378 F.2d 510 | 5th Cir. | 1967
Three groups of cases raise in a variety of ways the validity of the Federal Power Commission’s “in-line” price pronouncement, its statement of general policy, moratorium ceilings, and refund requirements.
In the first group the producer petitioners
The producers had proposed initial prices for their sales ranging from 14.5$ to 20.045$ per Mcf.
The producer-petitioners
The third group comprises the three Hunt petitioners.
In 21286 petitioner
In No. 21575
In 21856 the producer-petitioners
The FPC rejected the attempted change for Districts 2 and 4 and accepted for filing the change for District 3, then suspended it. The latter change ultimately was permitted to go into effect subject to refund.
The Hunt petitioners
All of the causes were set for oral argument at the same time because, although there are several peripheral questions involved, there is an identity of principal issues. The causes are likewise treated here.
“In-Line” in § 7 Applications
The nature and scope of the FPC’s duty to review producer price proposals before permitting natural gas to enter the interstate market has been so-thoroughly litigated in the past few years that it might be thought that the picture to be drawn from the decided cases could be painted with a light brush. Unfortunately this is not so. Not the least
When in 1954 it was held in Phillips 7
The Supreme Court made clear in Cateo
Following Cateo and the Third Circuit’s Transco-Seaboard decision
The “In-Line” Conclusions Reached
The FPC having been vindicated in the use of an in-line price method, there remains the question of whether the Commission’s determinations of in-line price levels in these cases are supported by the evidence and are well founded in law.
Of the sales for which permanent certificates were issued by the order in Turnbull and Zock, some were contracted before September 28, 1960, some between that date and August 31, 1962, and some thereafter.
As before noted, we are here concerned with both pre-Policy and post-Policy sales contracts, which were ultimately authorized by permanent certificates conditioned so that the initial price for sales contracted prior to September 28, 1960, should not exceed 15^ per Mcf and those thereafter 16 0 per Mcf.
These in-line certificate prices for District 4 have been considered and upheld by the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and the Tenth Circuit. In Shelly
Like their Shelly and Sunray DX counterparts the Turnbull and Zock applications, here under consideration, involved sales in the same producing area, both before and after September 28,1960, some by the same producers. We are in agreement with Shelly and Sunray DX, upholding the in-line price determination of the FPC and conclude that in these cases its action on that issue should be affirmed.
The Pre-Policy Statement 150 Level Without belaboring the analysis of prices in District 4 made by the Examiner and approved by the FPC, a recapitulation for the period January 1, 1958, through September 27, 1960, shows this. The average of all the permanently certificated sales weighted by volume is 14.200 per Mcf. Out of 39 temporary certificates 38 were issued at prices between 16.00 and 18.00 per Mcf. The largest number of contracts and the largest volumes were at 15.00-per Mcf. And the average between the median price and the highest group of prices is 15.140 per Mcf.
The FPC’s finding of an inline price of 150 is based upon the principle that the price line is not established by the highest price or prices permanently authorized, but falls between the highest group of prices and the median price. We think this is a permissible criteria to apply. The Producers emphasize heavily the statement in Cattery
Distinctive Objections
Various Producer-petitioners assert special contentions not joined in by all, thus Continental
Continental also contends that in four separate § 7 proceedings since 1962, involving the same area, the FPC has not found it necessary to use prices below 140 in finding this to be the price-line, but here it could not use the same type data and get the answer it wanted, so it used data for sales below 140. Except when such sales are not generally comparable to Producer sales, we see no reason why they should not be considered in order that the in-line price determination might be based on a complete range of relevant price data. In any event, we are not impressed with Continental’s attack on the non-exclusion of below 140 sales here for, whatever weight the FPC gave such sales, it was not enough to change its in-line determination from the
Continental, joined by Hunt, complain that the FPC did not give them notice of the FPC’s standards and adequate opportunity to meet the standards. We have already discussed some of the Producer’s objections advanced to support this charge. We note that the Hunt hearing, after court remand, began on March 28, 1962, and that the Turnbull and Zock proceeding was not initiated until May 28, 1964. In 1959 Cateo decided that the FPC is not obligated in § 7 proceedings to determine the just and reasonable price for the gas sold, it being sufficient to determine the in-line price. In applying this concept many decisions thereafter dealt with the interpretation of the in-line standard, and the weight to be accorded various kinds of evidence in applying that standard.
Austral contends that it was discriminatory for the FPC to make applicable to it the in-line price of 150 based upon permanently certificated sales under contracts dated between January 1,1958, and September 28, 1960, even though Austral’s sale was made pursuant to a contract with Natural Gas Pipeline Company dated September 1, 1960. Austral argues that the cut-off date of September 28, 1960, is arbitrary and that sales made under contracts thereafter should be considered.
The Commission used September 28,1960, as a cut-off because on that date it issued Statement of General Policy No. 61-1 and thereby established guideline prices. The evidence shows that as a result of this regulatory action there was a change in the level of contract prices. We agree with the Examiner that “A comparison of prices both before and after September 28, 1960, would therefore be a comparison of prices based upon dissimilar circumstances and would not reflect the current conditions in the industry.” Both Shelly and Sunray DX have accepted the separate time periods as appropriate, and we think this is in keeping with the public convenience and necessity.
