South Carolina Public Service Authority v. Federal Power Commission

170 F.2d 948, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3331, 1948 WL 60182
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1948
DocketNos. 5793, 5757
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 F.2d 948 (South Carolina Public Service Authority v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Carolina Public Service Authority v. Federal Power Commission, 170 F.2d 948, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3331, 1948 WL 60182 (4th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Judge.

These are petitions to review decisions of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Power Commission approving respectively the sale by the Commonwealth and Southern Company and the purchase by the South Carolina Electric and Gas Company of all the common stock (800,000 shares) of the South Carolina Power Company. Commonwealth and Southern had been ordered by the S. E. C., under section 11(b) (1) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, 15 U.S. C.A. § 79, to divest itself of ownership of the stock of the South Carolina Power Company. It entered into a contract with the South Carolina Electric and Gas Company on October 28, 1947, to sell the stock to that company at the price of $10,200,000. The sale by Commonwealth and Southern was approved by the S. E. C. in 'an order dated March 25, 1948. The purchase by Electric and Gas was approved by order of the F. P. C. of April 29, 1948. Prior to these orders, on December 23, 1947, the issuance of securities by Electric and Gas to finance the purchase had been approved by an order of the South Carolina Public Service Commission, in a proceeding wherein the transaction had been subjected to attack and a full hearing had been accorded with respect to all questions affecting the public interest. This order was approved on April 3, 1948, in an equity proceeding which had been brought in the courts of South Carolina to set it aside. The petitions to us, therefore, ask that we set aside •orders of the S. E. C. and the F. P. C. with respect to a transaction over which they are given full supervisory power, and which has been approved, after the fullest hearing, not only by them but also by the state Public Service Commission and the state courts.

The petitioner in both cases before us is the South Carolina Public Service Authority, a state owned public utility company which generates and sells electrical energy in the State of South Carolina, Contention is made that it is not a party aggrieved by either the order of the S. E. C. or that of the F. P. C. so as to have a locus standi to prosecute the actions here. Assuming without deciding, however, that the petitioner can be considered a party aggrieved by the orders of the S. E. C. and the F. P. C. here under consideration, we are nevertheless of the view that it has made no case which would justify us in disturbing the orders.

The grounds of attack upon the sale and purchase of the stock are that petitioner, the South Carolina Public Service Authority, had offered a higher price for the stock than the sale price, that exemption had been granted from competitive bidding and that an offer of petitioner to cause a 10% reduction in the rates of the Power Company, if petitioner should become the purchaser of its stock, had been ignored. It appears, however, that both the S. E. C. and the F. P. C. gave full consideration to the contentions regarding all these matters, heard the evidence bearing thereon and found in them nothing requiring that the sale to Electric and Gas be disapproved. The offer of the Authority was made in the teeth of a decision of the South Carolina Supreme Court that it had no power to make a purchase of this character; and, while there was a proposal from the Authority that a case be made and submitted to that court for the purpose of obtaining a ruling which would approve the sale, there was no certainty that such a ruling would be made and no justification for requiring the Commonwealth and Southern to fore-go a sale, at a reasonable price which it desired to accept, upon the chance that it might obtain more if the South Carolina Court should reverse the position it had taken. With respect to competitive bid[950]*950ding, the S. E. C. found from abundant evidence that there was no reason to require this in view of the wide publicity which had been given the matter and of the lack of interest on the part of anyone other than the Authority and the purchaser. So far as the offer to reduce rates was concerned, this was a matter for a rate hearing before South Carolina Public Service Commission, as that commission itself pointed out.

The crucial matter in the case is the decision of the Supreme Court of South Carolina, in Creech v. South Carolina Public Service Authority, 200 S.C. 127, 20 S.E.2d 645, 650, which stands in the way of purchase by the Authority. There can be no question but that the order of the S. E. C. approving the sale by Commonwealth and Southern and the order of the F. P. C. approving the purchase by Electric and Gas would be unassailable but for the offer made by the Authority; and we agree with the S. E. C. that the decision in the Creech case raises such doubt as to the ability of the Authority to purchase that its offer should not be considered as ground for invalidating the proposed sale. As the matter was put by the S. E. C.:

“On- the record before us, we are persuaded that there is grave doubt concerning the Authority’s ability to acquire the common stock of Power, that a substantial period of time may be necessary to resolve that doubt, and that the real danger to Commonwealth from delay and from an adverse ruling and the fact that there is only one other prospective purchaser in the field, are sufficient to support Commonwealth’s decision to sell to Electric & Gas. It is obvious that the legal questions involved can be determined finally only by the appropriate State Courts, and we do not pum port to forecast the probable outcome or the period necessary to obtain a final decision. However, an attempted sale to the Authority might result in long delay and ultimate failure. Such delay would involve cash stringency, in view of the pending construction program of the Commonwealth system. A final determination adverse to the Authority would leave Commonwealth in a substantially impaired bargaining position, and might well result in its inability to procure a satisfactory price for its interest in Power. Under the circumstances, we cannot find that the management’s acceptance of the bid of Electric & Gas was unwarranted.”

That the S. E. C. did not overestimate the obstacle presented by the Creech case is perfectly clear. That suit was instituted to enjoin the Authority from purchasing the properties of Electric and Gas and the Lexington Water Power Company. In holding that the Authority might not' acquire these properties, the Supreme Court of South Carolina bases its decision, not on the location of the properties, as petitioner argues, but upon the lack of power on the part of the Authority to acquire an existing utility system. The court said:

“When the Authority was given the power to develop the Cooper, the Santee, and the Congaree Rivers, it was charged with the duty to evolve latent possibilities and to make available resources hitherto undeveloped. This thought and this purpose is carried to a fuller expression in subdivisions 4, 5, and 7 of Section 3.
* * * * * *
“But nowhere in these subdivisions do we find any language upon which to hinge the vast powers now contended for by the Authority. It would have been a simple matter for the Legislature to have explicitly provided for the purchase of established, existing power plants and public utilities in the area claimed, but it has not done so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 F.2d 948, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3331, 1948 WL 60182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-carolina-public-service-authority-v-federal-power-commission-ca4-1948.