Opinion
March 12, 1941.
October 2, 1941.
Appeals — Order of Public Utility Commission — Order holding rates unreasonable and that reparation should be awarded — Review — Evidence — Acts of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053 and July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374.
1. An order of the Public Utility Commission holding that the rates of a public utility company were unreasonable, oppressive and extortionate from a stated date until another date, and that reparation should be awarded for that period, is appealable, even though no award has yet been made.
2. Where petitions for reparation were filed prior to the effective date of the Public Utility Law of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053, the determination of the propriety or impropriety of the rate was governed by the Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, and the commission was required to find the rate unreasonable to the point of its being oppressive or extortionate in order to award reparations.
3. Upon appeal from the order of the commission, after the effective date of the Act of 1937, the scope of the appellate court's review was fixed by the new law, providing that the order of the commission should not be vacated or set aside, except for error of law or lack of evidence to support the finding or order of the commission, or violation of constitutional rights. Public utility law — Rates — Reasonableness — Reparations — Commission-made rates — Effectiveness of a proceeding by commission of its own motion — Award beyond date of petition.
4. Where it appeared that the order of the commission, fixing the rates of a utility, set forth that there was reasonable doubt as to the exact obligations that the utility would be called upon to meet and that, under the circumstances, the amount claimed by the utility company would be allowed until the exact amount was determined, at which time rate adjustments, if necessary, could be made; that a tariff was submitted to and accepted by the commission as in compliance with its order; that four years later the commission, on its own motion, instituted a proceeding inquiring into the reasonableness of the rates provided by the tariff, followed by an order which fixed the annual revenue allowable to the company at a lesser amount than that before provided; that, subsequently, pending an appeal, a complaint was filed, praying for the award of reparations; it was held that previous to the date when the commission instituted its inquiry the rate applied under its order was to be considered a commission-made rate and the commission was without power to order reparations for any period during which this rate was effective but that the institution of action on the commission's own motion was the equivalent of a determination by the commission in favor of a patron's complaint and that reparations could properly be awarded from the date of institution of the commission's inquiry.
5. Reparations may be found payable after the date of the filing of a petition therefor where there is no evidence of a change in circumstances relevant to the reasonableness of the rate during the period involved after the filing of the petition.
Appeal, No. 321, Oct. T., 1940, from order of Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, Complaint Docket No. 10967, in case of Cheltenham Abington Sewerage Company v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission.
Before KELLER, P.J., CUNNINGHAM, STADTFELD, RHODES and HIRT, JJ. Order as modified affirmed.
Proceeding before Public Utility Commission upon complaint alleging that former rates of appellant were unjust, unreasonable and discriminatory, and seeking reparations therefor.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Superior Court.
Order entered sustaining complaint and holding that reparations should be awarded. Utility company appealed.
Errors assigned, among others, related to the action of the Commission in dismissing appellant's exceptions.
George Henry Huft, for appellant.
Samuel Graff Miller, with him Solomon Freedman and Harry M. Showalter, for appellee.
Thomas A. Foulke and Edward B. Duffy, for intervening appellees.
Argued March 12, 1941.
The Cheltenham Abington Sewerage Company has appealed from an order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (successor to the Public Service Commission) that its rates were unreasonable, oppressive, and extortionate from October 17, 1933, until January 1, 1937, and that reparations should be awarded for that period.
Appellant furnishes sewerage service to the public in certain areas of Abington and Cheltenham Townships, Montgomery County. On October 6, 1930, in proceedings before the Public Service Commission reported as Ruttle et al. v. Cheltenham Abington Sewerage Co., 10 Pa. P.S.C. 502, it was ordered to file, post, and publish a tariff for sanitary sewerage service to yield a gross annual revenue not in excess of $36,140. A tariff intended to produce this result was prepared and filed with the commission, and on April 13, 1931, was adopted by the commission as in compliance with the order of October 6, 1930, to become effective on July 1, 1931.
The commission, however, on December 11, 1934, on its own motion instituted a proceeding to No. 10,546 of its complaint docket inquiring into the fairness, reasonableness, and justness of the rates provided by this tariff. An order by the commission followed on August 30, 1935, which fixed the annual revenue allowable at the maximum of $27,700. On appeal we reversed the order with directions that the findings, valuations, and rates be reformed so as to permit an annual allowable gross revenue of $30,050. Cheltenham Abington Sewerage Co. v. P.S.C., 122 Pa. Super. 252, 186 A. 149. This court's opinion was rendered on July 10, 1936, and further appeal to the Supreme Court was sought both by the commission and the present appellant, but was refused on September 17, 1936. The commission then made an order dated November 30, 1936, embodying the directions of this court, and appellant filed a new tariff to become effective on January 1, 1937. This was the first date since July 1, 1931, that appellant did not operate under the tariff approved by the commission on April 13, 1931, as complying with its order of October 6, 1930.
