Pressure Oil & Gas Co. v. Tri-City Gas Co.

1925 OK 334, 236 P. 41, 108 Okla. 248, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 28, 1925
DocketNo 15624
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1925 OK 334 (Pressure Oil & Gas Co. v. Tri-City Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pressure Oil & Gas Co. v. Tri-City Gas Co., 1925 OK 334, 236 P. 41, 108 Okla. 248, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 150 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

PHELPS, X

This case comes’ here on appeal from an order of the Corporation Commission,, and involves three small gas companies referred to in the record as “common-law trusts,” only one of which, however, the plaintiff in error, is directly affected by the order from which the appeal was taken. The city of Chelsea obtains its gas supply from the Tri-City Gas Company, which distributes the gas to the citizens of Chelsea. The Pressure Oil & Gas Company, plaintiff in error herein, furnishes the Tri-City Gas Company the gas supplied to the citizens of Chelsea. The Pressure Oil & Gas Company is a pipe-line company, having a pipe line extending from Chelsea to the gas field, some eighteen or twenty miles away, and obtains the greater portion of its gas by purchase from the Unity Gas Company. The Unity Gas Company consists of some gathering lines in the gas field which are used for the collection of gas to be delivered to the Pressure Oil & Gas Company, and also the Co-operative Gas Company, which supplies gas to certain industries of the city of Claremore, the owners or stockholders of the Unity Gas Company and the Pressure Oil & Gas Company being practically identical, although the two companies are operated separately. *249 All of these companies, prior to the beginning cf the proceedings herein, had been operating independently of the . Corporation Commission, making their own contracts and conducting their affairs apparently satisfactorily to all parties concerned without subjecting themselves to the jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission. However, on the 27th day of May, 1923, the Tri-City Gas Company filed its petition with the Corporation Commission alleging that it purchased its supply of gas for distribution to its consumers in Chelsea from the Pressure Oil & Gas Company under contract at the agreed price of 20c per M cubic feet, and that said contract expired on May 6, 1923, and that notice had been given it by the Pressure Oil & Gas Company that thereafter a rate of 25c per M cubic feet would be charged. It further alleged that it had been supplying the gas to consumers of Chelsea at 50c per M cubic feet for domestic purposes, and that in case it was compelled to pay the 25c rate demanded by the Pressure Oil & Gas Company a consequent raise in the price to its consumers would be necessary, and prayed for an order permitting it to make such raise. Notice of such application was given to the city officials of the city of Chelsea, and also to the Pressure Oil & Gas Company. The Pressure Oil & Gas Company came in and filed application for an increase in rates charged for gas gathered and transported to the city gate of the city of Chelsea,-and made itself a party applicant in the adjustment of the gas rate situation, praying that for the acquisition, gathering, transporting, and delivering of the ga« to the town borders of the city of Chelsea it be granted a rate of 30c per M cubic feet.

After a full and complete hearing the Corporation Commission made an ordev authorizing the Pressure Oil & Gas Company (effective May 1, 192-1) to charge for natural gas supplied at the city gate of the city of Chelsea to the Tri-City Gas Company a rate of 25c per M cubic feet for all gas sold, furnished, and supplied, and from this order of the Corporation Commission the Pressure Oil & Gas Company, plaintiff in error herein, appeals to this court.

In determining what disposition should be made of this case by this court it is incumbent upon us to determine from the record herein, primarily, the value of the property used and useful, of plaintiff in error, in furnishing the gas in question, and in doing that we are in the same situation we find ourselves in practically every case of this nature — somewhat bewildered by the divergent views as expressed by the witnesses on both sides of the controversy. In fact, there is an irreconcilable conflict in the testimony of the witnesses as to the value of the property, used and useful, of the Pressure Oil & Gas Company. Literally, reams of evidence appears in the record and copious briefs have been filed by counsel for both sides, much of which evidence and some of the matters contained in the briefs having but little to do with the real gist of this action. The method of fixing the value for rate-making purposes cf the property, used and useful, of a utility is well settled in this state, and It seems to us that by following the well-settled rules as laid down by this court much time and space could be saved.

In Oklahoma Natural Cas Co. v. Corporation Commission, 90 Okla. 84, 216 Pac. 917, the rule for fixing the present value of the property laid down in the second paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

“In determining the present fair value of the property of a public utility, neither original cost nor reproduction cost new, considered separately, is determinative, but consideration should be given to both original cost and present reproduction cost, less depreciation, together with all the other facts and circumstances which would have a bearing upon the value of the property, and from a consideration of all these a fair present value is to be determined.”

Also in McAlester Gas & Coke Co. v. Corporation Commission, 102 Okla. 118, 227 Pac. 83, in the syllabus thereof, this court said:

“In determining the present fair value of the property of a public utility, neither original cost nor reproduction cost new, considered separately, is determinative, but consideration should be given to both original cost and present reproduction cost, less depreciation, together with all the other facts and circumstances which would have a bearing upon the value of the property, and from a consideration of all these a fair present value is to be determined.”

In arriving at a proper rate base to be adopted in establishing a city gate rate for the gas supplied the city of Chelsea the Corporation Commission fcund it necessary to consider both the property used and useful of the Pressure Oil & Gas Company in transporting the gas thereto and that portion of Ithe property owned by the Unity Gas Company and used in gathering and delivering the gas to the Pressure Oil & Gas Company in the field, finding that the amount of gas gathered and supplied to the Pressure Oil & Gas Company and the Cooperative Gas -Company by the Unity Gas Company bears a relationship of 40 to 60; *250 40 representing the amount of gas supplied Chelsea through the Pressure pipe line and 60 representing the amount of gas supplied through the Co-óperative pipe line to the city of Olaremore; and from the testimony of witnesses before it, made the following finding:

“Taking the value of the Pressure Oil & Gas Company testified to by the Commission’s engineer of $42,359.90 and adding thereto the value found by him of the Unity Gas property, which is used in gathering gas for distribution in Chelsea, amounting to $15,637.21, we have a combined value of $57,996. Adding to this for overheads and intangibles, including working capital and going concern value heretofore used by the Commission of 20%, we arrive at a total figure of the combined properties of $68,595.'

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Related

Lone Star Gas Co. v. Corporation Commission
1934 OK 396 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Hominy Light & Gas Co. v. State
1928 OK 287 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
Western Oklahoma Gas & Fuel Co. v. State
1925 OK 546 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 334, 236 P. 41, 108 Okla. 248, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pressure-oil-gas-co-v-tri-city-gas-co-okla-1925.