Hunt Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, (Two Cases). Hassie Hunt Trust v. Federal Power Commission, Placid Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, (Two Cases)

334 F.2d 474
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 1964
Docket20204
StatusPublished

This text of 334 F.2d 474 (Hunt Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, (Two Cases). Hassie Hunt Trust v. Federal Power Commission, Placid Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, (Two Cases)) 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
Hunt Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, (Two Cases). Hassie Hunt Trust v. Federal Power Commission, Placid Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, (Two Cases), 334 F.2d 474 (5th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

334 F.2d 474

HUNT OIL COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION, Respondent (two cases).
Hassie HUNT TRUST et al., Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION, Respondent.
PLACID OIL COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION, Respondent (two cases).

No. 19218.

No. 19499.

No. 19500.

No. 20202.

No. 20204.

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.

May 28, 1964.

Rehearing Denied August 5, 1964.

Robert E. May, Washington, D. C., Robert W. Henderson, Dallas, Tex., Richard F. Generelly, Washington, D. C., Thomas G. Crouch, Dallas, Tex., for petitioner Hunt Oil Co.

Howard E. Wahrenbrock, Sol., Arthur H. Fribourg, Milton J. Grossman, Josephine H. Klein, Attys., Richard A. Solomon, Gen. Counsel, F.P.C., Washington, D. C., for respondent.

Thomas G. Crouch, Robert W. Henderson, Dallas, Tex., Robert E. May, Richard F. Generelly, Washington, D. C., Robert M. Kennedy, Dallas, Tex., John T. Ketcham, May, Shannon & Morley, Washington, D. C., for petitioners Hassie Hunt Trust and others.

Paul W. Hicks, W. Scott Wilkinson, Shreveport, La., for petitioner Placid Oil Co.

Before RIVES, BELL and WRIGHT,* Circuit Judges.

J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:

These five consolidated cases concern Section 7(c)1 permanent certificates covering the interstate movement of natural gas. The certificates were vacated by the Federal Power Commission after the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that the Public Service Commission of New York should have been allowed to intervene in the Section 7 proceedings.2 Nos. 19,499 and 19,500 challenge the right of the Commission to vacate the certificates without hearing and to issue, in place thereof, temporary authorization subject to a refund condition. Nos. 20,202 and 20,204 question the Commission's rejection of price increases in conflict with the no-increase-in-price condition of the temporary authorization. No. 19,218 involves the validity of the Commission's rejection of a rate increase in conflict with a condition in one of the permanent certificates before it was vacated. We affirm the action of the Commission in all five cases.

In 1959 the Natural Gas Pipe Line Company applied for a certificate of public convenience and necessity authorizing expansion of its facilities. At the same time petitioners, independent producers of natural gas, sought certificates authorizing the sale to Natural of gas produced in Railroad Districts 2, 3 and 4 of Texas. In the § 7 proceedings that followed, the Commission upheld petitioners' objection to the intervention of Public Service Commission of New York and thereafter granted the permanent certificates, subject to certain conditions. Peoples Gulf Coast Natural Gas Pipeline Co., 24 FPC 1 (1960). In fixing the certificate price for the gas, the Commission was influenced by the high price level set in its Continental Oil Company proceeding, 17 FPC 563 (1957) and 17 FPC 732 (1957), a price level previously found unsupported and out of line in Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public Serv. Comm'n, 360 U. S. 378, 79 S.Ct. 1246, 3 L.Ed.2d 1312 (1959) (CATCO).

On the day the permanent certificates in suit were issued, P.S.C. of N.Y. petitioned the District of Columbia court for review of the Commission's order denying intervention. That court set aside the Commission's order denying P.S.C. of N.Y.'s intervention and remanded the intervention proceeding to the Commission. Pursuant to the remand, the Commission allowed P.S.C. of N.Y.'s intervention, vacated its certification order, and, on November 2, 1961, issued temporary authorizations for continuation of the producers' sales pending redetermination of the certificate applications in the reopened proceedings. Hassie Hunt Trust, 26 FPC 689 (1961), 26 FPC 930 (1961). The temporary authorizations stipulated that the initial prices set in the vacated certificates should remain in effect, without being increased, during the reopened proceedings, subject to a refund to Natural of "any amounts collected after the date of issuance of this order in excess of the amount computed at the rate determined to be required by the public convenience and necessity" in the final certificate order. 26 FPC at 690. Subsequently, in August, 1962, petitioners filed rate increases on sales then being made pursuant to the temporary authorization. The Commission rejected these tendered filings as unauthorized under the petitioners' operating authority.

Apparently because of CATCO and its progeny,3 petitioners do not defend the original certificate order as reflecting the § 7 requirement of "public convenience and necessity." They maintain, however, that this order was "presumptively valid" and should not have been vacated until P.S.C. of N.Y. had successfully undertaken its burden, after its right to intervene in the § 7 proceedings was upheld by the District of Columbia court, of proving substantive error in the original order as well as the affirmative requirements of the public interest.

I.

The propriety of the Commission's action in vacating its original certificate order must be determined by reference to the court decision upholding the right of P.S.C. of N.Y. to intervene in the proceedings. At the time of that decision, the certificates, although not before the court, had already been issued. The question presented is whether the court intended that those certificates be vacated in order that P.S.C. of N.Y. be allowed to participate in the vindication of the public interest. We think that the court's decision not only authorized but required the Commission to set aside its order and vacate the certificates.

Initially, it is difficult to understand how a litigant, P.S.C. of N.Y. in this case, can adequately exercise its rights as a party to a proceeding without being given an opportunity to participate fully therein. Participation in a proceeding as a party usually includes the right to be present, the right to present witnesses, to cross-examine witnesses presented by the other parties, and generally to support by argument and brief the position it would have the Commission adopt. Here, however, we need not rely on this general understanding as to the rights of a party, because it is clear from the District of Columbia court's opinion, considered in the light of its prior ruling in the consolidated cases with which P.S.C. of N.Y.'s case was heard, that vacation of the certificates was required.

In the prior litigation, the District of Columbia court, speaking through its then Chief Judge Prettyman, explained the effect of an order upholding the right of a party to intervene in Commission proceedings:

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360 U.S. 378 (Supreme Court, 1959)
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376 U.S. 515 (Supreme Court, 1964)
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365 U.S. 880 (Supreme Court, 1961)
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Bluebook (online)
334 F.2d 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-oil-company-v-federal-power-commission-two-cases-hassie-hunt-ca5-1964.