On October 17, 1935, pending the appeal to this court from the order of August 30, 1935, an individual patron of appellant and the Glenside Home Protective Association, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation of the first class, assignee of various other patrons, filed with the commission a complaint alleging the unjustness and unreasonableness of the rates imposed by appellant in the past, and praying the award of reparations therefor. After hearing, the commission entered an order nisi which sustained the complaint on the finding that appellant's rates were unreasonable, oppressive, and extortionate from October 17, 1933, the two-year period prior to the filing of the complaint, until January 1, 1937, and awarded reparations for that period. Further hearing was ordered to determine the damage sustained by the particular complainants and other patrons of appellant. Appellant's exceptions to this order, except Nos. 6 and 19, which have no bearing on the issues here, were dismissed, the order nisi was made final, and this appeal followed.
The commission has moved to quash the appeal on the ground that the order appealed from is merely an interlocutory order, since it did not attempt to itemize the damages, if any, payable to the particular persons aggrieved, but specifically left the ascertainment of those rights to a further hearing.
The appeal will not be quashed, and the motion is overruled.
The Public Utility Commission and its predecessor under the earlier law, the Public Service Commission, have apparently accepted the suggestion made by this court in Centre County Lime Co. v. P.S.C. et al. (No. 1), 103 Pa. Super. 179, 157 A. 815, and have adopted the practice of conducting proceedings on reparation complaints in two steps, first, hearing and determining whether the rate paid in the past was unjust or unreasonable, and, second, hearing and determining the individual claims for refund of both complainant and noncomplainant patrons of the utility. We do not consider the disposition of the first question merely interlocutory. In so far as the commission is concerned it is a final determination of the propriety of the utility's conduct in the past in imposing the rate complained of. If reparations are ordered nothing which subsequently transpires before the commission will eliminate the obligation so declared, unless it happens that every patron claiming a refund either can be shown delinquent in payment of the rates charged or is met with an equivalent counterclaim due the utility. When we consider the many complainants in the ordinary reparation proceedings and the number of patrons of the average utility this result is not likely to occur.
In the second step of the proceedings the evidence, oral and documentary, is usually extremely voluminous. It would seem that the public interest would be more efficiently served by permitting immediate judicial review of the first step than by postponement until the completion of the calculations and tabulations necessarily required in the second. Moreover, the small number of reparation proceedings compared with actions at law guarantees against the hopeless prolongation of the business of both lower and appellate courts, which historically has been the moving consideration against allowing an appeal from an interlocutory order, for example, the overruling of a demurrer.
In Baltimore Ohio Railroad Co. et al. v. Pa. P.U.C. et al., 136 Pa. Super. 517, 7 A.2d 488, we heard and disposed of an appeal similar to the present one without the question having been raised as to whether it was from an interlocutory order. The same situation existed in Pennsylvania Railroad Co. et al. v. P.S.C. et al., 125 Pa. Super. 558, 190 A. 367, where, in a reparation proceeding, the commission determined a rate paid in the past to have been unjust, unreasonable, oppressive, and extortionate, but, making no award of reparation, ordered that the proceeding "`be set down for further hearing at a time to be designated, to ascertain what damages, if any, complainant has sustained.'" (page 561) In an opinion by Judge CUNNINGHAM we said (page 562): "Appellants contend there was no competent evidence that any damages had been actually sustained by the complainant, within the meaning of section 5 of article V of the statute. The commission has not undertaken, as yet, to pass upon that question but has expressly stated in its order that, in accordance with the holding of this court in the second Centre County Lime Company case, supra, (p. 188), it intends to conduct a further hearing `to ascertain what damages, if any, complainant has sustained.'"
