526 F.2d 898 | 5th Cir. | 1976
The instant petitions for review of two orders of the Federal Power Commission call for an evaluation of the success with which the Commission responded to our mandate in State of Louisiana v. FPC, 5th Cir. 1974, 503 F.2d 844. Before entering a discussion of the numerous issues presented for decision, a brief review of the facts leading up to the instant petitions will prove beneficial.
In April, 1971, the Commission issued Order No. 431,
Category I. Domestic consumers of natural gas served directly or indirectly by United.
Category II. Industrial users of natural gas served directly by United, to the extent they use natural gas as a raw material in creating an end product rather than as (a) an agent for*901 heating, cooling, dehydrating, or otherwise affecting industrial process materials, or (b) for other industrial purposes.
Category III. Electric generating stations, whether served directly or indirectly by United, to the extent that such stations serve domestic consumers of electricity.
Category IV. Users of United’s natural gas, whether served directly or indirectly, to the extent not supplied under Categories I, II, and III.
The Presiding Examiner entered his decision in July, 1972. Six months later, in January, 1973, the Commission responded with Opinion 647,
Three electric utilities and three industrial customers of United challenge the Commission’s orders of March 7 and May 2. LP&L, New Orleans Public Service, Inc. (NOPSI), and Mississippi Power & Light (MP&L) all suffered injury when the Commission, in Opinion 647, ordered Categories III and IV consolidated in United’s interim curtailment plan. That injury continued when this court, by order of December 13, 1974, allowed the Commission to continue the Opinion 647 plan in operation pending full compliance with State of Louisiana. Understandably the electric utilities are urging that the four-priority plan — under which they enjoyed a greater priority — should be reinstated by reason of the Commission’s failure to comply with State of Louisiana on remand. All of the electric utility petitioners challenge the failure of the Commission to hold a hearing on the justness and reasonableness of the four-priority plan. State of Louisiana held that before the Commission could adopt the three-priority interim plan, it was necessary to examine the existing four-priority plan in light of the standards of section 4(b) of the Natural Gas Act and find it wanting. See 15 U.S.C. § 717c(b) (1970). The electric utilities argue that absent a hearing on this issue, the Commission could not make the required finding. LP&L further attacks, on a number of grounds, the Commission’s phasing of the proceedings on remand from State of Louisiana. In addition to challenging the absence of a hearing, NOPSI and MP&L argue that the Commission’s finding that the four-priority plan violated the standards of
The industrial customers of United attacking the March 7 and May 2 orders occupy a somewhat different position. They — Allied Paper, Monsanto, and Texasgulf, Inc. — have repeatedly made the argument that United unreasonably extended its delivery commitments knowing that the gas shortage was close at hand. The industrial petitioners are longstanding customers of United and contend that they should be afforded some priority over United’s newer customers. In support of this position, the industrial petitioners argue that the decision in State of Louisiana precluded the Commission from determining the justness and reasonableness of past curtailment plans, that the Commission made no findings relative to petitioners’ old-new customer preference arguments, that the record does not support the Commission in its determination as to the equitable operation of the three-priority interim plan, and that the Commission erred in not allowing the old-new customer preference arguments to be made in Phase I of the proceedings below.
All petitioners raise what has been termed the misclassification problem and challenge the Commission’s assignment of this issue to Phase I of the proceedings below. Essentially, it is argued that certain industrial users of United’s gas are obtaining their gas upon resale by United’s pipe line and city gate customers, in effect creating a higher priority for those customers than they are entitled to under any of the curtailment plans in consideration. By placing the misclassification issue in Phase I, the Commission has, it is argued, improperly shifted the burden of proof onto petitioners in their attempt to have United “follow its plan.”
As indicated above, petitioners argue that absent a new hearing before the Commission, compliance with this court’s mandate in State of Louisiana was impossible. All of the parties fasten on different portions of the opinion in aid of their respective positions. The explicit language of State of Louisiana, however, provides no final answer to the question. On the basis of the past opportunities afforded petitioners to argue to the Commission the issues presented by the four-priority plan, the concerns expressed by this court in State of Louisiana, and a realistic appraisal of the goals to be served by a hearing before the Commission, we conclude that the Commission was not required to provide petitioners a new and independent hearing on the four-priority plan and the extent to which it comports with the standards of the Natural Gas Act.
