Natural Gas Co. v. Sommerville

166 S.E. 852, 113 W. Va. 100, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 279
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1932
Docket7448
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 166 S.E. 852 (Natural Gas Co. v. Sommerville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Natural Gas Co. v. Sommerville, 166 S.E. 852, 113 W. Va. 100, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 279 (W. Va. 1932).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

This is an original jurisdiction proceeding in prohibition to prevent the prosecution of a chancery suit in the circuit court of Ohio County.

In said suit William P. Wilson and seven other individuals are plaintiffs, and the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia (petitioner herein), the City of Wheeling, the City of Ben-wood, and the Wheeling Chamber of Commerce are defendants. The plaintiffs sue on behalf of themselves and all other customers of said Gas Company which is a public utility furnishing natural gas for domestic and industrial consumption in Wheeling and Benwood and their environs. It is alleged in the bill that the utility has been charging an illegal rate for gas. The main object of the suit is to require of the utility an accounting to its customers ,for the amounts paid it by its customers under the alleged illegal rate in excess of the alleged legal and proper rate. In the instant proceeding (prohibition) the utility (petitioner) prays that the circuit court of Ohio County be prohibited from proceeding further in said chancery suit because of lack o.f jurisdiction.

In October, 1919, the Gas Company (petitioner) filed an application before the Public Service Commission of West Virginia for an increase of rates. By an order entered March 20, 1920, effective April 15, 1920, the commission fixed the rate to be charged by said company for natural gas at forty cents per thousand cubic feet, subject to a discount of two cents per thousand cubic feet if paid on or before the 12th day of the month following that in which the gas was supplied.

*102 In 1922, the Gas Company again petitioned for an increase of rates. This precipitated a long controversy, the outcome of which was an order entered by the commission June 26, 1924, fixing the rate at fifty-two cents per thousand cubic feet, subject to discount of two cents for prompt payment, “said rates to be effective from the meter readings beginning about the 15th day of June, 1924. until the meter readings beginning about the 15th day of December, 1927.” This finding was in pursuance of an agreement entered into between the Gas Company, the City of Wheeling, the City of Benwood, and the Wheeling Chamber of Commerce. Other features of that agreement were that the Gas Company should dismiss its then pending petition for increase of rates; that the Gas Company should, if necessary, in order to furnish a reasonably adequate supply of gas to domestic consumers, expend in its southern district in each fiscal year ending July 31st (subsequent to August 1, 1924), during the term of said agreement, and proportionately for that period between July 1, 1927, and December 31, 1927, in addition to its normal expenditures in the southern district for the extension of gas territory and for the production of additional gas “a sum equal to the increase in gross gas receipts for the said fiscal year ending July 31, 1924, and not exceeding in any one fiscal year the sum of $250,000.”

The plaintiffs in the chancery suit take the position that even if the Public Service Commission’s order of June 26, 1924, fixing a fifty-two cent rate be a lawful order (they do not admit the legality of said order, but challenge it), the rate fixed by said order expired under its own terms December 15, 1927, and therefore they say that the Gas Company should account to its customers for the difference between the forty cent rate and the fifty-two cent rate, from and subsequent to the 15th of December, 1927. It is the contention of the said plaintiffs that if the said order of July 26, 1924, was not legal, then the prior rate of forty cents per thousand cubic feet remained operative, and that if the said order was legal, then, at the expiration date fixed by it, to-wit, December 15, 1927, the forty cent rate was automatically reinstated. If the order of July 26, 1924, was not a lawful order, the plaintiffs claim right of recovery from the date thereof.

*103 The Gas Company contends for the legality of the Public Service Commission’s order of June 26, 1924, and takes the position that the only purpose of the limitation period expiring December 15, 1927, as fixed by said order, was to preclude either the Gas Company or the other parties to the compromise agreement from instituting proceedings for a change of rates prior to December 15, 1927, and that subsequent to said date the said fifty-two cent rate remained in effect until changed by an order of the Public Service Commission. The company takes the further position that no cause of action lies against it by its customers for any portion of sums paid by them for gas, in the absence of a determination by the Public Service Commission that the rate enforced by the company was unreasonable. Therefore, it urges that it is entitled to the writ of prohibition for which it prays in this proceeding.

On the other hand, the plaintiffs in the chancery suit (of respondents herein) take the position that their claim for recovery of excess charges does not involve a question of reasonableness of rates, but rather a question of legality of rates; that the Public Service Commission in the proceeding now pending before it under a petition of the City of Wheeling filed August 14, 1931, for a reduction of rates, may determine the reasonableness of the existing rate from said date, and fix such a rate beginning as of that date as may seem reasonable and just, but that the commission has no authority to pass upon the right of recovery by the customers of the Gas Company for alleged excess collected by it prior to August 14,1931.

In the aforesaid proceeding now pending before the Public Service Commission on the said petition of the City of Wheeling for revision of rates charged by the Gas Company, the said city on October 1, 1931, moved the commission to require the Gas Company “to charge the customers served by it in accordance with the rates prescribed and determined by this commission by an order entered on the 20th day of March, A. D., 1920, in ease No. 947, and that the defendant utility be restrained, inhibited and enjoined from charging the rates set out in an order of this commission entered on the 26th day of June, 1924, in case No. 1361.” By order of November 25,1931, the commission overruled said motion but required of the Gas Company that it “keep and preserve true and accurate ae- *104 counts and records of all monies received by it from its customers in this state so as accurately and completely to show the several amounts received monthly from each of its customers from the rates stated in its tariff, in order that such order may be made and such further proceedings had as are authorized by law and warranted by the facts brought out in the investigation now pending.” The evident purpose of that requirement was to afford basis for recovery of excess from that date, or possibly from the date of the institution of said proceeding, August 14, 1931, if the commission should later determine that the rate being charged by the company was in excess of a reasonable and proper rate. Upon petition of the City of Wheeling to this court for an appeal from the said order of the commission overruling the motion of the City of Wheeling, a majority of the court refused the appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 852, 113 W. Va. 100, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natural-gas-co-v-sommerville-wva-1932.