Duquesne Light Co. v. Pennsylvana Public Utility Commission

63 A.2d 466, 164 Pa. Super. 166, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 320
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1948
DocketAppeal, 249
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 63 A.2d 466 (Duquesne Light Co. v. Pennsylvana 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
Duquesne Light Co. v. Pennsylvana Public Utility Commission, 63 A.2d 466, 164 Pa. Super. 166, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 320 (Pa. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hirt, J.,

For many years Duquesne Light Company (which we will refer to as the Company) has furnished a complete street lighting service to the City of Pittsburgh under rate S of its established tariff applicable to such municipal service. The rate is a composite or “package” rate which combines the furnishing and the lighting of lamps throughout the City with nightly inspection and replacement, at unit charges. Specific additional monthly charges, by way of rental or otherwise, were made by the Company for various types of fixtures, brackets, poles, underground supply lines and overhead extensions, essential to the utilization of the energy made available over 227 separate circuits at 17 substations in the City. The lighting system: was separate and independent of the Company’s general distribution system. Looking toward reductions in the cost of street lighting in Pittsburgh the Council and the Mayor of the City directed detailed plans and specifications to be prepared, pursuant to an enabling ordinance, for an entirely new and modern lighting system eventually to become the property of the City. Accordingly, the City, under its municipal powers, advertised for bids on three separate ten-year contracts, as follows: “Contract No. 1 — For the supply of suitable electric current to energize the new street lighting system, comprising approximately *169 20,000 streetlights which will.consume about 1,500,000 KWH of electric-energy per month. Contract No. ,2— For the installation and sale to* the City of, such new street lighting system,, including fixtures, brackets, ornamental poles and,other equipment; and Contract.No.- 3 — ; For the ^maintenance of such street lighting system* including nightly inspection and. replacement of lamps.” The Companyj which alone could supply electric energy in that public service, did¡ not respond 'by submitting any proposal, but bids were received from another responsible bidder on contracts 2. and 3,. thus-putting two of the services,on.a competitive;basis. .Shortly thereafter-as a result of some negotiations;, the Company, by letter to the Mayor, of Pittsburgh, dated July. .15, 1946, submitted a rate per kilowatt hour “at which the Company will supply electric energy for street lighting purposes, and, ... the charges; at which :the Company will provide related facilities not covered by the rate for energy.” The facilities referred to were not. included in the subjects of contracts 2 and 3. In the proposal the Company also set forth a number of conditions on which the-proposed charges were based, which for the purposes of this appeal we may regard as having been agreed to by. the City»; In.effect the. City agreed to the;proposed unit rental, charges of the Company for ducts, conduits, cables, junction boxes, extensions, of .supply .lines, and transformers, But the .proposal of the Company to supply untransformed energy of 7.5 amperage delivered from series circuits. to. street, lighting equipment at 2.5 cents, per .kilowatt hour, was .not acceptable to. the City. Thereupon: the City, believing that the proposed: rate for energy was excessive and higher, than other comparable charges for service in the Company’s tariffs, filed a complaint with the. Public Utility Commission praying for a determination of adjust and, reasonable rate to be charged by the Company for the electric current con *170 templated by contract No. 1 and the specifications applicable thereto, as modified by agreement between the Company and the City.

Extensive hearings were held by the Commission and the issues were thoroughly tried. Arguments were heard by the full Commission. About one-half of the Company’s gross income is received from customers qualifying for energy at Rate W of the Company’s tariffs. Rate W is available only to those having large- demands for energy and, as amplified -by Rider 2 which offers a reduction in Rdte W’s demand charges, is available only where the customer takes untransformed energy at- line voltage. It was obvious from-the express provisions of the schedules-that Rate W, Rider 2/was. not an available rate for street lighting, ¡which required transformed energy of 7.5 amperes distributed by means Of- interconnecting circuits: over a system separate, and distinct from that serving Rate'W customers» - Conceding, this, it nevertheless was the’ City’s contention that the separate energy rate foP street lighting delivered to-the City’s fixtures should not exceed in- amount, the cost of energy measured by Rate W, Rider 2, delivered to the meters of individual large users in the City of Pittsburgh.- On May 11, 1948, the Commission sustained the City’s complaint and ordered “That within 30 days -after service of this order, Duquesne Light Company, respondent, shall file with-the Commission such appropriate modifications or changes to its existing tariff rates as are necessary to provide for the supply of-electric energy to the City of Pittsburgh, complainant, as contemplated by contract No. -1, referred to above> subject to the modifications thereof (except as to the price for energy) included in the terms of the counter-offer made by respondent on July 15, 1946; said service to be supplied at a price for electric energy as determined under Rate ‘W’ and Rider *171 2 for all series- lights and Bates ‘C’, '‘Y’ or W as applicable for multiple lights.” 1

Thereafter the Company raised the question, which constitutes the difference of opinion giving rise to this controversy, whether it should be required to provide the “interconnecting circuits” required for-delivery of street lighting energy without special compensation in rentals or otherwise in addition to the charge for energy under Rate W, Rider 2. In answer to the question the Commission on June 29, 1948, by way of clarifying its former order in that respect, -stated: “That Order contemplated ... the exact service comprehended by Contract No. 1 and the counter-offer, and, - we merely substituted the Bate ‘W’ level for the 2.5 cents quoted by respondent.” Thus it was made clear that the order of: the Commission imposed the obligation on the Company of supplying and maintaining the necessary interconnecting circuits and delivering energy all within Rate W, Rider 2. The effect of these orders of the Commission was to make available in the future an optional rate supplanting Bate S of the tariff; if and when the City should put itself in position to make use of the new rate by pro *172 viding the facilities contemplated by contracts 2 and 3.

At the outset it is contended that the Commission does not have the power to separate the services and initiate a new rate for the proposed type of street lighting here contemplated. Utility companies in the field of municipal street lighting, almost without exception, have furnished a complete and comprehensive service together with all necessary incidental circuits, fixtures and facilities including the supply and maintenance of lamps; Separation of the service is a modern development of the art. But although the proposal of the City may be novel yet it is not open to practical objection nor can there be valid legal objection to the.order on that score. That a split up of the service as contemplated is feasible' must be considered as conceded by the Company from the. fact that it is willing to supply energy, alone, for a consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A.2d 466, 164 Pa. Super. 166, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duquesne-light-co-v-pennsylvana-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1948.