El Paso Electric Co. v. Raynolds Holding Co.

100 S.W.2d 97, 128 Tex. 495, 108 A.L.R. 744, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 406
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1937
DocketNo. 6789
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 97 (El Paso Electric Co. v. Raynolds Holding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Paso Electric Co. v. Raynolds Holding Co., 100 S.W.2d 97, 128 Tex. 495, 108 A.L.R. 744, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 406 (Tex. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Judge GERMAN

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This suit was instituted by Raynolds Holding Company, S. 0. Pottorff, Receiver of the First National Bank of El Paso, and M. H. Barrough, Administrator of the estate of J. S. Raynolds, deceased, as plaintiff, against El Paso Electric Company, as defendant, to recover for overcharges on electrical service rendered from August 1, 1921, to August 1, 1932. The parties will be referred to as in the district court.

The original petition was filed February 18, 1933. The defendant company pleaded limitation. Notwithstanding certain findings by the jury, the trial court sustained the plea of limitation as to all items of overcharge prior to February 18, 1931, but rendered judgment in favor of the receiver of the First National Bank for $1048.32, the amount the court found was paid by the bank or the receiver as overcharges after February 18, 1931, and prior to the date of the filing of plaintiffs’ peti[497]*497tion. Defendant did not appeal from this part of the judgment, and it became final. . Plaintiffs did appeal from that part of the judgment denying a recovery prior to February 18, 1931. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court in so far as it awarded the receiver the sum of $1048.32, with interest, but reversed the judgment of the trial court and rendered judgment in favor of Raynolds Holding Company, the administrator of the estate of Joshua S. Raynolds, and the receiver for the sum of $14,944.29. This was to be apportioned 46 per cent to the receiver and 54 per cent to the other parties. This represented the amount which the jury found had been paid in the way of overcharges from August 1, 1921, to August 1, 1932, and which the trial court held was barred by limitation. 70 S. W. (2d) 624.

In the trial court the defendant interposed a plea of settlement, or accord and satisfaction, but the jury found against it upon an issue which destroyed this plea. In the Court of Civil Appeals defendant did not assign any error attacking the finding of the jury upon this issue or the action of the court in submitting same over objections of the defendant. Although the question is raised in petition for writ of error as to some of the plaintiffs, this Court has no authority to grant relief in this regard as to any of the plaintiffs. In application for writ of error defendant has not questioned the findings of the jury establishing the fact of the overcharges or the amount, and the case is before this Court with these questions settled against defendant. Therefore the sole question which we are authorized to decide here is the question of limitation.

Plaintiffs sued for an alleged overcharge for direct current used in the operation of elevators in their buildings from August 1, 1921, to August 1, 1932, in the sum of $15,215.20. The suit was not based upon a claim that the bills rendered to plaintiffs and paid by them were excessive, so far as the electricity consumed was concerned. The suit was based upon a contention that although the bills rendered were correct as to the amount of current consumed, yet the monthly charges therefor were excessive, due to the application of a certain rate to an excessive estimate of what was known as the “demand.” The published and approved rates upon which the service was based were as follows:

“10c per K. W. H. for the first 40 hours of use per month of the demand. 5c per K. W. H. for next 500 K. W. H. 2c per K. W. H. for next 2,000 K. W. H.; lc per K. W. H. for all excess.”

[498]*498Along with the published rate was the following explanation:

“Demand is defined as follows: Entire connected load up to 5 K. W.; 80% of the next 10 K. W. of connected load; 60% of the next 10 K. W. of connected load; but not less than actual measured demand which will be used for installations of more than 25 K. W. Measured demand will be the greatest average load for any thirty minute interval during the twelve months’ period ending with the current month.”

The emphasized words are the important ones, and an explanation is necessary. An expert witness defined “demand” in this way:

“The demand means the amount of power necessary to move your machinery; in other words, if you had a 25 KW motor it would take 25 KW to move that motor; now it has nothing to do with the consumption, if you use that 25 KW that is you use that motor constantly for one hour you have used 25 KW hours.”

Plaintiffs’ installation was more than 25 KW, therefore the demand was more than 25 KW. This being true, under the published rates as above set out, the demand which was to be used as a basis for making the first charge of 10c per KWH was the actual “measured demand.” The schedule defines what was meant by measured demand in this language:

“Measured demand will be the greatest average load for any thirty minute interval during the twelve months’ period ending with the current month.”

It will be noted from the schedule set out above that plaintiffs were to be charged at the rate of 10c per KWH for the first 40 hours of use per month of this measured demahd. Therefore, in order to arrive at the amount of current for which a charge of 10c per KWH was to be made, it would have been necessary to ascertain the measured demand and multiply by forty. After this was done, the amounts to be charged for at other rates named was a simple matter. In this case the only complaint is that there was a charge of 10c per KWH made each month on the basis of an excessive “demand,” and the other rates are not in question.

It is undisputed that on each and every monthly statement submitted to plaintiffs during the period in question there was a charge of 10c for 2266 KWH, which represented the first 40 hours of use of the measured demand. Dividing 2266 by 40 we have 56.66 KW as the “demand” for which a charge of 10c per KWH was made. Upon the trial of the case the jury [499]*499found in effect that plaintiffs’ measured demand during the period in question was only 26 KW, and the first 40 hours per month of this demand amounted to 1040 KWH, for which the charge of 10c should have been made. This amounted to an overcharge of $94.98 per month on this item.

The defendant has not attacked the findings of the jury as touching this overcharge, and it necessarily follows that in arriving at a basis for making this charge defendant either failed to measure the demand, arbitrarily adopting 56.66 KW as such demand, or if it did measure the demand it wrongfully charged on a basis of 56.66 KW instead of on the basis of 26 KW.

It seems to be undisputed that no demand meter was ever placed in the building. It is contended, however, that the demand could have been correctly measured by the watt meters which were used to compute the amount of current consumed. According to the testimony of the expert witness it could have been measured in this manner :

“You get the demand from the rotation of the disks which controls the watt meter. There is a technical way of doing it by taking a constant, taking your number of revolutions and multiplying it by this constant, multiplying by thirty six hundred seconds in an hour and dividing it by the seconds of the actual reading, and that will give you the demand for that time.”

He explained the matter in' a little different way in this language:

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 97, 128 Tex. 495, 108 A.L.R. 744, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-electric-co-v-raynolds-holding-co-tex-1937.