Land Title Bank v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

10 A.2d 843, 138 Pa. Super. 544, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 388
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 30, 1940
DocketAppeal, No. 13
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 843 (Land Title Bank v. Pennsylvania Public Utility 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
Land Title Bank v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 10 A.2d 843, 138 Pa. Super. 544, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 388 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtpeld, J.,

This is an appeal from the action of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission denying appellant the right to purchase electric service under a wholesale rate contained in the tariff filed by the respondent electric company.

Appellant owns and operates an apartment development known as Villa D’Este, located in Upper Darby [546]*546Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. This development consists of 264 apartments constructed and operated as a group.

Respondent now meters each apartment separately and bills at . its “residence rate”, although these bills (with few exceptions) are sent to and paid, not by the individual tenants of the apartments, but by appellant.

On October 31, 1934, appellant demanded that respondent furnish electric service for the entire development metered at a single point under respondent’s W.L.P. (wholesale light and power) rate. Respondent made several tests which show that the W.L.P. rate would result in substantial reduction. Respondent refused appellant’s demand and on October 28, 1935, appellant filed a complaint with the Public Service Commission to compel respondent to grant appellant the W.L.P. rate. The case was heard and argued before the Public Service Commission but that Commission went out of existence without deciding the case, and on March 7, 1938, the newly created Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission entered anj order dismissing the complaint. A petition for rehearing and reargument was presented and dismissed on October 10, 1938.

It is agreed that as far as the quantity of consumption is concerned, appellant meets the requirements of the tariff but the Commission denied that appellant was a “customer” within the meaning of the tariff. :

By stipulation, made part of the record, complainant and respondent agreed on most of the facts deemed by either to be relevant and material.

Sometime in 1926, John H. McClatchy, a real estate developer, purchased a tract of land in Upper Darby Township, Delaware County. In the same year, he received permits for construction of dwellings to be erected on this tract of land. Pursuant to the authority granted by these permits he built 66 structural units which were divided into 132 vertical duplex dwellings or 264 apartments now known as the “Villa D’Este”.

[547]*547The Villa D’Este Development is described as follows: One apartment section parallels the south side of Glenthorne Boad; another section directly south and paralleling the former with an open court between is on the northern side of Badbourne Boad; another section paralleling the above two sections is on the south side of Badbourne Boad; another section northwest of the intersection of Glenthorne Boad and Guilford Boad runs in a northerly and southerly direction; and the last section is northeast of the intersection of Glenthorne Boad and Alderbrook Boad paralleling the latter road, and runs approximately in a northeasterly-southwesterly direction.

While the structures were in the course of construction, the said John H. McGlatchy made application to the Delaware County Electric Company, since merged into the respondent company, requesting provision of the necessary facilities for electric service to the said development. The application contemplated the separate supply and separate metering of electricity by the electric company to each of the 264 apartments or residences. Pursuant to this request, the Delaware County Electric Company installed the necessary equipment and the requested service has been maintained since that date. Intervenor’s investment for the installation of this service exceeded $8500.

Prior to July 30, 1926, the said John H. McClatchy, placed upon each vertical half of each of the 66 apartment structures, that is to say, upon each of the 132 vertical duplex dwelling structures, first and second mortgages. The first mortgages are owned by various unrelated entities. The second mortgages are owned by four separate and unrelated building and loan associations, the properties to which the mortgages appertain not being contiguous.

On July 30, 1926, and subsequent to the placing of the mortgages, the said John H. McClathy, and Mary [548]*548E., his wife, conveyed the property to The Land Title and Trust Company by deed.

On August 2, 1926, a certain agreement of trust was executed wherein the said John H. McClatchy and Mary E., his wife, were parties of the first part, and the Land Title & Trust Company was party of the second part, and the holders of certificates under the terms of the agreement and their assigns were parties of the third part.

The trustee had the power and duty to collect certain charges from the certificate holders and allocate the charges so collected for payment of taxes, mortgage interest, insurance, building and loan dues, interest and premium, janitorial service, and for making ordinary repairs necessary to maintain the external structure. The trustee also had the authority to refinance the mortgages for the same amount if refinancing was necessary.

The rights and interests of the various Certificate Holders áre stated in the trust) agreement and the several schedules appended and endorsed thereon as follows: “This certifies that ...... as holder of one of these certificates is (or are) entitled to the exclusive ownership and occupancy of apartment ...... of Apartment House No.......under the terms of the Deed of Trust.”

All Certificates of Ownership but 12 were issued to purchasers who had paid the said John H. McClatchy. These remaining 12 were issued in the name of John Dolan, straw man for the said John H. McClatchy. After a time, and from time to time, holders of various ownership certificates defaulted in the payment of the monthly charges due under the Agreement of Trust. As a consequence of the defaults by the various certificate holders the Trustee exposed for sale at public auction the equitable interests of the defaulting parties, including the equitable interests in their shares of building and loan stock. The Ownership Certificates were struck down at said public auction to the said John H. Me[549]*549Clatcliy or to Ms nominee or to the said Trustee or to its nominee. At a later date, because of the numerous defaults by certificate holders, various of the second mortgages covering the vertical premises as aforesaid, became in default. As a result of the defaults in the second mortgages, an agreement was entered into on December 21,1933, between the said John H. McClatchy and Mary E., his wife, the Trustee and all the second mortgagee building and loan associations. This agreement, in essence, provided that the said John H. MeClatchy transfer to the respective mortgagee building and loan associations the “Ownership Certificates” acquired by him or for him in the various public auctions and the twelve “Ownership Certificates” issued to John Dolan, straw man for John H. McClatchy, as herein earlier mentioned, and also transfer all his right, title and interest under the Trust Agreement to the holders of the second mortgages. The agreement of December 21, 1933, in addition, provided that The Real Estate Land Title & Trust Company should collect “from the occupants of the various apartments the sums payable by them either as Certificate Holders or as Lessee of the apartments.” The sums collected from the “Certificate Holders shall be applied as heretofore in accordance with the Agreement of Trust.

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10 A.2d 843, 138 Pa. Super. 544, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-title-bank-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1940.