Petitioners ground their hearing argument on section 5(a) of the Natural Gas Act,
Petitioners’ argument can be reduced to the proposition that to avoid a successful charge that it simply inserted “magic words” in its March 7 and May 2 orders, the Commission was required to hold a hearing on remand as to the four-priority plan. The assumption behind such an argument is that the only sufficiently reliable indicator of whether the Commission undertook a bona fide re-examination of the four-priority plan in light of the standards of section 4(b) of the Natural Gas Act is the fact of a hearing before the Commission. We are of the opinion, however, that petitioners’ argument unnecessarily restricts the scope of procedural options available to the Commission. A hearing before the Federal Power Commission is not an end unto itself. Rather, the end is proper presentation and development of sufficient record evidence to support the particular course of action chosen by the Commission. In the final analysis, the only indicia of conscientious agency action to which an appellate court can look with certainty is the agency’s written statement of findings, the reasons given in support of those findings, and the extent to which record evidence provides a foundation for those findings. State of Louisiana v. FPC, 503 F.2d at 871-72; see FPC v. Texaco, 1974, 417 U.S. 380, 94 S.Ct. 2315, 2326, 41 L.Ed.2d 141; Burlington Truck Lines v. United States, 1962, 371 U.S. 156, 167-68, 83 S.Ct. 239, 245, 9 L.Ed.2d 207; SEC v. Chenery, 1947, 332 U.S. 194, 196, 67 S.Ct. 1575, 1577, 91 L.Ed. 1995. Petitioners’ attempts to draw the issue in this case at whether or not the Commission was required to hold a hearing on remand suggests a misapprehension of the above stated function of á‘ hearing before the Commission. A correct statement of the issue in this case is whether the Commission’s orders of March 7 and May 2 are supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole and the substantial evidence standard is the one to which we look. As will become clear, however, the fact that the Commission was not as an original matter required to hold a hearing on the continued justness and reasonableness of the four-pri
Notwithstanding the Commission’s lack of statutory authority to adopt a new curtailment plan without first finding an existing plan invalid under the Act, this court in State of Louisiana did find sufficient record support at that time for the Commission’s immediate and interim consolidation of Categories III and IV of the Opinion 606 plan, and the consequent destruction of the priority formerly enjoyed by the electric utilities.
To summarize, the record would contain enough evidence to support FPC’s interim action in subordinating gas used for domestic power generation if FPC had statutory authority to take that action.
503 F.2d at 861. And at another point in the opinion.
Therefore the Commission’s order requiring immediate subordination of gas used to generate domestic electricity has enough evidentiary support to pass muster, especially in light of [the] emergency allotments to protect electrical consumers.
The order of reversal and remand in State of Louisiana followed from our concern that the Commission was unmindful of its statutory obligation to examine an existing plan under the standards of section 4(b) and find it wanting before adopting a new curtailment plan. We concurred in the Commission’s appraisal of the need to subordinate gas used to generate domestically consumed electricity; we remanded to insure that the Commission’s appraisal was made within the framework of the Act. In short, we deferred to the Commission for a determination as to whether the' inferiority of the four-priority plan was sufficient to rise to the level of making that plan “unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, or preferential” within the meaning of the Act. As noted above, the March 7 order turns on two factual considerations: the alternate fuel capabilities of the electric utilities and the serious and irreparable harm to the approximately 1800 industrial customers of United that would follow re-implementation of the four-priority plan. We read the March 7 order as expressing the view of the Commission that both of these factors are essential to the statutory determination it made as to the four-priority plan. See State of Louisiana v. FPC, supra ; cf. FPC v. Texaco, Inc., 417 U.S. at 397, 94 S.Ct. at 2326.
The March 7 order begins, quite properly, with the evidentiary assessment made by this court in State of Louisiana in favor of the interim subordination of gas used to fire large boilers in the generation of electricity for domestic
Because of the natural gas shortage, the Company [NOPSI] has encountered difficulties in obtaining natural gas as a boiler fuel in its power plants. As a substitute fuel, the Company has been burning substantial quantities of fuel oil.17
Somewhat more specific testimony on May 30, 1974, by a witness for Gulf States Utilities Company confirmed the increasing reliance of electric utilities on alternate fuel systems.
