Manning v. Newville Water Co.

169 A. 254, 111 Pa. Super. 229, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 393
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1933
DocketAppeal 16
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 A. 254 (Manning v. Newville Water Co.) 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
Manning v. Newville Water Co., 169 A. 254, 111 Pa. Super. 229, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 393 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

James, J.,

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in an *231 amicable action in assumpsit on a case stated to collect awards of reparation made by the Public Service Commission against tbe defendant company in favor of the 119 legal plaintiffs who have assigned their claims to the use-plaintiff.

In May, 1927 the defendant company filed its tariff P. S. C. Pa. No. 5 to become effective on July 1, 1927, superseding the tariff Pi S. C. Pa. No. 4 then in effect and increasing the rates for water to its consumers. On June 2, 1927 a public town .meeting of the consumers was called and held in the Borough of New-ville to consider and take action on the proposed increase of the water rates. At this meeting James W. Sharp, Paul E. Spangler, W. II. McCrea, E. W. James and B.. L. Shenk, the latter three being legal plaintiffs herein, were appointed a committee to file, as representatives and trustees of all the consumers of the defendant company, a complaint against the proposed rate increase. On June 30, 1927, prior to the effective date of defendant’s tariff No. 5 the committee filed a complaint alleging that the proposed rates were and would be unjust and unreasonable, which complaint was signed by the members of the committee as individuals and contained no recital of the action of the consumers or averment that the plaintiffs were acting in a representative capacity. On October 11, 1927, the Public Service Commission granted the borough leave to intervene as party complainant on the condition that such intervention should not broaden the scope of the investigation. An answer was filed to the complaint, hearings were had and a final report and order was made by the Public Service Commission on April 23, 1929 sustaining the complaints, cancelling tariff No. 5 and reinstating the tariff No. 4 as of May 1,1929. No appeal was taken by the defendant company or any of the complainants from the said report and order.

*232 The rates charged and collected from the plaintiffs by the defendant company during the period tariff No. 5 ¡was in .effect, namely from July 1, 1927 to May 1, 1929, were unjust and unreasonable to the extent which they exceeded the rates of tariff No. 4. During this period the plaintiffs had paid, under protest to the defendant company, in excess of the reasonable rates fixed by the Public Service Commission, the total sum of $1,825.39, which sum is agreed upon as the total amount of all excess payments made by the plaintiffs. Defendant admits and agrees to the excess payments made by plaintiffs, E. W. James, W. H. Mc-Crea and R L. Shenk in the sum of $44.58, and the excess payments made by the other plaintiffs subsequent to March 4, 1929 in the sum of $317.71, amounting to $362.29, as just and reasonable claims. On March 4,1931, plaintiffs filed their 119 individual petitions for reparations for the excess amounts paid by them individually; answers were filed, hearings were held and on October 13, 1931 the Public Service Commission made its report and order determining that the petitioners were entitled to reparation for the excess payments made on the unreasonable rates paid by them from July 1, 1927 to May 1, 1929 and ordered the defendant company to pay to the plaintiffs named in the order, within thirty days from the date of service of the order, the total sums set forth opposite the name of each party.

Appellant has raised three questions. 1. That the cause of action accrued upon the payment of the excessive rates. 2. That no reparation can be awarded except to those who within two years of excessive payment complained to or petitioned the commission. 3. That the agency of the individual complainants, if any existed, was not disclosed to the commission or the company and therefore is of no effect. These questions will be discussed in their order.

*233 The questions involved relate entirely to a construction of Article V, Sec. 5 of the Public Service Law of July 26, 19131, P. L. 1374, which provides: “If, after hearing, upon complaint or upon its own motion, the commission shall determine that any rates which have been collected,......by any public service company complained of,------- were unjust and unreasonable ......the commission shall, upon petition, have the power and authority to make an order for reparation, awarding and directing the payment to any such complainant, petitioner, within a reasonable time specified in the order, of the amount of damages sustained in consequence of said unjust, unreasonable, or unlawful collections,......of such public service company: Provided, That such damages have been actually sustained by ,such complainant petitioner ......

“No reparation, as herein provided, shall be awarded by the commission unless the complaint or petition shall have been filed with it within two years from the time when the cause of action accrued. A suit for the enforcement of an order directing such payment shall be filed in the said court of common pleas within one year from the date of the order, and not after.

“No action shall be brought in any court on account of the wrongs or injuries referred to in this section, unless and until the commission shall have determined that the rate, regulation, classification, practice, act, or omission in question was unjust, unreasonable, or unjustly discriminatory or unduly or unreasonably preferential, or in excess of the rates contained in the said tariffs or schedules, and, then, only to recover such damages as may have been awarded and directed to be paid by the commission in said order.”

The learned court below held that the cause of action for reparation claims founded on excess payments made on proposed rates attacked before the effective *234 date, accrues and the two-year period of limitation fixed by the statute, begins to run on the effective date of the final order determining that the proposed rates are unjust and unreasonable; and that a single complaint against proposed rates filed before the effective date of the tariff inures to the benefit of all consumers affected, and stays the running of the statutory limitation and satisfies the requirements of the statute. Appellant contends that the cause of action accrues on the date the consumer pays the unjust and unreasonable rate and that each such payment creates a new cause of action; that consumers who pay the unreasonable rate are limited to the two-year period in which they may ash for reparation and that only the original complainant is entitled to reparation for the two-year period when the reparation claim is filed more than two years subsequent to the date of the payment of the unreasonable rate.

It has been repeatedly held that the last tariff rate published as provided by law is the legal rate and having satisfied every requirement of the act it has become a collectible, suable rate until it is set aside by the method provided in the act: Suburban Water Co. v. Oakmont Boro., 268 Pa. 243, 248, 252, 110 A. 778.

The tariff which was filed by the defendant company became an effective legal rate on July 1,1927 and until by order of the Public Service Commission this rate was declared to be unreasonable, the consumer was obliged to pay the rate as provided by the tariff. Prom July 1, 1927 until May 1, 1929 the rates as fixed by the tariff No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 A. 254, 111 Pa. Super. 229, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-newville-water-co-pasuperct-1933.