Southwest Gas Corporation v. PUBLIC SERVICE COM'N

474 P.2d 379, 86 Nev. 662, 1970 Nev. LEXIS 590
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1970
Docket6078
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 474 P.2d 379 (Southwest Gas Corporation v. PUBLIC SERVICE COM'N) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwest Gas Corporation v. PUBLIC SERVICE COM'N, 474 P.2d 379, 86 Nev. 662, 1970 Nev. LEXIS 590 (Neb. 1970).

Opinion

*664 OPINION

By the Court,

Bat jer, J.:

This is an appeal from a review by the district court of an order of the respondent, Public Service Commission of Nevada, requiring the appellant, Southwest Gas Corporation, to make refunds to its customers because of its failure to use altitude adjustment factors and because it employed long proration in its billing practice. The respondent cross-appeals from that part of the judgment of the district court enjoining it from requiring the appellant to replace certain gas meters within a fixed period of time.

During the early part of 1968 the respondent received numerous complaints directed at the appellant concerning its manner and method of billing in northern Nevada. On March 27, 1968, the respondent determined that pursuant to NRS 704.120 and NRS 704.450, a hearing should be held to inquire *665 into the “practice, services, regulations, meter reading, billing and accounting of Southwest Gas Corporation with respect to its Northern Nevada Division, and more particularly, whether Rule No. 5 of the filed tariff has been properly adhered to.”

On April 16th and 17th, 1968, a hearing was held in Carson City, Nevada. Respondent’s final order, dated December 18, 1968, was issued as a result of that hearing and provided, inter alia: “IT IS ORDERED That Southwest Gas Corporation shall amend its Northern Nevada Rule No. 5, Section 1, Proration of Bills, to reflect that in the computing of bills, short prorations (i.e. proration of bills rendered for less than a 27-day period) shall be allowed, but long prorations (i.e. proration of bills rendered for more than a 33-day period) shall be prohibited; that as a consequence of certain inequities arising out of the manner in which bills to various customers were prorated, Southwest shall refund to its Northern Nevada customers all portions of their bills attributable to long prorations made from November 1,1967, to the present time; that all such refunds shall be computed and paid within sixty (60) days from the date of this Final Order; that the amount of the refund to each customer shall be equal to the difference between the total amount collected from the customer on long prorated bills (i.e. all long prorated bills rendered to the customer from November 1, 1967, to the present time) and the total amount that would have been collected from such billings if no long prorating had occurred;...”

“. . . [W]ithin thirty (30) days from the date of this Final Order, Southwest shall file an amended Northern Nevada Rule No. 2A, Description of Service; that said Rule, as modified, shall require measurements for altitude to be in conformance with the current edition of California Natural Gas Association Bulletin TS-561 and such amendments or revisions of said Bulletin as may be incorporated therein from time to time hereafter; that within sixty (60) days from the date of this Final Order, each present Southwest customer in Northern Nevada, to whom a bill or bills have been rendered without an altitude adjustment calculated in conformance with the aforesaid Bulletin, shall receive a refund equal to the total amount by which said customer’s bill or bills would have been adjusted for altitude had Southwest adhered to the measurements provided for in the aforesaid Bulletin;. ..”

“. . . [Tjhat in the event one of Southwest’s Rockwell “150” meters in Northern Nevada malfunctions hereafter, the company shall retire such meter and replace it with a temperature compensated measuring device; that by December 31, 1969, *666 Southwest shall have replaced with temperature compensated measuring devices at least 250 of the company’s Rockwell “150” meters in Northern Nevada; that by December 31, 1970, Southwest shall have replaced with temperature compensated measuring devices the remainder of the company’s Rockwell “150” meters in Northern Nevada;. . .”

On January 7, 1968, appellant filed its complaint with the trial court requesting that the respondent be permanently enjoined and restrained from enforcing that portion of its final order: (1) requiring that the appellant “refund to its Northern Nevada Division customers all portions of their bills attributable to long prorations made from November 1, 1969 to the present time;” (b) that portion requiring the appellant to refund to customers whose bills have been rendered without an altitude adjustment calculated in conformance with the California Natural Gas Association Bulletin TS-561, a sum equal to the total amount by which said customers’ bill or bills would have been adjusted for altitude had appellant adhered to the measurements in that bulletin; and (c) that portion requiring that appellant, by December 31, 1969, “replace with temperature compensated measuring devices at least 250 of the appellant’s Rockwell “150” meters in Northern Nevada; and that by December 31, 1970, “appellant, shall have replaced with temperature compensated measuring devices the remainder of Rockwell “150” meters in Northern Nevada.”

The part of the respondent’s order requiring refunds by the appellant rests on evidence, that during the times in question, in the Carson City area, the appellant employed an inadequate meter reading force; that at least one of those meter readers made many “curb” or fake readings; that bills were estimated without justification and in approximately two-thirds of the billings about which customers had complained the meters had been read late and long proration billing had been employed by the appellant. It was conceded that long proration billing favored the appellant.

The evidence also showed that all customers in the South Lake Tahoe area were billed at the same rate although there existed an altitude variation of some 1,700 feet between those customers living at the lake shore and those in the Daggett Pass area. Furthermore, the record indicated that the appellant had on file with the respondent, the California Natural Gas Association Bulletin TS-561, and had adhered to those schedules in other parts of its service area.

*667 When an order of an administrative board is challenged, the function of this court is identical to that of the trial court. Urban Renewal Agency v. Iacometti, 79 Nev. 113, 379 P.2d 466 (1963); McKenzie v. Shelly, 77 Nev. 237, 362 P.2d 268 (1961). We must review the evidence presented to the commission and determine whether that body abused its discretion by acting arbitrarily or capriciously. Our review reveals that the respondent acted within the permissible limits of its discretion in ordering the refunds.

The appellant argues that the long prorations were in accordance with the appellant’s Rule No. 5, 1 filed with and approved by the respondent, and supports its argument by relying upon the testimony of one of the respondent’s witnesses to the effect that the actual proration was in accordance with that rule.

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Bluebook (online)
474 P.2d 379, 86 Nev. 662, 1970 Nev. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-gas-corporation-v-public-service-comn-nev-1970.