WILKEY, Circuit Judge:
This appeal seeks review of two orders of the Federal Power Commission. The first approved without hearing and over the objections of the petitioner, Pennsylvania Gas and Water Company, a settlement of rate proceedings; the second denied Penn Gas’ application for rehearing. By order
of 30 October 1970 the Federal Power Commission specifically set forth Penn Gas’ objections to the “Stipulation and
Agreement,”
assumed all of Penn Gas’ underlying facts to be correct, and found each objection to be without merit. By order of 31 December 1970 the FPC denied rehearing.
Penn Gas’ arguments before this court fall into two general categories: a claim of a denial of procedural due process by the FPC, and claims of FPC errors in four specific areas of alleged controverted factual issues. For the reasons stated hereafter, we affirm.
I.
The Procedural Due Process Issue
In contending that it has been deprived of procedural due process by the Commission’s approval of a settlement without a hearing and over its objections, Penn Gas points to the following sources in support: the Natural Gas Act,
which it believes entitles it to a full formal hearing; the Administrative Procedure Act;
the Commission’s Rules
and practice; and judicial precedent, which it believes requires unanimous consent of the parties to settle a rate proceeding.
It is essential to recognize at the outset the appropriate scope for our review. The Federal Power Commission under its mandate, the Natural Gas Act, is empowered to regulate the transportation and sale of natural gas in interstate commerce for resale for ultimate public consumption. Its findings and orders, absent evidence of arbitrariness or lack of support by substantial evidence, are entitled to our respect. As we recognized in a related context:
We are not called upon to decide directly if the [Civil Aeronautics] Board made a sound decision; judicial review calls on us to determine only if the Board followed established principles and procedures which provide the required procedural due process for the adversary parties and which should lead to a sound decision.
A.
The Hearing Question
Under the Natural Gas Act a proceeding to review a filed rate increase may be initiated by the FPC either upon com
plaint or upon its own motion. Section 4(e) of the Act provides in relevant part:
Whenever any such new schedule is filed the Commission shall have authority, either upon complaint of any State, municipality, State commission or gas distributing company, or upon its own initiative without complaint, at once, ... to enter upon a hearing concerning the lawfulness of such rate, charge, classification, or service; . . .
Section 4(e) further states that the FPC, provided it orders a hearing, may suspend the rates in question in its review for a period of no longer than five months beyond the time when they would otherwise become effective. It may thereafter, by means of a refund procedure, make any order finding increased rates unjustified retroactive to the date the change became effective.
As the plain language of Section 4(e) and the Supreme Court’s review of the Natural Gas Act in United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Service Corp. reveal, the suspension of a rate is discretionary with the Commission. Section 4(e) merely defines the power of the Commission; it
does not require
the FPC either to suspend a rate or to hold a hearing without suspension at the behest of a customer such as Penn Gas.
As the Court remarked with respect to the Act as a whole, “In short, the Act provides no ‘procedure’ either for making or changing rates; it provides only for
notice
to the Commission of the rates established by natural gas companies and for
review
by the Commission of those rates.”
In the case at bar the FPC decided, after reviewing the evidence before it,
that the rates successfully negotiated by Manufacturers with all of its customers except Penn Gas, and approved by the Commission staff, did not warrant further hearing. If it were not within the power of the Commission to do so, any customer of a natural gas company could tie up its supplier and the Commission for an indefinite period in the trial of a limitless variety of issues, where there is no genuine issue of material fact, despite the ease with which their inherent worth or worthlessness might otherwise be quickly determined.
B.
The Settlement Question
Penn Gas asserts that it was denied procedural due process by the Commission’s acceptance of the “Stipulation and Agreement” submitted by all other parties, and by the termination of the pro
ceedings without further hearings. The applicable legislation, agency rules, and judicial precedents, however, favor the resolution of issues such as presented by the ease at bar by settlement proposed by some or all of the litigants, subject to Commission approval.
It is well to note at the outset that “settlement” carries a different connotation in administrative law and practice from the meaning usually ascribed to settlement of civil actions in a court. As we shall see later,
in agency proceedings settlements are frequently suggested by some, but not necessarily all, of the parties; if on examination they are found equitable by the regulatory agency, then the terms of the settlement form the substance of an order binding on all the parties, even though not all are in accord as to the result. This is in effect a “summary judgment” granted on “motion” by the litigants where there is no issue of fact.
