Georgia Power Company v. Federal Power Commission

373 F.2d 485, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7341, 68 P.U.R.3d 312
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 21, 1967
Docket23753_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 373 F.2d 485 (Georgia Power Company v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Power Company v. Federal Power Commission, 373 F.2d 485, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7341, 68 P.U.R.3d 312 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

AINSWORTH, Circuit Judge:

The question for decision is whether the Federal Power Commission erred in ordering Georgia Power Company to eliminate from certain wholesale electric energy schedules those provisions relating to resale load ceiling and small resale credits, held by the Commission to be unjust, unreasonable and unduly discriminatory, without an additional hearing by the Commission to refix the rate before terminating these provisions.

Georgia Power filed this petition for review of an order of the Federal Power Commission under authority of Section 313(b) of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. § 8251(b)). Georgia Municipal Association, American Public Power Association and several Georgia municipalities have intervened.

These proceedings were originally begun by the Commission upon its own motion under the provisions of Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act (16 U. S.C. §§ 824d, 824e). The Commission made it clear that its purpose was to determine the lawfulness of the restrictive service provisions and that it did not question whether Georgia Power’s schedules of filed rates to municipalities were unjust or unreasonable for reasons of rate level. The questioned provisions were contained in Georgia Power’s Standard Form WR-4, Contract for Wholesale Service of Electric Energy to Georgia Municipalities, and were found in forty-two of the fifty contracts on this form. The same rate was made applicable to all of the municipalities, but as to eight of them, there was no limitation as to the quantities of power which might be resold. The resale ceilings were designed by Georgia Power to limit the sale by municipalities of power to large loads in their service areas. However, the load ceilings were not uniformly enforced among the municipalities. The Commission’s hearing examiner conducted an exhaustive eight-day hearing after which he rendered his findings that the questioned contract provisions were unlawful and unreasonable and ordered their deletion. At the hearing Georgia Power did not defend the resale credit provision. Thereafter, the Commission substantially upheld its examiner, stating in its written opinion that the resale load ceiling provision and the resale credit provision were unjust, unreasonable and unduly discriminatory and therefore unlawful. It said that the resale load ceiling provision was unduly discriminatory because it did not apply to all of the fifty municipal customers and was not applied uniformly even to those towns subject to them. It found that it was not normally consistent with the public interest for a wholesale supplier of electric power to restrict the manner in which its customer may resale the power and that Georgia Power had shown no special facts or circumstances which would establish the reasonableness of these restrictions.

On appeal Georgia Power has not contested the deletion of the questioned contract provisions involving resale load ceiling and small resale credits in its schedules. However, it contends that the Commission’s action is arbitrary and capricious and violates Section 206(a) of the Federal Power Act because the Commission did not, when it ordered deletion of the restrictive provisions, also order an additional full hearing to determine just and reasonable rates and contract terms to be observed in the future. *487 Georgia Power argues that it was thus deprived of due process under the Fifth Amendment in that it was not accorded its constitutional right to a full hearing which is essential to the validity of the Commission’s action. It argues that the relationship between the rate level and the resale load limitation in the contract is such that the deletion of the load limitation without a corresponding upward adjustment of rates would virtually destroy the existing contracts and impose new contracts with rates whose reasonableness was unsupported by any evidence. Georgia Power states that it received more than $800,000 of revenue from direct service to large loads in 1965 than it would have received if it served those loads indirectly through the municipalities whose WR-4 rate was set at a lower level.

The Commission declined to order the additional hearing which Georgia Power demanded but held that under Section 205 of the Federal Power Act the Company “may, at any time, submit for filing new rate schedules, reflecting increased rates, unless legally precluded from doing so by contractual commitments.” The Commission’s position is that there was no impropriety in ordering an unlawful practice such as it found in the resale load ceiling and resale credit provisions eliminated from ' the rate schedules without the necessity of an accompanying full-blown rate case and that it had the authority to terminate that practice which it held is not inseparable from a major rate case. It pointed out that Georgia Power had an opportunity at the hearing to show what its economic losses would be with the elimination of the deleted provisions but totally failed to do so. It contended that there is substantial evidence in the record to warrant affirmance of its opinion which is all that is required under Section 313(b) of the Federal Power Act.

Section 206(a) of the Federal Power Act is the provision which authorizes the Commission to determine reasonable rates, regulations and practices of public utilities under its jurisdiction. The section reads as follows:

“Whenever the Commission, after a hearing had upon its own motion or upon complaint, shall find that any rate, charge, or classification, demanded, observed, charged, or collected by any public utility for any transmission or sale subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or that any rule, regulation, practice, or contract affecting such rate, charge, or classification is unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory or preferential, the Commission shall determine the just and reasonable rate, charge, classification, rule, regulation, practice, or contract to be thereafter observed and in force, and shall fix the same by order.”

There is nothing in Section 206 (a) which prohibits the Commission from eliminating an unlawful practice without simultaneously holding a full rate hearing to prescribe a proper rate. We perceive no inseparability of the forbidden practices from the Company’s rates. The Commission is fully authorized by this section to deal solely with an unjust or unreasonable practice as such. In Federal Power Comm. v. Tenn. Gas Transmission Co., 371 U.S. 145, 83 S.Ct. 211, 9 L.Ed.2d 199 (1962), the Supreme Court upheld the Commission’s action in ordering an increased rate immediately reduced by interim order without awaiting completion in a rate proceeding of the hearing on the allocation of the overall costs of the company’s services among its zones of service. The analogy is pertinent here and the Commission is fully authorized to end the unlawful restrictions on service involved here without awaiting completion of a full rate case.

Georgia Power strongly urges that the relationship between the load limitation provision and its revenue was established by the evidence, but it failed to offer any evidence tending to show that its WR-4 rate was unreasonably low or that it would sustain any loss by elimination of the restrictive provisions.

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373 F.2d 485, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7341, 68 P.U.R.3d 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-power-company-v-federal-power-commission-ca5-1967.