Hunt Petitions
Proceedings in these cases (see notes 12, 13 and 15) were stayed by the court pending the outcome of Cattery. That decision settled the contentions of the Producers that the FPC lacked the power to exclude cost evidence in a § 7 proceeding, to order refunds of rates collected during temporary authorization, and to impose a moratorium on the filing of price increases as a condition to the issuance of permanent certificates. Petitioners now contend that the FPC improperly exercised the power it was found to have.
Hunt’s Procedural Complaints
We have above discussed and rejected these petitioners’ argument that they were denied administrative due process because they did not receive notice that the only evidence that would be considered would be that relating to the in-line price. To this we would only add here that these petitioners elected to disregard the burden cast upon them to sustain the in-lineness of their rates. Rather they simply took and stood upon the position of respondents, who have no burden of proof.
In-Line Determinations
Petitioners’ contracts for the sale of gas here on review were dated May 15, 1959. Petitioners attack the FPC’s determination of the in-line price to be 150 for Texas Railroad Commission Districts Nos. 2 and 4 and 160 for Texas Railroad Commission District No. 3. They particularly object to the exclusion of permanently certificated sales to Coastal Transmission Company and Truckline Gas Company as being “suspect”, the period of time utilized for comparability, and the ■ use of estimated rather than actual volumes.
As the petitioners adduced no evidence, the in-line prices were determined by considering the various sales permanently certificated for the calendar years 1958 to September 28, 1960, as shown on Staff Exhibit No. 236, eliminating from consideration all sales at prices below 140 (about which petitioners do not complain). Sales only temporarily authorized were substantially eliminated. Sales that were suspect were not used.
In District No. 2 there were 29 sales at or below 150 per Mcf, having an estimated first month volume of 2,347,765 Mcf. There were six contracts having an estimated first month volume of 635,000 Mcf above 150 per Mcf. This we find was a sound basis for the FPC’s finding of an in-line price of 150 for District No. 2.
In District No. 3 there were twenty-four permanently certificated sales having an estimated monthly volume of 886,-995 Mcf at prices between 140 and 160 per Mcf. There were three at 16.14967 per Mcf with initial monthly volumes of 467,500 Mcf. The other prices were not considered, because they were either in litigation, under review or “suspect”.
In District No. 4 with one exception that is insubstantial, there were no contracts permanently certificated at prices, above 150 per Mcf, except those excluded in the same categories as in District No. 3.
Staff Exhibit 23 also included the sales relied upon by the FPC in Skelly Oil
We are not impressed with the contentions of petitioners that actual instead of estimated volumes should have been used in the staff compilations. This, was usual FPC procedure and is predicat
What we have heretofore said makes it unnecessary to extend this opinion further concerning petitioner’s complaint that there is no comparability of contracts in point of time.
Finally, the petitioners challenge the in-line price of 160 in District No. 3, because the FPC disregarded as “suspect” the so-called Coastal and Trunkline sales. The petitioners urge that these sales are permanently certificated and not subject to any further FPC or court review, modification or infirmity. But we cannot say that the FPC acted arbitrarily and capriciously in excluding these sales, for the certificates surely would have been set aside had it not been for a procedural defect (an untimely petition for review filed by Public Service Commission of New York from the FPC’s denial of intervention.
7% Interest in Refunds
Petitioners, while conceding that the Supreme Court in Cattery upheld the imposition of interest on refunds as a means to prevent unjust enrichment, complain that 7% imposed in these proceedings
In Cattery the interest assessed was 6% from the time that the gas first was certificated and at the rate of 7% from the time that the initial certificates were set aside and temporaries were issued in place thereof. The Supreme Court affirmed the assessment of interest, Callery, 382 U.S. at 230, 86 S.Ct. 360. Here the FPC, unlike Cattery, did not require petitioners to refund the difference between the price collected under the original certificates while they' were in effect and the ultimately certificated in-line price but imposed a refund obligation only from the time the temporaries were issued and ordered interest only from that date. This was far more favorable to the petitioners than was the procedure in Cattery.
On remand of Cattery, this Court by its order of March 29, 1966, summarily denied the petitioner’s contention similarly here made that the FPC’s orders should be modified to reduce the interest rate to 4% percent, instead of that of 6 and 7 percent as prescribed.
The 4.5% rate applied by the FPC in other refund cases is not comparable, because the FPC applies this rate only when the company is directed to retain the refundable amount pending a determination of the proper distribution.
We conclude that the 7 percent interest imposed by the FPC was permissible. Mississippi River Fuel Corp. v. F. P. C., 1960, 108 U.S.App.D.C. 284, 281 F.2d 919, cert. den. 365 U.S. 827, 81 S.Ct. 712, 5 L.Ed.2d 705; Texaco, Inc. v. F. P. C., 5 Cir., 1961, 290 F.2d 149.
Change in Rates to Avoid In-Line Limitations
Upon the promulgation of Opinions 412 and 412A setting an in-line price of 150 for Districts 2 and 4, and the orders of February 24 and March 20, 1964, establishing a moratorium of 180 petitioners in No. 21856
In District 3 the petitioners who were collecting 200 per Mcf filed a notice of rate change that fixed the price at 190, which was accepted by the FPC, suspended for five months and made subject to a § 4(e) rate proceeding.
Petitioners contend that the rejection of the rate change in Districts 2 and 4 was erroneous and discriminatory.