This difference in procedure between the courts and regulatory agencies stems from the different roles each is empowered to play: the court must passively await the appearance of a litigant before it; once the court's process has been invoked, the litigant is entitled to play out the contest, unless he and the other litigant reach a mutually agreed settlement or one of several summary disposition procedures is successfully invoked by his adversary. On the other hand, the regulatory agency is charged with a duty to move on its own initiative where and when it deems appropriate; it need await the appearance of no litigant nor the filing of any complaint; once the administrative process is begun it may responsibly exercise its initiative by terminating the proceedings at virtually any stage on such terms as its judgment on the evidence before it deems fair, just, and equitable,
provided of course the procedural requirements of the statute are observed. Only by exercising such “summary judgment” or “administrative settlement” procedures when called for can the usual interminable length of regulatory agency proceedings be brought within the bounds of reason and the agencies’ competence to deal with them.
Whether the summary action of any agency in a particular case is fair, just, equitable, and in accord with the procedure required by law is a matter for judicial review, as in the case at bar. But we cannot discourage the regulatory agencies by invoking blanket prohibition against such summary “administrative settlement” procedures in all cases, particularly in view of the administrative and judicial precedents supporting such action, see
infra.
1.
The Administrative Procedure Act
Section 554(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act provides in relevant part:
(c) The agency shall afford all interested parties opportunity for—
(1) the submission and consideration of facts, arguments, offers of settlement, or proposals of adjustment when time, the nature of the proceeding, and the public interest permit; and
(2) to the extent that the parties are unable so to determine a controversy by consent, hearing and decision on notice and in accordance with sections 556 and 557 of this title.
The legislative history accompanying this provision recognizes it as being of the “greatest importance” to the functioning of the administrative process.
The whole purpose of the informal setttlement provision is to eliminate the need for often costly and lengthy formal hearings in those cases where the parties are able to reach a result of their own which the appropriate agency finds compatible with the public interest.
Section 554(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act in itself is not decisive support for the Commission action here, as the Act merely provides for the “submission and consideration of facts, arguments, offers of settlement . . . when . . . the public interest per-mites].” Except as provided in § 554 (c) (2), it does not spell out in what manner or by what procedure the Commission is to consider and
act
on the matter submitted, nor does it expressly require — or dispense with — the unanimous consent of all the participating parties in a multiparty proceeding. As we have seen above, the Commission’s power to utilize summary procedures, acting on its own or the litigants’ initiative to terminate the proceedings over the objection of a party, stems from the nature of its mandate as a regulatory agency, particularly under the Natural Gas Act, Section 4(e), and is amply sustained by the Commis
sion’s rules, lengthy administrative practice, and judicial precedent.
2.
The Commission’s Rules and Practice
Section 1.18 of the Commission’s Rules of Practice and Procedure, implementing Section 554(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act,
supra,
provides:
Section 1.18
— Conferences:
offers of settlement
(a)
To adjust or settle proceedings.
In order to provide opportunity for the submission and consideration of facts, arguments, offers of settlement, or proposals of adjustment, for settlement of a proceeding, . . . conferences between the parties to the proceeding and [FPC] staff for such purposes may be held at any time prior to or during such hearings before the Commission or the officer designated to preside thereat as time, the nature of the proceeding, and the public interest may permit.
•x- * -X- -x- * *
(e)
Offers of settlement.
Nothing contained in this section shall be construed as precluding any party to a proceeding from submitting at any time offers of settlement or proposals for adjustment to all parties and to the Commission ... or from requesting conferences for such purpose. .
The Commission has made use of this settlement procedure without the consent of
all
the parties to a proceeding, including the FPC staff, in a variety of cases.
In
Union Oil Co. of California, et al.,
the Commission accepted an offer of settlement finding it “to be in the public interest,” and terminated the proceedings despite the fact that the FPC staff and
several of the intervenors failed to sign the settlement agreement.
