— Appellants are users of gas in Kansas City, and commenced this suit to enjoin the enforcement of a city ordinance which prohibited the use of gas pumps and other devices designed to increase the flow of gas beyond that normally due to the pressure in the pipe through which the Kansas City Gas Company furnished gas to them. The Kansas City Gas Company receives the gas from the Kansas Natural Gas Company, which procures natural gas at points of production in Oklahoma and Kansas and conducts it through pipes to various towns in Kansas and Missouri, including Kansas City, Missouri. About eighty-five per cent of the gas comes from Oklahoma and fifteen per cent from Kansas. That used in Kansas City is delivered to the Kansas City Gas Company through pipes metered at the city limits, and is by that company sold to about 60,000 consumers. Of these about 1200 employ devices prohibited by the ordinance in question. The Kansas Natural Gas Company is in the hands of a receiver, appointed by the Federal court in Kansas. The court fixed the price of the gas, and the Kansas City Gas Company pays to the Kansas Natural Gas Company forty per cent of its receipts from the sale of gas in Kansas City. The Kansas City Gas Company operates under a franchise granted by Kansas City in 1906. The agreed statement of facts shows the ordinance involved was duly passed and approved; that respondents contend that appellants by employing *524 the devices in question increased the natural flow of gas to the detriment of the great body of gas users in Kansas City, and that the result of the use of such devices was to endanger the health and safety of the people of the city; that respondents were about to begin prosecution, against appellants and others, under the ordinance and would do so unless restrained; that the Federal Court has increased the franchise rates. There was testimony of experts to the effect that the use of the gas pumps and devices condemned by the ordinance tended to produce a vacuum in the pipes; that air was thereby drawn into them and that the mixture thus produced became dangerously explosive and had frequently resulted in explosions in numerous places in Oklahoma, Kansas and Kansas City, and that great injury to life, limb and property is done and threatened thereby. There is no description of any of the devices and no detailed evidence of the manner of their use. The petition raised several constitutional questions, and alleged that the ordinance invaded the field occupied by the Public Service Commission. The trial court found against appellants and dismissed the petition, and this appeal followed.
Appellants contend the ordinance is void (1) "because it is in direct conflict with the Public Service Commission Statute of Missouri, and seeks to invade and usurp the powers and functions of the Public Service Commission;” and (2) "because it is in violation (a) of the Federal statute creating the Interstate Commerce Commission and defining its powers, and (b) of Section 8, Article I, of the Federal Constitution;” and (3) that the ordinance cannot be justified as a police regulation for these reasons.
“We think the trial court properly overruled the objections offered to its jurisdiction, and nothing need be added to the reason which it gave. [234 Eed. 152,155.] But we cannot agree with its conclusions that local companies in distributing and selling gas to their customers acted as mere agents, immediate representatives or instrumentalities of the receivers, and as such carried on without interruption interstate commerce set in motion by them.
“That the transportation of gas through pipe lines from one state to another is interstate commerce may not be doubted. Also, it is clear that as part of such commerce the receivers might sell and deliver gas so transported to local distributing companies free from unreasonable interference by the State. [American Exp. *526 Co. v. Iowa,196 U. S. 133 , 143; Oklahoma v. Kansas Natl. Gas Co.,221 U. S. 229 ; Haskell v. Kansas Natl. Gas Co.,224 U. S. 217 .]
“But in no proper sense can it be said, under the facts here disclosed, that sale and delivery of gas to their customers at burner-tips by the local companies operating under special franchises constituted any part of interstate commerce. The companies received supplies which had moved in such commerce and then disposed thereof at retail in due course of their own local business. Payment to the receivers of sums amounting to two-thirds of the product of these sales did not make them integral parts of their_ interstate business. In fact, they lacked authority to engage by agent or otherwise in the retail transactions carried on by the local companies. Interstate commerce is a practical conception and what falls within it must be determined upon consideration of established facts and known commercial methods. [Rearick v. Pennsylvania,203 U. S. 507 , 512; The Pipe Line Cases,234 U. S. 548 , 560.] The thing which the receivers actually did was to deliver supplies to local companies. Exercising franchise rights, the latter distributed and sold the commodity so obtained upon their own account and paid the receivers what amounted to two-thirds of their receipts from customers. Interstate movement ended when the gas passed into local mains. The court below erroneously adopted the contrary view, and upon it rested the conclusion that the public commissions were interfering with establishment of compensatory rates by the receivers in violation of their rights under the. Fourteenth Amendment.”
The decree was that the decree of the trial court was reversed and the cause remanded. Appellant seeks to evade the force of this decision on the same facts by the contention that the Supreme Court subsequently modified its decree, entered upon the filing of the opinion quoted, and made a different order as to the hearing. This is based upon the vacation,. April 28, 1919, of the original decree of date March 17, 1919. . [249 U. S. l. c. 590, 591.] The order of vacation and new decree is as follows:
*527 “In these ca'ses it is ordered that the decree entered March 17, 1919, be vacated and decree now entered as follows: The decrees below are reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to hear it anew and determine all the issues involved, including those arising on the several bills, cross-bills, and answers in the nature of cros's-bills, in conformity with the views expressed in the opinion of this court; and to take such further proceedings as may be appropriate and consistent with such opinion. All temporary injunctions in force at the time of the entry of the decrees from which appeals were taken here shall be continued in force until otherwise ordered. The costs, in this court will be paidx one-half by John M. Landon, receiver of the Kansas Natural Gas Company, and the remainder shall be paid, one-third by each of the three groups of appellants.
“ (For the opinion of the court and names of counsel, see ante 236.) ”
There seems to be nothing in this intended to modify the -opinion the court had rendered in March. On the contrary, the new trial ordered by the new decree is required to be “in conformity to the views expressed in the opinion of this court, ’ ’ and the ‘ ‘ further proceedings ’ ’ were required to be “appropriate and consistent with such opinion.” The Supreme Court (Penna. Gas Co. v. Pub. Service Comm., 252 U. S. l. c. 28) discussed the opinion in the Landon Case and stated what was there held, as follows:
“This case differs from Public Utilities Commission v. Landon,249 U. S. 236 , wherein we dealt with the piping of natural gas from one state to another, and its sale to independent local gas companies in the receiving state, and held that the retailing of gas by the local companies to their consumers was intrastate commerce and not a continuation of interstate commerce, although the mains of the local companies receiving and distributing the gas to local consumers were connected permanently with those of the transmitting company. Under the circumstances set forth in that c&se we held that the interstate movement ended when the gas passed into the local *528 mains; that the rates to be charged by the local companies had but an indirect effect upon interstate commerce and, therefore, the matter was subject to local regulation. ” ,
It is clear the Supreme Court was not of opinion that the order of vacation and the entry of the decree of April 28, 1919, had affected the quoted holding in the Landon Case. It also appears that the court to which the cause was remánded had no such conception of the new decree as- that now advanced by appellants in the instant case. On the retrial (Landon v. Court of Industrial Relations, 269 Fed. l. c. 415) the reasons for the order and decree of April 28, 1919, are stated, and it is shown they were made (not to affect the Supreme Court’s holding on the question as to interstate commerce, but) to meet conditions which arose after the original decree, and to permit the litigation of the question whether the rates fixed by the Kansas Commission were confiscatory. The decision of the Supreme'Court determines against appel-lants the interstate commerce issue in the instant case.
The judgment is affirmed.
