This is an appeal by the New York State Electric and Gas Corporation (hereafter for brevity called the Company) fiom a dismissal of its bill of complaint seeking to enjoin enforcement of an order of the Public Service Commission of the state of New York. Since no application for an interlocutory injunction was pressed in the district court, the hearing was properly had before a single judge and an appeal from his order lies to this court. Smith v. Wilson,
Upon motion of the defendants, Judge Patterson dismissed the suit for the reasons given in his opinion in a companion case, Long Island Water Corp. v. Public Service Comm., D.C.,
The claim of federal equity jurisdiction is based upon allegations that the Commission’s order was confiscatory and, contrary to the constitutional requirements recognized in Ohio Valley Water Co. v. Ben Avon Borough,
Consequently, dismissal by the state court of the Company’s equity action did not go on lack of jurisdiction, and that decision is res judicata of whatever it decided. It necessarily decided either that certiorari was an adequate remedy on the issue of confiscation alleged in the complaint, or that the allegations of the complaint did not show a confiscatory order. Either horn of the dilemma is fatal to the present appeal. If the state court decided that certiorari was an adequate remedy it may have been right, or it may have been wrong. It was right if confiscation turned only on questions of law; it was wrong if the complaint challenged findings of fact made by the commission on evidence upon which a court would find otherwise. But if it was wrong, an appeal by way of certio-rari to the Supreme Court was available under the Fourteenth Amendment. On the other hand, the state court may have decided on the merits that the allegations did not show a confiscatory order, and for that reason certiorari was an adequate remedy. Such a ruling, if wrong, could also have been carried to the Supreme Court, but no attempt to do so was made. Therefore, on either interpretation of the state decision, we find no error in dismissing the suit at bar on the ground of res judicata.
Decree affirmed.
