State Ex Rel. Public Service Commission v. Great Northern Utilities Co.

284 P. 772, 86 Mont. 442, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 32
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1930
DocketNo. 6,622.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 284 P. 772 (State Ex Rel. Public Service Commission v. Great Northern Utilities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Public Service Commission v. Great Northern Utilities Co., 284 P. 772, 86 Mont. 442, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 32 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appeal from a judgment of dismissal in mandamus proceedings. The record herein discloses that the Great Northern Utilities Company, hereafter referred to as the Utility, has been in the business of furnishing natural gas to the people of Shelby for some years and, up to 1927, charged, based upon the amount used, from sixty down to thirty cents per thousand feet. In 1927 the Public Service Commission, hereafter called the Commission, gave notice of a hearing on these rates, whereupon the Utility reduced its maximum rate to fifty cents per M.

In October, 1928, a rival concern commenced serving a part of the city at rates of from thirty-five cents to twenty-two and one-half cents, and thereupon the Utility reduced its rates to from twenty cents down to fifteen cents per M. The rival complained to the Commission and, after a hearing the Commission ordered the Utility to file its schedule fixing its rates the same as those of its rival; the order to be in effect from and after February 1, 1929. The Utility did not comply with *445 the order, but on February 8 commenced action in the district court of the first judicial district for the cancellation of the order as illegal. In its complaint filed the Utility asked for an injunction pendente lite but did not urge its issuance. The first judicial district has two judges; this action was pending on demurrer to a second amended complaint in department No. 2 presided over by Judge Horsky, when, on November 5,1929, the Commission made application to Judge Poorman, in department No. 1, for a writ of mandate to compel the Utility to comply with the rate order pending final determination of the action. To this application the Utility interposed a motion to quash, which was sustained by an order which recites that this action was taken “without reference to the validity of the order made by the relator and solely on the ground that, at the time this proceeding was commenced, there was, and still is, an action pending in a court of concurrent jurisdiction between the same parties, based substantially upon the same facts and in which the same issues here involved may be raised.” Judgment of dismissal followed, and the Commission has appealed from the judgment, contending that the pending action is no bar to the mandamus proceeding. With this contention we agree.

We have twenty judicial districts in this state (sec. 8812, Rev. Codes 1921); some have one judge, some two, and some three (sec. 8813, Id.). When a district has more than one judge, departments are created and the business is divided by rules of court adopted by the judges or by this court (sec. 8832, Id.), but the court presided over by each of the judges is the district court of the district and not a departmental court. The jurisdiction of the court extends to all matters properly before it, and neither department is “a court of concurrent jurisdiction” to the other. In the absence of rules, either judge has full authority to proceed in any matter properly before the court. (State ex rel. Little v. District Court, 49 Mont. 158, 141 Pac. 151.)

It is true that when a matter is pending in one department, a judge of another department is not permitted to inter *446 fere therewith (Lutey Bros. v. Jackson, 55 Mont. 556, 179 Pac. 459), but that situation is not presented here. The action pending in department 2 attacks the validity of the Commission’s order, but, in terms, the statute prohibits the court in such an action from issuing an injunction pendente lite and declares that the “rates fixed by the Commission shall be deemed reasonable and just, and shall remain in full force and effect until final determination by the courts having jurisdiction” (secs. 3905 and 3906, Rev. Codes 1921), and sec. 3911, Id., specifically authorizes mandamus proceedings to compel obedience to the orders issued.

It is therefore clear that the statutes contemplate such a proceeding independent of, and without regard to, the action pending to test the validity of the order, and that the fact that such an action is pending did not justify the quashing of the writ. This conclusion, however, does not alone warrant a reversal of the judgment, if the trial court was acting within jurisdiction in passing on the motion to quash and the decision made is right on any theory which might have been adopted by the court in rendering it.

The rule that an appellate court is not concerned with the reason given for a decision, and will therefore affirm a correct ruling regardless of the fact that the trial court gave a wrong reason therefor, is of almost universal application and has been followed in this jurisdiction on the consideration of every conceivable species of decision which the trial court had authority to make, as shown by the reported cases from McMullen v. Armstrong, 1 Mont. 486, to Whitcomb v. Beyerlein, 84 Mont. 470, 276 Pac. 430; in other words, whenever it appeared from the record that the trial court acted judicially. In McMullen v. Armstrong, above, the territorial court said: “Admitting that the reasons assigned for, and by which the court was governed in making its ruling, are erroneous, yet it makes no difference if the ruling itself is proper and correct. It matters not by what process or method of reasoning, or by what form of argument or manner of deduction, whether true *447 or fallacious, a conclusion is arrived at, provided the conclusion itself is right.”

We can now avoid the determination of further questions presented by the motion to quash, only by declaring that the trial court, in effect, refused to assume jurisdiction of the motion and did not act judicially in determining it. A somewhat similar action was taken in the case constituting the basis of an application for a writ of mandate in State ex rel. Peel v. District Court, 59 Mont. 505, 197 Pac. 741, 743, wherein this court declared that in striking a petition for.letters of administration which the petitioner was entitled, under the statute, to have heard, the court did not act within jurisdiction, and therefore mandamus would lie to compel reinstatement, quoting in support thereof from High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, section 151: “Refusal to take jurisdiction, or, after having acquired jurisdiction, refusal to proceed in its regular exercise, or the erroneous determination of a preliminary question of law, upon which the court refused to examine the merits, will be corrected by mandamus.”

But in the Peel Case the conclusion was reached only because it was declared that the trial court had no jurisdiction to strike a proper and authorized pleading from the files, and therefore acted without jurisdiction, permitting mandamus. In other words, this court held that the trial court had no jurisdiction to pass on the motion to strike, as it was not a proper motion, the statute (sec. 10077, Rev. Codes 1921) declaring that the court “must hear” the petition to which the motion to strike is addressed. The decision in the Peel Case is an exception to the general rule in mandamus proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P. 772, 86 Mont. 442, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-public-service-commission-v-great-northern-utilities-co-mont-1930.