Houston Lighting & Power Co. v. Railroad Commission

529 S.W.2d 763, 52 Oil & Gas Rep. 427, 84 A.L.R. 3d 531, 19 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 61, 1975 Tex. LEXIS 265, 1975 WL 350942
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1975
DocketB-5294
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 529 S.W.2d 763 (Houston Lighting & Power Co. v. Railroad Commission) 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
Houston Lighting & Power Co. v. Railroad Commission, 529 S.W.2d 763, 52 Oil & Gas Rep. 427, 84 A.L.R. 3d 531, 19 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 61, 1975 Tex. LEXIS 265, 1975 WL 350942 (Tex. 1975).

Opinion

REAVLEY, Justice.

Houston Lighting & Power Company brought this suit to set aside and to enjoin enforcement of an order of the Railroad Commission. The order under attack sets a curtailment program for United Texas Transmission Company; that is, the order assigns priorities for the delivery of natural gas by United Texas Transmission in the event and whenever its supply of gas is insufficient to meet the requirements of all of its customers. The trial court upheld the validity of the Commission’s order and denied the injunctive relief sought by Houston Lighting & Power. A direct appeal was brought to this Court pursuant to Article 1738a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., and Rule 499a, Tex.Rules Civ.Proc. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Houston Lighting & Power is a public utility which generates electricity at ten plants and serves the domestic and industrial needs for electricity of 700,000 customers in an area comprising 5600 square miles within a 60 mile radius of Houston. Its generation facilities employ turbines driven by steam produced in boilers heated by gas. A contract executed in 1964 bound United Texas Transmission Company (formerly Pennzoil Pipeline Company) to deliver 50% of the gas requirements of Houston Lighting & Power until December 31, 1984. In 1972 that contract was amended to require United Texas Transmission to deliver to Houston Lighting & Power a total of 2.8 trillion cubic feet of gas over the remaining years of the contract in certain quantities prescribed for each year. The contract provides that in the event United Texas Transmission should be unable to supply the full gas requirements of all of its consumers, Houston Lighting & Power’s requirements for generation of electricity sold to domes *765 tic consumers shall be satisfied before industrial demands are met. 1

United Texas Transmission is a gas utility as defined by Article 6050, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St., and is therefore subject to regulation and control by the Railroad Commission of Texas. On January 5, 1973, the Commission entered an order in Gas Utilities Division Docket No. 489 which set a curtailment program for all intrastate gas utilities in Texas. Then on May 22, 1973, the Commission in Docket No. 502 entered the order which applied specifically to United Texas Transmission, which order is the subject of the attack in this case. The scale of priorities in that order are set forth verbatim in the footnote. 2 The effect of the Commission’s order is to curtail all of the gas supply which Houston Lighting & Power receives from United Texas Transmission at an earlier point than their contract provides. Gas which Houston Lighting & Power needs to generate electricity for its domestic customers cannot be obtained until after United Texas Transmission meets industrial demands to which it has a firm contractual commitment.

The Commission’s order therefore has a serious effect upon Houston Lighting & Power. The only curtailment of supply by United Texas Transmission in 1974 was for its customers using large volumes of gas for boiler fuel, the classification into which Houston Lighting & Power falls. For the months of January, February and March of 1975, Houston Lighting & Power would have suffered 58% reduction in its supply if the provisions of the contract with United Texas Transmission had been followed; but under the terms of the Commission’s order, it suffered 87% reduction in that supply. In 1974 Houston Lighting & Power was forced to burn large amounts of fuel oil, costing some 3V2 million dollars in excess of *766 its contract price for gas. When storage costs and inventory of oil, as well as new higher priced natural gas, and the extra cost of capital investment is counted, Houston Lighting & Power figures that the Commission’s order cost it almost $19,000,-000 in 1974. It concedes that the extra fuel cost can be transferred to its customers but argues that this is a burden which the public should not be forced to bear.

I.

Houston Lighting & Power contends that the Commission has no statutory authority to establish priorities for the supply of United Texas Transmission gas. This contention is answered by the recent opinion of this Court which discussed at length the authority of the Commission: Railroad Commission v. City of Austin, 524 S.W.2d 262 (Tex.1975). The Court there said that the Commission had authority to allocate the supply of a gas utility:

The Commission is authorized to allocate Lo-Vaca’s gas among cities, towns and corporations, and it is already doing so. It also has the jurisdiction and power to allocate TUFCO’s gas, and the gas of all other gas utilities among cities, towns and corporations. 524 S.W.2d 262.

If a gas utility cannot meet the demands for gas, Article 6053 provides that the Commission may require the utility to augment its supply. If additional gas it not available, and the public interest requires it, the Commission may set priorities and may do this according to the end-use to be made of the gas. The Commission is not limited to ratable apportionment of available gas to all customers or potential customers of the gas utility. Homes and hospitals may be kept warm even when brickyards are cold.

II.

Houston Lighting & Power next complains that it is being deprived of valuable property rights when gas to which it is entitled under an express provision of its contract is denied to it by a different priority program imposed by the state. The short answer to this contention is that Houston Lighting & Power made its contract for gas supply at a time when Article 6053 and the other pertinent statutes were in force. If the priority of curtailment were a question to be resolved only according to the respective rights of the parties to the contract, the contract provisions would govern. The shortage of natural gas, however, has become a matter of serious proportions — and not just for two or more contracting parties but for the public welfare and the entire economy. Houston Lighting & Power and United Texas Transmission could not by their agreement set aside the statutes of the state or obstruct enforcement of them. The public interest is paramount and it may be, and must be, protected by the Commission. The statutes so provide.

Though the priorities of contract and Commission order differ, the contract provision is not inconsistent with the superi- or statutory authorization for the regulation of service rendered by gas utilities. 3 The contract should be considered to incorporate the regulatory authority of the Commission as provided by the statutes at the time of the execution of the contract. East Texas Motor Freight Lines v. U. S., 239 F.2d 417 (5th Cir.1956); Hall v. Weller, Hall and Jeffery, Inc., 497 S.W.2d 374

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529 S.W.2d 763, 52 Oil & Gas Rep. 427, 84 A.L.R. 3d 531, 19 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 61, 1975 Tex. LEXIS 265, 1975 WL 350942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-lighting-power-co-v-railroad-commission-tex-1975.