[This exhibit] shows the actual oil to gas burn ratio at [two generating stations] during the period from September 1972 through January 1974. You will note that the maximum percentage of oil burned was in December of 1973 [while the interim three-priority plan was in effect]. During such month we burned 64.7% oil and 35.3% gas at [one generating station]. You
will also note that the quantity of oil burned varies from zero to 64.7% and changes significantly from month to month.
******
[F]or the months of November and December of 1974, and January and February of 1975, the percentage of oil to be burned is 100%. In other words, we are projected to be burning 100% oil and no gas at Nelson [Generating] Station during such period.18
Finally, the testimony of Mr. H. H. Bell on behalf of Mississippi Power Company revealed that “two-thirds of MP Co’s net generating capacity is with coal-fired units.”
The second factual basis of the Commission’s order of March 7 — the serious and irreparable harm to United’s industrial customers — is not similarly blessed with record support. Petitioners challenge numerous aspects of the irreparable harm finding. For example, MP&L and NOPSI vigorously argue that the Commission improperly relied on extra-record materials in making its assessment of irreparable harm. We have no occasion to address all of petitioners’ arguments in detail at this time. Assuming arguendo proper reliance by the Commission on all materials cited in its March 7 order, the finding of irreparable harm still suffers an overriding defect. No record or extra-record support is provided for the assertion that a shutdown of gas service to United’s industrial customers will create “serious and irreparable injury, including plant closings, employee layoffs, and other forms of economic dislocation.”
The second [reason], minimization of curtailment’s economic impact, is premised on the notion that it is easier to find substitute fuels for boilers than for other industrial systems. Since this reason depends on the validity of another reason (availability of alternate fuels), it adds no support to FPC’s decision and we shall discard it.
State of Louisiana v. FPC, 503 F.2d at 859. The Commission’s order of March 7 fails to reflect any upward adjustment of this evidentiary deficiency in the interim. For this reason, we hold that the Commission’s finding of irreparable harm is not supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole. Accordingly, we reject the Commission’s determination that the four-priority plan became “unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, and preferential” as of the date of Opinion 647.
Beyond the absence of record support for its finding of irreparable harm, the more fundamental problem with the March 7 order is its failure to specify in even general terms that set of circumstances which the Commission deems essential to a determination that an existing curtailment plan has become “unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, or preferential” within the meaning of the Natural Gas Act. We are, therefore, compelled to view both the alternate fuel and. irreparable harm findings as indispensable elements in the Commission’s determination of the four-priority plan’s
The ability of utilities to use alternate fuel is an important factor in our determination that the four-priority plan is unjust and unreasonable, but it is not the sole basis of our decision. More important, perhaps, is the serious and irreparable harm that would ensue to hundreds of other industrial concerns if the utilities were to receive a preference.
Joint Appendix at 439.
To the extent the Commission remains firm on remand in its position that alternate fuel capability and irreparable harm are elements necessary to demonstrate the invalidity of an existing curtailment plan, record support for the finding of irreparable harm must be forthcoming. An examination of the alternate fuel capabilities of United’s industrial customers should be viewed by the Commission as essential to having a finding of irreparable harm sustained on review by this court. To the degree that the record is devoid of such evidence, hearings on the issue of industrial alternate fuel capability may be warranted. The Commission, of course, is the first judge of the necessity of hearings, but any subsequent order must pass scrutiny under the substantial evidence standard. Of importance, the Commission is free on remand to formulate a “working definition” of the applicable statutory standard and apply it to the facts at hand. Indeed, effective appellate review is unduly hampered without this clear indication of the Commission’s position. It may well be that any future elaboration of the statutory standard by the Commission will dispense with the apparent requirement of a showing of irreparable harm by reason of the continued operation of an existing curtailment plan. Nevertheless, with the Commission’s determination in the March 7 order explicitly dependent on two factual considerations — one of which is lacking in record support — we are unable to escape the conclusion that the Commission’s determination of the four-priority plan’s invalidity after the date of Opinion 647 is not supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole.
