Southwestern Natural Gas Co. v. Cherokee Public Service Co.

1935 OK 50, 44 P.2d 945, 172 Okla. 325, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 22, 1935
DocketNo. 22248.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1935 OK 50 (Southwestern Natural Gas Co. v. Cherokee Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Natural Gas Co. v. Cherokee Public Service Co., 1935 OK 50, 44 P.2d 945, 172 Okla. 325, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 248 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an api>eal from an order awarding defendant in error, heroin referred to as plaintiff, a peremploty writ of mandamus directed to plaintiff in error, herein referred to as defendant, commanding defendant to make, or permit a connection to be made, with and to a gas pipe line owned by defendant, and to supply plaintiff with natural gas through said pipe lino connection for distribution by plaintiff to the public in the cities of Muskogee and Wagoner, and to make or permit a like connection at a point near and convenient to the town of Jenks for distribution of natural gas by plaintiff to the public in the town of Jenks, and that such gas be furnished through such connections without interruption to service and without discrimination either for or against plaintiff. The matter of rates and other similar regulations was left to the Corporation Commission. It appears that defendant, a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware but licensed to do business in Oklahoma, constructed in 1930 a 16-inch gas line from the Quinton gas field in Pittsburg county through Creek county, Tulsa county, into Muskogee county to or near the limits of the city of Muskogee. Tbe line runs near the town of Jenks in Tulsa county.

Plaintiff is the owner of a franchise and gas distribution system in the town of Jenks and the'city of Wagoner, and was furnishing natural gas to consumers in said town and city. It was affiliated with the Municipal Gas Company, a public service corporation owning a franchise and distribution system and furnishing gas to consumers in the city of Muskogee. Defendant had entered into a contract with Muskogee1 Natural Gas Company, a public service corporation, which also had a franchise and a gas distributing- system in the city of Muskogee, and was furnishing natural gas to consumers in said city, to furnish and sell gas to said Muskogee Natural Gas Company, and had connected its line with the lines of said company at or near the city limits of the city of Muskogee. On August 19, 1930, defendant wrote the Municipal' Gas Company to the effect that its main line from the Quinton field to Muskogee would be completed by September 1st, and that it would then be in position to supply it, the Municipal Gas Company, with gas at the Muskogee terminus for its requirements up to 5,000,000 cubic feet daily for the town of Wagoner.

After the line was completed, plaintiff and the Municipal Gas Company requested that they he permitted to connect with the line, and that they be supplied with gas for distribution lo their consumers. The request was denied, whereupon this action was commenced by plaintiff and the Municipal Gas Company.

Defendant raised the question of mis-joinder of parties plaintiff. In this defendant was sustained, whereupon plaintiffs asked and obtained leave to file separate petitions and to prosecute their actions separately, and this cause is upon the separate petition of plaintiff Cherokee Public Service Company.

Plaintiff, after alleging- its corporate existence, the ownership by it of a franchise from the town of Jenks and the city of Wagoner, and its obligation to furnish gas to industrial, commercial, and domestic consumers therein, alleged that in order to supply such consumers it was necessary for plaintiff to procure natural gas either from producers or from pipe lines in the vicinity of the communities served; that the supply of natural gas in the vicinity of said city and town was inadequate and undependable ; that defendant company was licensed to do business in the state, and under its charter and the laws of this state it was a common carrier and distributor of natural gas; that it had a large supply of natural gas available for distribution to its various customers and sufficient to supply plaintiff and all others along its said line; that it had promised and agreed to furnish a supply of natural gas for distribution in said towns and cities, and was in fact sup *327 plying other public service companies gas for distribution in the cities of Sapulpa and Muskogee; that it refused to supply plaintiff, and that its refusal was without cause or reason and was a discrimination against plaintiff and in' violation of the laws of this 'state under which defendant company was operating.

Defendant pleaded: (1) The court had no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed l'or. (2) The court had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter. (3) That if plaintiff is aggrieved by any act of defendant, it had a plain, adequate remedy at law.

.It also denied that it was under the law a common carrier and distributor of natural gas, or that it was and is a public utility, but that if it was mistaken and could be properly classed as a public utility, then entire, complete, and exclusive jurisdiction in the matter is vested in the Corporation Commission, and that the court was without jurisdiction to issue a writ of mandamus against the defendant as a public utility.

Ponding this action in the district court, plaintiff, joined by the Municipal Gas Company, made application to the Corporation Commission for an order against defendant substantially the same as that prayed for herein.

A hearing appears to have been had there resulting in an order in favor of the Municipal Gas Company, but no order appears to have been made granting or denying relief to the plaintiff in this action.

Defendant, by supplemental plea, set up this order as a final adjudication of the matter against plaintiff by the Corporation Commission.

At the trial defendant admitted that it has a supply of gas sufficient to supply all the requirements of those with whom it had contracted, as well as plaintiff.

Plaintiff having introduced its evidence, defendant demurred thereto upon the sole ground of alleged want of jurisdiction in the district court. The demurrer being-overruled, defendant elected to stand upon the demurrer, and the court made findings of fact and conclusions of law as follows:

“Argument of counsel being had upon both the facts and the question of law as lo jurisdiction, the court finds that the defendant is a public utility and as such under the plain and clear legal duty to furnish connections and service to the plaintiff upon demand of plaintiff with offer to pay therefor. The court is further of opinion and holds that in ordering connections and service, it is necessary that rates and terms be fixed upon which same shall be furnished, and that in respect to such rates and terms and enforced contracts between the ■ parties, the court is without jurisdiction, and that it cannot fix rates nor terms nor make contracts between the parties, but that sole and exclusive jurisdiction so .to do is conferred upon the Corporation Commission of this state — but the court is further of opinion and holds that while a more complete and satisfactory jurisdiction in all respects is had by said Corporation Commission, still the courts of the state have at least a limited jurisdiction to enforce a plain and clear legal right of connection and service by a public utility in a proper case — not attempting, however, to invade the jurisdiction of said Corporation Commission as to rates and terms of such enforced contracts and service.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 50, 44 P.2d 945, 172 Okla. 325, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-natural-gas-co-v-cherokee-public-service-co-okla-1935.