64 A.2d 500 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued October 6, 1948. The Philadelphia Suburban Water Company (hereinafter referred to as "Water Company") was ordered by the Public Utility Commission to provide single-point water meter service to the Colonial Gardens Corporation (hereinafter referred to as "Colonial") at its eleven-building apartment development in Yeadon, Delaware County, instead of under the contract theretofore in force between Colonial and the Water Company, according to the terms of which eight of the eleven buildings were carried on one meter and three were individually metered. The order was made after a hearing on a complaint by Colonial in which it sought to be classified as a "commercial" consumer of water within the meaning of the Water Company's tariff, and thereby have but a single meter for the entire group of apartments. From the order in favor of Colonial, the Water Company brought this appeal; Colonial joined as intervening appellee.
Colonial erected the eleven two-story buildings, comprising 186 apartments, in 1940, as a Federal Housing Administration project, financed by that agency. The apartment units themselves were duplexes, built one over the other; they were arranged into buildings of various sizes in order to avoid monotonous uniformity. All were erected on a single plot of ground owned by Colonial through which a private road was cut for the convenience of the tenants. The mortgage under which the project was financed covered the entire plot and all eleven buildings. The project was taxed as a single unit by the local real estate taxing bodies, had a single superintendent, and was supplied with gas and electricity under single-point meter service by the utilities providing those services. Colonial's vice president, who was the only witness called in support of the complaint, testified that the project differed from a single apartment house only in that the apartment units were grouped in separated *323 buildings of varying sizes, and that this separation was to provide light and air and grass around the dwellings and to avoid "a mechanical uniform outlook."
As the buildings were completed in 1940, they were supplied with water through individual meters, one to each building. It was brought to the attention of Colonial's officers (who were newly elected on a change of management in 1943) by the FHA that Colonial's water bills were almost double the amounts paid by comparable projects in other parts of the country, and Colonial then started a series of requests for single-point service that culminated in an agreement with the Water Company in February, 1944. Under this agreement, eight of the eleven buildings were put under single-point service, Colonial buying the water main under the private road cutting the plot, and paying the costs of installation of the single meter. The other three buildings were to continue on separate meters; the Water Company's officer stated that it was "impossible" to put them on a single-point service.
In violation of this agreement, Colonial placed all eleven buildings on the single meter. The Water Company objected, and Colonial then wrote to the Public Utility Commission, which advised Colonial to request the Water Company to cancel the individual contracts for service to the three buildings not included in the agreement for single-point service. Colonial did, on September 22, 1944, request the Water Company to cancel the contract, and offered to make a new agreement covering all eleven buildings, but no response was ever received to this letter. In April, 1946, Colonial applied for single-point service once again, using the Water Company's application forms, and was refused.
Colonial filed one complaint with the Commission in 1944, claiming refunds from the Water Company on account of improper metering and billing; this complaint was dismissed, the Commission noting that Colonial *324 was at that time taking water for the three buildings not covered by the agreement of February, 1944, contrary to the terms of that contract, contrary to the rules and regulations of the Water Company, and to the law. The complaint was not, however, dismissed on that ground, but on the ground that the refunds asked for were not called for under the then subsisting agreement between Colonial and the Water Company. It was expressly stated in the Commission's order that Colonial's right to single-point service for the entire development had not been made the subject of the complaint in that proceeding, and so was not passed on.
Colonial restored the separate meters for buildings 1, 2, and 3 in April, 1946, to conform to the agreement of February, 1944, after the Water Company had brought a suit in equity to compel restoration of the separate meters. Colonial then filed this complaint with the Public Utility Commission requesting that the Water Company be ordered to provide single-point service for all eleven buildings. The Commission determined (1) that Colonial was not barred from this relief by reason of having taken water for buildings 1, 2, and 3 through the single meter, in violation of the contract of February, 1944; (2) that Colonial was a "commercial" establishment entitled to single-point service under the Water Company's tariff; and (3) that a further hearing was necessary to settle the right of the Water Company to recover "undercharges" for water taken in violation of the agreement of February, 1944, and the right of Colonial to refunds for water supplied to buildings 1, 2, and 3 through separate meters after April, 1946, when Colonial's request for single-point service was denied.
