Tulsa Tribune Co. v. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co.

1927 OK 287, 261 P. 213, 126 Okla. 280, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 13, 1927
DocketNo. 16563
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1927 OK 287 (Tulsa Tribune Co. v. Oklahoma Natural Gas 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
Tulsa Tribune Co. v. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co., 1927 OK 287, 261 P. 213, 126 Okla. 280, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 136 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This cause of action was brought before the Corporation Commission by plaintiffs in error above named on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, inhabitants of the city of Tulsa and the surrounding towns of Dawson, Red Fork, and Turley. It is asserted in the application that Tulsa being located in a favorable geographical territory with respect to the natural gas fields of the state, and particularly the Osage Nation, from which the Oklahoma Natural Gas Company takes a portion of its gas, therefore, the city of Tulsa should be separated and segregated from other municipalities furnished by the transmission system of the respondent; that a zone should be created for the purpose of including therein that portion of the property used by the respondent in rendering service to Tulsa, and that the city of Tulsa be relieved from the burden of contributing any portion of the amount of money necessary to a reasonable return upon the property of respondent devoted to the general public service within the state of Oklahoma.

It is contended that the rate being charged by the respondent corporation, under its franchise, to gas consumers in the city of Tulsa is excessive, and that the earnings resultant from that portion of the property used and useful in the service of gas to the city of Tulsa is grossly in excess of a reasonable rate, and that a temporary rate of not more than 40 cents per M. cubic feet for domestic consumption and 15 cents per M. cubic feet for industrial purposes be established by an immediate order to that effect, and that on final hearing the Commission promulgate a fair and reasonable rate, based upon the geographical and physical advantagese njoyed by the ciay of Tulsa, such final rate to be calculated upon the cost of producing and acquiring such gas and the cost of delivery thereof to the consumers and omitting therefrom the necessity of contribution on the part of Tulsa toward any amount to constitute a reasonable return .on property not used in the service of said city and towns similarly situated. Petitioners further prayed for a refund of all sums of money theretofore collected from said city in the form of excess rates since December 16, 1921

The Corporation Commission set the hearing for December 31, 1924, and gave notice to the respondent. Evidence was offered by the petitioners tending to support the allegations of the petition as to the amount of earnings in the city of Tulsa. The Commission took notice of the geographical location of Tulsa. The respondent offered no testimony, contending that the evidence offered by petitioners was based upon an erroneous assumption in that it had not taken into consideration a valuation of the respondent’s production or transmission *281 property necessary to supply the city of Tulsa.

The Commission at tlie time of the hearing recited that for 15 months past it had been engaged in an effort to arrive at a fair and just conclusion with respect to rates to be charged by the respondent at the city gates of cities and towns supplied by that corporation. That on June 19, 1923, the Supreme Court handed down an opinion which reversed the Corporation Commission’s Order No. 1S8G, which had established a gate rate of 25 cents per M. cubic feet for all cities and towns served by the Oklahoma Natural Gas Company, which opinion was filed after the Corporation Commission had been enjoined by the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma from the enforcement of Order No. 1886. That the Supreme Court had fixed a gate rate of 38 cents for domestic purposes and 20 cents for industrial purposes, and that immediately thereafter the Commission had begun to re-value the properties of the Oklahoma Natural Gas Company throughout the state with the view of establishing a new rate to be charged all cities served by the respondent. That some 20 days had been consumed in taking testimony on the new matter by the Commission instituted, and that the trial of the cause had proceeded some ten or fifteen days prior to the filing of the petition herein.

The order of the Corporation Commission of January 5, 1925, concluded by consolidating the cause with cause No. 5965, then being considered by the Commission for a determination of a general rate schedule for all municipalities served by the respondent company.

The petitioners filed a motion requesting a specific and immediate ruling by the Commission: First, whether it would grant the prayer for an emergency rate; second, that the Commission make findings of fact as a predicate for appeal; third, to set aside the order of consolidation. On January 26. 1925, the Commission entered Order No. 2724. being a finding of fact and setting forth the Commission’s view and theory of the correctness of the general gate rate principle as applied to the situation under consideration, and denying an emergency rate as applied to the city of Tulsa. Thereupon petitioners perfected their appeal.

Subsequently, and on December 2S. 1925, the Commission promulgated Order No. 3276, in cause No. 5965, wherein the Commission, in the consolidated matter, after a valuation finding, reduced the city gate rate for all municipalities served by the respondent through its Enid and general system, by causing to be made a rate of 35 cents per M. cubic feet, and ordering a deduction in like amount in distributing systems for domestic purposes effective ■January 1, 1926.

In the trial of this cause only one witness was produced, that one being a Mr. Grimes on behalf of petitioners, he having theretofore been an auditor for the Commission and an assistant auditor for the respondent company. He testified from a duplicate packet or annual report, secured from the offices of the respondent company, the original of which had theretofore been filed with the Commission but misplaced.

Mr. Grimes testified that during the year 1923, a total of 3,445,841 M. cubic feet of gas was sold by the Oklahoma Natural Gas Company in Tulsa for both domestic and industrial purposes, at an average rate of 45.97 cents per M. cubic feet, which produced a gross revenue of $1,593,920.79. He then undertook to determine the total cost of gas in Tulsa at the burner tip, and in undertaking to show what the cost of gas was he submitted a table as follows:

General expense _$ .0205
Producing expense _ .0101
Transmission expense _ .9647
Royalties_ .0063
Gas purchased_ .0829
Taxes _ .02S9
Interest and other deductions_ .0058
Distribution expense _ .0239
Total cost at burner tip_$ .2331

Having thus determined that the total cost of the gas "at the burner tip was 23 31 cents per M. cubic feet, Mr. Grimes testified that the cost of the 3,124,752 M. cubic feet of gas sold in Tulsa for domestic purposes, at 23 31 cents per M. cubic feet, was $728,37i9.69. which subtracted from the gross revenue produced by the sale of that much gas, to wit, $1,492,149.17, left a gross profit of $763,769.48.

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Related

Southwestern Light & Power Co. v. City of Elk
1940 OK 458 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)
Lone Star Gas Co. v. Corporation Commission
1934 OK 396 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 287, 261 P. 213, 126 Okla. 280, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulsa-tribune-co-v-oklahoma-natural-gas-co-okla-1927.