Petitioners challenge two further determinations made by the Commission in the March 7 order: (1) the finding that the three-priority plan has provided for equitable and nondiseriminatory curtailment during the two years that it has been in effect, and (2) the finding that the four-priority plan was just, reasonable, and nondiseriminatory in its operation prior to the date of Opinion 647. We can quickly deal with the Commission’s finding as to the three-priority plan, which we find to be unsupported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole. Indeed, the March 7 order contains no record citation whatsoever to support the finding that the three-priority plan has provided for equitable and nondiseriminatory curtailment during the past two years. We vacate the Commission’s finding as to the three-priority plan. The Commission’s finding as to the four-priority plan, however, presents more subtle problems, and an examination of those problems is warranted.
The transparent purpose of the Commission’s findings with regard to the justness and reasonableness of United’s past and present curtailment plans is to insulate the pipe line from devastating contract liability that may be incurred in pending damage suits.
The Commission and United point to the fact that the Opinion 606 four-priority plan was the product of proceedings initiated under section 4 of the Natural Gas Act. On the authority of Minneapolis Gas Co. v. FPC, 1961, 111 U.S.App.D.C. 16, 294 F.2d 212, they argue that the Commission was required to proceed to a determination of the justness and reasonableness of the four-priority plan. We dissent from this view. The four-priority plan was placed in effect on October 5, 1971, pending a later determination of its justness and reasonableness. The Presiding Examiner entered his decision in July, 1972, and the Commission responded with Opinion 647 in January, 1973. Opinion 647 found that the four-priority plan was just and reasonable from the time of its implementation until January 13, 1973 — the date of Opinion 647. Opinion 647 failed — as State of Louisiana emphatically found — to make «a finding as to the plan’s justness and reasonableness after that date. The determination of the four-priority. plan’s justness and reasonableness prior to January 13, 1973, in the March 7 order is simply a reiteration of the same finding contained in Opinion 647. Minneapolis Gas does in fact stand for the proposition that once the Commission has initiated proceedings under section 4 — and advanced as far as the Presiding Examiner’s decision — a decision by the Commission on justness and reasonableness must subsequently be reached. The added wrinkle in the instant case, however, is the Commission’s continuing opposition to the four-priority plan. Opinion 647 abandoned the four-priority plan, and the March 7 order seeks to finalize its demise. Had the Commission continued with its original support of the four-priority plan, a determination of justness and reasonableness would have been required under the logic of Minneapolis Gas. Having shifted its support to the three-priority plan and by virtue of our mandate in State of Louisiana, the only determination of justness and reasonableness required on the part of the Commission at the time of Opinion 647 was a determination that the four-priority plan became unjust and unreasonable prior to the adoption of the three-priority plan.
While the Commission was not required to make a finding as to the four-priority plan’s justness and reasonableness, it was still authorized to make such a finding. In State of Louisiana we instructed the Commission to answer the following question:
Did the four-priority plan instituted in November 1971 meet the standards of Section 4(b) of the Natural Gas Act?
503 F.2d at 864. The thrust of the question posed was directed toward a determination of invalidity by the Commission and followed from the requirement that the Commission find an existing curtailment plan wanting before proceeding to adopt a new plan. Implicit in our direction to the Commission was the possibility that the determination on remand would be in favor of the continuing validity of the four-priority plan under the standards of section 4(b). Ascertaining a
The Commission possesses broad powers to structure the proceedings before it. See FCC v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 1940, 309 U.S. 134, 60 S.Ct. 437, 84 L.Ed. 656; City of San Antonio v. CAB, 1967, 126 U.S.App.D.C. 112, 374 F.2d 326, 329. Given the complexity and difficulty of the legal and economic issues generated by deep curtailment on an extensive pipe line system, the phasing of proceedings on remand from our decision in State of Louisiana was an entirely proper course of action for the Commission. The electric utility petitioners argue, however, that placing their “misclassification” arguments in Phase I of the proceedings on remand — dealing with possible modifications to the three-priority interim plan— improperly shifted the burden of proof off of the Commission and United. Phase I of the proceedings below was suspended when the Administrative Law Judge certificated a proposed settlement to the Commission on August 14, 1975. Thus, petitioners’ misclassification arguments, and the treatment afforded those arguments in Phase I, are matters still pending before the Commission. For this reason, we hold that petitioners’ challenge to the placing of the misclassification arguments in Phase I is not yet ripe for judicial review. A petition to review the Commission’s actions with regard to the proposed settlement is the appropriate vehicle for review of petitioners’ burden of proof argument. As a final matter, the industrial petitioners argue that the Commission erred by refusing to place the old-new customer arguments in Phase I. We disagree. State of Louisiana emphatically reserves consideration of this aspect of the curtailment controversy to the proceedings on a permanent plan for United. 