We think that the FPC’s interpretation of the Act was correct. Since the attempted filing price and the one the petitioners were collecting was identical, there was no change, and we conclude that only filings that do change the sales price are authorized by the Act. Cf. Amerada Petroleum Corp. v. F. P. C., 10 Cir., 1961, 293 F.2d 572. There was no discrimination in accepting the filings in District 3 because there was a change — a reduction in the cost of gas to the purchaser.
The remaining error relied upon by these petitioners, asserting that the imposition of a price moratorium on the filing of increases above 180 and 190 until January 1, 1968, was unlawful is deferred to our discussion of a similar point raised by the other petitioners. In all other respects we conclude that the points the Hunt petitioners raise are without merit.
The Post-Policy Statement 16<j¡ Level The Distributor-petitioners
The FPC in establishing an in-line price after September 28, 1960, considered sales and initial prices contracted for those sales during the post-Policy Statement periods. The first period extended from September 28, 1960, when the Policy Statement fixed a guideline price of 180 for new gas in District 4, until August 30, 1962, when the Fifth Amendment changed that price to 160. The second period was from August 30, 1962, through March 25, 1964.
During the first period the estimated first month volumes of gas under non-suspect sales was only 256,576 Mcf, as compared with 4,470,796 Mcf for all gas first entering interstate commerce. There were 34 sales permanently certificated in the Amerada case
During the second period the estimated first month volume of gas under non-suspect sales was only 910,691 Mcf, as compared with 6,439,858 Mcf for all gas flowing.
There were 26 temporary sales at 160 per Mcf related to the contracts in issue here with an estimated first month’s volume of 5,379,168.
In making a determination of the inline price for the sales contracted during the period from the first Policy Statement, September 28, 1960, to the date of the Fifth Amendment, August 30, 1962, while the 180 guideline price was in effect, the Examiner considered evidence as to both permanently certificated and temporarily authorized sales contracts and having compared this evidence with
Coincident with the FPC decision in Amerada on August 30, 1962, the FPC by the Policy Statement Fifth Amendment lowered the guideline price to 160, and in determining the in-line price for the period subsequent to this date the Examiner gave some weight to the temporarily certificated sales related to the contracts here in issue. He noted that the large number of contracts entered into the 160 per Mcf reflected the effect of the Policy Statement Fifth Amendment and that some weight should be given to this consequence of the regulatory action by the FPC. The Examiner, subsequently adopted by the FPC, found 160 per Mcf to be the in-line price for this period.
The Distributors, both in oral argument and in their briefs, rely upon the same reasons and arguments as they advanced to the Tenth Circuit in Sunray DX Oil Company et al. v. F. P. C., supra, for urging that the FPC erred in holding that the in-line price in District 4 had advanced in the Post-Policy Statement period.
We are in full agreement with the reasoning and conclusions reached by the Tenth Circuit in Sunray DX. This decision fully answers the Distributor’s contentions concerning sales subsequent to September 18, 1960, and we therefore borrow from it heavily.
With reference to the position of the Distributors that the 150 price established in SIcelly, Opinion No. 362, for contracts executed prior to the date of the Policy Statement is the in-line price rate which is presumed to continue until a just and reasonable rate has been determined, the court said:
“We agree with the distributors that the in-line procedure is an interim device and is not intended to be a permanent method of producer regulation. It is a necessary device because of the complex and time-consuming processes incidental to the establishment of a just and reasonable rate. The apparently inevitable time lag between certification and establishment of a just and reasonable rate affects the mutability of an established in-line price.
“The Commission has recognized that the in-line price must reflect current conditions. The Courts of Appeals have agreed. Further support is found in the Gallery decision where the Supreme Court referred to ‘other contemporaneous certificates’ and ‘prices higher than existing levels.’ We concur with the Commission that once the in-line price is established it is presumed to continue not until the just and reasonable rate is determined but until ‘substantial evidence is presented that it has changed.’ ” Id. at 187, 188.
Temporaries as Suspect Prices
Concerning the Distributors’ argument that the FPC considered and acted upon suspect prices, the court supported the FPC’s consideration of prices under temporary authorizations because permanently certificated prices covered only a small percentage of total volumes for the period involved. It recognized that permanent certificates have a greater weight than either temporary certificates or contract rates under attack in the determination of an in-line price. But the court, nevertheless, went on to say:
“At the same time, when no appreciable volume of gas is moving under permanent certificates, the Commission has nothing upon which to base a de*525 cisión as to in-lineness unless it turns to the temporaries. * * * ”
“An in-line price is intended to reflect the price at which substantial volumes of gas are currently contracted for sale in interstate commerce. This determination cannot be made if all current sales are within the ‘suspect price’ doctrine because of objections made to them. Such an application of the doctrine would, as said by the Commission, make the price determination dependent on the ‘unreviewable fiat’ of the objectors. Our conclusion is that in the circumstances of this case the Commission did not abuse its discretion by the consideration given to prices not covered by permanent certificates.” 370 F.2d at 189.