Hunt Oil Co., et al.
and
Texaco, Inc., et al.
both involved Commission approval, conditional in the former, final in the latter, of rate settlement proposals, termination of proceedings and prescription of refunds. Several customers intervened and filed unfavorable comments. In each case, after modifying the settlement offer as initially proffered, the Commission found each proposal met “the criteria previously set forth in other of our recent settlement orders and accordingly . . . find [each] to be in the public interest. ”
In
Socony Mobil Oil Co., et al.,
the Commission approved a rate settlement proposal, terminated the proceedings and prescribed refunds, all over the objections of an intervenor-customer.
The Commission stated that “[t]he principles underlying the present settlement are consistent with those utilized in previous major independent producer rate settlements,” that “[t]he rates herein agreed upon are consistent with the guidelines set forth in our Statement of General Policy No. 61-1, as amended,” and that “[r]efund dates are determined by utilizing cost of service studies prepared in accordance with prior Commission decisions.”
The FPC thus found the proposed settlement in
Socony Mobil
to be “in the public interest.”
Atlantic Seaboard Corf., et al.
involved conditional Commission approval of a rate settlement agreement and prescription of refunds. All but two of the parties participating in the informal conferences supported the proposed settlement. The Commission, after considering the objections advanced by these two parties, found “no basis in [the first party’s] comments which would warrant disapproval of the proposed settlement” and that “the facts are contrary” to the objections, which it labeled “without merit,” presented by the second party.
3.
Judicial Precedents
This court, in remanding a case to the FPC in which the Commission had refused to consider a proposed settlement because of objections by a principal party to the proceeding, held that once such offers are made, the Commission
“cannot refuse to consider
a proposal which appears, on its face at least consistent with
[its] duty [of protecting the ultimate consumer].”
We explained:
Even assuming that under the Commission’s rules Panhandle’s rejection of the settlement rendered the proposal ineffective
as a settlement,
it could not, and we believe should not, have precluded the Commission from considering the proposal
on its merits.
Indeed, the proposal appears prima facie to have merit enough to have required the Commission at some stage of the proceeding to consider it on its own initiative as an alternative to total abandonment.
Carrying this one step further, the Fourth Circuit in Cities of Lexington, etc. Ky. v. FPC
held that where there was no genuine issue of material fact the Commission could approve a proposed settlement of a rate proceeding as a resolution on the merits with less than unanimous consent of the parties involved. The court stated:
There is nothing in the Administrative Procedure Act which expressly requires unanimous consent of all the participating parties to an agreement of settlement; and to read such a contention into the statute in view of the countless state agencies, municipalities, and consumers who may be interested in an administrative proceeding would effectually destroy the settlement provision. In this instance the kind of interest which Lynchburg [a petitioner there] entered the proceeding to represent was protected by the participation and consent of other parties in like situation. Their consent to the settlement was sufficient basis for the Commission’s approval.
The petitioner Lynchburg had contended that the FPC could not accept the proposed settlement over Lynchburg’s objection and was required instead to hold a formal hearing. Lynchburg relied on Minneapolis Gas Co. v. FPC,
in which this court had stated that “the Commission cannot terminate a proceeding after it has actually conducted a hearing to the point of receiving an Examiner’s initial decision, without rendering a decision upon the issues presented, which is the lawfulness of the proposed rates.”
This court was careful to point out, however, that “We do not have before us, and therefore do not decide, whether the Commission may terminate a proceeding, once entered upon, at some point prior to the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing. A change of mind, midstream so to speak, may or may not be permissible.
This court in a subsequent case further stated:
. . . [S]everal cases subsequent to Minneapolis Gas, though recognizing the principle of that case, point out that an agency determination to discontinue proceedings will not be upset where there is good reason therefor.
Cities of Lexington, swpra,
then stands for the proposition that an offer of settlement may be accepted by the Commission as a resolution of a rate proceeding on the merits with less than unanimous consent of those participating, and the proceeding terminated without a full and
formal evidentiary hearing, provided, of course, there is no dispute of fact.
Penn Gas attempts initially to distinguish
Cities of Lexington
from the case at bar by asserting that controverted issues of fact in the instant case preclude FPC acceptance of the “Stipulation and Agreement” proposed as a resolution on the merits. In the event no factual controversy exists here, however, no hearing is required.
In the case at bar, we find no possible dispute over the facts, since the Commission accepted all of Penn Gas’
factual
allegations as correct.
