Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

41 N.E.2d 389, 139 Ohio St. 581, 139 Ohio St. (N.S.) 581, 23 Ohio Op. 59, 1942 Ohio LEXIS 562
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1942
Docket28914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 N.E.2d 389 (Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 41 N.E.2d 389, 139 Ohio St. 581, 139 Ohio St. (N.S.) 581, 23 Ohio Op. 59, 1942 Ohio LEXIS 562 (Ohio 1942).

Opinion

By the Court.

The findings, opinions and order of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio made August 18, 1939, show that for the year ending December 31, 1937, expenses connected with the procurement and distribution of the manufactured inert and reformed *584 gas were claimed and allowed in the sum of $110,908.42, and that during, this same period the company used natural gas in the production of these inert and reformed gases costing $168,631.55, which had also been allowed as an expense. The allowance of these items formed in part the basis for the reversal of the finding and order of the commission, and it is conceded by both the Public Utilities Commission and the appellant that these expenses should be eliminated and that no error results by reason of the decision of the commission striking them from the allowable expenses.

Only two matters, therefore, are in issue in this appeal: -(1) The commission’s elimination of forty per cent of the total gas rate case expense previously allowed by the court, that being the proportion of such expense now attributed by the commission to the procurement of evidence, the preparation of exhibits and submission of evidence relating to the inert and reformed gas; and (2) the commission’s use of a percentage method in arriving at the 53-cent rate, as subsequently set forth herein.

Considering the first of these matters, that is, the elimination of a portion of the gas rate case expense, we are immediately confronted by an admission of the commission that its finding of the percentage of expense to be disallowed was not based upon any evidence in the record previously presented, and that the commission received no additional testimony and afforded no opportunity to present evidence bearing upon the question. This fact in itself would require a reversal of the finding and order of the commission. But there is a further and more cogent reason for reversal.

The gas company contended throughout the entire controversy that the use of these inert and reformed gases was necessary in order to provide adequate and satisfactory service to the consumer. The city’s posi *585 tion is, and the evidence tended to show, that the use of these gases served no such purpose. The company contended that stabilized gas is natural gas and that it had fully complied with the terms of the ordinance. Such contention is not supported by the record or upheld by any decision of this court. Mixed gas may properly be furnished to a city where permissible under the terms of an ordinance of the city. City of Cincinnati v. Public Utilities Commission, 137 Ohio St., 437, 30 N. E. (2d), 797. However, such issues were a proper subject of controversy and litigation, and there is nothing in the record to show improvident or unjustifiable cost or expense of litigation occasioned by the appellant. The Public Utilities Commission therefore erred in striking the forty per cent from the gas rate case expense previously found and allowed by the commission.

The last, and probably the appellant’s most important claim of error on the part of the commission, refers to the methods by which the Public Utilities Commission arrived at the 53-cent rate. The procedure of the commission in this respect goes far beyond the instructions of the court in its previous opinion and mandate issued in áecordance therewith; but we shall review and determine the validity of its action in that regard.

The record in this case contains evidence of the expenses incurred by the company for the years 1935, 1936 and 1937, and the average for these years was used in the original decision as the basis on which the commission found the rate of 56.22 cents per thousand cubic feet inside the city of Columbus. In computing this rate the commission originally allowed the company the actual cost of the natural gas which it purchased for resale. This computation was based on the evidence in the case, and the commission had not *586 allowed the company any amount for any gas purchased and used only for so-called stabilization purpose, that being the inert gas purchased from the Preston Oil Company.

When the case was remanded, the commission substituted for the actual cost of gas as theretofore found the estimated cost if the company had purchased and supplied natural gas alone, which estimated cost, of course, was somewhat higher than the cost of natural gas actually purchased by the company and previously allowed by the commission as an expense. After making minor corrections for taxes and allowing all the expenses in the exact sums which were previously allowed (excepting, of course, those heretofore mentioned which were stricken out because they concededly concerned stabilization), the commission arrived at a new cost based upon the furnishing of natural gas alone, and fixed that cost at 56.68 cents per thousand cubic feet. This figure the commission designated the “necessary cost per M c. f. for natural gas inside the city of Columbus.”

The commission further determined that only 93.516 per cent of the gas furnished to the city of Columbus was natural gas and, consequently, that the necessary cost of the natural gas actually furnished in each thousand cubic feet of combined natural and manufactured or inert gas was 93.516 per cent of 56.68 cents per thousand cubic feet, or 53 cents.

The following is a table in which the findings of the commission in its order of August 1939, and its order of October 1941, are compared:

*587 The Ohio Fuel Gas Company Successor to The Columbus Gas & Fuel Company
and
The Federal Gas & Fuel Company Average Rate per M c. f. for Inside City of Columbus for Years 1935, 1936 and 1937 Based on Combined Cost of Service, Including Rate Case Expense.
Aug. 18,1939 Amount Allowed on Original Hearing
Oct. 23,1941 Amount Allowed on Rehearing
Three Year Average
Natural Gas Purchased for Resale...........$2,413,155.56 $2,474,370.45
Distribution System Expense ............... 219,586.25 219,586.25
Utilization System Expense ............... 30,600.53 30,600.53
Commercial Expense ... 126,130.97 126,130.97
Business Promotion Expense ............... 60,472.90 60,472.90
General Administrative Expense ............ 25,880.60 25,880.60
Other General Expense. 52,634.21 52,634.21
Taxes (exclusive of State Excise, P.U.C.O. and Fed. Income)......... 74,960.44 74,960.44
Federal Income Tax. ... 49.325.00 49,325.00
Public Utilities Commission Tax............ 771.00 749.69
State Excise Tax....... 36.776.00 35,761.78
Total Expenses... .$3,090,293.46 $3,150,472.82

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41 N.E.2d 389, 139 Ohio St. 581, 139 Ohio St. (N.S.) 581, 23 Ohio Op. 59, 1942 Ohio LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-fuel-gas-co-v-public-utilities-commission-ohio-1942.