Margaret Hunt Hill, Trustee for Hassie Hunt Trust v. Federal Power Commission, Placid Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission

335 F.2d 355, 21 Oil & Gas Rep. 214, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4637
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 1964
Docket20375, 20386
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 335 F.2d 355 (Margaret Hunt Hill, Trustee for Hassie Hunt Trust v. Federal Power Commission, Placid Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret Hunt Hill, Trustee for Hassie Hunt Trust v. Federal Power Commission, Placid Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, 335 F.2d 355, 21 Oil & Gas Rep. 214, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4637 (5th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

The question in this case is whether it is too late for an Agency to declare the standards to be met by its decision holding that they have not been met. The answer, quite obviously, is in the affirmative. That this problem occurs is just further proof of the incessant challenge to the administrative process and the necessity for resourceful *357 ingenuity in the efficient management of it brought about by the first, 1954, Phillips 1 decision holding that producers are subject to the Natural Gas Act. We reverse.

One of the problems, of course, is the fact that with at least a considerable present blessing from the Supreme Court 2 3 the Commission for very good reasons has generally abandoned cost-of-service regulation for area pricing. But every now and then, for some reason thought wise or inescapable, the Commission severs a case or otherwise has to treat it on more “traditional” grounds. Such are these cases. The Producers 3 in May 1962 filed separate § 4(e) 4 applications for a rate increase from 21.50 to 23.50 under a gas purchase contract covering South Louisiana production. 5 The Commission suspended the effectiveness of the rate to December 1, 1962. The applications were consolidated with similar South Louisiana gas rate proceedings, and set for hearing on July 16, 1962. The hearings were concluded in four days, and with an Examiner’s decision bypassed, the Commission, by opinion No. 369, and over the strong dissents of Commissioners Ross and Morgan, on November 30, 1962, granted the motion of the Staff (and certain inter-venors) to dismiss the application for failure to make out a prima facie case. 28 FPC 897. 6 Oddly enough, while presumably holding on the merits that the proposed increased rates were not “just and reasonable,” § 4(e), the Commission expressly stated that the Producers could immediately refile the same proposed increases and start the whole thing over. In the meantime, of course, the dismissal put an end to the right of the Producers to collect the increases subject to refund. This is a practical escape mechanism reflecting an adjustment between traditional common law notions of res judi-cata which are apparently discarded here in order to avoid the triggering of other rate increases as to other producers. We mention it, not to criticize or approve the mechanism as such, but to highlight •at the outset the Commission’s awareness that its final opinion 369 was the first real authoritative declaration of the standards which these producers would have to meet.

*358 The Producers make three principal attacks. The first is that the hearing lacked basic fairness because the standards were never announced until it was all over. The second, under various -headings, is that on the undisputed facts the Producers at least made out a “prima facie” case for the increase. The third is that the right to án increase was established beyond question. We do not get to the second and third branch because it is the Commission, not the reviewing Court, to whom Congress has initially committed the important role of rate review.

In a broad sort of way, the Commission held that the Producers’ proof did not meet the standards laid down in Phillips, 24 FPC 537. 7 Discussed in more detail later on, two principal deviations or deficiencies were found. The first was the use of “sales volume” rather than “production volume” of gas in the allocation of joint oil-gas costs. The second was the failure to include “some gas condensate production in the ‘gas only ;leg’ of the relative cost computation.” It was these two asserted deficiencies which for all practical purposes the Commission found; would alone destroy the “prima facie”- case. Of course there were a number of Others, some of importance, others quité secondary, which we need not specify. The Producers sought, but were denied,, the right to a further hearing to meet or overcome these deficiencies and to supply the proof now determined to be essential. 8

These deficiencies in the rate application asserted by the Commission highlight the Producers’ basic claim: the standards were not announced until the decision which simultaneously held that the proof was insufficient to make out the “prima facie” case under them. The Commission’s answer — or rather, the rationalization of its decision by the General Counsel — is that for all who would read, Phillips was the answer, if not alone, then by contentions which others— intervenors, Staff, etc. — were making in other cases.

We are of the definite view that Phillips 9 was no crystal ball, and the Commission had the -duty at some stage prior to the close of proof to declare what it considered the relevant standards to be.

We need not examine Phillips in detail. The Supreme Court in the 1963 second Phillips case 10 dwelt at length on the Commission’s conclusion in Phillips that the school of hard knocks had demonstrated that the traditional utility-prudent-investment-cost-of-service type of rate regulation was not the answer. 11 Rather, Phillips was a stop-gap decision on out-moded test year figures for this one producer and a general pronounce *359 ment that from here on out, the solution was to he found in area pricing. This got a considerable blessing from the Court which restated what it had long made clear that “just and reasonable” did not tie the Commission to any one method. It was the result, not the route taken, that was important. 12

Probably most significant, the Commission in Phillips, recognizing that allocation was indispensable in the cost of service approach, disclaimed any purpose of laying down in Phillips any fixed standards to be followed in what it hoped would be the very few cost-of-service cases pending the day when all would be washed out by area pricing 13 In the meantime the Commission had itself manifested that Phillips was not a panacea, that for many cases the factors there applied would not be relevant to other situations. 14

Whatever vitality the Commission intended for Phillips as to cost of service rates for producers other than Phillips itself, it is plain that when these hearings were ordered for July 1962, there was no indication what standard was to be applied. The Commission never even so much as breathed the name Phillips and indeed declined categorically to give to the earnest plea of one of the bewildered petitioners 15 anything but the *360

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Bluebook (online)
335 F.2d 355, 21 Oil & Gas Rep. 214, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 4637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margaret-hunt-hill-trustee-for-hassie-hunt-trust-v-federal-power-ca5-1964.