Williamson v. Public Service Commission

174 S.W.2d 526, 295 Ky. 376, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 8, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 526 (Williamson v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamson v. Public Service Commission, 174 S.W.2d 526, 295 Ky. 376, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 245 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The Inland Gas Corporation was organized for the purpose of procuring, transporting and distributing-natural gas to consumers thereof, and which it says was confined, from the beginning of its operations, to the furnishing of gas to industrial institutions although it may have, under the terms of its charter, been authorized to distribute and furnish its product to individual domestic consumers, or to others engaged in that branch of service. In 1935 it went into bankruptcy and later the bankruptcy court appointed the appellant, Ben Williamson, Jr., trustee of the bankrupt estate, and directed him to continue to operate the business of the bankrupt until further orders of the court, and pending negotiations for refinancing schemes then under contemplation. At the same time the court issued a general order of injunction — authorized by the Federal Bankruptcy Act, 11 TJ. 5. C. A., Section 1 et seq. — enjoining all persons “from instituting or prosecuting- or continuing the prosecution of any action at law or action or proceeding- in Equity or. Bankruptcy against the debtor, or its Beceiver in Equity, or the Trustee, in any court of Law or Equity or *378 Bankruptcy, or before any association, commission, board, referee or other court or tribunal; and from interfering in any other manner, to prevent the discharge by the trustee of his duties and obligations in the maintenance and operation of such business under the orders of this Court.” It was, however, provided in that order that “the court or Judge'may upon notice, and for causé shown, permit to be instituted or maintained any judicial proceedings to enforce any lien upon the estate of . debtor that may be appropriate.” That proviso appears to be confined to litigation to enforce a lien against the estate of the bankrupt and does not prescribe that the court might permit litigation by the persons enjoined seeking other character of relief, but the order without the proviso enjoined every character of litigation as therein specified.

Either prior to or following the entry of that order (it being entirely immaterial) a corporation was formed known as “The Eureka Gas Company” with power and authority to operate a distributing gas plant within the city of Olive Hill in Carter County for domestic purposes. It constructed its plant and later, applied to the appellee and defendant, Public Service Commission of Kentucky, (usually referred to as Kentucky Utility Commission) for an order compelling the trustee as operator of the Inland Gas Corporation properties to connect or permit the Eureka Gas Company to connect the latter’s pipes with those of the former at or near Olive Hill, to which point either the trustee or the bankrupt had laid its pipes in furnishing gas to industrial institutions in that vicinity engaged in manufacturing fire brick, and which was within the service to which the bankrupt and its trustee contended was the only one to which the facilities of the bankrupt estate had theretofore been devoted.

The trustee as such and for and on behalf of its bankrupt estate appeared before the appellee, Commission, and resisted the order applied for by the Eureka Gas Company, upon the ground that the Commission had no jurisdiction of the subject matter, and any order it might make in the premises would be void for the reason that the bankrupt under its plan was devoting its operations to the furnishing of gas to industrial institutions only and had theretofore contracted with such customers for its entire output; that it was not then nor had it ever been engaged in furnishing its product- to domestic eon *379 sumers, or to others engaged in such service, and to compel it to divert its product to such purpose would not only require it to depart from the character of service it had always rendered, but would also impair contracts theretofore made with customers pursuant to that purpose by reducing its product below the amount of service agreed to be rendered to its selected customers of the class indicated. Furthermore, it developed in the record that the Eureka Gas Company, as petitioner to the defendant and appellee, was violating the injunction issued by the bankrupt court, not even requesting permission from that court to make such application, even if the court had reserved the right to grant it in the injunction order. Evidence ■ was taken — largely and mostly upon the issue as to whether or not the Inland Gas Company and its trustee had confined its service to the character of customers supra, or had in addition thereto furnished gas for domestic purposes. It greatly preponderates that they had theretofore followed the adopted character of service supra, and we think the evidence largely preponderates to that effect. '

However, it is admitted that the application made to the Commission by the Eureka Gas Company was done in violation of the bankrupt court’s injunction, the petitioner not even requesting permission of the court to make such application. The Commission, after hearing the evidence and on final submission of the application to it,, determined that the bankrupt through its trustee was operating a public utility of which the Commission had jurisdiction of such utility service within Kentucky, the central office of the bankrupt being located at Ashland, Kentucky. As such the Commission held that it was its duty to serve all the public who might apply for its product within reasonable circumstances." In so determining the Commission ignored the injunctive order of the bankrupt court and expressly held that it had jurisdicr tion to hear and determine the application by the Eureka Gas Company. It then found that it was the legal duty of. the bankrupt and its trustee to permit the connection contended for by that Company and directed.,the respondent to do so within sixty days from the entry .of that order.

Within the time required by 278.410, KBS, Edition •1942,. the trustee brought an action in the Franklin Circuit Court against the Commission in which it-set up the *380 facts as hereinbefore outlined and sought a review of the order of the Commission, contending as it had done before the Commission, that the order entered by it was coram non judice and void for the reasons above stated. The answer of the Commission put in issue the affirmative allegations of the petition and the cause was ordered heard on the record made before the Commission. The court later adjudged that the Commission possessed jurisdiction to enter the order and that the facts justified that conclusion and its order was affirmed. An appeal was prosecuted to this court, but not within the time prescribed therefor, and upon manifestation of that fact the appeal was dismissed on March 10, 1942, which left the judgment of the Franklin Circuit Court in full force and effect and it has continued to remain so.

On September 1, 1942, an identical action was filed in the same court (Franklin Circuit Court) by the same plaintiff against the same defendant, seeking identical relief as that sought in the action which the Franklin Circuit Court had previously adjudged, and the appeal from which to this court was dismissed. The judgment under review by this appeal is the one rendered by the Franklin Circuit Court in the last action above referred to.

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Ward v. Commonwealth
814 S.W.2d 589 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1991)
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379 S.W.2d 444 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 526, 295 Ky. 376, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-public-service-commission-kyctapphigh-1943.