Tariff Rule No. 17 of the Water Company provides as follows:
"Property Supplied by Single Service Line:
"17. A service line from the curb to a property shall not supply more than one property as generally described *325 and classified below; but any such property upon written request of the owner may be supplied by two or more meters, each of which for billing shall be considered as being one customer account, and provided that the supply to each such meter has an individual control at or near the curb, viz:
"(a) A dwelling house; — either detached, or one side of a double house, or a house in a row of houses; provided, that a garage, a conservatory and similar features incidental to the family life shall be considered a portion of the dwelling.
"(b) An industrial, or commercial, or manufacturing establishment.
"(c) A building separated from adjacent buildings by party wall or walls, and comprising apartments or stores or offices or any combination thereof.
"(d) A detached building comprising apartments or stores or offices, or any combination thereof.
"(e) A Housing Development owned and operated as a unit by the United States Government."1
The questions for determination are: (1) Did Colonial, by taking water for buildings 1, 2, and 3 through a single meter contrary to its contract with the Water Company, and by failing to pay the "undercharges" on such water as claimed by the Water Company, bar itself from the relief here sought? (2) Was the Commission's interpretation of the Water Company's tariff classification reasonable and supported by competent evidence?
The Commission, in its order nisi, stated: "There is no doubt that from May, 1944 until April 25, 1946, Colonial was taking water illegally and contrary to existing and controlling service contracts and has not to this day paid Suburban [the Water Company] the amounts demanded by Suburban as undercharges. We *326 feel, regardless of the fact that the matter is presently in litigation, Colonial should pay Suburban the amounts claimed. We do not feel, however, that non-payment of money damages should bar Colonial from the relief to which it might otherwise be entitled, particularly when we can condition any relief we may afford Colonial on the payment by Colonial to Suburban of the amount of the charges claimed by Suburban. Clearly, one who seeks equity must do equity."
Because the exact amount of the overcharges was not determined by the Commission in this proceeding, that question was ordered to be decided in a subsequent hearing at which Colonial's claim for damages from April, 1946, because of the Water Company's refusal to grant single-point service, would also be determined. Clearly this would provide the Water Company with all the relief necessary or otherwise available, and as Colonial points out in its brief as intervening appellee, after the controversy as to these conflicting claims would be settled, Colonial would be able to demand the relief sought for in this proceeding. Why the relief should be refused now because of Colonial's refusal to pay undercharges not judicially ascertained in amount, the Water Company does not suggest. It seems clear that the Commission did not abuse its discretion in entertaining the complaint at this time.
It is settled that the reasonableness of the classification and of the different rates applicable are administrative questions. Brown v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission,
The Water Company argues that the use to which Colonial's property is put determines that it is not "commercial" *327
within the purview of its Tariff Rule 17 (b), distinguishing "commercial" from "residential." Were Colonial's tenants the contracting consumers, rather than Colonial itself, the distinction would be apposite; as it is, however, Colonial is the consumer, and there can be no doubt that it is engaged in, and devoting its property to, a commercial enterprise. Only by a narrow construction of the word "commercial" could it be decided that the operation of an apartment development like Colonial's is not a commercial activity. In District ofColumbia v. Wardell,
Clearly Colonial's project of 186 apartments could not be viewed as anything but a commercial establishment, so long as Colonial itself was the consumer which purchased the water. Certainly it was not unreasonable for the Commission to adopt a construction of the word *328 "commercial" which would embrace an enterprise of this scope.
Further, the evidence supports the finding here assailed; the testimony of Colonial's vice president is adequate to establish that there was a uniform use of the property for apartment dwellings, with uniform leases in which all utility services were covered by the rent, with common maintenance and supervision, common garage facilities, on a single tract mortgaged as a unit, taxed as a unit, and billed for utility services as a unit. Such a factual situation, under the decisions of this Court, establishes a case where single-point service is proper.
In Land Title Bank and Trust Company v. Pennsylvania PublicUtility Commission,
In Hunter v. P.S.C.,
"`Neither the fact that there are several buildings on the plot receiving separate services, nor the fact that the sole owner of these buildings would be the contracting party for water service rendered thereto, are the factors upon which to determine this complainant's grievance. The real point atissue is whether the complainant is a singleCommercial-Industrial consumer receiving water for thepurposes of one business unit, or whether the thirty-fourtenants are each essentially separate domestic and/orcommercial consumers. Under the evidence the conclusion is inescapable that the latter is the fact.'" (Emphasis added.)
Under the evidence in the instant case the opposite conclusion, equally inescapable, is that the coincidence of uniform ownership with uniform use of the premises, places Colonial in the category of a single commercial consumer under the Water Company's Tariff Rule 17.
The order is affirmed.