Harding Glass Co. v. Ark. Public Service Commission

313 S.W.2d 812, 229 Ark. 153, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 726
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 2, 1958
Docket5-1542
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 313 S.W.2d 812 (Harding Glass Co. v. Ark. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harding Glass Co. v. Ark. Public Service Commission, 313 S.W.2d 812, 229 Ark. 153, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 726 (Ark. 1958).

Opinions

Sam Robinson, Associate Justice.

This is a rate case. On the 5th day of October, 1956, the Port Smith Gas Corporation (the Gas Company) filed an application for a change of rates for a supply of gas to industrial consumers in the city of Port Smith, the surrounding area and other communities. The Gas Company sought to increase the price from 16.38 cents per Mcf to 20.62 cents. After extensive hearings the Commission granted the requested new schedule of rates on May 17,1957. The protestants took an appeal to the Pulaski Circuit Court, where the action of the Commission was affirmed, and the protestants have appealed to this Court. The principal contention of appellants is that the Commission accepted the contract price for gas supplied by the Stephens Production Company (Stephens) to the Gas Company, the Commission refusing at the time of the hearing to investigate the merits of that contract. Appellants maintain that Stephens is an affiliate of the Gas Company and in these circumstances the Commission should not have accepted the contract price as between Stephens and the Gas Company as a bona fide operating expense.

In 1945 W. R. Stephens bought the controlling interest in the Gas Company. At that time and up until 1953 the Gas Company bought more than 97 per cent of its gas from the Arkansas-Oklahoma Gas Corporation (Arkansas-Oklahoma). This company owned gas production properties and owned a distribution system whereby it supplied gas to the Gas Company at the city gates of Port Smith and supplied gas and distributed the same in several small towns in Oklahoma and Arkansas. In 1953, the owners of the Arkansas-Oklahoma decided to liquidate that company and put up for sale all of its properties, including the production properties and the distribution systems. In that connection, in an order made on December 22, 1953, which will be referred to again, the Commission made a finding of fact as follows: “The majority of the common stock of Arkansas-Oklahoma Gas Company has for many years been owned by a group of residents of Port Smith, Arkansas, and these stockholders have recently expressed a desire to sell the stock and have offered such stock for sale to various interests, including persons not residents of the areas served by the two companies, which caused the owners of the stock of the Port Smith Gas Corporation and its officers and directors to become concerned as to the continuation of their source of supply of gas from the Arkansas-Oklahoma Gas Company at the termination on December 31, 1965, of the service agreement between the two companies.”

Por its supply of gas the Gas Company was almost wholly dependent on a contract with Arkansas-Oklahoma which had only twelve years to run. To protect his Port Smith Gas Company’s source of gas supplies, Stephens made a deal whereby the Port Smith Gas Company bought the distribution system of Arkansas-Oklahoma, and he and his brother, J. T. Stephens, along with the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, bought the production properties. Stephens assumed heavy obligations by contracting to maintain and develop the properties and explore for gas at his own expense. This is a hazardous business. There are many dry wells; production may be obtained or it may not. The North•western Mutual Life Insurance Company put up $4,-333,000 to pay Arkansas-Oklahoma. Stephens contracted with the Gas Company to supply gas at the wellhead at 12.7819 per Mcf. The Gas Company had been paying Arkansas-Oklahoma 17.38 at the city gate. All of these transactions were aboveboard and the whole plan was laid before the Oklahoma Public Service Commission, the Arkansas Public Service Commission, and the Federal Power Commission. The Arkansas and Oklahoma Commissions approved the sale, and the Federal Power Commission held hearings and granted the application. The contract between the Gas Company and Stephens was made on March 2, 1954, after the Arkansas Commission, in Docket No. U-902, had found in December of 1953 that the price of 12.7819 per Mcf was reasonable. In its findings and order of May 17, 1957, in the case at bar, Docket No. U-1169, approving the new rate schedule, the Commission referred to its order in Docket No. U-902, wherein the contract was approved. The Commission said: “This Commission, after full investigation and hearing, from which it was fully developed, as shown by the contract itself, and the exhibits attached to the Company’s response to protestants’ motion, found that the dedication of the large gas reserves, made a condition of the contract, was essential to the Fort Smith area. The Commission further found that therefore the contract and the contract rate was fair and reasonable, and that in the public interest it was necessary that the contract and the contract rate be approved and the transfer of properties proposed be authorized. Therefore, the Commission, by its order of December 29, 1953, in our Docket No. U-902, approved the contract and the contract rate of 12.7819 cents per Mcf which the protestants here seek to attack.

“Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, owner of the Production Payment supported by the gas reserves dedicated under the contract in question, obviously relied on our order in this docket and on the order of the Federal Power Commission approving the transaction in Docket No. G-2332-33 as a basis for accepting the production payment which, made the transaction possible. We have no reason now to recede from the position originally taken by us that our approval of this contract and this transaction was then and now is in the public interest. . . . ’ ’

The Commission points out that by reason of the Supreme Court decision in the case of State of Wisconsin v. Federal Power Comm’n., 205 F. 2d 706 (Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin, 347 U. S. 672, 74 S. Ct. 794, 98 L. Ed. 1035) (the Phillips Petroleum Company case), it has no jurisdiction over the Stephens Production Company, but that it does have jurisdiction over the rates charged by the Gas Company to its customers. The Commission said: “Moreover, even though we do not consider that we have jurisdiction over the price charged the Company under the contract, we do have jurisdiction over the Company’s rates to its customers, and having already found the contract price fair and reasonable, we still would consider it so for the purpose of the application here under consideration.” Furthermore, the Commission had knowledge of the fact that subsequent to 1953, when the 12.7819 per Mcf was approved, a wellhead price of 16 cents per Mcf had been allowed for gas produced in the same area. The Commission may take notice of a fact of that kind. Acme Brick Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Comm’n., 227 Ark. 436, 299 S. W. 2d 208.

Appellants say: “It is not enough that money ($4,-333,000) has in fact been spent; there must be proof that it was wisely, reasonably, and necessarily spent.” The spending of this money was approved by the Arkansas Public Service Commission, the Oklahoma Public Service Commission and the Federal Power Commission. It is hard to see how any stronger proof could be produced that the money was wisely, reasonably and necessarily spent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
313 S.W.2d 812, 229 Ark. 153, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-glass-co-v-ark-public-service-commission-ark-1958.