Mississippi River Fuel Corporation v. Federal Power Commission, Illinois Power Company, Laclede Gas Company, Midsouth Gas Company, Intervenors

281 F.2d 919
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1960
Docket15167_1
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 281 F.2d 919 (Mississippi River Fuel Corporation v. Federal Power Commission, Illinois Power Company, Laclede Gas Company, Midsouth Gas Company, Intervenors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi River Fuel Corporation v. Federal Power Commission, Illinois Power Company, Laclede Gas Company, Midsouth Gas Company, Intervenors, 281 F.2d 919 (D.C. Cir. 1960).

Opinion

BURGER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by Mississippi River Fuel Corp. (Mississippi), a natural gas pipeline company, from an order of the Federal Power Commission (Commission) directing Mississippi to make certain rate reductions, and pay certain refunds, to the intervenors, Illinois Power Co., Laclede Gas Co., and MidSouth Gas Co.

The controversy arises out of Mississippi’s position as middleman in the sale of gas. Mississippi purchases gas from United Gas Pipe Line Co. (United) and in turn sells gas to utility customers, among them the intervenors. It is obvious, of course, that the cost of gas supplied by United to Mississippi has a direct impact on the price of that gas to the intervenors. The present problem emerges from the fact that Mississippi was engaged in rate disputes during approximately the same period both as to the cost of its gas from United, and as to the price which it sought to charge in-tervenors on resale. These proceedings were carried on independently. A narration of their history is necessary.

Mississippi v. Intervenors

During the years 1951 and 1952 Mississippi filed two proposed rate increases for gas sold to intervenors. 1 Both increases were eventually disallowed by the Commission. 2 However, disallowance of the second increase, which envisioned a tariff of $2.00/mcf demand and .18/mcf commodity charge, was reversed by the Third Circuit, 3 and the cause remanded. Mississippi was permitted to move that the increase be made effective at once, subject to refund, and subject also to the Commission’s right to hold hearings on the new schedule.

Mississippi then requested a settlement conference and a settlement was ultimately negotiated (Mississippi-Inter-venor settlement) which set an applicable rate, effective April 10, 1953, of $1.80 demand and a .17 commodity charge. 4 (Schedule F-l). One of the difficulties met in gaining this agreement was that Mississippi was even then embroiled in a rate dispute with United, its principal supplier. United was seeking a higher rate schedule (Dockets G-2019 and G-1142) for gas sold to Mississippi and, in fact, the higher rates were being collected subject to refund. Since the possibility existed that this higher tariff might be reduced after the extensive hearings being held in those dockets, two provisions were inserted in the Mississippi-Intervenor settlement decree which in substance provided:

(a) If United was required by the Commission in Docket G-2019 to refund to Mississippi any part of the charges then being paid to United by Mississippi, Mississippi would refund to its utility customers that portion of the refund attributable to gas purchased from United by Mis *922 sissippi and resold to Mississippi’s customers. (Paragraph VI.) 5
(b) If United was required to reduce its rates charged to Mississippi as a result of the proceedings in Dockets G-2019 and G — 1142, Mississippi would then file proportionately reduced schedule F-l rates so as to pass the proper amount of United’s reduction on to the inter-venors. (Paragraph VII.) 6

This settlement was approved by the Commission on June 3, 1953, 7 and from April 10, 1953, onward Mississippi charged intervenors on the basis of the F-l schedule. No increase in that rate was sought by Mississipi until May 1, 1958, which increase went into effect on November 1, 1958. (Docket No. G-15174).

Mississippi v. United

The Dockets mentioned in the Mississippi-Intervenor settlement evolved out of disputes between United and Mississippi regarding the propriety of United’s gas charges. Docket G-1142 was an investigation of United’s rate schedule begun by the Commission in 1948. One of the rates there under scrutiny was Schedule PL-2, which called for payment by Mississippi of $1.30/mef demand charge per month and ,12%/mcf commodity charge. In addition, due to peculiarities not here pertinent, Mississippi was also being billed for a portion of the United gas it received under another schedule, PL-3. This rate was the result of a filing made by United in Docket G-2019 seeking a tariff of .65/mcf demand and ,09/mcf commodity charge. 8 Though hearings regarding the propriety of both the PL-2 and PL-3 rates were in progress, both rates were in force at the time the Mississippi-Intervenor settlement was being negotiated. It was the possibility of their reduction that led to the inclusion in that settlement of the provisions whereby reduction in United’s PL-2 and PL-3 rates would obligate Mississippi to reduce its own F-l Schedule to the intervenors.

The hearings regarding rates PL-2 and PL-3 culminated in a Commission order of November 8, 1955, which (1) replaced the two United-Mississippi rates with one uniform tariff; and (2) ordered this uniform tariff to be .75/mcf demand and .10/mcf commodity charge. 9 (Schedule PL-C). Though this rate represented a substantial reduction of the old PL-2 rate, Mississippi nevertheless petitioned this court for review. 10 We vacated the November 8 order, and remanded the cause to the Commission. 11

During the subsequent proceedings a settlement was finally reached between United and Mississippi in which Mississippi agreed to accept the PL-C rate as embodied in the Commission’s November 8 order. That rate retroactively replaced *923 United’s PL-2 and PL-3 rates as of November 8, 1955, and Dockets G-1142 and G-2019 were finally terminated by the Commission’s United-Mississippi settlement order of September 11, 1958. 12

The Present Controversy

The retroactive tariff reduction embodied in Mississippi’s acceptance of schedule PL-C (,75/mcf and ,10/mcf) meant that United was obligated to refund certain amounts to Mississippi, those amounts being the difference between the PL-C rate and the charges collected under the superseded PL-2 and PL-3 rates after the effective date of the PL-C schedule. (November 8, 1955). Similarly, the termination of Dockets G-1142 and G-2019 triggered Mississippi’s obligation under the Mississippi-Intervenor settlement to reduce its F-l schedule and credit Intervenors with the proper proportion of that reduction.

Here, however, the time factor becomes highly important. Though the United-Mississippi accord did not become final until September 11, 1958, the PL-C charges therein adopted were made retroactive to November 8, 1955.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 F.2d 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-river-fuel-corporation-v-federal-power-commission-illinois-cadc-1960.