Furthermore, it is apparent that Penn Gas has been afforded ample opportunity to present its position to the Commission from its participation in both the prehearing and informal conferences, its objections to the proposed “Stipulation and Agreement” filed with the Commission,
and its objections to the FPC’s first
of
der in its application for rehearing.
The Commission dealt with these objections in detail in its order approving the proposed “Stipulation and Agreement,” explaining its grounds for rejecting them.
As this court noted in
Citizens for Allegan County, Inc.:
We conclude that the information presented to the FPC in the applications, exhibits, affidavits, intervention petitions and other pleadings, developed the salient facts of the dispute to a sufficient depth and detail that the Commission was enabled to perceive, define, and resolve the various strands of public interest. It is important that the Commission’s opinion addressed itself to each of the problems raised by petitioner and set forth its reasons for concluding that the public interest lay in [rejecting them].
If the Commission were required in a case such as this one to hold a full and formal evidentiary hearing despite the fact that it accepted all of a participant’s factual allegations as true and still found their conclusions to be wanting, the settlement procedure would be rendered meaningless. As the Fourth Circuit recognized in
Cities of Lexington, supra:
In view of the great volume of the Commission’s business and the intricacies of utility accounting practices suspension of a new schedule proposing increased rates is almost a matter of course; and it goes without saying that there is no substance to the suggestion that if the Commission at the time of suspension announces that a hearing will be held the hearing must be held no matter how futile or unnecessary it thereafter becomes by reason of a settlement.
In dealing with its increasingly heavy case load, the importance of the settlement provision to the Commission is evident from the fact that during fiscal year 1970 no less than 59 pipeline companies requested rate increases, as compared with 35 the prior fiscal year. Of these, only 10 were disposed of during fiscal year 1970,
eight
of them by settlement.
Penn Gas also seeks to distinguish the instant case from
Cities of Lexington, supra,
in which no formal hearing was held but simply informal conferences, by
pointing out that in the case at bar a formal hearing was convened and evidence copied into the record. To conclude, therefore, that the Commission is irrevocably bound to continue with a full and formal evidentiary hearing is unwarranted in view of Section 554(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act,
Section I. 18 of the FPC’s Rules of Practice and Procedure,
and this court’s ruling in Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. v. FPC
II.
Penn Gas’ Specific Objections
Penn Gas identifies four specific areas as containing controverted issues of fact, and asserts that with respect to each the Commission could not possibly have assumed the underlying facts as presented by Penn Gas to be correct. On this basis, it urges that a full and formal evidentiary hearing is required. We believe that in each instance Penn Gas confuses contrary conclusions which might be drawn from accepted basic facts with contradictions in the basic facts themselves. We find no conflict in fundamental facts calling for a hearing; we do find that the FPC has placed interpretations on and drawn conclusions from the facts which differ from those urged by Penn Gas, and that the Commission’s expertise entitled it to do so, and that it has done so reasonably.
A.
Delivery Points
Penn Gas claims that it suffers unlawful rate discrimination in that it receives natural gas from Manufacturers at only one delivery point, in contrast to larger customers who receive gas at numerous points, thus requiring Penn Gas to bear the cost differential of serving a number of points.
In the first place, simply showing a higher cost, which the Commission accepts as true with respect to Manufacturers’ larger customers, does not conclude the investigation of whether a rate is unduly discriminatory to smaller customers such as Penn Gas. The higher cost may be offset by other considerations. And the burden of establishing that system-wide rates are unlawful in that they discriminate unduly against smaller consumers rests with Penn Gas.
The FPC, despite the admitted difference in cost, has rejected the allocation of costs by delivery points. “[A]ny attempt to arrive at such perfection would be not only delusory, but also impracticable and infeasible from both the management and regulatory point of view.”
The Supreme Court has stated, “. where as here several classes of service have a common use of the same property difficulties of separation are obvious. Allocation of costs is not a matter for
the slide-rule. It involves judgment on a myriad of facts.”
And this kind of judgment is particularly appropriate for the FPC to make.
