The City of Hastings, Nebraska, a Municipal Corporation v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Company, Inc., a Kansas Corporation, (Two Cases.)

226 F.2d 419, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4862, 11 P.U.R.3d 346
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 1955
Docket15192, 15193
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 226 F.2d 419 (The City of Hastings, Nebraska, a Municipal Corporation v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Company, Inc., a Kansas Corporation, (Two Cases.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The City of Hastings, Nebraska, a Municipal Corporation v. Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Company, Inc., a Kansas Corporation, (Two Cases.), 226 F.2d 419, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4862, 11 P.U.R.3d 346 (8th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

The gas distribution system in the City of Hastings, Nebraska, is municipally owned, and the City obtains the gas which it sells to consumers from the Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Co. The electric light-and-power plant for the City likewise is municipally owned, and the City also has been obtaining from the Kansas-Nebraska Natural Gas Co. the gas which it uses for fuel in the plant’s operation.

Kansas-Nebraska began to sell gas to the City, for its conducting of both of these activities, in 1942, under a separate contract as to each. The contract covering gas supplied to the City as a distributor fixed a certain rate for gas used by the City “for resale”, with an exclusionary clause that “Gas used or consumed by Buyer for industrial use shall not be covered by the foregoing schedule but shall be covered by separate agreement.” The rate schedule of the contract, with its exclusionary clause, had been duly filed by Kansas-Nebraska with the Federal Power Commission. The contract covering gas furnished to the City for the operation of its power plant, which was on an interruptible basis, provided for a different rate.

The existence of this separate contract for the power-plant gas apparently operated to the City’s satisfaction until 1947, when Kansas-Nebraska filed a new rate schedule with the Federal Power Commission, voluntarily reducing the price on gas being supplied by it to the City and the other distributors in the area for resale, but, as under the previous schedule, making exclusion of gas used or consumed by any such distributor for its own industrial purposes. Instead, however, of representing a straight commodity charge, as the previous rate had been, the new rate consisted of a demand charge for such quantity of gas as the distributor obligated Kansas-Nebraska to deliver, under a contract to be entered into between them, plus a commodity charge for such quantity of gas as the distributor actually took.

To insure an adequate margin of distributor gas for new customers and community growth, the City desired to subject Kansas-Nebraska to a substantial demand requirement, but it wanted, in such agreement as it might make, to have a right to use the margin between its contract demand and its customer consumption, for fuel purposes of its power plant. Kansas-Nebraska refused to enter into any such agreement with it.

The City then sought, by correspondence, to get the Federal Power Commission to require Kansas-Nebraska to amend its new rate schedule, so as to leave the gas covered by its distributor demand subject to use by it in its power plant. The Commission made reply that the request was in effect one to have the Commission establish a rate on gas for use by the City in its power plant, which the Commission regarded itself as without power to do, since the jurisdictional limitation of the Natural Gas Act made its provisions “apply * * * to the sale in interstate commerce of natural gas for resale * * * but * * * not * * * to * * * any other * * * sale of natural gas * * * ” 15 U.S.C.A. § 717b.

The City thereupon entered into a contract with Kansas-Nebraska for the sup *421 plying of a certain quantity of distributor or demand gas to it under the new rate schedule, with the exclusionary clause included in its provisions, and shortly afterward it also executed a new separate agreement covering the purchase of gas for its power plant, to take the place of the one previously in effect. Later, under a notice provision in the instrument, it purported to cancel the separate power-plant contract, but continued to allow part of the gas being supplied to it by Kansas-Nebraska to go through its pipe, leading from its main, to the power plant, using the gas for fuel therein, and refusing to give Kansas-Nebraska access to the meter by which such gas previously had been measured. It asserted that it was merely making use of part of the gas which it was entitled to receive under its demand contract; that it had a legal right to use any excess existing in such gas at any time, in any manner that it saw fit; and that it was only obligated, and was willing, to pay for the gas on this basis.

Kansas-Nebraska insisted that the City could not make use of gas in its power plant, or pay for such gas, under its distributor contract; that whatever gas it used in the power plant could only be taken, and was required to be paid for, on the basis of the power-plant contract, which the City had purported to cancel, and subject to the metering and rate provisions of that agreement; and that the City therefore would have to pay for such gas as power-plant, and not distributor, gas.

Upon the City’s continued refusal to pay for such gas except as a part of its distributor supply, Kansas-Nebraska instituted suit in the federal court, on diversity jurisdiction, for a declaration of its rights against the City, under 28 U. S.C.A. § 2201, and for a recovery on the basis of the rights claimed to exist in its favor as to such gas. Some months later, when the City took further steps to render certain the cancellation of the power-plant contract and to declare with finality its unwillingness to engage in any negotiation for another such separate contract, Kansas-Nebraska brought an additional suit, to enjoin the City from making further use of the gas supplied to it under its distributor contract, for the operation of its power plant, predicating its request for relief upon the provision of the distributor contract that the agreement covered only gas to be used “for resale” and excluded gas which the City wanted for any industrial use of its own.

The District Court, in a consolidated hearing of the two cases, granted Kansas-Nebraska the relief which it sought in each suit, and the City has appealed.

Trial of the cases in the District Court had been allowed to wait, until the Federal Power Commission had taken action upon a complaint, filed by the City with the Commission, after Kansas-Nebraska had instituted its two suits, by which administrative proceeding the City formally sought to get the Commission to eliminate the exclusionary clause from Kansas-Nebraska’s distributor-gas rate schedule as being invalid, and to have the Commission regulatively hold that the rate and supply under the City’s distributor contract were properly applicable to such part of this gas as the City might see fit to use in its power plant.

The Commission, after a full hearing on the complaint, issued its Opinion No. 244, 98 P.U.R.(N.S.) 1, declaring in substance (the Chairman of the Commission dissenting) that, on the history, facts and relations shown by the evidence to have existed in the situation, the Commission was without authority under the Natural Gas Act to require Kansas-Nebraska to eliminate the exclusionary clause from its rate schedule, in order to afford the City the opportunity to use part of the gas contracted to be supplied to it “for resale” or distribution purposes, as fuel for its power-plant activity. The Commission in effect held that, by their dealings and contracts, the parties had effectively established between themselves a separate sales identification and status for such gas as the City desired for its power plant; that, so far as the Natural Gas Act was concerned, they had a right so to do, and *422

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226 F.2d 419, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4862, 11 P.U.R.3d 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-city-of-hastings-nebraska-a-municipal-corporation-v-kansas-nebraska-ca8-1955.