McPherson v. Pacific Power & Light Co.

296 P.2d 932, 207 Or. 433, 13 P.U.R.3d 604, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 325
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 296 P.2d 932 (McPherson v. Pacific Power & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McPherson v. Pacific Power & Light Co., 296 P.2d 932, 207 Or. 433, 13 P.U.R.3d 604, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 325 (Or. 1956).

Opinion

PERRY, J.

This is a class suit brought on behalf of approximately 50,000 electric power consumers in defendant’s Willamette and Coos Bay Divisions against the Mountain States Power Company to recover the amount of a surcharge which was imposed and collected by the defendant utility during December of 1952 and the spring of 1953, and to restrain and enjoin defendant from collecting any further sums over and above its lawful rates and schedules. From an order of the trial court sustaining defendant’s demurrer and dismissing the complaint, the plaintiffs now appeal.

Effective May 21, 1954, Mountain States Power Company was merged into and became a part of Pacific Power & Light Company, and thereafter its legal existence terminated. Based upon a stipulation of the parties this court on November 12, 1954, ordered that Pacific Power & Light Company be substituted as the party defendant herein. However, in order to avoid confusion we shall continue to refer to Mountain States Power Company as such rather than Pacific Power & Light Company wherever reference to such company appears.

At the time of the oral argument on the demurrer, the defendant requested the lower court to take judicial notice of certain records of the Public Utilities Commission. It is now agreed by the parties that these documents shall be considered as a part of the record. These records reveal that on September 5,1951, defendant filed with the Public Utilities Commissioner (hereinafter referred to as Commissioner) an application *436 for authority to apply temporary and flexible rate surcharges to substantially all of its schedules. The application pointed out that current consideration indicated that adverse water conditions in the northwest would necessitate the purchase of an abnormally large quantity of steam-generated electric energy at a substantially higher cost than the hydro-generated energy available under normal conditions to maintain normal operations. The defendant company proposed that a surcharge be applied to bills each month to recover the estimated amount of such excess steam costs beginning with the October billings, to be adjusted from month to month thereafter as soon as the actual excess cost for such month became known. This schedule and application were suspended and a hearing was set for September 17, 1951, which resulted in the following PUC Oregon Order No. 28235 issued October 2, 1951:

“BEFORE THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OREGON
“In the Matter of the Suspension of) Emergency Rate Surcharge filed by) TT rp -, o Mountain States Power Company.) U-b -ibis (On the Commissioner’s own motion.))
‘ ‘ The above entitled matter came on for hearing, pursuant to notice, * * *.
“Whereupon evidence was introduced, the hearing concluded, and the matter submitted for determination. Based on the record, evidence, and law in the matter, the Commission makes and enters the following findings, conclusions, and order, to-wit:
“FINDINGS
“That Mountain States Power Company is a member of the Northwest Power Pool, which has as its prime purpose the maximum utilization of all *437 electrical generating facilities by the interconnection of all the major plants in the Pacific Northwest, including federal, municipal, and private utility plants; that the now existing and anticipated reduction in stream flow makes it necessary to operate, for the benefit of the Pool, the available steam generating facilities of the Pool members on an ‘ around-the-clock' basis in order to alleviate the shortage created by the dry period. That the normal use of steam plant energy is for peaking and standby reserve purposes as the cost of steam plant energy is much greater than the cost of hydro energy.
“That, in order to cover the estimated excess costs of steam energy during the periods of acute hydro-power shortage, Mountain States Power Company, on September 5, 1951, filed an Emergency Eate Surcharge to become effective on less than statutory notice.
“That the surcharge, as filed, would be applied on a percentage increase basis to practically all electric bills sent out by the Company, without changing the present basis rate schedules, beginning with the October 1951 billing cycle period, with the amount of the surcharge to be on an estimated basis as determined by the Company; that, when the actual excess costs were known, the percentage would be adjusted so that at the end of the period, the Company would recoup the excess energy costs actually experienced.
“That the filing proposes that the percentage surcharge would apply uniformly to practically all customers of the Company in the Willamette Valley District and the North Lincoln District, with the exception of that area served in competition with the City of Springfield, Lane County, Oregon.
“That, in compliance with Sections 112-4,134 and 112-4,135, OCLA, the Emergency Eate Surcharge as filed by the Mountain States Power Company was suspended for a period not to exceed ninety days from September 6, 1951, and a hearing set for *438 September 17, 1951, by PUC Oregon Order No. 28027.
"That it is possible to determine on an actual basis the percentage increase to be applied, and that the surcharge should be applied on the basis of actual experience of the Company or on the known obligations committed by the Company in lieu of permitting it to be applied on the basis of an estimate as set out in the proposed filing.
"That the surcharge payments by the customers on an over-all basis should not exceed actual excess costs of electrical energy as the result of inadequate water supply, and that only those excess costs brought about by the operations of the steam plants will be considered and only in the event that the Company’s earning position cannot absorb the charges placed upon it by such operation.
"That the surcharge should apply to all customers of the Mountain States Power Company in its Willamette Valley District and North Lincoln County District, with the exception of service for city street lighting and for that area served in competition with the City of Springfield, Lane County, Oregon.
"That the conditions now facing the utilities, brought about by the deficiency in the water supply, will be temporary, and the surcharge as applied must be considered from the standpoint of meeting the emergency that now confronts the members of the Power Pool.
"That, in order to show the actual results of operation for the year 1951, the Company should defer the closing of its books for the year 1951 to permit the inclusion in the accounts of the surcharge collected in 1952 covering the excess costs incurred in 1951.
"CONCLUSIONS
"1. That the filing of the Mountain States Power Company as submitted on September 5, 1951, should be denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 P.2d 932, 207 Or. 433, 13 P.U.R.3d 604, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpherson-v-pacific-power-light-co-or-1956.