Peoples Natural Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

14 A.2d 133, 141 Pa. Super. 5, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 259
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1940
DocketAppeal, 274
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 133 (Peoples Natural Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Natural Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 14 A.2d 133, 141 Pa. Super. 5, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 259 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Per Curiam,

The Peoples Natural Gas Company has appealed from a report and order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, entered against it on February 15, 1940, by a majority of the commissioners. Chairman Driscoll and Commissioner Buchanan joined in a report supporting the order; Commissioner Beamish filed a concurring report; and Commissioners Siggins and Thorne filed a dissenting opinion.

In the majority report it was held that the appellant utility had not met the burden of proving the “lawfulness” of certain new and increased rates proposed in a new tariff—Pa. P. U. C. No. 19—'filed by it on March 17, 1939, under Section 30S(a) of Art. Ill of the Public Utility Law of May 28, 1937, P. L. 1053, 66 PS §1148, to become effective May 16, 1939.

In the concluding paragraph of the majority report the proposed rates were declared to be “unjust, unreasonable, discriminatory and in violation of the Public Utility Law.” The order appealed from reads:

“1. That the rates and charges set forth in Tariff Pa. P. U. C. No. 19 of respondent, The Peoples Natural Gas Company, shall not be or become effective.

“2. That the existing rates of The Peoples Natural Gas Company shall remain in effect until further order of the Commission.

“3. That the instant proceeding be and is hereby terminated.”

The existing rates referred to in the second, paragraph are the rates which appellant has been charging, with *8 the approval of the former Public Service Commission, since 1924.

The events leading up to the making of the order maybe thus summarized:

Appellant was created by the merger of two prior constituent gas companies—the former The Peoples Natural Gas Company and the former The Columbia Natural Gas Company. In 1925 the Peoples company acquired control of the Columbia and was operating it upon the effective date of our present Public Utility Law.

On April 20,1937, shortly after its organization under the Act of March 31, 1937, P. L. 160, 66 PS §§452-464, the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission entered, upon its own motion, a complaint against one hundred and four natural gas companies doing business in Pennsylvania, alleging on information and belief that the rates of each were unjust and unreasonable. Each company was given a subnumber at Docket No. C-11380. The complaint against the former Peoples company was docketed at No. C-11380, Sub. 20, and the complaint against the former Columbia company at No. C-11380, Sub. 28. Both companies filed answers denying their rates were unjust or unreasonable.

Under date of July 27, 1937, the commission sent a questionnaire to each company requiring the preparation of detailed data including, inter alia, an inventory of its property priced at the cost of construction or acquisition to the company and also upon a reproduction cost, new, basis, as of December 31, 1936. At the initial hearing against the Peoples company on October 1, 1937, voluminous exhibits were submitted in reply to the questionnaire. The first hearing against the Columbia company was on November 16, 1937, and similar data with respect to that company was then presented. Subsequently, on February 14, 1938, the commission instructed each company that “original *9 cost” as referred to in the previous questionnaires is to be “interpreted to mean the cost of property to the company first devoting it to public use.” Other questionnaires and revisions thereof were issued in May and October, 1938, requiring the preparation and submission of accounting information in detail.

As of December 31, 1938, the former The Peoples Natural Gas Company and the former The Columbia Natural Gas Company, were merged and consolidated under the corporate name, The Peoples Natural Gas Company, and on February 1-1, 1939, the commission entered an order consolidating the proceedings at sub-numbers 20 and 28, at Docket No. C-11380, by reason of the merger.

This was the situation when appellant filed its new tariff on March 17th to become effective May 16, 1939. Its right to file a new tariff, notwithstanding the pend-ency of the proceedings instituted by the commission against its existing rates, cannot be questioned: Coplay Cement Mfg. Co. v. Pub. Ser. Com., 271 Pa. 58, 114 A. 649, reversing the judgment of this court at 76 Pa. Superior Ct. 354.

On March 20, 1939, the commission, upon its own motion, instituted an inquiry and investigation at Complaint Docket No. 12683 “for the purpose of determining the fairness, reasonableness and justness of the rates and charges” set forth in appellant’s tariff, Pa. P. U. C. 19. LTpon the same date it ordered that “this inquiry and investigation, C-12683, be and hereby is consolidated for hearing and determination with the inquiry and investigation......at C. 11380, Sub. No. 20.”

On the same date the commission, pursuant to the authority conferred upon it by Section 308(b) of the Public Utility Law, supra, entered an order suspending the operation of the new tariff for a period of six months, i. e., from May 16 to November 16, 1939, assign *10 ing the following reason: “The reasonableness of the rates proposed by Tariff Pa. P. IT. C. No. 19 is directly related to the evidence already received in connection with the investigation at C. 11380, Snb. No. 20.” On November 13, 1939, the commission entered an order further suspending the operation of the new tariff from November 16,1939, to February 16, 1940, an additional period of three months, as also authorized by the statute.

Hearings were resumed in March, 1939, at which the appellant presented reproduction cost valuations, both new and less accrued depreciation, of the merged property and testimony with respect to gas reserves, annual depreciation, cost of developing operated leaseholds, etc. A number of hearings were held between October 18, 1939, and January 19, 1940, at which evidence on behalf of appellant and the commission was introduced.

At the final hearing on January 19, 1940, it was stated by the sitting commissioner that the testimony in the proceedings at C-12683 would be closed, but that the proceedings at C-11380, Sub. 20, would remain open for further hearings; hence, the significance of the third paragraph of the order.

Incidentally, it appears from the commission’s brief that there was also pending a complaint by the Borough of Tyrone against the former Peoples company at Docket No. C-1.1587, in which it was alleged the rates charged by that company for natural gas service at Tyrone were unfair and unjust to consumers in the lower brackets. It is also there stated that the commission combined at its hearings not only C-11380, Sub. 20, and C-12683, but also C-11587. The record (335a) shows the three complaints were consolidated for hearing and determination and it is clear from the third paragraph of the order that the commission undertook to terminate thereby only its own complaint at C-12683. It may also be noted that the order with which we are now concerned was entered the day before the expiration of the nine months’ period of suspension.

*11 The commission invokes and relies upon Section 312 of the statute, 66 PS §1152, whereby it is enacted:

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 133, 141 Pa. Super. 5, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-natural-gas-co-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1940.