Tyler Gas Service Company and the City of Tyler, Texas v. United Gas Pipe Line Company

217 F.2d 73, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 435, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 1954
Docket15034
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 217 F.2d 73 (Tyler Gas Service Company and the City of Tyler, Texas v. United Gas Pipe Line Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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 the City of Tyler, Texas v. United Gas Pipe Line Company, 217 F.2d 73, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 435, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

Alleging that United Gas Pipe Line Company, a “Natural Gas Company”, was under binding term contracts as to rates with the City of Tyler and the Tyler Gas Service Company, the operators of a system for the local distribution and sale of gas and the holder of a gas franchise from the city, and that, in violation of their express covenants, it had filed with the Federal Power Commission and was proposing, at the end of the suspension period, to put into effect a schedule of higher rates, Tyler and Tyler Gas filed this suit seeking: (1) a preliminary injunction to restrain United from putting the schedule into effect; (2) a judgment declaring the contracts to be in all things valid, subsisting, and enforcible; and (3) enjoining the defendant from proposing or making effective any rates and charges in excess thereof.

The defendant moved for a dismissal of the complaint for want of jurisdiction and for want of equity and failure to state a claim because it in effect seeks to ■enjoin compliance by the defendant with the provisions of the Natural Gas Act, 1 and more particularly Section 4 thereof, 2 and because it in effect bases its claim to declaratory and injunctive relief upon the theory and contention that the contracts relied on override and nullify the *75 duties, powers, obligations and procedures imposed and conferred by the act on defendant as a natural gas company under the Act, indeed override the provisions of the Act itself. In addition, it moved for a dismissal as to the City of Tyler for the reason that the city was not a party to the contracts and had no capacity to sue on or in respect of them, and filed a lengthy answer, which, because of the manner in which the case went off, it is not necessary to here set out.

The matter thereafter coming on for hearing on the application for preliminary injunction, the district judge filed a carefully worded opinion in which,, summing up the facts, 3 as to which there- *76 is no serious dispute, and discussing the applicable law, he held: that federal jurisdiction existed by reason .of diversity and jurisdictional amount; that . United is a natural gas company subject to the act; that being such it cannot by private contract fix binding long term future rates; and that plaintiffs must, therefore, seek such relief as they may be entitled to under the statute from the commission and not from the court.

So holding, he denied the preliminary injunction and dismissed the bill for want of equity, and plaintiffs have appealed.

Here, while conceding that the commission on final hearing may fix reasonable rates higher than the contract fixes them, appellants insist: that unless and until the contracts sued on are set aside for some invalidity, or after a hearing before the Federal Power Commission, the contract rates are found by the commission to be unreasonable and are set aside, the contract and the rates they fix are controlling upon the parties to them; and that they may not be rendered null and ineffective by the unilateral action of United in filing with the Federal Power Commission a new schedule with higher rates.

In support of their views, that this cannot be done and that the court erred in denying the preliminary injunction and dismissing the complaint for want of equity, appellants, in eight specifications of error, 4 which ring the changes on *77 what it claims is the fundamental error of the trial court, attack its holding that a public utility company may, by the simple expedient of filing a revised schedule with the Federal Power Commission, without a full hearing before and a finding by the Commission that such contract rates are unjust, unreasonable, or unlawful, disregard its solemn contracts fixing maximum rates.

Moving forward under these specifications and conceding that a contract fixing utility rates is deemed to have been made subject to the sovereign power of the government to alter it under proper circumstances, appellants insisting that it is not void but only voidable, quote from Vol. 73, C.J.S., Public Utilities, § 16, pages 1012-1013, where it is said:

“Such a contract is, however, voidable only in that it cannot stand against modification by competent authority; and it is obligatory on the parties until abrogated by the state, falling only when the rate is altered or a different rate is fixed.”

and from 43 Am.Jur. page 639:

“Until the legislature or other body having the right to prescribe rates to be charged by public utilities has exercised this power, the rates are subject to contract between the corporation and its patrons, and such contracts will be deemed valid by the courts, and may be enforced by an appropriate mode.”

Proceeding from the premises these contentions and citations supply, appellants insist: that Section 4, subd. (d) and (e) of the Natural Gas Act do not authorize a natural gas company to increase rates fixed by contract solely by its own action in filing a new schedule with the commission ; that this can be done only after a full hearing and determination that the contract rates are not in the public interest because unjust, unreasonable, or unlawful.

Citing in support Colorado Interstate Co. v. Federal Power Commission, 10 Cir,, 142 F.2d 943, and insisting that nothing in Secs. 4, 4(e) and 5(a) of the Natural Gas Act is inconsistent therewith, the appellants urge upon us that the district judge erred in refusing interlocutory equitable relief and in dismissing the bill for want of equity.

We do not think so. We find ourselves, on the contrary, in agreement with the well considered and expressed views of the district judge, that the defendant, a public utility, may not by private contract fix binding long term rates either too high or too low, for if too high they would penalize the particular consumers affected, or if too low they might jeopardize the ability to serve the public and in both situations they would be the result of action in contravention, if not in defiance, of the Natural Gas Act, and in particular Section 4 thereof, and of the authority and jurisdiction of the Federal Power Commission.

Based upon these views, he thought, as we do, that the commission is empowered under and in accordance with the terms of the Act to afford relief and that any relief due the plaintiff must be sought from the commission and under and in accordance with the Act.

So thinking, he rejected, as we reject, the plaintiff’s view that the district court *78 could and should grant the relief asked, (1) an injunction prohibiting United from proceeding under Section 4 of the Act, and (2) a decree in effect requiring it to specifically perform the contract sued on, the Act and its proceeding under the Act to the contrary notwithstanding.

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217 F.2d 73, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 435, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-gas-service-company-and-the-city-of-tyler-texas-v-united-gas-pipe-ca5-1954.