Kulp v. Public Service Commission

82 Pa. Super. 83, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 238
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1923
DocketAppeal, 118
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 82 Pa. Super. 83 (Kulp 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
Kulp v. Public Service Commission, 82 Pa. Super. 83, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 238 (Pa. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

This appeal is from an order of the Public Service Commission approving the appropriation, (under the provisions of the Act of May 21, 1921, P. L. 1057), by the intervening appellee, hereinafter called Suburban Company, of a right-of-way through private property for the construction, operation and maintenance of an electric transmission line, and granting the certificate of *86 public convenience required therefor. Appellants are owners of property in Upper Gwynedd Township, Montgomery County, through which the proposed transmission line will pass.

Suburban Company is a corporation formed for the supply of light, heat and power by electricity, by the merger of a number of companies organized for the like purpose, and operating prior to the effective date of the Public Service Company Law. Its consolidated district included Upper Gwynedd Township aforesaid and the adjoining Township of Montgomery, prior to January 1,1914, so that it was, as respects said entire district, a corporation actually doing business and as such not requiring a certificate of public convenience from the commission before it could perform its charter obligations in any portion of said district: Penna. Utilities Co. v. P. S. C., 69 Pa. Superior Ct. 612; Harmony Electric Co. v. P. S. C., 78 Pa. Superior Ct. 271. Under such circumstances the recent case of Biddle v. P. S. C., 81 Pa. Superior Ct. 350, is decisive of the right of Suburban Company to construct, operate and maintain its transmission line from its generating station at Cromby, East Pikeland Township, Chester County, up to and through Upper Gwynedd Township to Montgomery Township aforesaid and, subject to the approval of the commission, to condemn a right-of-way therefor. Appellants so concede. But they deny the right of Suburban Company to carry the line from Montgomery Township through Warrington Township, Bucks County, to and through Doylestown Township, Bueks County, to the boundary line between Doylestown Township and Doylestown Borough, where the electric current will be delivered to the Bucks County Electric Company for distribution to its customers in Doylestown ‘Township, Doylestown Borough' and perhaps elsewhere in its own territory; and further contend that as its final destination is without lawful warrant the line may not be erected even within Upper Gwynedd Township, where it could ad *87 mittedly be constructed if it went no farther than Montgomery Township. What grounds ,are advanced, in support of this proposition?

(1) Appellants contend that the franchise of the Warrington Township Electric Co. was forfeited for inaction in carrying on its work, under the provisions of section 2 of the Act of May 16, 1889, P. L. 241, amending section 11 of the Act of April 17, 1876, P. L. 30, before its merger with Suburban Company. It is a sufficient answer to this position to say that there is no competent evidence in the record before us that Warrington Township Electric Co. did not proceed in good faith to carry on its work and construct or acquire its necessary buildings, structures, property or improvements within the space of two years from the date of its letters patent. If by arrangement with Suburban Company, it carried on its business in its charter territory and furnished the required service therein to the public, using the lines and facilities of that company, with which it was subsequently merged, it would require more than the meager evidence before us to hold that this was not a fair compliance with the requirements of the statute. But, in any event, these appellants cannot in this proceeding collaterally attack Suburban Company’s franchises or consolidated charter: Curry v. Harmony Electric Co., 251 Pa. 344, 348; Windsor Glass Co. v. Carnegie Co., 204 Pa. 459,462; Olyphant Sewage Co. v. Boro., 196 Pa. 553; Passyunk Ave. B. M. Assn. v. P. S. C., 73 Pa. Superior Ct. 242, 250. Such attack can only be made by the Commonwealth itself in a direct suit. As was said in Western Pa. R. R. Co.’s App., 104 Pa. 399, 407: “The appellant alleges that the appellee has omitted to do something that it ought to have done under its contract with the State, and in consequence of which the State may move to have the contract annulled. Well, let it so be that the Commonwealth may move for a rescission of this contract, yet by what warrant does the Western Pennsylvania Company assume to control the *88 will of the Commonwealth and use the rights of the State for its own purposes?” If the Commonwealth, acting through its appointed agency, the commission, saw fit to consider the action of the Warrington Electric Co. as a compliance with the Act of 1889 and approved its merger with Suburban Company, appellants are not in a position to attack collaterally what the Commonwealth did not see fit to object to in that respect.

(2) Appellants also allege that Suburban Company proposes to sell current to the Bucks County Electric Company for distribution in a field outside of the former’s consolidated territory, and deny its right to do so, citing: Bly v. White Deer Mountain Water Co., 197 Pa. 80. But they overlook the distinction pointed out in Citizens Elec. Ill. Co. v. Lackawanna & W. V. Power Co. 255 Pa. 145, 150, that while water companies, as the law then stood, were restricted to furnishing water to the town, borough, city or district where they might be located, electric companies may furnish light, heat and power to persons, partnerships and corporations residing in or adjacent to the chartered or consolidated terri: tory. The Act of March 19, 1903, P. L. 34, specially authorizes the sale of electrical current by one electric company to another within a district occupied by both or forming part of the chartered or consolidated territory of each. “Nor is there anything in the act to prevent these two quasi public corporations chartered for service in the same territory, from contracting that one was to supply the other with whatever current it might require. Indeed, this is a privilege that the act expressly confers”: Citizens Elec. Ill. Co. v. Lackawanna & W. V. Power Co., supra, p. 153.

If Suburban Company may lawfully sell electrical current to Bucks County Company in Doylest'own Township or Doylestown Borough, it is none of appellants’ concern what the latter may do with it after it is delivered there: Bland v. Tipton Water Co., 222 Pa. 285, 289; the buyer is answerable only to the Commonwealth: *89 Mier v. Citizens Water Co., 250 Pa. 536, 540; Blauch v. Johnstown Water Co., 247 Pa. 71, 79. If this is so with a water company which under its right of eminent domain appropriates and conveys away water which, except for such diversion, would flow past the riparian owner’s property, and thus by such sale deprives him of something that otherwise could be used by him, much more is it applicable to the present case where the only thing appropriated is the right-of-way, and its use, as respects the appellants, is precisely the same whatever Bucks County Company may do with the current it receives; the electrical current purchased by it not being subtracted from some source that would otherwise be open to their use.

Now, Suburban Company’s consolidated district includes both Warrington Township and Doylestown Township. It is of no moment that the district was extended so as to include these townships after the Public Service Company Law went into effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Pa. Super. 83, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kulp-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1923.