Columbus Gas & Fuel Co. v. City of Columbus

42 F. Supp. 762, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2318
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 16, 1941
DocketNo. 362
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 F. Supp. 762 (Columbus Gas & Fuel Co. v. City of Columbus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbus Gas & Fuel Co. v. City of Columbus, 42 F. Supp. 762, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2318 (S.D. Ohio 1941).

Opinion

UNDERWOOD, District Judge.

This case had its inception in a bill of complaint filed in this Court by the Columbus Gas and Fuel Company against the City of Columbus, Ohio, April 29, 1925. The Gas Company sought to restrain the operation of a certain gas rate ordinance upon the ground that the rate provided therein amounted to an unlawful taking within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution and that it deprived the complainant of its right to acquire, possess and protect property under Section 1, of Article 1, of the Constitution of the State of Ohio. Since that date, the case has been pending in the various Federal Courts.

The questions now before this Court for consideration grow out of what amounts to a purported settlement and compromise between the City and the Gas Company, by means of which it is proposed to dispose of the case by agreement and without further litigation. These questions are relatively limited in scope and the issues immediately involved are definitely restricted in their nature as compared with the broad general issues made by the previous pleadings. The present issues, however, are of the utmost importance, for if they should be decided in accord with the theory of settlement as advanced by the complainant company, then effect will have been given to the purported compromise and the entire case disposed of by the decision. In that event, the impounded fund amounting to nearly $2,000,000, and which is drawing no interest, will be released while some of those contributing to it are still alive to enjoy their part of it. On the other hand, if this purported settlement between the City and the company cannot be, and is not sustained by the Court, then regardless of what the final decision of this Court may be upon the full merits of the case, judging from the history of the litigation in the past, it may be safely predicted that it will be left to wend its weary way among the intricacies of technical jurisprudence for many more years to come. No one could predict when the final determination could be reached nor how many appeals would be involved therein. These matters are not, of course, determinative of the issues herein considered, but they, in themselves, do indicate that determination of the present issues should be made by the Court only after full deliberation and with the utmost care and attention to the law and the facts.

In order to deal properly with the present questions, it is essential that there be some statement and understanding of the past history of the case. The Court will therefore briefly review the course of these proceedings leading up to the present purported settlement.

On November 4, 1924, the City of Columbus adopted and passed a certain ordinance, fixing for a period of five years, beginning September 12, 1924, the price to be charged for natural gas furnished to citizens of Columbus, at forty cents net per thousand cubic feet. At that time, natural gas was being delivered to the consumers of Columbus by the Columbus Gas and Fuel Company and the Federal Gas and Fuel Company. The Gas Companies objected to the ordinance and refused to accept its terms.

Then on April 29, 1925, the Columbus Gas and Fuel Company filed its bill of complaint herein, its basic contention being that the rate provided by the ordinance was confiscatory within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution and that it deprived the complainant of its right to acquire, possess and protect property under Section 1, Article 1, of the Constitution of the State of Ohio. The Complainant prayed for an injunction against the enforcement of the ordinance and the application of the ordinance rate. It likewise prayed that the said injunction prevent interference with the complainant’s collecting a rate greater than the ordinance rate but not more than 74‡ per thousand cubic feet.

Acting upon the prayer of this complaint, Judge Hough who then occupied the Bench of this Court, did, on May 16, 1925, grant a preliminary injunction prohibiting enforcement of the ordinance rate and prohibiting any interference with the complainant’s collection of a minimum charge [764]*764of 754 per month and its collection of payment for its gas as follows: 55^ per 1,000 for the first 10,000 cubic feet per month; 654 per 1,000 for the next 10,000 cubic feet; and 754 per 1,000 for all over 20,000 cubic feet used in any month. Among other provisions of the injunction was the following:

“This injunction is conditioned that the plaintiff issue to each consumer so paying the rates herein provided, a receipt reciting the fact that said person so paying such rate is entitled to receive from the plaintiff the difference between the rate paid and the rate finally fixed by the appropriate and proper rate fixing authority, and within a period of thirty (30) days after its order may become final; and the plaintiff is further required, as a condition of this injunction, to keep in a separate deposit in a national bank in the City of Columbus, Ohio, designated by this court as a depository for United States funds, such deposit open at all times to the inspection of the Clerk of this- Court, all moneys received by plaintiff for gas consumed under the rates herein specified, over and above the flat rate provided for in said ordinance No. 35,533, to-wit: forty (40) cents net per 1,000 cubic feet.”

Thereafter, on May 21, 1925, the City of Columbus filed its answer and cross bill praying for certain injunctive relief and asking also that the Federal Gas and Fuel Company, the Ohio Fuel Gas Company, and the Ohio Fuel Supply Company be made parties to the suit. Needless to say, the City expressly denied that the rate provided by the ordinance was confiscatory or unconstitutional. The City further took the position that since both the Columbus Gas and Fuel Company (complainant), and the Federal Gas and Fuel Company, were distributing gas at retail to the consumers; that since such gas was purchased solely from the Ohio Fuel Gas Company under a gate rate contract whereby the cost was based upon the selling price to the consumer, and since the stock of all three companies, with the exception of certain qualifying shares was owned by the Ohio Fuel Supply Company, the price fixed by the gate rate contract was no longer controlling and that the Ohio Fuel Supply Company was the real party in interest. It may be remarked at this point that although the question as to whether or not the gate rate contract did govern the cost of gas to the complainant was one of the most important factors in - the original case, it has long since been removed from the consideration of this Court by stipulation between the City and the Gas Company.

This answer and cross bill brought the Federal Gas and Fuel Company into the case and that company filed its own separate answer to the cross bill of the City, June 8, 1925, admitting the facts alleged by the City with regard to the common ownership of stock and stating its own claim for injunctive relief, in substantially the same terms as those set forth by the Columbus Gas and Fuel Company in its original complaint. Thereupon, the late Judge Benson W. Hough, issued an interlocutory injunction in practically the same terms as that issued in behalf of the Columbus Gas and Fuel Company in so far as rates to be collected and amounts impounded were concerned.

Other pleadings were filed and among them were the answers filed by the Ohio Fuel Supply Company and the Ohio Fuel Gas Company wherein the common ownership of stock was admitted but its materiality denied and both denied that they were proper parties to the suit.

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Bluebook (online)
42 F. Supp. 762, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-gas-fuel-co-v-city-of-columbus-ohsd-1941.