115 Misc. 14 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1921
It is alleged in this action that since about the year 1914, and until October, 1920, the defendant charged for gas furnished to private consumers at the rate of ninety-five cents per 1,000 cubic feet; that on o'r about the 23d day of October, 1920, the defendant increased said rate to one dollar and fifty cents without giving and publishing the thirty days ’ notice of such change of rate as required by the
In my opinion a brief reference to certain statutes and to prior litigation is necessary to a proper consideration of the motion. By chapter 125 of the Laws of 1906, the legislature fixed a maximum rate, applicable to defendant, of one dollar per 1,000 cubic feet. On or about July 1, 1914, the defendant reduced its rate to private consumers to ninety-five cents per 1,000 cubic feet. Although it does not clearly so appear from the papers before me, I assume that such action by the defendant was taken pursuant to an order of the public service commission to that effect. In any event that rate continued until increased to one dollar and fifty cents as aforesaid. Chapter 604 of the Laws of 1916 purported to amend the act of 1906 by reducing the rate to eighty cents per 1,000 cubic feet. In May, 1920, the defendant herein brought an action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against the public service commission and others, with the result tha.t on October 20, 1920, a decree was duly entered in that action adjudging that the said acts of 1906 and 1916, in so far as they limit the rate to be charged (by this defendant)
The ultimate fact in issue in this action, whether or not the one dollar and fifty cent rate is excessive, cannot be determined upon affidavits; and I do not think the facts presented by the plaintiff on this motion point so clearly to his ultimate success as to justify an injunction pendente lite. Had the defendant fixed a rate in excess of a rate ordered by the public service commission after a hearing pursuant to section 72 of the Public Service Commissions Law, the plaintiff would be entitled to the temporary relief sought. But the commission has made no such order since the decree in the federal action. Also, if said rate exceeded the maximum rate prescribed by any state statute, this of itself would entitle plaintiff to injunctive relief pendente lite. But such is not the fact. The legislature has not acted since the decree in the federal action adjudging the confiscatory character of the acts of 1906 and 1916. There is, therefore, no statutory rate obligatory upon the defendant
Neither does a consideration of the facts presented by the plaintiff change my views. He emphasizes the finding of the special master in the federal action that a rate of approximately one dollar and seventeen cents would yield the defendant a fair return on its investment. This finding must be considered in light of the issue then pending. That issue was the confiscatory character of an eightv-cent rate rather than the determination of what would be a remunerative rate in the future, a determination which the court expressly refused to make or suggest. Several months have intervened since the entry of that decree. Plaintiff has added nothing to the force of that finding, and has offered no proof that the then status quo should be maintained. But the defendant has shown that
However, in view of the decision in Public Service Commission v. Brooklyn Borough Gas Co., 189 App. Div. 62, 72, I doubt if defendant’s one dollar and fifty cent rate could become effective, legally, until the expiration of thirty days from the date of the filing of its schedule. . This would be on or about November 21, 1920. It fairly appears that of the balance owed to the defendant by the plaintiff, two dollars or thereabouts represents an increase caused by charging the plaintiff at the rate of one dollar and fifty cents prior to November 21, 1920. Plaintiff may have an injunction to this extent restraining the defendant from removing its meter from plaintiff’s house or shutting off his supply of gas for failure to pay such increase made prior to said date but in every other respect the motion for a temporary injunction is denied.
In my opinion the application of the public service commission to intervene should be denied. The decree in the federal action expressly restrained and enjoined the public service commission, among other things,
Motion granted.