Referring to Distributors’ argument that under Atlantic Refining Co. v. Federal Power Commission, 1963, 115 U. S.App.D.C. 26, 316 F.2d 677, if the FPC is to err in setting an initial rate, it should err on the low side because of the right of a Producer to immediately file for a rate increase under § 4. The court in Sunray DX rejecting this argument said:
"The provisions of § 4, although they may not be disregarded, are not a complete answer. Rate increases filed thereunder are subject to suspension. The producers may have the use of the money collected but it is at interest if refunds are ordered and royalty and tax payments have to be made on the total amount collected. If the just and reasonable rate as finally determined is greater than the in-line rate adopted, the producers have no way of recouping their loss. Our view is that the possibility of filings for increased rates under § 4 does not require that the Commission fix the price in a § 7 proceeding at a figure lower than that at which substantial volumes of gas are currently contracted for sale in interstate commerce.” 370 F.2d at 190.
Finally, we fully concur in the summary and conclusions reached by the Tenth Circuit in Sunray DX so aptly put as follows:
“It is apparent that in the case at bar the Commission was confronted with a difficult situation. CATCO tells it to hold the line. The Ninth Circuit UGI decision says that the price line is intended to reflect current conditions and that the prices on which it is based must be those under which substantial quantities of gas move in interstate commerce. Various decisions warn against the use of suspect prices. Because of objections to most pertinent certificate applications, the number of permanent certificates available for comparison purposes represents only a meager amount of gas. The Commission took due note of all factors and concluded that the price required by public convenience and necessity is 16 cents. We believe that in so doing the Commission acted reasonably and that ‘we owe it the same deference to its expertise that courts generally owe to the specialized boards and commissions created by the Congress to deal with complex and difficult problems in the field of economic regulation’. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm the 16-cent price.” 370 F.2d at 190-191.
We are quite aware that the District of Columbia Circuit, in Public Service Commission of the State of New York v. Federal Power Commission, 373 F.2d 816 [Feb. 7, 1967] refused to accept the reasoning of the Tenth Circuit in Sunray DX. To the contrary, adopting the Distributors’ contention here made the District of Columbia Circuit did freeze the in-line price during the interim period between the sale of gas and the rate determination under § 4 or § 5 of the Act on the logic of Cateo. As we stated at the outset, we align ourselves with the Tenth Circuit’s Sunray DX and the Ninth Circuit’s holding that “* * * the ‘line’ referred to in Cateo may properly be referenced to relevant existing producer prices under which substantive amounts of natural gas move in interstate commerce * * UGI v.
Relevance of Public Need
In addition to the reasons advanced in Sunray DX, and as a separate basis for reversal here, the Distributor-petitioners urge that the FPC's holding that the issue of public need properly belongs in pipeline certificate cases, not producer applications, is erroneous. Consequently the total absence of formal record evidence of a public need for the gas supplies here involved invalidate the contested certificates authorizing the sales. The District of Columbia Circuit agrees with this view. In Public Service Commission of State of New York v. F. P. C., supra, that court found that there was no showing of public need and that such a decision must be made before a permanent certificate is granted to a producer.
With deference we disagree. Callery simply cannot be squared with any contention that would result in such proliferation of issues and evidence in § 7 proceedings. Congress intended that the FPC would pursue regulatory methods which would permit performance of the task. The FPC has been encouraged to devise reasonable means of streamlining its procedures. Federal Power Commission v. Hunt, 376 U.S. 515 at 527, 84 S. Ct. 861,11 L.Ed.2d 878. The FPC should and does have discretion to consider the question of public need in rule making proceedings or in pipeline certification cases.
Where there are hundreds of producers in § 7 proceedings who cannot have any knowledge of ultimate demand, the result would be either a forced intervention of the pipelines and prolongation of the hearings, or possible collateral attack on the pipeline certificate cases. To force a general consideration of need in § 7 proceedings would force consideration of that type of market evidence whose exclusion CaUery specifically sanctioned on the price issue. California Oil Company, Western Division v. Federal Power Commission, 10 Cir., 1963, 315 F.2d 652; Texaco, Inc. v. Federal Power Commission, 5 Cir., 1961, 290 F.2d 149.
We decline to require an enlargement of what, until now, has been decided to be the scope of a § 7 proceeding.
Price Increase Moratorium Producer-petitioner Blanco
Bound to comply with Cateo, the FPC’s moratorium policy was evolved because initial price regulations alone did not suffice to hold the line. This policy was first accomplished by the issuance of temporary certificates imposing a moratorium on the filing of any increase in the initial price during the term of temporary authorization. In Hunt v. Federal Power Commission, 5 Cir., 1962, 306 F.2d 334 we held that the FPC had no power to condition a temporary certificate upon the maintenance of a prescribed price.
In our view the petitioner here fails in establishing that rate increases above the 180 level will not result in triggering of contracts and price escalation.
Blanco argues the negative, that although there are contracts that could be triggered by price increases above 180, there is no evidence that this will be done. We reject this and refuse to leave it to the purchaser’s decision whether or not for one reason or another they may or may not act. If a rate filing for more than 180 is permitted, it would upset much that the FPC has succeeded in accomplishing to comply with Cateo.
Producer-petitioners Hunt
The FPC raises a threshold question in No. 21575 that the petition was premature because, although the FPC’s order of April 17, 1964, denied the application of petitioners for rehearing of that part of the opinion and order 412-A, dated March 20, 1964, which imposed a moratorium on price increases, by footnote it invited a response setting forth any basis for a factual disagreement, and petitioner, on May 14, 1964, filed such a motion which remained undisposed of on May 27, 1964, when the petition in No. 21575 was filed. Then on September 29, 1964, an order was entered by the FPC refusing to modify the moratorium condition and petitioners did not seek rehearing or court review.
