Public Service Gas Co. v. Mayor of Newark

98 A. 404, 86 N.J. Eq. 384, 1 Stock. 384, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 A. 404 (Public Service Gas Co. v. Mayor of Newark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Gas Co. v. Mayor of Newark, 98 A. 404, 86 N.J. Eq. 384, 1 Stock. 384, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26 (N.J. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Foster, V. C.

The complainant has- been since October 1st, 1909,. and still is, engaged in supplying gas in the city of Newark, for public and private use, and lighting some of the public streets of the city with gas, by means of posts, lamps and burners, connected with its mains by service pipes.

It. is the only company engaged in that business in the city, and it is the owner of gas works and many miles of gas mains in the city.

Gas is furnished by complainant to consumers in the city of Newark by means of meters at a uniform standard’ of prices, which is on file with the board of public utility commissioners of the state, and no gas is furnished to any consumer unless measured by meter, except in cases where complainant lights the streets and other public places of the city under contract.

The contract between complainant and the city for municipal lighting expired March 1st, 1916.

About May 15th, 1916, the city awarded a contract to the defendant, Public Lighting Service Corporation, for the equipment, with burners, of about two thousand lamp posts, owned by the city, for the supplying of street gas light. By the terms of this contract the defendant, Public Lighting Service Corporation, agreed for the period of about three years from the date thereof, to supply and maintain certain standard burners upon the city’s posts, and to light and extinguish these lamps according to the specifications of the contract. ■

This contract was awarded after the city had advertised for proposals for street lighting in two forms, viz.:

The first proposal asked for the supplying of gas lamps, the maintenance thereof and the lighting and extinguishing of the same; and secondly, for the supplying of gas at such fixtures.

On April 6th, 1916, complainant sent the city a proposal for the maintenance of two thousand or more street gas lamps, including the supplying of gas therefor, and providing the necessary fixtures in accordance with the contract between it and the city which had recently expired, and offered this service upon its standard rates filed with the public utility commissioners. This [386]*386proposal was not in accordance with the advertised specifications of the city and was not considered as a formal bid by the city authorities.

As a result of the contract between the city and the lighting corporation, on June 5th, 1916, the equipment of complainant on the lamp posts was directed by the city authorities to be removed forthwith, so that the equipment of the Public Lighting Service Corporation could be installed in its place. Complainant objected to the installation of other lamps than its own, to use gas from its mains, unless an agreement was previously made for installing meters at suitable places to lie provided by the city to measure the quantity of gas used by the substituted lamps.

Under date of June 16th complainant was again notified by the city engineer to remove its lanterns and fixtures from approximately two hundred lamp posts, the work of removal being directed to commence the following morning at eight o’clock, and complainant was at the same time notified that if it desired that the gas'consumed by the substituted burners should be measured by meter, that it immediately install meters upon the services supplying these lamps.

Complainant, in acknowledging the receipt of this last notice, again objected to the installation of the lighting corporation’s lamps, to use gas from it mains, until the city had provided, as previously requested, suitable places in which meters could be installed.

About June 17th the defendant, Public Lighting Service Corporation, removed over fifty of complainant’s lamps and substituted its own lamps therefor, and lighted and kept the same lighted on the nights of June 17th and 18th, with gas from the mains of complainant, and it is admitted that the defendants intend, unless restrained, to remove all of complainant’s lamps from the city’s posts and substitute other lamps of the lighting corporation’s in their place, and have these lights supplied by gas from complainant’s mains. On this showing, a rule to show cause with interim restraint was issued by Vice-Chancellor Howell, preventing defendants, from taking gas from complainant’s mains except on the conditions stated therein.

[387]*387The defendant, Public Lighting Service Corporation, is a corporation of the State of New York, authorized to manufacture, furnish, maintain, light and extinguish gas lamps for street lighting purposes, but it has no franchise for carrying on a public lighting business or for supplying gas.

It has filed a certificate to authorize it to do business in this state. It claims to own or control a lamp, or burner, equipped with a governor to regulate the supply of gas and to insure uniformity thereof, and in the opinion of its engineers, the gas consumption, as determined by means of governors, is as accurate as the measurement of gas by meters.

The dual contract system, which the city of Newark desires to adopt for street lighting, whereby one contract calls for the equipment of the lamps and the lighting and extinguishing of the same, and another contract provides for supplying gas to such lamps, is in force, to some extent, in New York, Chicago and a number of other cities, and the average consumption of gas in these cities ranges from three to three and five-tenths- cubic feet per lamp per hour, and it is claimed by defendants tjiat their lamps are of such a character that each lamp in effect constitutes a meter, provided the number of hours which each lamp is burning is ascertained, and that the construction of the governors on these burners is such that a uniform flow of gas is maintained to the lamps, despite variances in pressure from one and five-tenths to six inches water pressure, and the defendants further claim that the pressure maintained by complainant in Newark never shows a variance as great as this, and that each of their lamps installed, or to be installed, in Newark will consume a uniform quantity of gas amounting to three and three-tenths cubic feet per hour, and that in order to ascertain the quantity of gas consumed, it is only necessary to know the total number of lamps and the total number of hours during which they are burning.

Complainant claims that the gas used by defendants cannot be measured accurately by merely ascertaining the' quantity that passes through a burner at a particular time, for the following reasons, among others- — first, that the pressure of gas in the mains of a gas company, and particularly in Newark, [388]*388varies in different localities, according to t-lie elevation of the land; second,■ that the pressure varies according to the distance from the holders or source of supply; • third, according to the quantity that is being taken throughout the territory served by the company at a given tune, which causes variations of pressure; and fourth, according to the variation in the opening of the burner, sometimes, the flow of gas being reduced by carbon or other deposits, and at other times when the opening is unobstructed, a much larger quantity of gas will pass through.

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 404, 86 N.J. Eq. 384, 1 Stock. 384, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-gas-co-v-mayor-of-newark-njch-1916.