Viscose Co. v. Public Service Commission

187 A. 454, 123 Pa. Super. 223, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 272
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 13, 1936
DocketAppeal, 24
StatusPublished

This text of 187 A. 454 (Viscose Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Viscose Co. v. Public Service Commission, 187 A. 454, 123 Pa. Super. 223, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 272 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This appeal brings before us another phase of the controversy between the Viscose Company and the *226 Lewistown-Reedsville Water Company. When last here (Lewistown-Reedsville Water Co. v. P. S. G., 111 Pa. Superior Ct. 24, 169 A. 406) we sustained the Public Service Commission in its construction and interpretation of Rule 8 of the Water Company. The present appeal by Viscose Company is from the order of the Commission deciding that an amendment of that rule which nearly quintuples the bills for water furnished to the industrial housing section of Viscose Company’s plant is just and reasonable as respects the Viscose Company. To understand the issues involved we shall have to go somewhat fully into the facts as presented in this and prior cases involving the Water Company’s rule and rates.

In 1921 Viscose Company erected a large rayon manufacturing plant in Granville Township, just outside of Lewistown. Three years later, in 1924, it laid out on its land in Granville Township an industrial housing group as auxiliary to and reasonably necessary for its manufacturing plant, 1 consisting of 250 dwelling houses, two stores, eleven fire hydrants and a sewage disposal plant. Before doing so it made inquiries of the intervening appellee, hereinafter referred to as the “Water Company”, as to the arrangements which could be made for supplying this industrial development with water. The water company presented three proposals, none of which provided for the extension of its facilities to the proposed development at its (the water company’s) own cost and expense. The water company was not willing to extend its mains, install pump and stand pipe then necessary,- lay service lines and install meters at its own immediate ex *227 pense. The most that it proposed along that line was for the Viscose Company, at its expense, to construct the Water Company’s distribution system on plans and specifications furnished by the latter, and look for reimbursement to a partial credit on the water bill. Another plan proposed by Water Company was for Viscose Company to build, own and maintain its own distribution system to this industrial housing section of its plant. As to the rates for water furnished the Viscose Company was referred to the Water Company’s schedule of rates and rule 8, effective April 1, 1922. 2

Viscose Company adopted the proposal that it construct its own distribution system—one of the three submitted by Water Company—and did so at a cost of over $21,000. As the entire cost of supplying the *228 water was to be borne by the employer,* * 3 it did. not run separate service lines into each house and installed no separate meters, nor did it lay separate lines or mains for the fire hydrants and sewage disposal plant. It treated the development or industrial housing section of its plant as a unit. Had it done otherwise, the cost would have been higher. The Water Company extended its eight-inch main to Viscose Company’s housing section land—a very short distance—and installed a battery of two four-inch meters 4 outside the borough limits 5 , and ivas put, and has since been put, to no additional expense by way of building, operating, maintaining or repairing the distribution line built and maintained by Viscose Company. The latter must not only keep the line in repair but also pay for all water lost by way of breaks, leakage, etc. in the distribution line.

It is readily seen that this was not the ordinary case of two or three separate, but adjacent, individual domestic consumers being supplied, Avith the approval of the water company, with water from the latter’s distribution main through one meter. It was a different and wholly unique proposition and put the dwellings included in this industrial housing group in a different class from the ordinary residence supplied on a separate or two or three party service line laid and maintained by the Water Company. Counsel for the *229 Commission in Ms brief in the last appeal pointed this out, arguing that the facts in the case were such as to “put these residences definitely in a different class from others served

It is to be borne in mind that the supply of all the water consumed in this entire industrial housing section of the Viscose Company’s plant, through one private distribution main and a battery of two meters, could not have been compelled by the Viscose Company. It was necessarily subject to the Water Company’s approval, which it gave in the most emphatic way possible—it made the connection to the plant after the distribution system inside the village was completed and with full knowledge of its manner of construction, and commenced furnishing water in December, 1924. Had it' been willing itself to pay the cost of constructing the system it might have insisted on a separation of water for fire protection and sewage disposal from individual consumers and a separate meter for each dwelling house. But it did not. It approved the adoption by the Viscose Company of one of its own proposals. At no cost to the Water Company by way of distribution after the water left the meters, with no expense by way of maintenance, repairs, leakage, etc. and no charges for reading individual meters, keeping individual accounts and billing individual customers, it had for all the water passing through the meters for all purposes—fire protection, sewage disposal and dwelling house consumption—only one customer, to whom it sent one bill and from whom it was certain of collecting, without delay, for all the water consumed.

When the Water Company came to sending out bills for the water thus consumed at the industrial housing section of appellant’s plant it adopted a method not justified by the plain language of its schedule and rules. Besides the additional monthly readiness to *230 serve charge of two-thirds of the full charge,(50 cents), for each family or establishment, which was provided for in rule 8, it attempted to average the total consumption of water at the industrial housing section among the 250 dwelling houses, as if each householder were its separate customer, and used 1/250 of all the water passing through the meters, instead of treating the Viscose Company as one consumer and applying to it the out-put charge in accordance with its tariff. In this way the Viscose Company, though using approximately 1,600,000 gallons of water per month at its industrial housing section, got no benefit of the lower out-put rates for quantities used in excess of 50,000 gallons a month, and would have to use 12,500,000 gallons a month before it would receive any benefit from the seven cent and four cent rates. Viscose Company, at once, protested against this method of billing and persistently objected to it as not being warranted by the tariff schedule and rules of the water company and, not having received any satisfaction from the water company, finally complained to the Public Service Commission as above (111 Pa. Superior Ct.

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Related

Hunter v. P. S. C.
168 A. 541 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Lewistown-Reedsville Water Co. v. P. S. C.
169 A. 406 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Borough of Lewistown v. Public Service Commission
80 Pa. Super. 528 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
187 A. 454, 123 Pa. Super. 223, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viscose-co-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1936.