Under the circumstances above related, with the FPC on March 20, 1964, expressly denying the petition for rehearing, there was as to this question of law a sufficient compliance with § 19 to warrant the petition for review. Consequently the question raised by the petitioner is properly before us.
On the merits we are persuaded that the temporary moratorium on the filing of price increases in Districts 2, 3 and 4 was a reasonable exercise of the FPC’s power. The rates petitioners rely upon as being higher than the moratorium ceiling were themselves rates that had been redetermined under contract clauses triggered by the petitioner’s collections of the sales prices here involved, plus an 180 sale to United Gas Pipeline Co. Since the rates were being collected, and disregarding the liability to make a refund, the redetermined rates were 19.333330 per Mcf. We agree with what the FPC had to say in its order denying petitioner’s motion for amendment of the moratorium condition:
“It is sufficient here to indicate that for purposes of imposing a moratorium against possible price increases above the triggering ceiling we cannot consider prices which are themselves based on a price we have held to be too high and which was the subject of a hearing on this question at the time of the redetermination: In fact the situation here well illustrates the mushrooming effect that an out-of-line price for a given sale may have on other sales in the area through redetermination clauses and clearly does not justify a bootstrap operation raising the moratorium level we had set.” 32 FPC 874 at 876.
While there were no rate increases in Districts 2 and 4 which had led to a price redetermination, the possibility that this might occur prompted the FPC to do what it could to preclude this from becoming a reality.
Denial of Exceptions from In-Line Price Levels As to Shell
Producer-petitioner, Shell Oil Company (No. 23408), does not attack the in-line price level determined by the FPC in Opinion No. 478, but insists that, under the circumstances, there is a compelling justification requiring an exception to the application of the in-line price to it.
In 1959 Shell contracted with ■Coastal Transmission Corporation to sell it gas from Texas Railroad Commission District No. 4 at an initial price of 16.50 per Mef. This sale was to supply gas for Coastal’s first major expansion of its pipeline. In Opinion 478 the FPC issued to Shell a permanent certificate with a price condition reducing the original price, which Shell can collect under its ■contract from- 16.50 per Mcf to 150 per Mcf. Subsequently
The “compelling justification” upon which Shell relies is that sales to Coastal contracted in 1955 to supply gas to Coastal’s projected original pipeline including one sale from Gulf
We think the FPC was warranted in concluding that the early sales were “* * * to a new company (Coastal) that had neither been given a certificate nor was yet in operation, and so may have taken place at higher prices than would have occurred under contracts with an established pipeline because of the inclusion in the price of an additional risk factor * *
Austral, Blanco, Etc.
On September 1, 1960, Producer-petitioners Austral, Blanco and Killian and Hurd contracted with Natural Gas Pipe
The Examiner allowed per Mcf because of the flexibility provisions of the contract. The FPC overruled the Examiner and refused to allow any price increment for the so-called premium features.
The FPC found that there were a substantial number of contracts with the same pipeline having exactly the same flexible take provisions and that no extra allowance had been granted over the in-line price in any of the certificated cases. “Moreover, the feature is present in all but two contracts executed by the pipelines or its predecessor * * * for purchases in District No. 4 since September, 1960 * * This led the producers to contend that it is arbitrary and capricious for the FPC to consider sales under contracts dated prior to September 28, 1960 (the Policy Statement date) to determine the in-line price for the producer’s sales and then look to sales under contracts dated after September 28,1960, to determine whether the premium features of the sales are unusual. They submit that, if the FPC insists upon using an arbitrary cut-off date for in-line price purposes, then it must use the same cut-off date for determining whether particular features of a sale are unique. We do not agree. The periods before and after September 28,1960, were separately considered by the FPC in establishing in-line pricing because with ample justification it was felt that the Policy Statement had introduced a new element affecting the in-line price. But the fixing of a period “before” and “after” in reference to the policy statement is irrelevant in connection with contracts having flexible take provisions and those that did not, since such provisions are not responsive to the Policy Statement. We think that the FPC’s refusal of a premium price allowance to the Producer, based upon a comparison of contracts dated after September 28, 1960, was supported by substantial evidence.
The Refund Issue
Some of the parties submit that they are entitled to a prompt decision of the refund question. The issue is whether the FPC has the authority under § 7 of the Natural Gas Act to require the Producer-petitioners to refund amounts above the in-line prices previously collected by them pursuant to temporary certificates which contained no express refund condition.
The FPC urges that, in the present posture of the case, the Producers are not aggrieved by the deferral of the refund issue by the FPC and contend that the challenge to the FPC’s refund authority is premature, because the FPC has not determined as to any of the petitioners that it has the power to order refunds and, if so, how much is due. This is literally so. But whether it is really so may be quite another matter.
On September 30, 1965, the FPC, in Opinion 478, rehearing denied November 24, 1965, held that “* * * the decision whether refunds should be ordered as a condition to the permanent certificates is deferred for subsequent determination.”
However, on July 25, 1966, the FPC in Opinion 49 9
The FPC on September 2, 1966, granted applications for rehearing of Opinion 499 to permit joint consideration of all applications and has taken no further action.
We think that in view of the action taken by the FPC “the question of the power of the Commission to order refunds of amounts collected under temporary certificates containing no express refund condition is ripe for determination, and that proper judicial administration requires that it be deferred no longer.”
