State Ex Rel. v. Publ. Serv. Comm.

275 S.W. 940, 310 Mo. 313
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 25, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 275 S.W. 940 (State Ex Rel. v. Publ. Serv. Comm.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. v. Publ. Serv. Comm., 275 S.W. 940, 310 Mo. 313 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

This proceeding was instituted before the Public Service Commission by complainant, and had for its purpose the prevention of the promulgation and enforcement of certain rules and regulations proposed by the Kansas City Power Light Company, called the relator or appellant, regarding the kind and character of fuse and switch box which prospective consumers of electricity in Kansas City should install as a condition precedent to being supplied with an electric current by the Power Company.

It may be proper to state that a fuse or switch box is the covering or enclosure for switches installed on the premises of consumers for the purpose of cutting off and turning on current coming from the service wires of the utility and before it enters the meter installed for the measuring of the current used by the consumer. The fuse is a piece of soft lead which fits into the switch, which is so designed as to automatically melt and sever the connection in case the service wires become charged with an unusual and dangerous current of electricity. In Kansas City the meters are owned by the relator. They are in all cases installed so as to connect with fuse or switch boxes.

Prior to the promulgation and enforcement of the rules and regulations of relator in question, consumers in Kansas City customarily supplied metal meter boxes of ordinary construction. They were required to so do as a measure of fire protection by the city authorities, and such practice, it appears, was also required by the insurance underwriters. Moreover, as was undisputed, *Page 319 this box of ordinary construction so used fully met the requirements of the city and the underwriters.

The McCanles-Miller Realty Company, together with other companies and persons, filed a complaint with the Public Service Commission, wherein the rules of relator here in question were charged to be unreasonable and oppressive, in that by reason of the promulgation and enforcement of the rule complainants and other consumers were required to purchase and install a particular box which was manufactured under patent, and the selling price of which was extortionate and excessive over and above the cost of the ordinary boxes, which were adequate for the consumers' needs, to the extent of $2.50 per box as against 50 cents per box; and in that in addition the effect of the rules and their enforcement was to require the use of a separate box for each consumer in an apartment house, whereas formerly one large box had been sufficient; and in that the cost of installation was greater; and in that the benefits of the new box over and above the old box, if any, inured to relator and not to the individual consumer; and in that the rules and the manner of enforcement was unreasonable, unjust and discriminatory; and in that they necessitated an expenditure by complainants alone in the building and equipping of apartment houses in Kansas City of more than $25,000 yearly over and above the cost of installation of the old boxes. The prayer of the complaint was that the rules and regulations be declared void and of no force and that defendant be prohibited from enforcing the same.

Relator, the Power Company, filed an answer asserting that the rules and regulations were promulgated and enforced for the purpose of bringing about standardization of equipment and uniformity in the conducting of defendant's business, and that the same promoted safety to lives and property, and lessened the cost of operation and maintenance both by the consumer and the company.

The rules in question had not been filed with the Commission by the relator. During the hearing relator asked permission to file the same as a part of its schedule *Page 320 of rates and regulations. The Commission made the following report:

Upon a full hearing of evidence, oral argument and briefs filed by the parties the Commission handed down a report wherein it found that the new box required by the rule was made under patents as alleged and that the cost of it, including top, was $2.69 per box; that the total cost of the box and its installation was from $5 to $6 more per meter, that is to say, per consumer, than the cost of the old boxes and their installation; that the added cost to complainants was from $18,000 to $20,000 per annum, and to all consumers in Kansas City approximately $40,000 per annum.

The Commission found that the new boxes had some advantages, both to consumer and relator, over the old boxes, but that a substantial objection to the rule was that it required a particular type of box obtainable only from restricted sources, and at high cost; that the advantages accruing from the new boxes were in favor of the relator more than the consumer.

The Commission pointed out that the price of boxes insisted upon by relator could more likely be reduced if the installation was made by the relator and charged to its capital account; and found that the boxes advocated by the relator were so closely identified with the installation and testing of meters as to probably justify the approval of a rule permitting relator to furnish the same and charge to its capital account if request were made by relator so to do.

The report concluded by holding that the rules as promulgated could not be enforced: first, because they had not been properly filed; and second, that they should not be filed because in the opinion of the Commission they were arbitrary and unreasonable.

An order was entered in conformity with the report prohibiting relator from further enforcing the rules in question. Motion for rehearing was filed, additional evidence had and rehearing denied. This proceeding by certiorari was instituted in the Circuit Court of Cole *Page 321 County, the case there submitted, and the order of the Commission affirmed. Appeal was then taken to this court.

The rules in question were as follows:

"620. The customer is required to furnish an iron entrance box with fused service switch, and install same at the point where service enters the premises. The company will ordinarily furnish the conductor from the company's lines to the point where the service enters the premises.

"621. The iron entrance box with switch and cut-out shall be arranged so that no live parts can at any time be exposed, and shall be connected to the entrance conduit by continuous rigid, iron conduit. The box shall allow sealing to prevent exposure of any live parts, and shall provide for an enclosing device for meter terminals. Two and three-wire entrance boxes up to and including 100 amperes must have an externally operated switch. Load side fuses, accessible to the customer, are required on all circuits, including single circuit installations. The entrance box used must be approved by the engineering department.

"622. The customer will be required to furnish all fuses of an approved type and in accordance with the National Electrical Code. Where the customer desires the company to re-fuse, a charge will be made to cover the cost.

"623. The company reserves the right to require a load side switch as a ready means for the customer to cut off the supply of current. Such is required particularly for stove circuits.

"624. For duplexes, flats and apartments, a main line iron entrance box with fused externally-operated service switch is required in addition to the iron service boxes with fused service switches for the individual customers.

"625. Specifications for `standardized' iron entrance box with fused service switch and cut-out: *Page 322

"a. Knock-outs shall be provided in entrance box on sides, ends and back to allow service and load wires to enter or leave through conduit or bushings.

"b.

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Related

State ex rel. Wabash Railroad v. Public Service Commission
196 S.W. 369 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1917)
Southwest Missouri Railroad v. Public Service Commission
281 Mo. 52 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1920)
State ex rel. Croy v. Bluefield Water Works & Improvement Co.
103 S.E. 340 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 940, 310 Mo. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-v-publ-serv-comm-mo-1925.