Public Service Commission v. Brooklyn Borough Gas Co.

104 Misc. 315
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 104 Misc. 315 (Public Service Commission v. Brooklyn Borough Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Commission v. Brooklyn Borough Gas Co., 104 Misc. 315 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

This is a statutory' proceeding, brought in this court by the public service commission for the first district under the provisions of section 74 of the Public Service Commissions Law for an alleged or threatened violation of law on the part of the Brooklyn Borough Gas Company. It was begun by an order of this court granted by me and dated on August 5, 1918, requiring the company to answer the petition on August sixth, and providing for a hearing upon the petition on August seventh, at Special Term, Part III, of this court. Upon the last mentioned date the company asked for further. time to serve its answer to the petition, and the court allowed it until August twelfth, and adjourned the hearing upon the merits until August thirteenth; but I entertained a motion by the company to vacate upon the petitioner’s papers the temporary injunction contained in the order of August 5, 1918, and after argument denied such motion.

The defendant’s answer, was served on August twelfth,' and filed on August thirteenth, on which date [318]*318evidence was submitted, and counsel for all parties desiring to be heard were fully heard.

On account of the importance to the parties interested of an immediate decision of the questions involved in this proceeding and to admit of a speedy review of such decision, I shall not, in this memorandum, attempt to do more than to state as plainly and briefly as I can the considerations which have led me to the conclusion that the petitioners are entitled to the relief asked for.

Under the express terms of the Public Service Commissions Law the proceeding, under section 74, is intended to be not only summary in its nature but also free from all technicalities. In its wide-reaching scope it is of the greatest usefulness for the protection of the public in the relations sustained by public service corporations supplying gas or electricity to the public. It is designed to afford to the Supreme Court a direct and summary visitorial power over these corporations whenever the public service commission charged with their oversight shall be of opinion that they have violated or are threatening to violate the law. The legislature, perhaps foreseeing the difficulties which have at times attended the efforts of the public service commissions to compel this class of corporations to obey the mandate of law or the orders of the commissions, wisely gave to these commissions the -right of resort to this court for speedy relief, and wisely vested in this court the power to hear without delay and to determine without technicality the questions so presented to it. In my judgment the legislature intended, by this provision, to abolish the delays and technicalities which in the ordinary course of judicial proceedings seem inevitably associated with the practice of the law. The court should, therefore, whenever called upon, act according to the spirit of this statute as well as to its [319]*319letter; and, if it finds that sufficient reason exists for its interference in this particular class, of cases, it should act promptly and efficiently to sustain the public service commissions in the just and lawful exercise of those governmental functions, powers and duties which the legislature has vested in them and without the power of enforcement of which the usefulness of the commissions would be utterly destroyed. For this reason a proceeding under;this section is paramount in its effect to any other action or proceeding, even if brought in this court, to determine questions involving a breach or disregard of .law upon the part of gas or electrical corporations under the jurisdiction of the public service commissions or either of them. There was, it is true, an action brought in the Supreme Court, in which the defendant in the present proceeding was the plaintiff and the public service commission for the first district and other persons were defendants. When the present proceeding was begun no judgment had been rendered in that action, and there then was no binding adjudication by this court of the questions now presented in the present proceeding. This court, having taken jurisdiction of the proceeding and having the defendant corporation before it, can and should judicially examine and decide the questions presented herein in pursuance of section 74 of the Public Service Commissions Law, without regard to the proceedings in any other form of action pending in the courts. Were this not true the legislative intent in making the provision in question would plainly be nullified, and set at naught; because any gas or electrical corporation upon being haled into court under this statute for its misdeeds could secure long and vexatious delays and even ultimately defeat justice by suits in equity to review the action of the public service commission in its case. If such procedure could be tolerated all [320]*320advantage in vesting power in public service commissions to control these public service corporations would be lost; and such corporations could readily tie the hands of the public service commissions by suits in equity, wherein the legal machinery of the courts could be clogged by injunctions, stays and appeals and all the other dilatory and technical procedure, which are the reproach of our system of jurisprudence. And so we find that this section 74, written, into our Public Service Commissions Law as originally passed in 1907 and continued without change until the present time, wisely provided that, “ In case of default in answer or after answer, the court shall immediately inquire into the facts and circumstances in such manner as the court shall direct without other or formal pleadings, and without respect to any technical requirement. ’’ I hold, therefore, that no judgment of the court in any other form of action can deprive the public service commission of the right to apply to this court for relief under section 74 nor deprive this court when thus applied to of the power to exercise the jurisdiction thereby conferred.

Since this proceeding was instituted, and on August thirteenth, the defendant here has caused the referee’s report in the equity action* to be filed and a judgment to be entered thereon which determines the eighty-cent rate fixed by chapter 604 of the Laws of 1916 to be void, and enjoins its enforcement, and which also determines that the order of the commission fixing the ninety-five-'cent rate has been superseded by chapter 604 of the Laws of 1916, and enjoins the defendants in that action, among them the petitioner here, ‘‘ from in any way enforcing or attempting to enforce said order as against the plaintiff,”-the defendant here. The [321]*321entry of such judgment on behalf of the defendant here was, in my opinión, a violation of the order made by me on August fifth, which stayed pending the determination of this proceeding ‘

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Related

City of New York v. New York Edison Co.
196 A.D. 644 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1921)
Public Service Commission for First District v. Brooklyn Borough Gas Co.
189 A.D. 62 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1919)
Public Service Commission v. Kings County Lighting Co.
105 Misc. 665 (New York Supreme Court, 1919)
Public Service Commission v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad
105 Misc. 254 (New York Supreme Court, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 Misc. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-commission-v-brooklyn-borough-gas-co-nysupct-1918.