Lead Opinion
We are called upon to review three orders promulgated by the Federal Power Commission in lengthy proceedings arising and conducted under the Natural Gas Act.
The producers are Sun Oil Company, General Crude Oil Company, M. H. Marr and Continental Oil Company. The pipeline is Texas Eastern Transmission Cor-, poration (Texas Eastern).
The orders under attack emanate from a series of Commission proceedings extending over a period of more than thirteen years. But notwithstanding its longevity, the controversy arrived here in a posture far from a final resolution. We have painstakingly examined its diffuse history, analyzed its multifaceted issues and pondered the complex problems emerging. Then, finding and identifying error in their administrative treatment, we are led to a disposition which, fortu-. nately, will bring this long-standing litigation to a just and early end.
I. BACKGROUND OF THE LITIGATION
A. Producer-Pipeline Transactions
By contracts executed on February 1, 1957, the producers agreed to sell, and Texas Eastern to buy, their natural gas production in Rayne Field,
After that pronouncement, Texas Eastern and the producers renegotiated, and oh December 4, 1958, agreed upon another arrangement. Instead of a conventional well-head sale of the gas at a 23.9-cent price, the new plan provided for sales to Texas Eastern of the producers’ leasehold interests in the gas reserves in place.
B. Opinion No. 322 And Its Demise
On June 23, 1959, the Commission overruled objections to the new proposal and, in its Opinion No. 322, awarded Texas Eastern an unconditional cerifícate to build and operate the facilities needed to effectuate the lease-sale.
Opinion No. 322 was, however, brought to this court for judicial review, and was reversed.
C. Opinion No. 378
On remand, the Commission took the latter course, and after further hearings, reached two conclusions. On February 6, 1963, in Opinion No. 378,
Opinion No. 378 was subjected to judicial review in the Fifth Circuit, and the Commission’s jurisdictional determination was reversed.
D. Opinion No. 565
In March, 1966, in response to Opinion No. 378, the producers filed applications for certificates of public convenience and necessity, and another round of hearings ensued. The presiding examiner split his initial decision into two parts, the first dealing with the question of payments to be remitted to producers in the future, and the second, made necessary by the first, with the question of refunds on account of payments to producers in the past. In his Phase I decision, issued January 23, 1968,
On August 6, 1969, the Commission issued its Opinion No. 565 and an order upholding in the main the examiner’s decision on both phases.
Opinion No. 565 was not a unanimous decision. Commissioners O’Connor and Bagge subscribed to it fully.
E. Opinion No. 565-A
It so happened, however, that Opinion No. 565 and its accompanying order were not effectuated in any meaningful way. Applications for rehearing were presented to the Commission, and by orders en
The modifications proposed by Opinion No. 565-A are directly traceable to significant developments in producer-rate regulation in Southern Louisiana occurring contemporaneously with the proceeding under review. In 1960, the Commission inaugurated a series of proceedings to enable determination of maximum producers’ rates for major gas-producing areas and the regulation of such rates on an area-wide basis.
Order No. 565-A reflects some shifting of positions among the Commission’s members.
So it was that the Commission reached no decision as to the refund liability of either Texas Eastern or the producers, and that all issues in that regard were postponed.
Petitions seeking rehearing of Opinion No. 565-A were filed,
II. STATUS OF THE COMMISSION’S OPINIONS
The threshold question we confront is the current status of Opinions Nos. 565 and 565-A and the orders respectively accompanying them as exertions of the Commission’s adjudicatory authority. No one argues that either of these opinions or orders lacked a Commission majority when they issued. No one suggests that Opinion No. 565-A, when announced, did not effectively modify Opinion No. 565. Rather, the dispute relates to the impact upon the substantive and procedural aspects of those decisions which may have been made by the commissioners’ subsequent votes on the order denying rehearing of Opinion No. 565-A. The votes which Commissioners Carver and Brooke cast on that order are at the center of the controversy.
A. The Problem and Its Genesis
Opinion No. 565 and its companion order were supported by the majority votes of Chairman White and Commissioners O’Connor and Bagge in every aspect save one.
Similarly, Opinion No. 565-A and the order related to it were sustained, initially at least, by the unqualified votes of . Chairman Nassikas and Commissioner Bagge,
PSC,
The Commission, on the other hand, eschewing the withdrawal, asserts that the majority vote for Opinion No. 565-A when issued was unaffected by the subsequent voting with respect to the applications for rehearing of that opinion, and in that position the producers unite. The issue thus boils down to whether the attempted withdrawal changed the 4-1 vote for Opinion No. 565-A and its suspension of the certificate conditions to a vitiating 3-2 vote against Opinion No. 565-A, thus restoring Opinion No. 565 as the final and only decision of the Commission. It is important to resolve
B. The Governing Principles
The authority to entertain and dispose of applications for rehearing of Commission orders is defined by the Natural Gas Act. “Upon such application,” the Act provides, “the Commission shall have power to grant or deny rehearing or to abrogate or modify its order without further hearing.”
By institutional decisions, we mean, of course, a decision by a majority vote duly taken. That is the rule of the common law,
We perceive no incongruity with logic or precedent in these conclusions. On the contrary, neither the requirement of institutional action which Congress has imposed on the Commission nor the principle of majority rule which the Commission has itself impressed upon its decision-making processes could tolerate any other. Collective action, we repeat, is the only authorized means to a decision, including a decision to undo a prior decision. If an agency proceeding could be reopened by the unilateral action of a member who casts a vote for the majority, then, irrespective of the conviction of remaining members that the interest in repose outweighed their doctrinal differences, a single defection from the majority could thwart many a careful considered resolution, and wreak havoc on the stability of the agency's decisions. We have not been referred to nor have we found any authority for such a novel and frightening proposition.
