United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission of West Virginia

14 F.2d 209, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1294
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedMay 10, 1926
Docket1517
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 209 (United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission of West Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission of West Virginia, 14 F.2d 209, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1294 (S.D.W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

ROSE, Circuit Judge.

On the 2d day of April, 1925, the United Fuel Gas Company filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia at Charleston its bill in equity. The defendants named in it are the Public Service Commission of West Virginia, Birk S. Stathers, Ernest D. Lewis, and James J. Divine (the members of the commission), Howard B. Lee, the Attorney General of the state, and Ered M. Livezey, counsel to the commission.

On the 17th day of April, 1925, sundry municipal and private corporations obtained leave to intervene. Both the original and the intervening defendants have answered. The latter will be called the protestants.

The bill states certain facts which are not in dispute, the more important of which are that, for a considerable time, the plaintiff has been engaged, among other things, in producing and selling natural gas in West Virginia and elsewhere. Some of the plaintiffs gas business is with domestic and industrial eon *210 sumers in that state, and some is with wholesale purchasers. Certainly since 1916 (ease 482,1 Decision Public Service Commission of West Virginia, 238) and perhaps since 1913 (United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission, 73 W. Va. 571, 80 S. E. 931), ’the rates charged by the plaintiff to consumers in West Virginia have been regulated by the Public Service Commission. With some relatively unimportant exceptions, those now prevailing have been in force since 1919. The plaintiff, claiming that they did not give a reasonable return upon the value of its property devoted to West Virginia public service, on April 26, 1924, filed a new and higher schedule, the going into effect of which was at once suspended by the commission. After a full hearing and the taking of much testimony, the commission on March 24,1925, by a vote of two to one, held that the old rates yielded an adequate return and refused to let the plaintiff exact the new. P. S. C. W. Va. bulletin 91. The plaintiff charges that the rates thus continued in force are confiscatory. It asserts that the defendants, the Attorney General of the state, and the counsel for the commission, are charged with the duty of enforcing certain statutes which subject to fine and imprisonment any public service corporation and any of its officers or agents who disobey the orders of the commission. It says that as a consequence, its property is being taken from it without due process of law. Injunctive relief is prayed.

Judge McClintic refused a temporary restraining order. Answers were filed whieh denied that the rates prescribed by the commission will not yield a fair return on the plaintiff’s property used in the public service. The application for an injunction pendente lite was heard by the court as now constituted.

The Plaintiff and the Commission.

Up to date, this is the latest scene in a practically continuous performance, whieh began on May 21,1917, more than eight years ago, with a petition of the plaintiff, numbered on the commission’s docket No. 585, for permission to increase its rates to domestic and industrial consumers. On February 28th following, the commission, by a report and order (bulletin 43) granted some of the relief asked for and refused the rest. In less than ten months, the plaintiff presented a new application, docketed No. 845. It asked to be allowed to make another raise to domestic consumers and to discontinue all service to industrial. This proceeding was pending for a year, when on December 19,1919, the commission filed a report and order (bulletin 51) by whieh some but not all of the advance sought was allowed, but permission to cut off gas to industrial consumers was denied. After an interval of eighteen months, the plaintiff was back with a petition, No. 1251, which the commission accurately described as in practical effect an application for a rehearing of the two earlier cases, No. 585 and No. 845, respectively. On April-28, 1922, the commission, by a report and order (bulletin 70), made some additional allowance to the plaintiff in the matter of rates, and suspended further action to await the result of six months’ operation under a prescribed system of accounting. On the 20th of February, 1923, the information whieh the commission had sought being then before it, the plaintiff asked that the case be further heard. Such request was granted, with the result that on August 9, 1923 (bulletin 82), the commission allowed a considerable temporary increase, and retained the proceedings to await.the result of six months’ operation, to end March, 1924. From this order the present protestants appealed, as the state law permitted, to the Supreme Court of Appeals, whieh on November 27, 1923 (City of Charleston v. Public Service Commission, 95 W. Va. 91, 120 S. E. 398), reversed and set aside the findings and order of the commission and remanded the case for “such further investigation and order as may be proper.”

Nothing further was done until April 26, 1924, when the plaintiff filed a new and higher schedule of rates. Upon the plaintiff’s motion, the nominally new proceeding, No. 1516, was consolidated with No. 1251, whieh was still open, and which, as has been stated, was in itself really an application for a rehearing of the earlier cases, No. 585 and No. 845. It was in this consolidated proceeding that the commission, refused permission to make the desired increase, and thereby according to the plaintiff confiscated part of its property without due process of law.

The Case in this Court.

By stipulation, the testimony and exhibits submitted to the commission were treated as before us and some additional testimony was put in.

In the course- of this long drawn out controversy, many contentions have been made. Some of them are at once novel and difficult. Questions are raised, authoritative answers to whieh will affect public and private interests of far greater magnitude than those directly before us, considerable as the latter are. The law of public rate regulation is still in the *211 making. Courts will do well to move cautiously and to speak sparingly. While stating all the facts which to either lawyer or layman can seem relevant, they should attempt to decide nothing not required for the full, fair, and just determination of the actual eases before them. Upon the record before us, it will be easier for us to keep ourselves within such limits if we depart somewhat from the usual order of discussion in rate cases and deal with other questions before attempting to appraise the value of the plaintiff’s property, used and useful in the public service.

Depreciation and Amortization.

The plaintiff employs in its business a plant which, like that of every one else, is subject to the wear and tear of use and misadventure. In order to keep itself in condition to render efficient service and to protect itself against the gradual decay of its investment, it must annually expend or lay aside a sum sufficient to offset deterioration. The plaintiff, moreover, is faced with a problem with which most public utilities are not concerned. It does not make the gas it sells. That has existed for milleniums, and plaintiff now owns much of it, or, at all events, has rights to or in it. When it is used, it is gone forever. A portion of plaintiff’s annual receipts, therefore, represents the proceeds of the sale of its property.

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14 F.2d 209, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-fuel-gas-co-v-public-service-commission-of-west-virginia-wvsd-1926.