Public Service Commission v. Iroquois Natural Gas Co.

103 Misc. 587
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 Misc. 587 (Public Service Commission v. Iroquois Natural 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. Iroquois Natural Gas Co., 103 Misc. 587 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

In September, 1911, this defendant and various other domestic and foreign corporations were severally producing, acquiring, selling and distributing natural gas in and about western New York, or conducting one or more of such enterprises. In that month this defendant and these several companies filed various petitions with this petitioner, in general to [589]*589obtain permission for this defendant to purchase, take over and operate the various gas plants and exercise various rights and privileges belonging and appertaining to the other said corporations. Finally the time came when this petitioner, instead of making as full an investigation into the capitalization, properties, franchises and general situation of said various corporations as perhaps might otherwise have been made, granted the request of such corporations — but only after such corporations had entered into a certain written stipulation. Of course, I must follow the usual rule in holding that all conferences, proposals and discussions preceding the making of said stipulation are merged in that formal document; but it is appropriate to say that it was the evident intention of all the parties to get into a situation such that through the Public Service Commissions Law and the said stipulation the present and future rights of all parties concerned, including the citizens, should be fully conserved.

The Public Service Commissions Law contains many provisions which empower and enable this petitioner to regulate and control gas corporations. It is provided substantially in section 74 of such act that whenever this commission shall be of opinion that a gas corporation within its jurisdiction is failing or omiting, or about to fail or omit, to do anything required of it by law or by order of the commission, or in violation of law, or of any order of the commission, such commission through its counsel may commence a proceeding in the Supreme Court for the purpose of enjoining such violation or threatened violation. Sections 71 and 72 of said act make provision whereby this petitioner may investigate as to the cause of complaints made in writing by the mayor of a city, the trustees of a village, a certain number of customers [590]*590or purchasers of gas, or of a gas corporation specifying in particular the procedure to be followed.

In this proceeding the petitioner complains that in disregard of its legal obligation, and of the stipulation above mentioned, this defendant on November 30,1917, and on March 28, 1918, respectively, filed in the petitioner’s office a tariff increasing its rates for natural gas in the city of Buffalo, and in various towns and cities in western New York, from thirty-two cents, gross, and thirty cents, net, per 1,000 cubic feet to thirty-seven cents per 1,000 cubic feet for each 1,000 cubic feet up to and including 40,000 cubic feet and forty-two cents for each 1,000 cubic feet in excess of 40.000 cubic feet monthly, and to thirty-seven cents per 1,000 cubic feet for each 1,000 cubic feet up to and including 10,000 cubic feet, and forty-two cents per SL,000 cubic feet for each 1,000 cubic feet in excess of 10.000 cubic , feet weekly, effective January 1, 1918; that the operation date of such proposed new tariff has been postponed by the defendant from time to time until May 1, 1918, and that on said date the new tariff has by the defendant been put into force and effect so far as the defendant can make it of force and effect, and that the defendant threatens and intends to collect the increased rate from all consumers from May 1, 1918. On December 11, 1917, the mayor of the city made a complaint to the petitioner against permitting the defendant to carry through the proposed increase of rates in the city of Buffalo, and asked- for an examination into the justice and reasonableness thereof. In January, 1918, the petitioner made an order that the defendant make answer to the complaint, which the defendant did on January 29,1918. In its answer the defendant denied that it was bound by said stipulation to do any more than assume the burden of proof in any regular proceeding brought, and claimed and [591]*591now claims that the stipulation did not prohibit the defendant from increasing the rate and collecting the increased rate pending an investigation and an order from this petitioner to the contrary. As a further portion of the history of the case it may be said that in the latter part of March this year this defendant through petition endeavored to obtain a writ of prohibition commanding this petitioner to cease and desist from conducting the above mentioned proceeding.

After consideration the said application has been denied by Mr. Justice Hasbrouek. The petitioner claims that in thus attempting to put into effect a new schedule of rates as of May 1, 1918, the defendant has failed and omitted, and is about to fail and omit, to do a thing required of it by law and by order of the petitioner, namely, to furnish gas at the old rates until such time as it shall have duly proven to this petitioner that such old rates are unreasonable and unjust.

I will now insert the portions of the stipulation mentioned which are or may possibly be directly involved in the motion before me:

“ 2. (The Iroquois Natural Gas Company stipulates) that in any proceeding to fix the rate or rates which shall be charged as a maximum, or otherwise, for natural gas supplied to customers within the cities, towns and villages now served by the companies whose properties are to be transferred to the Iroquois Natural Gas Company — the burden of proof shall be upon said Iroquois Natural Gas Company to establish affirmatively that any price in excess of thirty-two cents, gross, and thirty cents, net, for each one thousand cubic feet of natural gas is just and reasonable; and in default of evidence fairly and reasonably meeting such burden the commission, or other lawful authority, may, without other proof or evidence, fix [592]*592and determine the just and reasonable rate for natural gas in said municipalities at thirty-two cents, gross, and thirty cents, net, for each one thousand cubic feet.

“ 4. The foregoing stipulations shall not preclude the commission, or other lawful authority, from exercising any power conferred upon it by law to investigate and determine as to the reasonableness of the existing rate of thirty-two cents, gross, and thirty cents, net, per one thousand cubic feet.”

The defendant correctly contends (Pub. Serv. Com. Law, § 66, subd. 12) that, upon giving thirty days’ notice to the commission and publication for thirty days as required by order of the commission, the defendant has a full right to file a schedule of increased gas rates. The defendant further contends that the filing of such schedule empowers the gas corporation to collect the increased rate after the expiration of the thirty days; and whether or not this be true is the crux of the whole controversy now before me, the petitioner claiming that the fair intendment of the stipulation in question is that no increased rate may be collected until the reasonableness thereof has been passed upon by the appropriate commission.

The defendant further contends, and correctly, that prior to the making of the said stipulation the burden of proof was always on the complainant in a rate proceeding.

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Related

Public Service Commission v. Iroquois Natural Gas Co.
108 Misc. 696 (New York Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
103 Misc. 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-commission-v-iroquois-natural-gas-co-nysupct-1918.