No consideration of healthy administrative procedure suggests either the necessity for or desirability of waiting further, requiring a new and second proceeding for review. Furthermore, the FPC’s briefs in support of its petitions for certiorari to the Tenth Circuit eases
The Producer-petitioners argue that the FPC had the power to insert an express refund condition in the temporary certificate, but it chose not to do so. Since the FPC’s powers under § 7 are quasi legislative and therefore prospective in application, Arizona Grocery Co. v. Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Co. et al., 1932, 284 U.S. 370, 52 S.Ct. 183, 76 L.Ed. 348, it cannot now retroactively impose such a refund condition by awarding reparations of amounts previously collected by the Producers. F. P. C. v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 320 U.S. 591, 64 S.Ct. 281, 88 L.Ed. 333. Further, relying on the Tenth Circuit’s earlier Sunray Mid-Continent
Events certainly fortified their position for the Tenth Circuit in its very
Before the FPC’s decision in Skelly Oil Co. et al., 28 F.P.C. 401, in 1962, it had taken the position that any error in granting a temporary certificate could be corrected by a refund order on permanent certification. Continental Oil Co. Opinion 851, 27 F.P.C. 96. After the Tenth Circuit’s Mid-Continent decision
The vacillation of the FPC’s position in the refund area must be attributed in no little degree to the uncertainties brought about by the various court decisions on the subject, in which there has been a conspicuous lack of unanimity. The conflict persists, as witness the Tenth Circuit’s recent disagreement with the District of Columbia Circuit.
Viewed in the spectrum of Cateo
“The basic purpose of the Natural Gas Act is consumer protection from unreasonable prices, and refund of excessive utility rates is a well recognized remedy. It would need to be quite clear from the Act that the Commission lacked the power to use such a remedy for the courts to deny it. We find no such clarity. The power does not depend upon an explicit refund provision in a temporary certificate. Should the occasion be appropriate for its exercise the power resides in the Commission when it grants a permanent certificate. To hold that it may not then require refund of excessive prices previously permitted without notice or hearing or mature consideration, since the Commission acted on an emergent and temporary basis, would be inconsistent with the regulatory responsibility of the Commission to aid in the ascer*532 tainment and authorization of just and reasonable rates.” 329 F.2d at 249.
We think it basic that the inline price technique was developed by the courts to make sure that the public interest, with its strong emphasis on consumer interest, was to be protected from the outset against excessive rates and charges. This is not to say that the power to refund must be exercised. If, as and when the power is exercised it must be shown that all equitable considerations involved have been explored and given due weight in the conclusion reached.
We think that the Callery rationale is persuasive in the circumstance of this case. The thrust in Callery — that the court would not permit the certification of sales of gas at prices exceeding that properly determined to be in the public interest — is identical with the critical issue here. The argument that excessive rates in Callery were collected pursuant to permanent certificates, the issuance •of which was still the subject of judicial review, while the excesses here were accumulated under temporary authorizations that were not subject to judicial scrutiny, does not carry the day. The Producers knew that the authorizations they received were temporary, granted ex parte to provide interim relief. The contingency of the temporaries was made known to the recipients by the express condition embodied in them that:
“This constitutes all requisite temporary authorization to commence the sale of gas, but such authorization and acceptance of the rate schedule are without prejudice to such final disposition of the certificate application as the record may require.”
Whether or not this is characterized as “boiler plate” language it was sufficient in our opinion to put the Producers on notice of the possibility that refunds of excessive amounts might ultimately be required so that no higher price might be retained than the Producer was entitled to receive under a properly conditioned permanent certificate.
Although the argument was not pressed, the Producers whose contracts were executed after the Statement of General Policy No. 61-1, dated September 28, 1960, suggest that they are entitled to rely upon the price levels therein established, and thus the prices in their temporaries should not be subject to refund. This view was adopted in Sunray DX. At the moment, therefore, the District of Columbia Circuit in Shelly has held that the FPC has the power to order refunds in pre-Policy Statement contracts and the Tenth Circuit has held that the FPC does not have the power to order refunds in contracts entered into post-Policy Statement.
If the Policy Statement is considered in the context in which it was issued, we do not think that it bears upon the refund issue. In the Statement it is emphasized that, because of the volume of administrative burdens thrust upon it, means had to be found to carry out its duties, “* * * particularly in the interest of the consumer for whose protection the statute was enacted * * *.” Further, it is said: “These price levels * * are for the purpose of guidance and initial action by the Commission and their use will not deprive any party of substantive rights or fix the ultimate justness and reasonableness of any rate level.”
With deference to the Tenth Circuit, we disagree with the reasoning in Sun-ray Mid-Continent and the decisions following it
Other issues raised by the Producer and Distributor petitioners have been considered, and we find them to be without sufficient merit to extend this already too long opinion.
We conclude that there is substantial evidence in the record to sustain the find
The cases are remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
. Nos. 23188, 23189, 23325, 23333 and 23408. Upon motion of petitioner Bright & Schiff in No. 23325 leave was granted to withdraw its petition for review and the proceeding was dismissed on June 21, 1966.
. The Natural Gas Act was approved June 21, 1938, 52 Stat. 821-833, and thereafter amended from time to time, 15 U.S.G.A. §§ 717-717w. Section 19(b) was amended 72 Stat. 941, 947; 15 U.S.C.A. § 717r.
