Opinion
No. 31255
Decided April 7, 1948.
Contracts — Municipal ordinance granting gas franchise accepted by public utility corporation — Rights and duties binding on both parties to such contract — Company emergency rule removing right to use gas for space-heating purposes — Ineffective to modify terms of contract — Rule adopted without city's consent and approved by Public Utilities Commission — Without notice to city or hearing as to necessity of rule.
1. An ordinance of a municipality providing for the furnishing of gas to the municipality and its inhabitants which ordinance is accepted by a public utility company creates a contract between the municipality and the public utility corporation, and the rights and duties established thereunder are binding on both parties to such contract.
2. An emergency rule adopted during the term of the contract by the public utility company and filed with the public utility commission, which rule removes the right of certain inhabitants of the city to use natural gas for space-heating purposes, except in cases of medical hardship, is ineffective to modify the terms of such contract, where such rule is adopted by the company without the consent of the city and approved by the Public Utilities Commission without notice to the city or the inhabitants thereof, and without hearing as to the necessity of such rule.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Summit county.
The appellant herein is The East Ohio Gas Company, a corporation engaged in the business of supplying natural gas within the state of Ohio; the appellees are Robert S. Newman, an inhabitant of the city of Akron, Ohio, and the city of Akron.
By ordinance adopted by the city council and accepted in writing by The East Ohio Gas Company, the city of Akron and The East Ohio Gas Company entered into a contract by which The East Ohio Gas Company was granted the right to occupy "the streets, alleys, public grounds and public places of the city for the transportation and supply of natural gas to the city and its inhabitants and the transportation thereof in and through the said city."
By such contract, the company is required to provide pipes and mains for the furnishing of natural gas to and upon any dedicated street within the limits of the city whenever sufficient residents therein agree in writing to take a supply of gas at the then established rate. The contract provides further that, in the event of a shortage of gas, "preference shall be given to that class of users known as (1) residential, (2) commercial, (3) industrial."
On February 6, 1947, The East Ohio Gas Company filed with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio emergency rule No. 26 which had been adopted by the company and which rule became effective upon the filing and approval thereof by the commission. Under the provisions of this rule, four changes in service were authorized:
First. No gas was to be supplied for industrial use to any new applicant therefor.
Second. No gas was to be supplied for heating new buildings not under construction prior to February 1, 1947.
Third. No gas was to be supplied for equipment intended to replace equipment using other fuel, installation of which began after January 29, 1947.
Fourth. No gas was to be supplied for gas heating equipment intended to replace old gas equipment, if the new equipment used more gas than the equipment it replaced.
That rule was amended by a supplemental application filed with the Public Utilities Commission dated March 14, 1947, which rule was approved by the Public Utilities Commission and became effective March 17, 1947.
Rule 26, as amended, provides:
"A. From April 1, 1947, until this emergency rule is amended or cancelled, the company will not supply gas to gas heating equipment intended to replace equipment using other fuel.
"B. In special medical hardship cases, supported by the filing of all necessary evidence satisfactory to the company, paragraph (A) may be modified."
On March 28, 1947, Newman with knowledge of the existence of rule 26 installed a conversion burner in order to burn gas in his furnace in Which he formerly had used coal. On April 2, 1947, Newman was notified by The East Ohio Gas Company that, unless he disconnected the conversion burner or qualified as a medical hardship case within rule 26, the company would discontinue all service to him.
Thereafter on April 8, 1947, Newman filed this action in the Common Pleas Court of Summit county seeking a permanent injunction to enjoin The East Ohio Gas Company, its agent or employees from in any way interfering with the free flow of gas from its mains into the residence of the plaintiff for use in the gas burner so installed, so long as the plaintiff complied with the lawful rules and regulations of The East Ohio Gas Company.
Following a hearing of the case in the Court of Common Pleas, that court on June 18, 1947, issued a permanent injunction as prayed for.
An appeal was thereafter perfected to the Court of Appeals on questions of law only and that court, on November 1, 1947, affirmed the decree of the Court of Common Pleas.
The case is before this court following the allowance of a motion to certify the record of the Court of Appeals.
Messrs. Brouse, McDowell, May, Bierce Wortman and Mr. Charles R. Iden, for appellee Robert S. Newman.
Messrs. Jones, Day, Cockley Reavis, Mr. Walter J. Milde and Messrs. Buckingham, Doolittle Burroughs, for appellant The East Ohio Gas Company.
Mr. Roy E. Browne, director of law, for appellee city of Akron.
