Wilkes-Barre Co. v. Public Service Commission

70 Pa. Super. 464, 1918 Pa. Super. LEXIS 277
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 30, 1918
DocketAppeal, No. 17
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 Pa. Super. 464 (Wilkes-Barre 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
Wilkes-Barre Co. v. Public Service Commission, 70 Pa. Super. 464, 1918 Pa. Super. LEXIS 277 (Pa. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion bt

Porter, J.,

The Wilkes-Barre Light Company, the intervenor, presented its petition to the Public Service Commission, [467]*467praying for a certificate of public convenience, evidencing the approval by the commission of a certain ordinance contract ordained by the City of Wilkes-Barre, prescribing the conditions upon which the city would consent to the entry upon its streets by the corporation, for the purpose of supplying light, heat and power.' The Wilkes-Barre Company, a corporation already having the right, under its charter, to supply light, heat and power within the municipality, protested against the approval of the contract ordinance by the commission. The proceedings before thé commission were protracted, much testimony was taken and after the parties were fully heard, the commission approved of the ordinance and granted a certificate of public convenience. The Wilkes-Barre Company appeals from that action of the commission.

The determination of the commission appealed from in this case was filed and the order that the certificate of public convenience issue was made on May 22, 1917. The áppeal of. the Wilkes-Barre Company to this court was taken on June 28, 1917. The Public Service Company Law, Act of July 26, 1913, Article VI, Sec. 17, P. L. 1424, relating to appeals from the Public Service Commission, provides: “Within thirty days after the filing of any finding or determination b$ the commission, or after the date of service of any order,......any party to the proceeding affected thereby may appeal therefrom.” It was manifestly the legislative intention to make a distinction between those cases in which the action of the commission involved only the approval of something in which the general public had an interest, but did not directly affect the rights or property and did not require any individual or corporation to perform any service, such a case as that with which we are now dealing, on the one hand; and those in which the commission issued an order, requiring some individual or corporation to do or abstain from doing some act, or to perform the act in a certain way, and in which notice to [468]*468the party affected was a reasonable requirement. This appellant had not availed itself of its right to intervene and become a party to the proceeding, in the manner provided by Section 14 of Article VI, of the Public Service Company Law, and was not entitled to notice of the “determination”"of the commission; as to it, if it was entitled to appeal, the time began to run from the filing of the determination. We might, therefore, quash the appeal upon this ground. This being the first case, however, in which this question has been raised, we deem it well to consider the questions argued by counsel and so ably discussed in their respective briefs, in so far as they go to the merits of this litigation.

The principal question upon which the parties are at variance is: “Was there any valid contract or franchise agreement made and presented to the commission by a party competent to do so?” This is the second' question presented by the appellant in its statement of the questions involved. Mature consideration of the provisions of the ordinance of the City of Wilkes-Barre and the facts presented to the commission has led us to the conclusion that the existence of a contract, absolutely binding upon the city and upon the company, was not necessary to the exercise of jurisdiction by the commission in this case. The Wilkes-Barre Light Company was incorporated under the provisions of the Act of May 8, 1889, P. L. 136, and its right to enter upon the streets of the city was subject to the limitation contained in that statute, viz: “No company shall enter upon any street in any city......until after the consent to such entry of the councils......shall have been obtained.” The city had the right to determine the conditions upon which it would consent. The ordinance here involved contained provisions not only regulating the manner in which the appliances of the light company should be installed upon the streets, but required the company to enter into a contract to furnish certain service to the city gratuitously, to' bid upon furnishing street lights [469]*469to the city at not exceeding certain rates, to' furnish light to the residences of citizens at not exceeding certain rates and to do other things not necessary here to specify. The tenth section of the ordinance provided, inter alia, that if the company failed “to accept the provisions of this ordinance,....... within ninety days from the passage of this ordinance,......then in all such case all property, including the plant and equipment, rights and franchises whatsoever of the said company shall become the absolute property of the City of Wilkes-Barre.” The fourteenth section of the ordinance contained provisions which, in our opinion, are controlling. “Should the Wilkes-Barre Light Company be prevented by legal procedure before the Public Service Commission......, or appeal therefrom......to the Superior Court or Supreme Court of the State of Pennsylvania, or by any proceeding at law or in equity of the Courts of Common Pleas of this Commonwealth, not undertaken nor used for the purpose of delay, from exercising and enjoying the privileges herein granted, the said time, specified in sections two, ten and thirteen of this ordinance, preceding the phrase ‘after the passage of this ordinance’ shall not begin to run until from the date of the final disposition of such litigation.” The ordinance did not contain any provision requiring the company to accept its terms before entering upon the streets. What the municipal authorities said was, practically, “You may enter upon the streets, if you do so you must accept the provisions of this ordinance, by proper corporate action, within ninety days or all your property, equipment, rights and franchises will become the absolute property of the city, but if you are prevented, by the legal procedure specified in the fourteenth section of this ordinance, from exercising and enjoying the privileges herein granted, the said time within which you must accept the ordinance shall not begin to run until from the date of the final disposition of such litigation.”

[470]*470Thisá ordinance granting the consent of the city to the entry of the company upon the streets was not passed until August 3, 1915, after the enactment of the Public Service Company Law. Article III, section 2, of that statute provides: “Upon the approval of the commission, evidenced by its certificate of public convenience, first had and obtained, and not otherwise, it shall be lawful for any proposed public service company......(b) To begin the exercise of any right, power, franchise, or privilege under any ordinance, municipal contract, or otherwise.” Section 11 of the same article of the statute provides that: “No contract or agreement between any public service company and municipal corporation shall be valid unless approved by the commission;” and provided that, “Upon notice to the local authorities concerned, any public service company may appeal to the commission, before the consent of the municipal authorities has been obtained, for a declaration by the commission of the terms and conditions upon which it will grant its approval of such contract or agreement if at all.” The municipal authorities, evidently assumed that this statute was a valid exercise of legislative power and that it Avas incumbent upon the company to obtain the approval of the commission before it could begin to exercise the privilege to enter upon the streets granted by the ordinance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 Pa. Super. 464, 1918 Pa. Super. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkes-barre-co-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1918.