. An area of 15 counties in Southern Texas.
. All but one of the sales had been temporarily authorized under § 7(c) of the Act and § 157.28 of the Commission’s regula- - tions (18 C.F.R. 157.28). These certificates were issued ex parte, by letter orders, upon the producers’ sworn statements asserting a variety of emergency conditions, which, they claimed, required immediate authorization to commence the sales in question.
. Texas Gulf Coast Area Rate Proceeding. Docket AR64-2.
. See note 1 supra.
. Nos. 23454 and 23455.
. See note 7 supra.
. Nos. 23188, 23189, 23325 and 23408.
. It is joined by other grantees of certificates issued by the order, McCurdy and McCurdy, Sun Oil Co., Pan American Petroleum Corp., Gulf Oil Corp., Humble Oil & Refining Co., Jonnell Gas, Inc. and Texaco, Inc.
. See note 7 supra.
. Nos. 21286, 21575 and 21856.
. Margaret Hunt Hill, Trustee for Hassie Hunt Trust, H. L. Hunt, Hunt Oil Company, Lamar Hunt, Trustee for William Herbert Hunt Trust Estate, A. G. Hill, Trustee for Lamar Hunt Trust Estate, George W. Graham, Inc., and Placid Oil Company.
. See note 13 supra.
. Hunt Oil Company, Lamar Hunt, Trustee for William Herbert Hunt Trust Estate, A. G. Hill, Trustee for Lamar Hunt Trust Estate and Placid Oil Company.
. The attempted change in rates was sought to be accomplished pursuant to § 4(e) of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.SC.A. § 717c(e).
. See notes 12, 13 and 15 supra.
. Sunra y DX Oil Company et al. v. FPC, 10 Cir. (1966), 370 F.2d 181; Skelly 011 Company et al. v. FPC, 10 Cir. (1967), 375 F.2d 6; Public Service Commission of State of New York et al. v. FPC, D.C.Cir. (1967), 373 F.2d 816; Pan American Petroleum Corporation et al. v. FPC, 10 Cir. (1967), 376 F.2d 161; Standard Oil Company of Texas et al. v. PFC, 10 Cir. (1967), 376 F.2d 578. Petitions for certiorari have been filed in all of these cases.
. Phillips Petroleum Co. v. State of Wisconsin et al., 347 U.S. 672, 74 S.Ct. 794, 98 L.Ed. 1035.
. 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 717c and 717d.
. Atlantic Refining Co. et al. v. Public Service Commission of State of New York, 360 U.S. 378, 79 S.Ct. 1246, 3 L.Ed.2d 1312.
. 15 U.S.C.A. § 717f.
. In Cateo the court said “[w]here the proposed price is not in keeping with the public interest because it is out of line or because its approval might result in the triggering of general price rises or increase in the applicant’s existing rates by reason of ‘favored nation’ clauses or otherwise, the Commission in the exercise of its discretion might attach such conditions as it believes necessary.” (360 U.S. 378 at 391, 79 S.Ct. 1246 at 1255)
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Public Service Comm, of State of New York, 3 Cir. 1959, 269 F.2d 865 (subsequently vacated sub nom. P.S.O. of New York v. F.P.C. (1959), 361 U.S. 195, 80 S.Ct. 292, 4 L.Ed.2d 237).
. California Co., 22 FPC 252, rehearing denied, 22 FPC 653, set aside sub nom. U.G.I. v. F.P.C., 9 Cir., 283 F.2d 817, cert. den. sub nom. Superior Oil Co. v. U.G.I., 365 U.S. 879, 81 S.Ct. 1030, 6 L. Ed.2d 191 and California Co. v. U.G.I., 365 U.S. 881, 81 S.Ct. 1030, 6 L.Ed.2d 192; Sun Oil Co., 22 FPC 351, rehearing denied, 22 FPC 654, set aside sub nom. U.G.I. v. FPC, 5 Cir., 290 F.2d 133, cert. den. sub nom. Sun Oil Co. v. U.G.I., 368 U.S. 823, 82 S.Ct. 41, 7 L.Ed.2d 27; Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co., 22 FPC 361, rehearing denied, 22 FPC 652, set aside sub nom. U.G.I. v. F.P.C., 10 Cir., 287 F.2d 159; Superior Oil Co., 22 FPC 369, rehearing denied, 22 FPC 655, set aside sub nom. U.G.I. v. F.P.C., 5 Cir., 290 F.2d 147, cert. den. sub nom. Superior Oil Co. v. U.G.I., 366 U.S. 965, 81 S.Ct. 1926, 6 L.Ed.2d 1255; Texas Gas Transmission Corp., 22 FPC 378, rehearing denied, 22 FPC 657, set aside sub nom. P.S.C. of State of New York v. F.P.C., 109 U.S.App.D.C. 292, 287 F.2d 146, cert. den. sub nom. Hope Natural Gas Co. v. P.S.C. of State of New York, 365 U.S. 880, 81 S.Ct. 1031, 6 L.Ed.2d 192; Shell Oil Co. v. P.S.C. of State of New York, 365 U.S. 882, 81 S.Ct. 1030, 6 L.Ed.2d 192; People of State of California v. F.P.C., 9 Cir., 353 F.2d 16, affirming 32 F.P.C. 34.
