129 Va. 377 | Va. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
The powers and duties of the commission under this decision were very plain. It was to ascertain whether or not the appellee was supplying any services within the corporate limits of the appellant which were not attempted to be fixed or affected by the franchise granted by the appellant, and if so to exercise jurisdiction over the same according to the provisions of the 1914 statute (Laws 1914, c. 340).
After the above-mentioned opinion was handed down, to-wit, on April 7, 1920, the appellee filed its petition before the State Corporation Commission in which it undertook to set out the facts of the case, and prayed that it might be permitted to withdraw in the city of Clifton Forge all service not required by the franchise granted by said city, or in lieu thereof that the commission would determine what was an adequate and sufficient service in said city and fix just and reasonable rates for same. The city of Clifton Forge appeared by counsel and filed a lengthy plea to the jurisdiction of the commission, the grounds of which will be more particularly noticed hereinafter. The appellee moved to strike out the plea. The commission heard the
The chairman of the commission, in an elaborate and able opinion copied into the record, maintained the jurisdiction of the commission over the rates for services rendered in the city which were not covered by the franchise and rightly interpreted the mandate of this court in that respect.
Under the franchise, the predecessor in title of the appellee and its successor or assigns were granted the right “to conduct, maintain and operate for a period of fifteen years from the granting of this franchise an electric light system in and for the said city and the citizens thereof. And the said company is hereby granted permission to conduct, erect and maintain in the streets and alleys of the said city
In consideration for the grant, the grantee agreed to pay the city eight hundred dollars, to furnish the city a specified number of arc lights at $50.00 each per annum, ■others in excess thereof at $40.00 each per annum, and to furnish incandescent lights to citizens at a scale of prices set forth in the franchise. As to the lights to be furnished to citizens, the franchise provides: “Upon the completion of the said electric lighting system the said company shall furnish electric lights to all the citizens of said city who shall agree to take it and equip their houses with the necessary appliances therefor at all hours from sunset until sunrise, or as much earlier and as much later as weather conditions may make it necessary.”
A few months after the franchise was granted, the grantee thereof, without other consideration than has been stated, began to furnish a continuous day and night service for lighting, and also a like service for heat and power, and this service has thence hitherto been, and is now being, furnished. It v/as conceded before the commission that the night and day service could not be so dissociated as to permit the commission to regulate rates for the latter service ■while maintaining the contract rate for the former, and the city not only refused to assent to the abrogation of the day service, but insisted upon its maintenance without increase of rates. The commission was of opinion and decided that the continuous day and night service of lighting was a new service differing from and riot covered by the franchise, as was also the service of heat and power, and that it had jurisdiction to fix the rates therefor. Its order, however, was “without prejudice to the rights of the city
Nearly every question raised on this appeal was settled on the former appeal which we have neither the power nor the inclination to disturb.
In the petition for appeal it is said that three questions are involved in the case. They will be stated and numbered as in the petition:
The occupation of the streets of the city by the poles and wires of the appellee was fully warranted by the franchise hereinbefore quoted. Sending the current along said wires
As pointed out by the commission, the continuous day and night service is an inseparable service and one that is essentially different from that provided for by the franchise; hence, under the very terms of our former decision, is subject to the jurisdiction of the commission.
This contention was fully considered and answered adversely to the appellant on the former hearing of this case, and is not now subject to review. Steinman v. Clinchfield Coal Corp., 121 Va. 611, 93 S. E. 684. The city further insists “That, if the said act of 1914, as amended, be construed as giving the State Corporation Commission power to grant the right to use the streets, alleys and other public property, for the purpose of furnishing day electric service, when the city has granted no franchise for such service, said act is unconstitutional and void.”
The use of the streets, alleys and other public property for the purpose of furnishing day electric service has been in existence, without objection on the part of the city, for over ten years, but no rate therefor has ever been fixed by any contract between the city and the power company. The commission is not granting a use, but fixing, a rate for a. use already in existence and not covered by the franchise agreement. In this it was entirely within its powers. The reserved police power of the State, and the manner of its exercise has been so fully considered and discussed in cases recently decided by this court that it is not deemed necessary to do more than refer to them. Virginia-Western Power Co. v. Clifton Forge, supra; City of Richmond v. Ches. & Potomac Tel. Co., 127 Va. 612, 105 S. E. 127.
The city further contends “That the record shows that the State Corporation Commission made no investigation as to the rates which it authorized to be charged the eiti
This contention is fully answered by the commission as follows: “Under the provisions of the act of March 27, •1914, as amended (Acts. 1918, c. 407), schedules of rates filed with the commission by public utilities, automatically become effective thirty days after filing unless suspended by the commission upon its own motion or upon complaint of interested parties. The rates filed by the company, on March 18, 1918, are not out of line with rates approved by the commission in other communities in which the equipment in use and the operating conditions are substantially similar, and there appears to be no reason why the commission, of its own motion, should suspend the rates as filed; no complaint has been filed with the commission, and no representation made that said schedule of rates is ‘unjust, unreasonable, unjustly discriminatory or preferential’ and, the commission having jurisdiction of such rates, the schedule filed with the commission on March 18, 1918, is legally effective until changed in the manner prescribed by the statute.”
We find no error in the order of the State Corporation Commission, and it is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.