The Commission rejected Penn Gas’ claim of unlawful discrimination, pointing from among “a myriad of facts” to the benefits Penn Gas gained from the higher load factor purchase of gas by Manufacturers from Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corporation for Penn Gas’ account; the ability of Manufacturers to use valley gas resulting from such purchase ; Manufacturers’ larger customers, whose service needs allow it to make service available to,
inter alia,
Penn Gas; and the fact that storage fields serve the entire system, either directly or by displacement.
B.
Rate Zoning
While the Commission accepted Penn Gas’ view of the underlying facts as accurate in regard to rate zoning
(i. e.,
that Manufacturers’ system extends from West Virginia to the Pennsylvania-New York state line; that Manufacturers’ underground storage projects are located in the western part of its system; and that Manufacturers purchases natural gas from a number of companies at different points along its system), it did not, nor was it required to, accept Penn Gas’
opinion
that as a result of these facts alone Manufacturers’ rates should be zoned between two broad geographical areas. Looking to the conclusions submitted by Manufacturers and by the FPC staff, not prohibited in light of the fact that it was passing on the merits of the proposed “Stipulation and Agreement,”
the Commission decided that it was not feasible to zone Manufacturers’ system:
Penn Gas . . . ignores that the flow of gas on Manufacturers’ system is in a “grid” pattern,
i. e.,
gas flows in many directions and in different
directions at different times. Five pipeline suppliers deliver gas into Manufacturers’ system at 14 points surrounding the market area, and a large portion of such deliveries are into storage fields which serve the entire system, either directly or by displacement. Thus, there is no basis for Penn Gas’ zoning proposal.
Such a determination clearly lies within the Commission’s discretion.
C.
Pricing of Exchange Gas
The Commission accepted Penn Gas’ view of the underlying facts: that the exchange rate has an impact on, Manufacturers’ cost of service and therefore on the fairness of the rates in the proposed “Stipulation and Agreement”; that if the gas exchanged was priced at the rates set forth in Manufacturers’ Rate Schedule CDS and WS,
such higher pricing would also reduce the cost of service to Manufacturers’ other customers; and that the value of winter gas deliveries by Manufacturers to the Cumberland and Allegheny Gas Company may be higher than the value of the summer gas deliveries which Manufacturers receives from them.
The FPC refused, however, to accept the
opinion
of Penn Gas’witness that this pricing was unduly discriminatory, since this witness (Benson) used both the Cumberland and Allegheny requirements from Manufacturers and the amount of gas available from Cumberland and Allegheny for Manufacturers based on the design peak day.
The Commission found:
The method utilized by Penn Gas’ witness is inappropriate since it includes the net imbalance volumes rather than being based on total annual deliveries. Penn Gas’ approach is tantamount to billing on the basis of a hypothetical load factor of 21 percent in contrast to the actual load factor of 38 percent.
As such, the Commission properly relied upon its own expertise in regard to the selection of volumes to be used and the proposed rates to be applied to these volumes.
D.
Federal Income Tax Allowance
While the Commission accepted Penn Gas’ view that Manufacturers’ joint filing of its tax return with the Columbia Gas System produced a saving, there exists a factual controversy as to the precise percentage of this saving. However, as the Commission indicates, Penn Gas did not file its own testimony on this matter but relied instead on the FPC staff’s testimony.
Prior to the Commission’s issuance of the first order in the case at bar, accepting the proposed “Stipulation and Agreement,” Manufacturers and the FPC’s staff had disagreed as to the precise tax saving percentage, but then reached agreement on the figure of five percent. Before accepting this figure as a resolution of this question on the merits, the Commission indicated that it had considered Penn Gas’ objections to this five percent figure, but found them wanting in view of its treatment of objections identical in substance advanced initially by the FPC staff in
Columbia Gulf Transmission Co., et
al.
The Commission had there denied such objections.
The FPC stated in the case at bar that it could “see no reason to alter the treatment of these issues here from that in
Columbia Gulf,
an upstream affiliate of Manufacturers and [the] Home [Gas Company].”
The Commission had found over the course of a test period in
Columbia Gltlf
that a five percent tax saving was a “reasonable compromise.”
III.
Conclusion
Accordingly, the orders of the Commission of 30 October 1970, approving the “Stipulation and Agreement” as a resolution on the merits over the objections of Penn Gas and terminating the procedings, and of 31 December 1970, denying Penn Gas’ petition for rehearing, are
Affirmed.