503 F.2d at 863-64. The Commission’s delay in acting on a permanent plan for the United system is, of course, discouraging. Nevertheless, the delay that would ensue from requiring the Commission to place the preference arguments in the context of proceedings on an interim plan is of an even higher order. Moreover, we must give heed to the power of the Commission to control the scheduling and conduct of its own proceedings. See FCC v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co., su
The problem of remedy remains. Following our decision in State of Louisiana and by order of December 13, 1974, we allowed the Commission to continue the three-priority plan in operation pending compliance with our mandate on remand. LP&L urges that the failure of the Commission to properly support its implementation of the three-priority plan with a prior determination of the four-priority plan’s invalidity necessitates immediate re-implementation of the latter plan. In essence, LP&L argues that affording the Commission one opportunity to conform with the mandate of State of Louisiana was sufficient, and re-implementation of the four-priority plan is now required after a second failure. This court is mindful, however, of the fact that this year’s winter heating season is upon us. Undoubtedly, complex fuel supply arrangements have been made with the three-priority plan in mind. The disruptive potential inherent in immediate re-implementation of the four-priority plan is formidable. Accordingly, we allow the Commission to continue the three-priority plan in operation for the duration of the current winter heating season. Nevertheless, this is the last year during which the three-priority plan will remain in operation without the support of a proper finding on the invalidity of the four-priority plan. Absent proper compliance by the Commission with our decision on remand, the four-priority plan will control curtailment on the United system for the 1976-77 winter heating season.
The March 7 and May 2 orders of the Commission are reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
. 45 FPC 570 (1971).
. United Gas Pipe Line Co. FPC Tariff § 12, First Revised Sheet No. 71 and Third Revised Sheet No. 72, Docket No. RP 71-120 (May 14, 1971).
. The requested tariff provision provided as follows:
Whenever Seller [United] prorates its gas supply or interrupts its service in accordance with this Section 12 of its Tariff so that customers of Seller do not receive the volume of natural gas they desire up to their Maximum Daily Quantities, . . . Seller [shall not] be obligated to pay or credit such customers any sums with respect to substitute fuels burned by such customer during such period of proration or interruption.
United Gas Pipe Line Co. FPC Gas Tariff § 12.-3, Original Sheet No. 72-A, Docket No. RP 71-120 (May 14, 1941).
. Opinion No. 606, Docket Nos. RP 71-29, RP 71-120, RP 71-99, United Gas Pipe Line Co., 46 FPC 786 (Oct. 5, 1971). The intermediate decision of the Administrative Law Judge was waived with Opinion 606.
. Opinion 606-A, Docket Nos. RP 71-29, RP 71-120, RP 71-99, United Gas Pipe Line Co., 46 FPC 1290, 1292-93 (Dec. 3, 1971).
. Opinion No. 647, Docket Nos. RP 71-29, RP 71-120, United Gas Pipe Line Co., 49 FPC 179 (Jan. 12, 1973).
. The Commission’s proposed five-priority plan was adopted from the Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. proceedings. Opinion No. 643, Docket No. RP 71-122, Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co., 49 FPC 53 (Jan. 8, 1973). The Commission’s proposed permanent plan for United, like all of United’s prior curtailment plans, structured curtailment on the basis of “end use.”
. Opinion No. 647-A, Docket Nos. RP 71-29, RP 71-120, United Gas Pipe Line Co., 49 FPC 1211 (May 30, 1973).
. The text of the Commission’s order is set out in the Joint Appendix, pp. 413-50.
. Section 5(a), 15 U.S.C. § 717d(a), provides: “Whenever the Commission, after a hearing had upon its own motion or upon complaint of any State, municipality, State commission, or gas distributing company, shall find that any rate, charge, or classification demanded, observed, charged, or collected by any natural-gas company in connection with any transportation or sale of natural gas, subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or that any rule, regulation, practice, or contract affecting such rate, charge, or classification is unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, or preferential, the Commission shall determine the just and reasonable rate, charge, classification, rule, regulation, practice, or contract to be thereafter observed and in force, and shall fix the same by order: Provided, however, That the Commission shall have no power to order any increase in any rate contained in the currently effective schedule of such natural-gas company on file with the Commission, unless such increase is in accordance with a new schedule filed by such natural-gas company; but the Commission may order a decrease where existing rates are unjust, unduly discriminatory, preferential, otherwise unlawful, or are not the lowest reasonable rates.”