. Nos. 21286, 21575 and 21856 previously filed were held in abeyance pending the outcome of Callery.
. United Gas Improvement Co. et al. v. Callery Properties, Inc. et al., 382 U.S. 223, 86 S.Ct. 360, 15 L.Ed.2d 284 (1965).
. Callery Properties, Inc. v. FPC, 5 Cir. 1964, 335 F.2d 1004.
. These issues, some of which were controverted before the Commission and raised in this review proceeding, are now set at rest by Callery.
. Our discussion is first directed to the petitioners under Turnbull and Zock. See note 1 supra. The petitions in Hunt, notes 12, 13 and 15 supra, are treated subsequently unless otherwise noted.
. Temporary certificates had been granted for all but one (which is not here under review) of these sales under F.P.C. Regulations and under the Natural Gas Act, § 157.28 (18 C.F.R. 157.28).
. 24 FPC 818.
. 28 FPC 441.
. Public Service Commission of State of New York v. FPC, 1964, 117 U.S.App. D.G. 287, 329 F.2d 242, cert. den. sub nom. Prado Oil and Gas Co. v. FPC, 1964, 377 U.S. 963, 84 S.Ct. 1644, 12 U. Ed.2d 735.
. See note 32 supra.
. Sunray DX Oil Company et al. v. FPC, 10 Cir. 1966, 370 F.2d 181, now pending on petition for certiorari.
. See note 32, supra.
. See note 33, supra.
. 382 U.S. 223, 227, 86 S.Ct. 360.
. See note 36 supra.
. No. 23188.
. See cases collected in note 25.
. In P.S.C. of State of New York v. F.P.C., 1961, 111 U.S.App.D.C. 153, 295 F.2d 140, cert. den. sub. nom. Shell Oil Co. v. P.S.C. of State of New York, 368 TJ.S. 948, 82 S.Ct. 388, 7 D.Ed.2d 343, it was held that the Public Service Commission of New York had been improperly denied leave to intervene in the certificate hearing and remanded the case to the Commission. See also Hunt Oil Company v. FPC, 5 Cir., 1964, 334 F.2d 474.
. 28 F.P.C. 401.
. 29 F.P.C. 593.
. The in-line price of 150 was affirmed by the District of Columbia Circuit in SJcelly, supra.
. Public Service Commission of State of New York v. F.P.C., 1960, 109 U.S.App. D.C. 66, 284 F.2d 200.
. Opinion 412, par. (f), 30 F.P.G. 1438.
. See note 15, supra.
. See note 7.
. Amerada was then pending on petition for review in the Tenth Circuit and was therefore labeled suspect by the Examiner. Amerada Petroleum Corp. et al. 31 F.P.C. 623, petition for review sub nom. Sunray DX Oil Co. et al. v. F.P.C. —now decided, 370 F.2d 181.
. The Distributors also assert here that there is no showing of a public necessity for the gas supplies for which contested certificates were issued, which is treated infra.
. In the rule making Docket R-199 the take or pay problem has been considered on an industry-wide basis. Order No. 334, January 18, 1967. The certificates here in suit are included in this proceeding.
. See note 1, supra.
. Austral (see note 1 supra), although making the same objection in its petition, conceded in its brief, filed after Gallery, that this decision was dispositive of the error asserted by Austral as to the imposition of a price increase moratorium. Bright and Schiff (see note 1, supra), who initially made the same objection, by order dated June 21,1966, was permitted to withdraw its Petition for Review and the proceeding as to it was dismissed.
. See note 27 supra.
. See notes 12, 13 and 15, supra.
. Skelly Oil Co. et al. v. Federal Power Commission, 10 Cir., 1967, 375 F.2d 6, January 20, 1967.
. Order Denying Rehearing, Opinion No. 478, November 24, 1965.
. AR 64-2, covering District 4.
. Docket No. G-10127.
. Texaco Seaboard, 29 F.P.C. 593, at 598.
. This is a part of the Turnbull and Zock proceeding which was the subject of Opinion 478.
. At the time of oral argument the court requested the FPC to make available from time to time any action taken by the FPC that might have a bearing on the issues to be determined in this review proceeding. There has been submitted to us Opinions and Orders of July 21, 1966 (492A), December 6, 1966 (498A and 501A), and December 8, 1966 (502A), in each of which the FPC denied rehearing and stay of Opinions 492, 498, 501 and 502, which directed partial refunds of amounts collected under non-refund conditional temporary authorizations in excess of ultimately determined in-line prices.
. Sunray DX Oil Company v. F.P.C., supra, 370 F.2d at 192. See also Pan American Petroleum Corporation et al. v. F.P.C., 10 Cir., 1967, 376 F.2d 161; Standard Oil Co. of Texas et al. v. F.P.C., 10 Cir., 1967, 376 F.2d 578.
. See note 65, supra.
. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co. v. F.P.C., 10 Cir., 1959, 270 F.2d 404.
. See note 27, supra.
. See note 34 supra.
. See note 65, supra.
. Seo note 34, supra.
. See note 67, supra.
. See note 34, supra.
. The Supreme Court placed a continuing responsibility on the FPC, in certificating procedures, to prevent “out of line” prices and to “hold the line awaiting adjudication of a just and reasonable rate.”
. See notes 65 and 66, supra.