Preston County Light and Power Company v. Renick

113 S.E.2d 378, 145 W. Va. 115, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 13
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1960
Docket12002
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 113 S.E.2d 378 (Preston County Light and Power Company v. Renick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston County Light and Power Company v. Renick, 113 S.E.2d 378, 145 W. Va. 115, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 13 (W. Va. 1960).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

In this original proceeding in prohibition instituted in this Court on November 24, 1959, the petitioner, Preston County Light and Power Company, a corporation, herein referred to as “power company,” seeks a writ to prohibit the defendants, Myron R. Renick, Hillis Townsend and Thaddeus D. Kauffelt, members of the Public Service Commission of West Virginia and that commission, and Preston County Coke Company, a corporation, herein referred to as “ coke company,” from proceeding further or asserting jurisdiction in a certain proceeding instituted by Preston County Coke Company, entitled Case No. 4913, now pending before the commission in which the applicant seeks authority to establish rates and charges for the sale of electricity. The proceeding before the commis *117 sion is based upon a petition in which, the coke company alleges that the rates for electricity stipulated in an agreement between it as the seller and the power company as the buyer are inadequate and the purpose of that proceeding is the establishment by the commission of rates and charges set forth in the petition in lieu of rates and charges specified in the agreement between the coke company and the power company. By order entered by the commission on October 30, 1959 in the case now pending before it, the commission found that the coke company is a utility under the jurisdiction of the commission and directed that a hearing be held on December 10, 1959, for the purpose of affording the parties an opportunity to present evidence as to the reasonableness of the rates and charges which the coke company seeks permission to establish.

Upon the rule awarded by this Court returnable January 13, 1960, the defendants, Myron R. Renick, Hillis Townsend and Thaddeus D. Kauffelt, members, and the Public Service Commission of West Virginia, filed their demurrer and answer to the petition, the defendant, Preston County Coke Company, filed its demurrer and answer to the petition, and the petitioner filed its reply to the answer of Preston County Coke Company and its seperate demurrers to the foregoing answers of the defendants. On January 20, 1960, this proceeding was submitted for decision upon the foregoing demurrers and pleadings and the written briefs and oral arguments in behalf of the respective parties.

The defendant coke company was incorporated in 1907 and in 1911 it began to sell electricity to the public generally in certain sections of Preston County and continued to do so until and during the year 1923. In November of that year the power company was incorporated and organized and the coke company transferred its facilities for the transmission and distribution of electric power in Preston County to the power company. Since the transfer the coke company has continued to generate electricity and to sell it to the power company for distribution to the public generally *118 in Preston County by the power company and the power company as a public utility has furnished the electricity purchased by it from the coke company to the public generally in Preston County and is now engaged in that service.

For several years after its incorporation the power company was a subsidiary of the coke company. Later control of the power company was acquired by Preston County Supply Company, control of the coke company was obtained by the widow of Colonel H. C. G-reer and control of Preston County Supply Company and the power company was acquired and is now exercised by her daughter and the sons of her daughter. For sometime prior to the institution of this proceeding there has been no affiliation between the coke company and the power company and neither is an affiliate of the other. Since 1958, an undetermined legal controversy has existed between the two companies involving an alleged indebtedness by the power company to the coke company for electricity sold by the coke company to the power company.

The electric power generated by the coke company was sold by it to the power company under a verbal arrangement or agreement until December 1955 and on December 19, 1955, a written contract was entered into between the coke company and the power company which was amended by a subsequent written agreement of May 14, 1956, which specified the rates for the electricity furnished to the power company by the coke company.

The petition of the power company alleges that the coke company now furnishes electricity to no one except the power company and the answer of the coke company alleges that all the electricity furnished by the power company to its customers is supplied by the generating plant and other facilities of the coke company and that the only purchaser of electricity from the coke company, other than the power company, is a company controlled by the widow of H. C. Greer which *119 now operates the coal and coke producing properties formerly owned by the coke company.

In 1923 the coke company filed its application with the public service commission for permission to increase its rates and in that proceeding, entitled Case No. 1487, by order entered January 23, 1924, the requested rates were authorized and the order provided that “The applicant, within a reasonable time, segregate its public utility electrical business from its coal and coke business and keep its books with respect to its utility business in accordance with the rules of the commission pertaining to such a utility.” The answer of the coke company also alleges that the power company instituted a proceeding against the Monongahela Power Company before the commission to prevent encroachment by that company upon the territory of the applicant in supplying service to Glauber Brass Company and that the foregoing proceeding was pending before the commission in December 1955 when the first written contract for the sale of electricity by the coke company to the power company was entered into on December 19, 1955.

After the entry of the order of January 23, 1924, which required the coke company to keep its books with respect to its electrical utility business in accordance with the rules of the commission, it does not appear that the commission has actually exercised any regulatory authority over the electrical business of the coke company or that the coke company has recognized or invoked the jurisdiction of the commission in connection with the generation and sale of electricity to the power company, but it does appear that the verbal and written agreements entered into by the coke company and the power company since January 23, 1924 for the sale of electricity produced by the coke company to the power company and the transfer by the coke company of its transmission and distribution facilities to the power company have not been approved by the commission. *120

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.E.2d 378, 145 W. Va. 115, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-county-light-and-power-company-v-renick-wva-1960.