Ford Motor Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

370 N.E.2d 468, 52 Ohio St. 2d 142, 6 Ohio Op. 3d 352, 1977 Ohio LEXIS 478
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1977
DocketNo. 77-318
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 370 N.E.2d 468 (Ford Motor Co. v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Motor Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 370 N.E.2d 468, 52 Ohio St. 2d 142, 6 Ohio Op. 3d 352, 1977 Ohio LEXIS 478 (Ohio 1977).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The gas in controversy in the instant cause was purchased by East Ohio and delivered to its' customers prior to the April 27,1976, effective date of R. C. 4905.302. That statute prohibits the passing-through of certain costs of gas purchased by gas companies and natural gas companies.

The. costs that cannot be passed through from the utility to certain statutorily-identified consumers are the costs.of its “special purchases.” This prohibition is found in R. C..4905.302(B), which provides:

“A purchased gas .adjustment clause may not allow, and no such clause may be interpreted to allow, a gas company or natural gas company that has obtained an order from the public utilities commission permitting the company to curtail the service of any custodier or class of customers other than residential customers, ‘ such order being based on the company’s inability to secure a sufficient quantity of natural gas, to distribute the' cost of any special;purchase made subsequent to the effective date of such order, to. the extent that such purchase decreases the level'of 'curtailment of any such customer or class of customers, to any class of customers of the company that was [145]*145not curtailed, to any class of residential customers of the company, or to any class of customers of the company whose level of curtailment was not decreased and whose consumption increased as a result of, or in connection with, the special purchase.”

E. C. 4905.302(B) directs that no gas utility which has obtained authority from the Commission to curtail service to certain classes of customers may use the provisions of the utility’s purchased gas adjustment clause to distribute the cost of a “special purchase” of gas to three enumerated classes of customers, if that special purchase resulted in a reduction in the level of curtailment that had been- imposed by the utility. The three classes of customers to which the costs of a special purchase may not be distributed include any class of customers that had not been curtailed, residential customers, and any class of customers whose level of curtailment had not been decreased and whose consumption had increased.

East Ohio, over the period relevant herein, had obtained Commission authorization to curtail service to certain classes of customers. The question to be determined is whether the prohibitions of E. C. 4905.302(B) apply to the recovery of the higher costs of certain East Ohio purchases. • •

Appellant believes the keystone of the Commission’s December, 1976, orders, which orders appellant assails, was the Commission’s finding that the East Ohio acquisitions made prior to April 27, 1976, were “special purchases,” the distribution of whose costs is prohibited by E. C. 4905.302(B). The definition of “special purchases” is afforded by E. C. 4905.302(A)(2), which provides:

“For the purpose of this section, the term 'special purchase’ shall mean any purchase of interstate natura] gas, any purchase of liquified natural gas, and any purchase of synthetic natural gas from any source developed after the effective date of this section provided that, this purchase be of less than one hundred twenty days duration and the price, for this purchase is not regulated by the [146]*146federal power commission, for the purpose of this division, the expansion or enlargement of a synthetic natural gas plant existing at such date shall be considered a source so developed.’’

Appellant points out that the definition afforded by R 0. 4905.302(A)(2) is in the present tense. Appellant concludes that the definition should not be presumed to encompass East Ohio purchases which had occurred prior to April 27, 1976.

Section 2 of Am. Sub. H. B. No. 1213 provides, in relevant part:

“On and after the effective date of this act, this act shall be applied to such costs as would not, under this act, be distributable to any particular class of customers of a gas company or natural gas company were they not payable by such class of customers under a provision, contained in a schedule approved by the public utilities commission prior to such date, that this act causes to be characterized as a purchased gas adjustment clause and that would have been so characterized, were this act to have been effective when the schedule in which the clause is contained was approved by the public utilities commission.”

Section 2 expressly ordains how and when the provisions of R. C. 4905.302 apply. The General Assembly makes the provisions of R. C. 4905.302 applicable to any costs of a special purchase made subsequent to the effective date of the utility’s curtailment plan, which costs were outstanding on April 27, 1976, and which would have been distributed to all customers of the gas company under a purchased gas adjustment clause were it not for the enactment of R. C. 4905.302, which prohibits the distribution óf those costs to the three enumerated classes of custom-érs named in R. C. 4905.302(B). Because R. C. 4905.302 expressly was made applicable to costs (such as East Ohio’s) incurred prior to April 27, 1976, East Ohio could not recover them through its purchased gas adjustment claitée.

Appellant has proposed as its initial proposition of [147]*147law that E. 0. 4905.302, relating to “special purchases” of gas, does not apply to gas purchased prior to April 27, 1976. In view of Section 2 of Am. Sub. H. B. No. 1213, this proposition of law is not meritorious.

Appellant avers further that gas companies and natural gas companies may collect from their customers only the rates and charges specified in their schedules at the time the service is rendered, and that a commission order changing the rates and charges for services rendered in the past is unreasonable and unlawful under E. C. 4905.32.1

By its order of December 15, 1976, the Commission authorized East Ohio to modify its purchased gas cost adjustment provisions in applying a special purchase adjustment to volumes of gas sold certain customers. That order authorized East Ohio to file tariffs consistent with the Commission’s order, said tariffs becoming effective upon the Commission’s approval. On December 22, 1976, the Commission issued an entry approving the tariffs which East Ohio had filed.

The adjustment embodied in the amended tariffs applied to volumes of gas sold subsequent to December 22, 1976. For services rendered prior thereto, East Ohio charged in accordance with its purchased gas adjustment clause as had been on file prior to December 22, 1976; it was for services rendered subsequent to that date that East Ohio charged pursuant to the modified purchased gas adjustment clause.

Appellant is misguided in premising this proposition of law upon its belief that because the new, post-December 22, 1976, charges must reflect costs incurred for past emergency gas purchases, East Ohio is in fact charging for services rendered in the past. Utility rates being based upon past costs, post-December 22, 1976, charges must [148]*148reflect pre-December 22, 1976, costs to the utility. However,, these charges properly attach to services provided appellant subsequent to December 22, 1976.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
370 N.E.2d 468, 52 Ohio St. 2d 142, 6 Ohio Op. 3d 352, 1977 Ohio LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-motor-co-v-public-utilities-commission-ohio-1977.