Philadelphia Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission

171 A. 690, 314 Pa. 207, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 475
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 16, 1934
DocketAppeal, 13
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 171 A. 690 (Philadelphia Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission, 171 A. 690, 314 Pa. 207, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 475 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Simpson,

Philadelphia Electric Company, appellant herein, filed with the public service commission, new schedules, so prepared as to operate throughout its entire service territory, the rates specified therein being intended to apply to practically every one of its customers. It then gave to the commission and to the public a notice thereof as required by article II, section 1, clause (f) of the Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P. L. 1374,1379. In the notice it stated that, in most respects and in its general result, the income which it would receive would be decreased, but that “In the application of the rates as revised, a limited number of bills will be unavoidably increased. The practice of supplying free lamp renewals is discontinued.” Why “a limited number of bills [or any of them] will be unavoidably increased,” in tariffs intended, as appellant claims, to result in a general decrease of its rates, is not stated on this record; evidently this is a mere matter of opinion.

*210 Complaints against the proposed new rates were filed with the commission before the effective date thereof, by certain users and consumers of the service and power furnished by the company; to them the company filed answers, and the new schedules, complaints and answers were then referred by the commission to one of its number to take testimony and report. At the first meeting before the sitting commissioner a question arose as to whether the company or the complainants had the burden of proof upon the issues to be decided. Article V, section 4, of the act (P. L. 1913, page 1404) provides that “At any such hearing [regarding a proposed change of rates] involving any proposed increase in any rate, the burden of proof to show that such increased rate is just and reasonable shall be upon the public service company.” Contending that this provision did not apply where, as here, their notice of the proposed new rates averred that the net result of all the changes would be a decrease in the total revenue it would receive, the company claimed that complainants had to carry the burden. This contention the sitting commissioner sustained; but complainants excepted thereto, and the matter was then heard by the commission itself, as required by article IY, section 4, of the statute (P. L. 1913, page 1397), and it decided “that the burden of proof rested on the [company] in so far as the increases [were] admitted by [it] in its general and division notices relative to its tariffs......particularly the increases resulting from the application of schedule B L P in said tariffs...... and also in so far as any and all other prima facie increases which may be shown by the complainants were concerned; and approved and confirmed the said ruling of the sitting commissioner in all other respects.”

Under the supposed authority of article YI, section 31, of the statute (P. L. 1913, page 1429), the company thereupon filed a bill in equity in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, seeking to enjoin the commission from enforcing its order as above, and to stay pro *211 ceedings in the matter until the further order of the court. After a full hearing the court dismissed the bill at the cost of the company, and from that decree the present appeal was taken. The decree must be affirmed for two reasons: 1st. The order of the commission was a proper one. 2d. Even if our conclusion was otherwise, the bill would nevertheless have to be dismissed.

The company’s contention would seem to be that, since article II, section 1, clause (f), (P. L. 1913, page 1379) states that its notice to the public of a proposed “change in any tariff or schedule......shall plainly state the exact changes proposed to be made in the tariffs or schedules then in force, and whether [it results in] an increase or decrease,” this must be interpreted to mean that the company’s ex parte allegation, as to the net result of all the changes, is the determinative factor, and that the commission is powerless even to inquire into the fact, when considering who has the burden of proof on the hearing of complaints, against proposed new rates filed with it before the effective date of a proposed change of rates. To this we do not agree. We know of no instance, and appellant has pointed us to none, wherein a judicial, quasi judicial or administrative trial tribunal has been so treated, nor where one of the contestants has been so handicapped. Such a conclusion antagonizes our sense of fair play, and will never be accepted unless no other is reasonably possible, which is not the case here. If the legislature had so intended it would have been easy to so state, but this it has not done. It seems clear to us, that the clause “any proposed increase in any rate” itself negatives such a conclusion. Under it, a question of fact is raised, to be determined preliminarily by the commission, when a schedule of new rates has been filed and has been duly and promptly objected to. This is evident also from the whole tenor and effect of the statute, otherwise the public, — because of the great expense to an objector, who is not interested in all the rates, — would be deprived, in many if not most cases, of *212 a determination of the fact of increase, because no customer could afford to contest this matter, consequently the equity and justice of the proposed new rates would rarely be reviewed. We therefore now decide that the regulatory power of the commission, to determine the validity of proposed new rates, when objections have been filed in time, includes the right to determine which of the litigants will be required, in the first instance, to produce his proof regarding the disputed questions to be determined by it.

We hear too much of the one-sided argument that “The Public Service Company Law was legislatively conceived and intended as a comprehensive scheme of rate regulation in which saving to the utility of needless expense of litigation was one of its dominant fundamentals.” It was, of course, hoped and believed that “needless expense of litigation” would be saved to every one interested, but its “dominant, fundamental” was and is that justice shall be done to all concerned, the utility and its customer alike, and that the customer shall not be dominated or delayed by the greater power or influence of the utility, as history showed had all too frequently happened prior to its enactment. Nor should the utility be harassed by unfounded complaints on the part of its customers. Where complaints against rates are filed before the effective date of the proposed new tariff, it is the duty of the commission to guard against placing the “great and unnecessary expense,” to which appellant so plaintively refers, on the consumer who in practically all cases is least able to bear it. Nor can we shut our eyes to the fact that appellant must have had the aid of departmental experts in preparing its schedules and tariffs, especially in determining whether or not they resulted in an increase or decrease of rates, whom it can more readily produce at less expense, than can complainants, who are not in so favorable a situation.

It is not our purpose to further consider this reason for affirming the decree below, since the second is the *213 more important, and is wholly free from doubt. "We supposed that when we decided Citizens Passenger Ry. Co. v.

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171 A. 690, 314 Pa. 207, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-electric-co-v-public-service-commission-pa-1934.