,680 feet of 4-inch main, extending across private property, which connects two [167]*167distribution mains from the standpipe with a 6-inch main supplying the Colonial property; and through a 6-inch line, installed in 1948 at the request of Colonial, which effected a more direct connection between the master transmission line from the Red Lion Water Company and one of the two principal mains serving the Colonial property. Actually, Colonial is served from water mains originating at the principal transmission line, from water mains originating at the standpipe, and from water mains integrated in the general grid system serving the borough. The water service for its fire protection purposes is supplied through a 4-inch service line installed on the property of Colonial.

Supplementary to the .hydrant fire protection facilities, Colonial has installed in its plant a sprinkler system supplied by a 50,000 gallon capacity water tower. There are two hundred sprinkler heads attached to the distribution pipes in the plant of Colonial and these are supplied by gravity flow from the water tower. One of the witnesses for Colonial testified that a fire at the plant would require at one time the use of approximately fifty sprinkler heads, and that the water tank if full would supply the sprinkler heads in any one fire for approximately forty-five minutes without replenishment. Complaint was made to delays experienced by Colonial in filling the storage tank after periodic tests. It appears that the storage tank is replenished automatically through the water system of Colonial which in turn receives water from the water company connections. On occasions Colonial has refilled its water tower by using a fire engine pumper. Colonial itself maintains no pumping facilities for replenishing the water tower supply, although the installation of a pump would be beneficial.

[168]*168In addition to the complaint regarding the sprinkler system, Colonial charged that the water pressure and flow at various hydrants and points in and around the plant were inadequate for proper fire protection. A lack of pressure and an inadequate flow were also given as causes for the difficulties encountered in the sprinkler system.

Two witnesses were called by Colonial to substantiate the charge of inadequate pressure and flow. Both witnesses were employed as field engineers or technical personnel by an industrial fire insurance company. One of these witnesses conducted pressure and flow tests on two occasions at points in and around the Colonial plant. He testified that he found a static pressure at five points ranging from 42 to 60 pounds per square inch; a residual pressure ranging from 12 to 29 pounds per square inch; and a rate of flow ranging from 500 gallons per minute to 805 gallons per minute.2

A witness for the water company who made tests of pressure and flow at various points near the Colonial plant found static pressure of 65 pounds per square inch, residual pressure of 50 pounds per square inch, and a rate of flow of 600 gallons per minute. The tests of this witness were conducted on a Saturday when the normal water usages throughout the system would be less than on a weekday. No weekday tests were made. The residual pressure test, however, was conducted simultaneously with the flow tests at a nearby hydrant.

[169]*169The expert witnesses for Colonial testified that under the existing water pressures fire hose stream lengths of 35 to 36 feet would be available, and, as we have indicated, the sprinkler heads required in a fire would operate 40 to 45 minutes, assuming that the water tower was full at the beginning of the fire. It was their opinion that the existing water pressures were inadequate when measured by the standards of water supply published by the National Board of Fire Underwriters. According to the standards of the fire underwriters for a community the size of Dallastown, a flow of between 1,750 and 2,000 gallons per minute for a duration of 7 or 8 hours under a pressure of 20 pounds per square inch must be maintained.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A.2d 657, 188 Pa. Super. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-products-co-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1958.