In Allegheny Steel Co. v. New York Central R. Co. et al., 324 Pa. 353, 188 A. 332, which was an action in assumpsit to enforce payment of reparations, it was shown that on April 5, 1932, the Public Service Commission found rates imposed in the past to have been unreasonable and determined the extent of the overcharge, but did not until April 18, 1933, after further hearings, make the individual awards of reparations. These were not paid, and the action at law was begun to enforce payment. The lower court refused to admit evidence that the rates in fact were not unreasonable as found by the commission, and this ruling was approved by the Supreme Court on the ground that the order of April 5, 1932, was appealable, and, not having been appealed, was conclusive on the question of unreasonableness. In an opinion by Mr. Justice LINN the Supreme Court said (pp. 359, 360): "The effect of the finding and determination in the order of April 5, 1932, was to determine that the railroads had committed a tort and the obligation to make compensation. We think it was appealable under article VI, section 17: New York Pa. Co. v. New York Central R.R. Co., 267 Pa. 64, 110 A. 286; Citizens Passenger Ry. v. Public Service Commission, 271 Pa. 39, 48 et seq., 114 A. 642. . . . . . . The order finding the rates unreasonable in the amounts specified was a declaration to which the law annexed the obligation to refund the overcharge. It is immaterial, in this connection, that the statute also provided for a determination of the amount and for suit in the common pleas to recover it if the defendant failed to discharge the obligation."
In support of its motion to quash, the commission cites Philadelphia Electric Co. v. P.S.C. et al., 314 Pa. 207, 171 A. 690, where, at pages 215, 216, it was said "that no appeal will lie from its [commission's] rulings, before final decree, unless the jurisdiction of the commission over the parties before it, or of the subject-matter being considered, is challenged." In this case there was an attempt by the utility to enjoin in common pleas the commission's ruling at the inception of a rate case that the burden of proof was upon the respondent utility. We think that what was said in Allegheny Steel Co. v. New York Central R. Co. et al., supra, renders the general language of the Philadelphia Electric Company case, supra, irrelevant and inapplicable.
Citing as authority the Citizens Passenger Railway Co. v. P.S.C. et al., 271 Pa. 39, 114 A. 642, for the statement that the order of April 5, 1932, in the Allegheny Steel Co. case, supra, was appealable under article 6, § 17, of the Act of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, as amended, 66 P. S. § 811, suffices to indicate that this order was considered by the Supreme Court to be within the description of article 6, § 10, 66 P. S. § 771, "a written finding, determination, or order, either dismissing the complaint or directing the public service company . . . . . . to satisfy the cause of complaint . . . . . .," and immediately appealable under section 17, as distinguishable from the order in the Citizens Passenger Railway Company case, supra, which overruled the demurrer of the respondent utilities, and directed an answer to the merits of the complaint, and which was held interlocutory and nonappealable. In like manner the order from which the present appeal is taken may be said to be an appealable order, and is thus properly before this court for review.
This section has been repealed by the Act of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053, § 1502, 66 P. S. § 1562, but is virtually the same as section 1101, art. 11, of the Act of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053, 66 P. S. § 1431, in so far as the present question is concerned.
On the merits the order of the commission will be modified and affirmed.
We agree, as it has been argued, that the determination by the commission of the propriety or impropriety of the rate, reparation for the payment of which is here sought, was governed by the Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, 66 P. S. § 1 et seq., which was superseded by the Public Utility Law of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053, effective on June 1, 1937, 66 P. S. § 1101 et seq. We so decided in Baltimore Ohio Railroad Co. et al. v. Pa. P.U.C. et al., supra, 136 Pa. Super. 517, 7 A.2d 488, where, in an opinion by Judge CUNNINGHAM, we said (p. 519): "Material changes made are, inter alia, that an order of reparation may be made `in any proceeding involving rates,' if the commission shall determine that any rate received by a public utility was `unjust or unreasonable,' and the commission `need not find that the rate complained of was extortionate or oppressive.' As the petitions for reparation here involved were filed prior to the effective date of the new law, and in connection with a pending proceeding under section 3 of Art. V of the old law, 66 P. S. § 492, instituted for the establishment of reasonable rates for the future, which was terminated on November 25, 1936, (Mfrs' Assn. of Lancaster v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 15 Pa. P.S.C. 495), this appeal must be considered and disposed of under the law as it stood at the time the petitions were filed."
The old law placed upon the commission the requirement of finding a rate unreasonable to the point of its being oppressive or extortionate in order to award reparations. Centre County Lime Co. v. P.S.C. et al. (No. 1), supra, p. 190. But it is also true that the scope of this court's review of the commission's action is now fixed by the new law. Under section 22 of the Public Service Company Law, as amended by the Act of June 12, 1931, P.L. 530, § 1, 66 P. S. § 836, in every appeal involving a question of reasonableness of rates, we were called upon to exercise our independent judgment whether the findings of the commission were reasonable and proper. See Pennsylvania Railroad Co. et al. v. P.S.C. et al., supra. In Pennsylvania Power Light Co. v. P.S.C. et al., 128 Pa. Super. 195, at page 200, 193 A. 427, at page 430, we indicated the extent of the review we are now called upon to make:
"By § 1107 of the new law, designated as the `Public Utility Law,' it is provided that in case of appeals to this court, `the order of the commission shall not be vacated or set aside either in whole or in part except for error of law or lack of evidence to support the finding, determination, or order of the commission or violation of constitutional rights.'
