Ohio Edison Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

52 Ohio St. 2d 123 | Ohio | 1977

-Per- Curiam.

Appellant today presents us ' with ' the question of whether the Commission was correct in dismissing an otherwise proper appeal made to determine whether a municipality possesses the authority to enact a rate-fixing ordinance, such dismissal being premised upon the finding that the municipality enjoyed no such power.

,By, its entry, of December 29, 1976, the Commission noted that,, a complaint having been brought, .before it, the Commission was authorized to ascertain its jurisdiction in the first .instance, and that it was incumbent upon the Commission to determine the validity of Ordinance No. 76-73, froip which appellant had appealed. The Commission declared that Ontario ¡when it passed Ordinance Np. 76-73 lacked authority, to pass ordinances setting rates. The Commission concluded, that because Ontario lacked such authority,; the ¡Commission lacked jurisdiction to .proceed, in the controversy in question.*

“R. C. 4909.39 authorizes the Public Utilities..Commission, to: fix a rate to1 be charged by, a utility company when ordinance rates are found to be unjust, unreasonable, or insufficient to yield reasonable compensation;, * * Forest Hills Util. Co. v. Pub. Util. Comm. (1972), 31 Ohio St. 2d 46, 47, 285.N. E, 2d 702 (paragraph eight of the syllabus).

'R.iG. 4909.39 provides, in relevant part:,

. “If the public utilities commission, after, the hearing .referred.to in sections 4909.34 to 4909.36 of the Revised Cede,.-is of-the'opinion that * * * [a] rate,* * * fixed by *125;ordinanee ip or will be: unjust, unreasonable, or insufficient to yield reasonable compensation for the service-,; th$. .cpm-mission shall fix and determine the just and. reaspnable rate, * * * to be charged, demanded, exacted-,;.or collected */'*;/? during the' period so fixed by ordinance, which, period shall not be less-.than two years,, and order the rate, price, charge, toll, or rental, so fixed substituted for the rate, price,, charge, toll, or rental fixed by ordinance, , ;
“* * # If .the commission,* # * isnfi.the opinion-that any provisions of- the ordinance appealed from or complained .of other than the rate, price, charge, toll, or rental fixed,by such ordinance/ are or will be unjust or unreasonable * ;* * the commission shall * * * strike, out such,unjust, or .unreasonable provisions, conditions, form, and structure of said ordinance and shall substitute-for theirg if it deems it necessary, such provisions .and conditions as.it considers fair o-nrl RfvnflTVlp * * ^

E. C. 4909.39 replaces G. C. 614-46'. It was provided by G. C. 614-46 that £i [X]f the commission, after * * * [a]' hearings, shall. be of the opinion that the rate, price, charge, toll or rental, so fixed by ordinance is or will; be .unjust ox-unreasonable, or insufficient to yield reasonable-compensation for the service, the commission shall, * * * fix. and. determine the,1 just and reasonable rate, price, charge, toll or rental to be charged, demanded, exacted or collected by such public utility, during the period so fixed by ordinance, which shall not be less than two years, and order the .same substituted for.the rate, price, charge, toll or rental .so,fixed by ordinance, or ;the commission may find and declare, that the rate, price,- charge, toll or rental, so fixed by , ordinance, is just and. reasonable, and ratify and confirm the, same.-” . , ,;

■ G-. C. 614-;46- was interpreted -by.this court in State, ex rel. Brainard, v. McConnaughey (1940), 137 Ohio St. 431, 30 N. E. 2d 699. Therein, the city of Cleveland repeatedly had passed ordinances regulating and fixing the price and terms upon which natural gas should be furnished within the municipality .over successive six-month periods,. The- East Ohio G-as Company filed appeals from each .of -these ordinances with the Commission. ..The municipality .filed mo*126tions with, the Commission to dismiss these appeals on the ground that the Commission lacked jurisdiction to heat appeals from municipal rate ordinances encompassing terms of less than two years.

In construing the language “which shall not be less than two years,” this court explained that it meant merely that a Commission order fixing a rate in substitution for that fixed by ordinance would be effective for not less than two years. The General Assembly had not intended allowing a municipality to escape Commission jurisdiction through ¡passage of successive rate-fixing ordinances covering spans of under two years. The statutory language ordained that should an appeal be prosecuted to the Commission from a rate-making ordinance, and if, upon such appeal, the Commission determined the ordinance rates to be unjust and unreasonable and fixed a rate which it deemed just and reasonable, such rate fixed by the Commission would be effective for not less than two years, notwithstanding the fact that the ordinance fixed a rate for a period of less than two years. Brainard, supra, at pages 434-36.

When the Commission, by its order of September 15, 1976, fixed a rate in substitution for that set by Ontario’s Ordinance No. 74-56, the order remained effective, pursuant to R. C. 4909.39, until September 15, 1978. The November 4, 1976, attempt of Ontario to set rates obtaining within that two-year interval was without force or effect.

Ontario’s rate-fixing ploy lacking force or effect, the Commission on December 29,1976, was not presented with a valid rate-fixing ordinance. There having been no valid : rate-fixing ordinance, Connnission dismissal of the case was both within the Commission’s jurisdiction, and appropriate.

In view of the foregoing, the order of the Commission being neither unreasonable nor unlawful is affirmed.

Order affirmed.

Celebrezze, W. Brown, P. Brown, Sweeney and Locher, JJ., concur. O’Neill, C. J., and Herbert, J., dissent.

The Commission’s entry of December 29, 1976,. provides in relevant páit": r ' '

! - ''iAs the Commission has the authority to determine its jurisdiction in the first instance, and as the Commission has found, that the , Village of Ontario* lacked the authority to pass an ordinance setting rates at the time it passed Ordinance 76-73, the Commission finds that it lacks jurisdiction to proceed in the instant matter.”

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