. Section 554(c)(1), 5 U.S.C. § 554, provides in pertinent part that:
The agency shall give all interested parties opportunity for . . . the submission and consideration of facts, arguments, offers of settlement, or proposals of adjustment when time, the nature of the proceeding^], and the public interest permit ....
. See Order No. 431, 45 FPC 570, 572 (1971).
. The forty-three days of hearings stretched from December 21, 1970, to July 27, 1971, produced a record of 6000 pages and 183 exhibits, and included extensive examination and cross-examination of United’s witnesses, as well as testimony from a large number of expert and management witnesses of companies affected by United’s curtailment plans.
. NOPSI’s witness, Mr. Joseph Benson, testified as to his preference for the four-priority plan, Joint Appendix at 173, and challenged the Commission’s basis for consolidation of Categories III and IV in the interim plan — the inferiority of boiler fuel gas usage. Joint Appendix at 174-80.
. We decline to view the March 7 order as providing a parade of reasons from which we can pick and choose in determining whether the statutory standard of invalidity has in fact been met. Indeed, a contrary approach was employed by the court in State of Louisiana. We there accepted the factual support for the general inferiority of the four-priority plan, but remanded for a determination by the Commission as to whether that inferiority rose to the level of making the plan unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, or preferential. We now review the Commission’s response in that context.
. Borrowing verbatim from the opinion in State of Louisiana, the March 7 order detailed the following record evidence in support of the conclusions of the Commission as to the alternate fuel capabilities of the electric utilities,
(a) Evidence showing oil is (or can be) used in existing boiler facilities.
Record testimony by utility representatives showed that some companies have an ability to burn fuel oil in their boilers. Gulf States can burn oil in generating units at two plants. Louisiana Power and Light has eight generating units which can burn oil on an emergency basis for up to sixty-five hours. Another LP&L unit can burn oil for seven days. Mississippi Power and Light’s Greenville plant upon completion was predicted to be able to burn fuel oil continuously. At the time of the hearing MP&L had four generating units capable of “split-firing” (burning a combination of oil and gas) on an emergency basis. New Orleans Public Service, Inc. (NOPSI) has two generating units which can split-fire for three to five days at a time, and perhaps longer. One
plant belonging to the South Mississippi Electric Power Association has operated “on a split-fired basis.”
(b) Evidence showing projected oil-burning boiler facilities.
Besides present oil-burning facilities, the record also shows that new facilities were being planned. Testimony showed that NOPSI expected to have most of its generating units converted so that they would have the capability of oil-burning by spring 1972. NOPSI had a plan to convert all its major generating units or major boilers to burn oil. Gulf States had employed a consultant to develop a construction schedule and cost estimate for converting “certain” Gulf States facilities to continuous full oil use.
Joint Appendix at 432-34 (footnotes omitted); See State of Louisiana v. FPC, 503 F.2d at 859-60.
. Joint Appendix at 435.
. Id. at 436-37.
. Id. at 438.
. Id. at 442.
. After State of Louisiana, we would have been inclined to view the alternate fuel capabilities of United’s industrial customers as a subject of inquiry more properly pursued in the hearings on a permanent plan for the United system. Nevertheless, by injecting the irreparable harm factor into the March 7 order, the Commission also and necessarily raises the issue of industrial alternate fuel capabilities.
. Damage suits are currently pending against United in both federal and state courts, and the potential liability faced by the pipe line exceeds $1 billion.
. See, e. g., International Paper Co. v. FPC, 5 Cir. 1973, 476 F.2d 121, 125.
. It should be borne in mind that with this holding the four-priority plan has thus never been found just and reasonable by the Commission on the basis of substantial evidence. Should the Commission abandon its support of the three-priority — an event we consider highly unlikely — it would be necessary to conduct hearings, on the justness and reasonableness of the four-priority plan in order to comply with the rule of Minneapolis Gas. ’