"This appeal involves the reasonableness of rates and in such matters the new law makes a radical change in the scope of the inquiry by this court, limiting our inquiry to matters of law and thereby placing appeals involving a question of reasonableness of rates on the same basis as other appeals.
"The change is procedural and affects pending litigation insofar as it is possible to conform to and give effect to the change in the law."
Although the commission was required to proceed under the old law, and, to award reparations, find the rate oppressive or extortionate, as it here did, a review of its finding does not require the exercise of the independent judgment of this court, but our review is limited to ascertaining whether there was an error of law or a lack of substantial evidence to support the commission's finding.
We are of the opinion that there is no lack of substantial evidence to support the finding and determination of the commission that the rate charged by appellant previous to October 17, 1935, was unreasonable, oppressive, and extortionate. But we are also of the opinion that the commission erred as a matter of law in fixing the date when the rate can be considered to have become oppressive and extortionate. As we have previously stated, the rate was one fixed by a tariff submitted to and accepted by the commission as in compliance with its order of October 6, 1930, that appellant's gross annual revenue was not to exceed $36,140. An element in the calculation by which that figure was reached was the amount appellant was required annually to pay Cheltenham Township, under contract, for conveyance of the sewage collected in appellant's lines through the township sewers and as its proportionate share of the cost of conveyance of the combined sewage through those of the city of Philadelphia and disposal thereof by the city's disposal facilities. Because at the time of those proceedings there was some uncertainty as to that amount, the order of the commission attempted to meet the difficulty with the following provision: "No bills have yet been rendered under that contract, and there is reasonable doubt as to the exact obligations that respondent will be called upon to meet. Under these circumstances the amount claimed by the respondent, $10,940, will be allowed until the exact amount is determined, at which time rate adjustments if necessary can be made."
Appellant does not dispute that for no year did its payments under the contract reach the allowance of $10,940. From 1931 to 1934, inclusive, the highest amount paid was $7,759.86, and the lowest $7,328.98 Obviously the annual reports of appellant to the Public Service Commission reflecting this experience made the commission aware that appellant was earning upwards of $3,000 annually in excess of the maximum the commission intended to allow, and led to its filing the complaint of December 11, 1934. Previous to this date appellant's conduct may have been excusable. There is no doubt that the commission's order as to the necessity of adjustment of rates is somewhat ambiguous, and very likely if the discrepancies between appellant's annual expenditure and the allowance were insignificant, even though in appellant's favor, no adjustment would be considered "necessary." But the differences represented a material percentage of appellant's annual allowable income, and the order was not clear whether appellant had the duty of moving or was justified in awaiting the commission's action. We do not share the view of the commission in its report and order nisi that it was incumbent upon appellant to make a voluntary rate adjustment immediately upon the first annual ascertainment of the unknown quantity of the earnings formula. It may as well be said that the commission had the duty of instituting a complaint on its own motion forthwith. If appellant was remiss the commission was also somewhat lax; its order was ambiguous, and it temporized until December 11, 1934. After the rate was challenged on that date on the commission's own motion, any doubt on appellant's part as to the meaning of the original order should have been dispelled, and its persistence thereafter constitutes evidence of the extortionate and oppressive nature of the rate.
It is true, of course, that a finding in a proceeding on a complaint against the reasonableness of an existing rate for the future, governed by section 3, art. 5, of the Public Service Company Law of 1913, 66 P. S. § 492, furnishes no basis for awarding or refusing reparation of payments of the same rate in the past, an entirely separate proceeding under section 5 of that article of the statute (66 P. S. § 511). Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania v. Pa. P.U.C., 130 Pa. Super. 514, 520, 197 A. 783; Pennsylvania Railroad Co. et al. v. P.S.C. et al., supra, pp. 561, 562; Centre County Lime Co. v. P.S.C. et al. (No. 1), supra, p. 185; Centre County Lime Co. et al. v. P.S.C. et al., 96 Pa. Super. 590, 597, 598.