The journal entry of the Court of Appeals is in part as follows:
"1. An ordinance of the City of Akron No. 584 — 1946 accepted by The East Ohio Gas Company in 1946, provides for the furnishing of gas to Akron and its inhabitant's without discrimination except as provided in the ordinance. Emergency Rule 26, adopted in early 1947 by The East Ohio Gas Company with the approving order of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, removes the right of certain inhabitants of the city of Akron (namely those who have theretofore used fuel other than gas for heating purposes) to use natural gas as a fuel for heating except in cases of medical hardship. It is therefore in direct conflict with the provisions of said Akron ordinance which contain no such limitation.
"2. Said ordinance is a contract for utility service created pursuant to the provisions of Article XVIII, Section 4, of the Ohio Constitution and such company and the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, proceeding in accordance with the public utilities law of the state, cannot alter such a contract."
It must be first noted that the decree of the Court of Common Pleas was entered before the adoption and promulgation by the Public Utilities Commission of its state-wide order dated October 3, 1947, which temporarily prohibited the furnishing of natural gas for space-heating equipment which replaced equipment using other fuels. That regulation was held valid by this court in the case of City of Akron v. Public Utilities Commission, ante, 347. That order of the commission however is not involved in this case for the reason that it was not effective at the time Newman installed his gas heating equipment; in fact not until subsequent to the decision of this case in the Court of Common Pleas and while the appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals. The single question considered by the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of Appeals in the instant case was the validity of Rule 26 adopted by The East Ohio Gas Company and filed with and approved by the commission.
The order of the commission approving amended Rule No. 26, issued March 17, 1947, removed all restrictions except the one involved in this case.
The entry of the commission states:
"The commission, being fully advised in the premises and of the nature of the emergency involved, finds [in part]:
"That the demand of East Ohio's consumers for gas has diminished sufficiently to warrant the substitution of the emergency rule and regulation [Amended Rule 261 set forth above for said emergency rule and regulation filed as aforesaid by order of the commission dated February 6, 1947.
* * * * *
"Provided, however, that nothing herein shall be construed to be an approval by this commission of the reasonableness or justness of any rule or regulation, nor binding upon this commission in any future proceeding involving the reasonableness or justness of any rule or regulation."
The amended rule of the company issued March 17, 1947, removed all restrictions except only the one involved in this case.
Upon the adoption of these rules by The East Ohio Gas Company and the filing thereof with the commission, the finding and order of the commission were limited to the ascertainment of jurisdictional facts authorizing the filing of the rule, and to the formal approval thereof. Such action of the commission differs from its procedure wherein its order of October 3, 1947, was adopted in that the latter order, which was state-wide in its effect and operation, was adopted and promulgated only after notice and full hearing, and upon finding such order to be necessary by reason of an emergency affecting the health, safety and welfare of the people of the state of Ohio.
In the City of Akron case, supra, we held the order there involved was a proper exercise of the police power of the state in the interest of the health, safety and welfare of the people of Ohio during the existing emergency. The record in the instant case discloses only a formal approval by the commission of a proposed change in the rules of the utility, made without hearing and with no finding by the commission of the reasonableness or justness thereof.
The Court of Common Pleas issued its injunction after a full hearing in which it had before it the contract between The East Ohio Gas Company and the city of Akron, The East Ohio Gas Company's Rule 26, both original and as amended, with its formal approval thereof by the Public Utilities Commission. The trial court after finding that there was a conflict between the rule and the contract decided the case in favor of Newman and issued its injunction.
Upon appeal to the Court of Appeals on questions of law only, the decree of the Court of Common Pleas was affirmed. Both courts held that the mere filing of the rule with the commission did not as a matter of law affect the contract or nullify the rights and duties of the parties thereto.
This case presents a proper occasion for the intervention of a court of equity to protect the inhabitants of the city from arbitrary action on the part of the company. The franchise contract was completed December 16, 1946; on February 6, 1947, by company rule gas deliveries were forbidden to new industries, to new homes, to owners converting from other fuels to gas heating and to gas heating consumers installing new gas equipment which used additional gas.
On March 17, 1947, by rule, the furnishing of gas was resumed to all inhabitants except only those owners converting from other fuels to gas heating. If such procedure by the company is valid and effective, then few provisions in the city contract are binding on the company.
It cannot be permitted to thus alter such provisions by the mere filing of a rule, although formally approved by the commission. Therein lies the distinction between this case as it comes to this court and the case on appeal from the Public Utilities Commission; City of Akron v. Public Utilities Commission, ante, 347, this day decided.
For the reasons indicated the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., TURNER, HART, ZIMMERMAN, SOHNGEN and STEWART, JJ., concur.