M. W. Smith Lbr. Co. v. Alabama Public Service Commission

24 So. 2d 409, 247 Ala. 318, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 17, 1946
Docket3 Div. 438, 439.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 409 (M. W. Smith Lbr. Co. v. Alabama Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. W. Smith Lbr. Co. v. Alabama Public Service Commission, 24 So. 2d 409, 247 Ala. 318, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 9 (Ala. 1946).

Opinions

GARDNER, Chief Justice.

The Alabama Public Service Commission, on December 29, 1944, found that the gross revenues of the Alabama Power *320 Company for 1944 were excessive by approximately $600,000, and that a reduction therein should be effected by refunding the December, 1944 bill of every customer in its residential and street lighting classifications. The order recites that this finding was the result of a hearing by the Commission on March 12, 1943, and a continuous investigation thereafter by the Commission of the rates of the Alabama Power Company, and of.various conferences from time to time with the representatives of the company. The order contains the further recital as to the different reductions effected during this period and the elimination of certain differentials which the Commission considered unjustified, the details of which need not be here stated. It contains the following further important recitals:

“Continuing its investigation of the rates and charges of respondent, it now appears to the Commission from the present available estimate of the earnings of respondent for the year 1944, including particularly the Federal Income and Excess Profits Taxes, that a further reduction in the gross revenues for 1944 may be made.
“In .view of present unsettled business conditions generally, the Commission is of the opinion that such further reduction should be effected by a consumer credit or refund hereinafter provided.
“In the determination of which classes of consumers to whom the credit or refund should be given, the Commission has given consideration to the fact that the major reductions in respondent’s retail rates heretofore effected under this Order of Investigation have been applicable to service other than residential electric and municipal street lighting. With respect to industrial service, this is currently being generally rendered at the lowest average cost per KWH to the' consumer in the Company’s history.
“The Commission is therefore of the opinion that the credit or refund to be made should apply to the electric residential and municipal street lighting consumers of respondent and should be equivalent to 100% of the December, 1944 bills of all such consumers. It is further the opinion of the Commission that the credit applied to each residential and street lighting consumer’s account for December, 1944 bill shall not embrace a service period of more than thirty-one (31) days. It is estimated that this order will effect a savings of approximately $580,000.00 to respondent’s residental electric consumers and approximately $20,000.00 to its municipal street lighting consumers.”

Up to the time of making the order of December 29, 1944, there were no parties to the proceedings before the Alabama Public Service Commission except the Commission itself and the Alabama Power Company, the latter consenting thereto. But on January 15, 1945, the M. W. Smith Lumber Company, a partnership, filed with the Commission their petition for leave to intervene in said matter, protesting the entry of such order and charging its invalidity upon various grounds. The petition contained an alternative prayer that if intervention be disallowed the petition be received as an independent complaint filed pursuant to Sec. 57, Title 48, Code 1940, to the effect that compliance by the Power Company with the order would “be unjust, unreasonable, and discriminatory, and will impair the ability of the Power Company to render service and will distort its operating statistics and violate lawful accounting regulations by improper surrender of revenue accrued or paid for past services rendered.”

The Power Company objected to the allowance of the petition for intervention and moved to strike it upon various grounds. The Alabama League of Municipalities also appeared and moved to dismiss the petition upon the same line of reasoning as presented in the motion of the Alabama Power Company. The Commission set the petition for leave to intervene down for hearing on February 14, 1945, at which time attorneys for petitioners M. W. Smith Lumber Company, the Alabama Power Company, and the Alabama League of Municipalities appeared and presented arguments to sustain their various contentions.

The Commission entertained the view that the petition failed to allege such facts as to show that the petitioners have any direct financial interest, and stated to counsel that a period of ten days would be given in which to amend the petition in that respect. No such amendment was filed. Thereupon the Commission sustained the motion and objections, and denied the petition to intervene. An appeal was then prosecuted to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, where the holding was that the appellants had no interest in the order from which the appeal was attempted to be taken and that the appeal *321 be dismissed. It is from this order that the appeal is prosecuted to this Court.

Counsel for appellants also presented to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County a petition for writ of certiorari to review the order of the Commission of December 29, 1944, which appears, merely to have been another method of attack on such order. Objections were duly interposed by demurrer and otherwise to this petition, which were sustained and the petition for certiorari dismissed. An appeal is likewise prosecuted from this ruling of the court, and the two records are here consolidated and considered as controlled by the same principles.

The denial of relief to petitioners before the Commission was rested upon the theory that as commercial users of electric power they were unaffected by the order of December 29, 1944, and therefore were not entitled to intervene or otherwise question said order. As to the question of intervention, Sec. 65, Title 48, Code 1940, provides as follows: “Every person, firm, corporation, co-partnership, association, or organization affected thereby may by petition intervene and become a party to any proceeding before the commission.”

. The words in the above-cited statute “affected thereby” are pertinent to the question here under consideration. This statute is but the expression of the general rule as expressed in numerous decisions. Illustrative, is the following from Poyner v. Whiddon, 234 Ala. 168, 174 So. 507, 510: “To entitle a party to invoke the court’s jurisdiction to review the action of a subordinate court or body, by the writ of certiorari, he must show that he is a party to the proceeding or ‘that he has a personal interest in the subject-matter, and not a mere public interest, in common with the general public.’ ”

Speaking to a like principle, this Court in City of Birmingham v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 234 Ala. 526, 176 So. 301, 303, observed: “It may be stated as a well settled general rule that the existence of an actual controversy is an essential requisite to appellate jurisdiction. * * * Since an actual controversy is necessary, it is not within the province of appellate courts to decide abstract, hypothetical, or moot questions, disconnected from the granting of actual relief or-from the determination of which no practical relief can follow.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 409, 247 Ala. 318, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-w-smith-lbr-co-v-alabama-public-service-commission-ala-1946.