Our conclusion is not determined by the success or failure of the action instituted by the commission on December 11, 1934, but upon the fact that appellant on that date had notice the commission considered the existing rate unreasonable. In Pennsylvania Railroad Co. et al. v. P.S.C. et al., supra, we expressed ourselves in a similar manner. In that case it appears that two railroads imposed a rate prescribed by the commission on July 15, 1929. On June 27, 1934, the intervener-shipper filed a complaint against the rate as unreasonable for the future, and on July 31, 1935, it filed a second petition to cover shipments up to July 1, 1935. Both petitions asked for reparations. In a consolidated proceeding the commission sustained both complaints, and, although ordering a further hearing before making an award of reparations, found the rate had been unreasonable, oppressive, and extortionate from June 30, 1932, to June 30, 1935. It appears also, however, that in an independent proceeding by other shippers against the same rate, these carriers, among others, had received notice on October 20, 1934, of the commission's order of October 16, 1934, to reduce the rate. We held that it was error to fix the beginning of the reparations period at June 30, 1932, and modified the order by making it initially effective October 20, 1934. In an opinion by Judge CUNNINGHAM we said ( 125 Pa. Super. 558, at pp. 567, 568, 190 A. 367, at p. 372): "Appellants had notice on October 20, 1934, that the commission, after full hearing, had, in the language of section 5, `determined' that their rate of $2.40 was `unjust and unreasonable.' They knew that under such a finding the commission had `power and authority to make an order for reparation.' . . . . . . But after the receipt of such notice, appellants should, under the circumstances here present, be held to have taken their chances with respect to liability for any damages actually sustained by the intervener."
In the present case it may likewise be said that the institution of the complaint on the commission's own motion on December 11, 1934, gave appellant notice that the commission had determined the rate then charged to be unreasonable. We think that for such a purpose institution of action on the commission's own motion was here the equivalent of a determination by the commission in favor of a patron's complaint. For the period previous to October 20, 1934, in the cited case, the carriers were held to have followed a commission-made rate, and thus escaped liability for reparation. So, in the instant case, previous to December 11, 1934, the rate applied under the commission's order of October 6, 1930, and accepted by the commission as complying with this order must be considered a commission-made rate. The commission was without power to order reparations for any period during which the commission-made rate was effective. This has been discussed at length in Pennsylvania Railroad Co. et al. v. P.S.C. et al., supra, and in Baltimore Ohio Railroad Co. et al. v. Pa. P.U.C. et al., supra, and requires no further elaboration.
Appellant also contends that the commission erred in finding reparations payable after the date of the filing of the petition, that is, from October 17, 1935, until January 1, 1937. We have been given no authority which is decisive of this question. The commission in its brief has referred to Turtle Creek Borough v. Pennsylvania Water Co., 243 Pa. 401, 90 A. 194, where, on May 23, 1911, a bill in equity was filed alleging an increase in rates had been put into effect on January 1, 1911, and praying reduction for the future and refund for the past. The final decree ordered a refund from January 1, 1911, up to the date of the decree, February 8, 1913. This may correspond in theory to the result reached by the commission in the present case, but since the point was not raised or decided in that case it is not definite authority for the commission's finding. We think that what was said in Allegheny Steel Co. v. New York Central Railroad Co. et al., supra, in reference to a reparation proceeding, is more persuasive and determinative ( 324 Pa. 353, at page 359, 188 A. 332, at page 335): "The effect of the finding and determination in the order of April 5, 1932, was to determine that the railroads had committed a tort and the obligation to make compensation." It is not necessary to cite any authority for the proposition that damages in actions ex delicto are not restricted to the period ending with the institution of suit. We are convinced that it would not serve any useful purpose in securing either complete justice and fairness to the utility or the orderly administration of the business of the commission to require the filing of a second reparation complaint to cover the period between the date of the first and the determination of the commission unless evidence is adduced, either in the proceeding under the first complaint or previous to the determination, of a change in circumstances relevant to the reasonableness of the rate during that period. In our opinion therefore it was not error for the commission on January 3, 1940, to find reparations payable to January 1, 1937, the effective date of the new tariff.
Finally, appellant challenges the propriety of reference by the commission in its order nisi to files of the commission not in evidence at the hearing as showing the continuance during 1934 of informal conferences between appellant and the commission relative to a voluntary adjustment of its rates. In view of the disposition which we have made of the commission's finding as to the period previous to December 11, 1934, this contention becomes immaterial.
The ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth assignments of error, in so far as they relate to dismissal of appellant's twentieth and thirtieth exceptions to the order nisi of the commission, are sustained. The remaining assignments of error are overruled.
The final order of the commission is affirmed, with the modification that its operation and effect be restricted to the period from December 11, 1934, to January 1, 1937.