Louisiana Power & Light Company v. White

302 So. 2d 358, 1974 WL 325589
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1975
Docket6261, 6262
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 302 So. 2d 358 (Louisiana Power & Light Company v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisiana Power & Light Company v. White, 302 So. 2d 358, 1974 WL 325589 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

302 So.2d 358 (1974)

LOUISIANA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
v.
Perrin W. WHITE and James M. Hill, Jr.
LOUISIANA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
v.
CRESCENT PROPERTIES CO., INC.

Nos. 6261, 6262.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 3, 1974.
Amended on Rehearing November 7, 1974.
Writs Refused March 7, 1975.

*360 Monroe & Lemann, New Orleans (Andrew P. Carter), New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Charles H. Ryan, Monroe, for defendants-appellants, Perrin W. White and James M. Hill, Jr., and defendant-appellee, Crescent Properties Co., Inc.

Before LEMMON, BOUTALL and SCHOTT, JJ.

SCHOTT, Judge.

These claims were brought by plaintiff, Louisiana Power & Light Company (LP&L) for balances due by defendants, Perrin W. White and James M. Hill, Jr. (White-Hill) and Crescent Properties Co., Inc. (Crescent), for electrical services furnished to them as successive owners of Elmwood Plantation Apartments (Elmwood).

In 1965 White-Hill constructed the east half of Elmwood, consisting of 142 units, to which electricity was furnished by LP&L on the basis of billings to the individual tenants through separate residential meters. Subsequently, White-Hill constructed the west half of Elmwood, consisting of 223 units where, at the request of White-Hill, electric service was furnished on the basis of a master meter and a billing made to White-Hill rather than to the individual tenants. On March 16, 1967. White-Hill formally requested that LP&L convert the system in the east half from the individual meters to a master meter at rates established for commercial accounts (LGS-5 tariff). LP&L refused that request, which was consistent with the position it had taken for several months of negotiations with White-Hill on the subject. A system had been installed wherein the individual tenants had assigned their accounts to White-Hill who received the monthly bills from LP&L for payment, but this was unsatisfactory to White-Hill. On April 20, 1967, White-Hill took the matter to the Louisiana Public Service Commission (LPSC) which, after due proceedings, on December 20, 1967, ordered that:

"Louisiana Power & Light Company serve the Elmwood Plantation Apartments with a system of master reading and on a commercial rate schedule."

In due course this order was affirmed by the Supreme Court in Louisiana Power & Light Company v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, 256 La. 656, 237 So.2d 673, the opinion becoming final on July 30, 1970. Against a backdrop of counter charges between the parties of failure to cooperate with the orders of LPSC and the Court, contempt proceedings against LP&L were initiated in October, 1970, in the 19th Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, resulting in an adjudication of contempt against LP&L and its president. These proceedings were terminated on May 18, 1972, when the court found that these defendants had purged themselves of contempt.

On April 1, 1970, Elmwood was sold by White-Hill to Crescent. The claim against the former is for service furnished from January, 1968, until April 1, 1970, while the claim against the latter is for the period from April 1, 1970, to May 6, 1971.

*361 The suit against White-Hill was filed in March, 1970, and the balance sought was on the basis of residential rates through the individual tenant meters. However, alternative claims were made because of the litigation then pending in the Supreme Court for a sum based upon rates established by a tariff for a single master-metered primary service (MMRA-1 tariff) or a third alternative sum based upon the rates contained in the LGS-5 tariff. A preliminary default judgment was taken by LP&L in October, 1970, and despite an unsuccessful attempt by White-Hill to upset the preliminary default they filed declinatory and dilatory exceptions which included a plea of failure on the part of the plaintiff to make amicable demand since White-Hill had as early as March, 1968, informed LP&L that they were ready and willing to pay for the electrical service upon being billed the proper amount. LP&L countered with a motion to strike these exceptions based upon LSA-C.C.P. Art. 928. When the trial judge denied the latter motion and overruled White-Hill's exceptions, White-Hill filed their answer and a reconventional demand in January, 1971. By then the previous litigation had become final[1] and White-Hill alleged that they would pay for the electrical service on the basis of the LGS-5 rates. They prayed for an order requiring LP&L to render them a statement on that basis for service furnished to all 365 units of Elmwood between April, 1967, and April 1, 1970, subject to credits for payments made during that period; to submit such statement to them for review and verification; to allow a reasonable period of time for them to submit any objections which they might have; and to order them to pay the correct balance but without interest, penalties or court costs.

White-Hill also filed a peremptory exception of res judicata on the basis that with the finalization of the previous litigation it was now established that the master meter LGS-5 tariff was the proper basis for the assessment of charges, and that consequently the two alternative demands of LP&L, based upon the use of the residential tariff or the MMRA tariff, should be dismissed. In a supplemental and amending petition filed on the second day of trial LP&L limited its claim to $27,664.64 on the basis of the LGS-5 tariff for the period December 9, 1967, to April 1, 1970.

In the meantime White-Hill, in a supplemental answer, injected two additional issues, to wit, that the LP&L charges included "demand" charges and "facilities" charges not authorized by law or by LPSC.

Generally, the same issues were included in the litigation against Crescent, but there LP&L raised an additional issue that in June, 1968, LPSC had issued an order promulgating the MMRA-1 tariff to be applicable "with respect to all new customers" and that when the apartment complex was sold to Crescent and it became the recipient of the electrical service it was a new customer within the meaning of that order.

The trial judge awarded LP&L the sum of $14,457.37 against White-Hill without interest but with court costs and in written reasons concluded as follows:

"(2) That the `demand factor charge' is authorized by the LGS-5 tariff which contemplates that this factor be measured by a meter; the defendants were aware that this demand factor was not being measured by a meter and that this charge was not being included in their monthly remittances to the utility and the defendants had agreed to pay this charge when calculated. The Court concludes that the plaintiff's computation of *362 this charge is reasonable, and that this charge was contemplated and agreed to by the litigants when the services were furnished.
"(3) that the effective date that the defendants were entitled to receive electric service at the LGS-5 tariff rate is fixed by the Louisiana Public Service Commission and this Court has no authority to change the effective date of the tariff found applicable by the Commission, and no authority to determine which tariff was applicable at an earlier period; therefore the defendants cannot be given a credit for their payments for electric service during the period from March, 1967, to December, 1967.

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Bluebook (online)
302 So. 2d 358, 1974 WL 325589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-power-light-company-v-white-lactapp-1975.