Tyler Gas Service Company, and City of Tyler, Texas v. Federal Power Commission, United Gas Pipe Line Company, Intervenor

247 F.2d 590, 101 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4859
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1957
Docket13623_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 247 F.2d 590 (Tyler Gas Service Company, and City of Tyler, Texas v. Federal Power Commission, United Gas Pipe Line Company, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler Gas Service Company, and City of Tyler, Texas v. Federal Power Commission, United Gas Pipe Line Company, Intervenor, 247 F.2d 590, 101 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4859 (D.C. Cir. 1957).

Opinion

BASTIAN, Circuit Judge. '

This proceeding is to review ¡an order of the Federal Power Commission (hereinafter called the Commission) denying a motion of Tyler Gas Service Company (hereinafter called Tyler Gas) for re>fund of sums paid to intervenor, United Gas Pipe Line Company (hereinafter called United), and two joint petitions by Tyler Gas and the City of Tyler to reject rate schedules filed by United to increase rates specified in a contract between Tyler Gas and United.

The record discloses that the franchise of Tyler Gas as distributor of natural gas for the City of Tyler was to expire in 1946. In that year, natural gas was in abundant supply in the vicinity of the City of Tyler, by reason of the proximity of a number of producing fields. As the expiration of the Tyler Gas franchise neared, a group of citizens appeared before the Tyler City Commission with the proposal that the franchise be not renewed, that a new distributing company be organized, which would procure its gas from new sources at a price less than Tyler Gas paid United, its supplier, and suggesting that greatly reduced rates thus might be made available to the consumers. The City Commission was quite receptive to this proposal and, for a period of several months, had it under consideration.

Tyler Gas wished its franchise renewed, and United was anxious to retain this market for its product. After •considerable negotiation, United consented to a reduction in price to Tyler Gas for domestic consumption, from 22% 0 to 120 per MCF, if the City of Tyler would renew the Tyler Gas franchise. A new franchise was prepared, specifying the rates to be charged consumers, the rates being predicated on a rate of 120 per MCF from United to Tyler Gas for domestic and 80% of the amount received by Tyler Gas, though in no event less than 7.20 per MCF for industrial gas.

On April 3, 1946, United addressed a letter to the City of Tyler wherein United agreed that such rates would be *592 the maximum rates which United would charge Tyler Gas for a period of sixteen years. In reliance on the representation of United, the proponents of the new and competing company withdrew the application for its franchise, the City of Tyler renewed the franchise of Tyler Gas for a period approximating the life of the contract, and the original contract between United and Tyler Gas was amended accordingly. The amended contract was to run until 1962.

By the Commission’s Order No. 144, dated October 30, 1948, it was provided that existing rate schedules, which set forth rates in terms of percentages of receipts, should be replaced by schedules setting forth the rates in terms of dollars and cents per unit. This order was issued to bring all rate schedules in line insofar as terms of dollars and'cents per unit were concerned, and was not the result of independent action on the part of United, Tyler Gas or the City of Tyler. On July 30, 1952, United filed with the Commission a so-called “conversion tariff,” in accordance with Order No. 144.

The contract with Tyler Gas covered both industrial and domestic sales. The conversion tariff slightly increased the rate on industrial sales and decreased it on domestic sales, with a resultant small increase in the' rates at that time being paid under the contract.

On June 24, 1953, United filed schedules of increased rates for both domestic and industrial gas and, on July 10, 1953, the Commission issued an order suspending the increased rates for five months, pending a hearing. This suspension did not apply to rates applicable to sales for industrial use only. Tyler Gas intervened in the proceedings and opposed the rates.

In December 1953, Tylér Gas and the City of Tyler filed a complaint with the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, seeking a preliminary injunction to restrain United from putting its increases into effect, and for declaratory judgment declaring the contracts to be valid and existing. The District Court denied the application for preliminary injunction and, on motion of United, dismissed the complaint. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed. Tyler Gas Service Co. v. United Gas Pipe Line Co., 1954, 217 F.2d 73.

During the pendency of the proceedings in the. Fifth Circuit, hearings were held for the purpose of considering a proposal for settlement of United’s schedule of general rate increases, and Tyler Gas requested that this settlement, remain open for the determination of the issues raised in the petition to intervene by Tyler Gas. This was done.

Following the decision by the Supreme Court in the Mobile case, 1 Tyler Gas filed a motion for refund of the amounts United had been collecting pursuant to1 the order of the Commission dated January 25, 1954, and later filed, jointly with the City of Tyler, petitions to reject two. schedules for further rate increases filed by United subsequent to the January 25, 1954, order of the Commission. The Commission denied the motion and the joint petitions, holding that the Mobile case was not applicable and that Tyler Gas had no rights under its contract, which, by its terms, ran until 1962. The basis of the Commission’s decision was (1) that the case could be distinguished from the Mobile1 case, and (2) that the action of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit was res judicata insofar as Tyler Gas was concerned.

The questions presented on this appeal are two: first, is this case distinguishable from the Mobile case; and, second,, was the judgment of the Fifth Circuit, in the prior litigation res judicata? Our answer to both questions is in the-negative.

Respondent’s position that this case is distinguishable from' Mobile is based, on the contention that the United conversion tariff, filed pursuant to Commis *593 sion Order No. 144, was a unilateral change in the contract rates as to Tyler Gas, and that from the time of that change the contract did not bar further unilateral increases in rates. Particular reliance is placed on the fact that the conversion tariff effected some upward change in the cost of natural gas supplied to Tyler Gas by United. From this, respondent argues that Tyler Gas had no binding contractual rights to any rate and that United, by filing with the Commission a higher rate schedule, could unilaterally increase the price of gas to Tyler Gas. This, it is said, makes inapplicable the decision in Mobile that the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 717a--717w (in particular, § 4(d) ), confers no power to effect changes in contracts by unilateral action. According to respondent, at the time the rate increases were filed here there was no longer a right to obtain gas at any contract price.

In the Mobile case, United had a contract with Mobile to furnish gas for a certain industrial user at a certain percentage of the sale price paid Mobile by the user. Under Commission Order No. 144, United was directed to and did file a conversion tariff, which the Third Circuit found “ * * * almost identical with the amount the Mobile percentage rate actually figured.” [Emphasis supplied.] Mobile Gas Service Corp. v.

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Bluebook (online)
247 F.2d 590, 101 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-gas-service-company-and-city-of-tyler-texas-v-federal-power-cadc-1957.