Swan v. Public Utilities Commission

298 F. 114, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 992
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedDecember 18, 1922
DocketNo. 437
StatusPublished

This text of 298 F. 114 (Swan v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swan v. Public Utilities Commission, 298 F. 114, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 992 (D. Kan. 1922).

Opinion

. BOOTH, District Judge.

This cause has come on for final hearing upon the pleadings and proof. The suit is one for an injunction to restrain the Public Utilities Commission of Kansas from enforcing its order of July 1, 1921, which is as follows-;

“Before the Public Utilities Commission for the State of Kansas.
“In the Matter of the Investigation into the Reasonableness of the Customer’s Charge-Included in the Schedule of Rates Piled by the Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company, L. G. Treleaven, Receiver, for Gas at Topeka and Oakland,-Kansas.
' ' “Order.
“Noyr on this 1st day of July, 1921, the above-named case came on for final consideration and order of the commission.
“It appears that on the 11th day of April, 1921, this commission on its own initiative and motion instituted an investigation into the reasonableness of the service or consumer’s charge of the said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company through its receiver; that later the said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company, through its receiver and counsel, appeared, and a full hearing was had on said question and all other matters in connection with reasonable rates and charges of said company for its service in the cities of Topeka and Oakland, Kan. The evidence of all the parties was received, the law presented by counsel, and the evidence and law reviewed and presented to the commission by counsel for the said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company, and the commission, haying heard said evidence, listened to the argument of counsel, and having considered and weighed all of the evidence introduced by all of the parties present and participating in said hearing and investigation, finds that the rate of 80 cents per thousand cubic feet of gas furnished its customers in said cities, based on an annual leakage of 200,000 cubic feet per mile of three-inch equivalent, is a fair and compensatory rate for the service rendered by said company.
“And the commission further finds that no sufficient effort has been put forth by said company to maintain its distributing system in a reasonable condition as to leakage prior to this year, but that, on the other hand, the said company has always heretofore failed, neglected, and refused to provide against said leakage, even to the extent of the money provided by the United States court through the order of Judge Booth directing a larger proportion of the receipts for gas to said company for said purpose, but that said company has used said funds for other purposes, and said leakage has grown greater until recently, when the said company has inaugurated a campaign to reduce said leakage, but which leakage is still greatly in excess of the standard of 200,000 cubic feet fixed and determined as a reasonable standard by this commission.
“The commission further finds that the said 80 cents per thousand cubic feet, although compensatory for said gas delivered to its customers on the [116]*116basis of a leakage of 200,000 cubic feet of three-inch -equivalent, is not sufficient to provide funds to carry on a proper campaign to 'reduce the leakage to the standard fixed by this commission within a Reasonable time.
“The commission further finds that a reasonable sum for carrying on this campaign to reduce the leakage by the receiver of the said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company, or by the company, should said receivership be discontinued during the next 12 months, is $48,000.
“It is therefore by the commission ordered, and'the said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company, by its receiver, is authorized to collect 80 cents per thousand cubic feet of gas metered to its customers as and for full compensation for said gas so delivered.
“It is by the commission further ordered that the said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company be and it is authorized to collect a service or customer’s charge from each of its customers in the sum of 35 cents per month: Provided, however, that said service or customer’s charge shall be placed in and accounted for as a separate item and account, and shall all be used by said Consumers’ Light, Heat & Power Company through its receiver in his campaign to reduce the leakage of its distributing system to the fixed standard of 200,000 cubic feet per mile of three-inch equivalent, and said funds shall be used for no other purpose; and provided, further, that the period for which such service or customer’s charge may be collected is limited by this order to twelve months from the date hereof, and that'the commission retains jurisdiction hereof for any other and further orders necessary herein.
“By the Commission: It is so ordered.”

The validity of this order is challenged on several grounds. It is urged that the order is void because of failure by the commission to make findings of fact as required by sections 13 and 16, chapter 238, Session Taws of 1911 of the state of Kansas.

It might perhaps be contended that the commission did include findings of fact in its order above, quoted, but I do not understand counsel for defendants to make such contention here. It seems to be conceded that the order contains merely conclusions of law and not findings of fact, properly speaking. That this is the position of counsel for defendants I gather from defendants’ answer and from the brief submitted on their behalf. This ground of challenge was set up in the complaint, and the allegations of the complaint in this respect are not denied in the answer; the general denial in the answer not being sufficient for that purpose under the provisions of equity rule No. 30.

Further, in the brief submitted on behalf of the defendants it is not contended that the commission made findings of fact, but the position of the counsel is that no such findings were necessary. In support of this view he cites the case o£ Public Utilities Commission v. Wichita Railroad & Tight Co. (C. C. A.) 268 Fed. 37. That case, however, has recently been reversed by the United States Supreme Court, in an opinion handed down November 13, 1922 (260 U. S. 48, 43 Sup. Ct. 51, 67 T. Ed. 124); the court holding that a finding of facts was necessary to the validity of the order of the commission. In the course of its opinion the court said:

“The proceeding we are considering is governed by section 13. That is tbe general section of the act comprehensively describing the duty of the commission, vesting it with power to fix and order substituted new rates for existing rates. The power is expressly made to depend on the condition that after full hearing and investigation the commission shall find existing rates to be unjust, unreasonable, unjustly discriminatory, or unduly preferential. We conclude that a valid order of the commission under the act must contain [117]*117a finding of fact after hearing and investigation, upon which the order is founded, and that for lack of such a finding the order in this case was void.”

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Bluebook (online)
298 F. 114, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swan-v-public-utilities-commission-ksd-1922.