Kast v. Public Service Commission

189 A. 526, 125 Pa. Super. 184, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 1936
DocketAppeal, 96
StatusPublished

This text of 189 A. 526 (Kast v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kast v. Public Service Commission, 189 A. 526, 125 Pa. Super. 184, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

In January, 1935, Win. J. East, acting as attorney in fact for J. M. Anderson, (hereinafter referred to as the appellant), filed a complaint with the Public Service Commission against the Philadelphia Electric Company, (hereinafter called the company), alleging undue and unreasonable discrimination by the company in refusing to admit appellant into a certain class of its customers hereinafter described. In substance, the complaint charged a violation of Article III, Section 8, of our Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P. L. 1374, 66 PS §262, by which it is declared, inter alia, that it shall be unlawful for any public service company to charge any person or corporation for any service rendered a greater or less compensation than it receives from any other person or corporation for a like service under substantially similar circumstances and conditions, or to subject any person or corporation to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage in any respect.

After a full hearing and investigation, the commission dismissed the complaint and we now have this appeal by the complainant, in which the company was permitted to intervene as a party appellee. Appellant is the owner of an eight story office building at No. 328 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, known as the “Brown Building” and is a consumer of electric current, both for lighting and power uses. The building was unoccupied by tenants until May or June, 1933, but appellant became a customer of the company in November, 1932. Shortly thereafter he had a single phase lighting load of 3.550 kilowatts, which by July 1934 had increased to a connected lighting and appliance load of 17.5 kilowatts. He also had a polyphase motor or power load of 27.375 kiloAvatts Avhich subsequently in *187 creased to some extent. Under the tariffs of the company then in effect, appellant was billed under schedule “B” for light, and “C” for power. No criticism is made relative to appellant’s original classification under those schedules.

Effective March 2, 1933, the company made a radical change in its “Electric—P. S. C. Pa. No. 7.” It consisted in the elimination of the distinction between light and power rates and the substitution of classifications distinguishing between single phase and polyphase service. The prior “B” and “C” rates were withdrawn and a new and reduced retail rate designated “RLP— Retail Light and Power” substituted. Later, January 1935, a further reduction was made by a schedule designated “GLP—General Light and Power Rate,” providing for the furnishing of light or power, or both, at retail. Appellant has received the benefit of these reductions.

The controversy which gave rise to these proceedings had its origin in the fact that the schedule put into effect on March 2, 1933, contained a new wholesale polyphase light and power rate designated “WLP— Wholesale Light and Power.” Under Section 13 of the company’s Rules and Regulations, forming a part of its No. 7 schedule and relating to “Customer’s Use of Service,” a paragraph (No. 5) was included and entitled “Unbalanced Load.” It reads: “The customer shall at all times take, and use, energy in such manner that the load will be balanced between phases to within nominally 10%. In the event of unbalanced polyphase loads, the company reserves the right to require the customer to make the necessary changes at his expense to correct the unsatisfactory condition, or to compute the demand used for billing purposes on the assumption that the load on each phase is equal to that on the greater phase.” The reasonableness of this rule is not questioned.

*188 In November, 1931, appellant applied to the company for service at tbe above mentioned wholesale rate, designated “WLP”. As we read the record, and avoiding so far as possible the use of technical terms, the company refused his application for service under that rate upon the gro'und that although he had rewired his building subsequent to the effective date of the “WLP” rate he did not “balance” his load as required by the above quoted rule. In other words, the company admits in its answer that the building is “wired standard for the electric service which said building is now receiving under Rate GLP,” but does not have a standard installation which would enable appellant to comply with its “unbalanced load” requirements. Appellant’s charge of discrimination seems to be based chiefly upon averments to the effect that a large number of other customers formerly served under a wholesale rate, designated as “D-Max” and superseded by “WLP”, were brought under and given the advantage of the new “WLP” rate, but appellant was denied the privilege thus conferred upon certain other customers.

The company admits that one of the changes made in its tariffs on March 2, 1933,—the abolition of its former “D-Max” wholesale rate—left its customers under that rate—approximately 1,200 in number—in a position requiring special consideration.

The members of that group who did not have balanced load wiring could rewire to conform with the requirements of the rule foimiing part of the new wholesale schedule, “WLP”, or they could go under the retail schedule “RLP”, and its reduced successor, “GLP”. These customers are referred to in the testimony and record as a “transitional” group and it is into this group that appellant demands admission, although he was never under the old “D-Max” rate.

The findings of the commission upon this aspect of the case read: “When the wholesale rate ‘D-Max’ was *189 withdrawn there was a residue of approximately 1,200 customers to be disposed of; 200, to their advantage, were transferred to the new and reduced retail rate ‘RLP’, the same rate under which complainant [appellant] received his service at that time. There was a question as to whether or not the remaining 1,000 wholesale consumers fully met the requirements of the unbalanced load rule as it stood after the revision. Because these consumers had always been properly classified as wholesale consumers and had always developed their load conditions in conformity with the rules of respondent [company] in force from time to time, respondent resolved the doubts in favor of the consumers and classified this group of approximately 1,000 consumers on the ‘WLP’ or wholesale rate. This policy was with the avowed intention of clearing the situation either through further modifications of the rate schedules or by rearrangement of load conditions within the consumer’s property, if and when such consumer made any change in his load or wiring conditions. In line with this policy, when the retail rate ‘RLP’ was reduced and changed to rate ‘GLP’, approximately 100 more of the wholesale consumers on the ‘WLP’ rate who had come over from the former wholesale rate ‘D-Max’ were transferred to the retail classification.......

“The retail rate under which complainant is classified is designed to meet the condition where respondent obtains the desired degree of balance between consumers’ loads within its own distribution system. The wholesale rate ‘WLP’, on the other hand, is designed to apply to those consumers who balance their own loads and thus obtain from respondent a service which can be more economically rendered, and at a rate more attractive to them.......

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Related

Spear & Co. v. Pub. Serv. Com.
161 A. 441 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 A. 526, 125 Pa. Super. 184, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kast-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1936.