We do not mean to suggest that a commissioner’s vote, once made, imprisons him in an intellectual straitjacket. The point is that an individual change of mind cannot change an institutional decision unless it gárners a majority vote to do so. Nor is there any requirement, statutory or otherwise, that members of administrative agencies maintain consistent positions throughout the course of lengthy proceedings. Commissioners, no less than judges,
C. Application Of Doctrine Here
The petitions for rehearing of Opinion No. 565-A and its related order
It is also evident that the Commission’s decision to deny rehearing of Order No. 565-A was supported by the votes of a majority of the commissioners. Chairman Nassikas and Commissioner Bagge subscribed fully to the order of denial.
We hold, then, that Opinion No. 565-A was not abrogated or modified by the vote on the petitions to rehear it.
In consequence, the matters before us for review are Opinion No. 565 as modified by Opinion No. 565-A, and Opinion ' No. 565-A without modification, and the orders respectively accompanying those opinions. To the issues tendered for review we now turn.
III. CONVENTIONALIZATION OF THE LEASE-SALE
Opinions Nos. 565 and 565-A each express the finding of a majority of the Commission
The Commission faced a novel situation in the lease-sale arrangement presented to it, for the lease-sale was not readily amenable to administrative supervision in the Commission’s accustomed mode of regulating prices between producers and pipelines.
A. Certification of Conventional Natural Gas Sales
A conventional gas-sale contract sets a price for each unit — each Mcf — of gas to be supplied, frequently with a provision escalating the price. When a sale is sought to be certificated, the price is subject to scrutiny by the Commission in the exercise of its authority, under Section 7 of the Natural Gas Act,
In the CATCO litigation,
[T]he inordinate delay presently existing in the processing of § 5 proceedings requires a most careful scrutiny and responsible reaction to initial price proposals of producers under § 7. . . The fact that prices have leaped from one plateau to the higher levels of another . . . [makes] price a consideration of prime importance. This is the more important during this formative' period when the ground rules of producer regulation are being evolved. . . . The Congress, in § 7(e), has authorized the Commission to condition certificates in such manner as the public convenience and necessity may require. Where the proposed price jg not in keeping with the public interest because it is out of line or because its approval might result in a triggering of general price rises or an increase in the applicant’s existing rates by reason of “favored nation” clauses162 or otherwise, the Commission in the exercise of its discretion might attach such conditions as it believes necessary.163
Following CATCO, the Commission undertook to assure that the prices at which producer sales were certificated did not exceed in-line prices — the field prices at which the bulk of contemporaneous gas transactions not “suspect” took place.
The Act spells out the processes by which producer rates set at in-line levels may be altered. After Section 7 certification, a producer may, under Section 4, vie for a higher price by the simple expedient of a 30-day notice to the Commission and the public.
Case-by-case determination of just and reasonable producer rates on the traditional cost-of-service basis, however, proved to be an intractable process which threatened to inundate the Commission’s regulatory function.
B. The Lease-Sale Contrasted
Upon a conventional gas-sale transaction, then, the ratemaking aspect of a Section 7 certification proceeding has as its purpose the fixing of an initial price in line with prices in other jump-free transactions pending the establishment
Adherence to the Supreme Court’s CATCO
■ C. The Decision to Conventionalize
In reviewing action by the Commission within its jurisdiction under the Natural Gas Act, we exercise an “essentially narrow and circumscribed” function.
After Opinion No. 378 was announced, the producers sought to eliminate the risk of possible overestimation of the reserves by guaranteeing that they would supply Texas Eastern with a designated minimum volume of gas.
Like the examiner, the Commission in Opinion No. 565 was of the view that the reserve guaranty did not reduce much of the cost-price hazard inherent in the lease-sale.
When, however, the Commission came in Opinion No. 565 to again consider the lease-sale on its merits, it had long since ceased to be entirely executory. By the end of 1968, almost half of the estimated recoverable gas had been taken, and most of the contract price had been paid to the producers.
Opinion No. 565, as we read it, predicated that finding on two bases. One was a cost comparison of the lease-sale with a conventional gas-sale, which disclosed a difference of some $6 million in favor of the latter.
This difference in cost was not, however, the only consideration motivating the Commission to disapprove the lease-sale as presented. A second factor which loomed large was the Commission’s belief that despite the reserve guaranty, the lease-sale was fraught with uncertainties which precluded a confident evaluation of its economic impact, and that the public interest would hardly be served by thrusting the risk of an excessive price on consumers. Opinion No. 565 set forth a summary of the uncertainties, to which we have adverted,
[T]he lease-sale arrangement produces a lack of certainty over the life of the field and, as the record indicates, a higher cost than a conventional sale at 20 cents per Mcf. Because of these features of the lease-sale transaction, it is imperative for the Commission to take steps within its jurisdiction, which will protect consumers from paying excessive rates. This can be done, we believe effectively, through regulating the payments made by Texas Eastern to the Producers by conditioning the lease-sale arrangement.212
The uncertainty factor reappeared as a topic of discussion in Opinion No. 565-A. The producers contended that uncertainty is an element in many projects submitted for Commission approval, and that the uncertainties remaining in the lease-sale transaction after the reserve guaranty was made did not exceed reasonable bounds. The Commission disagreed, responding:
While, of course, there is always uncertainty, more is involved here, for the proposal is to commit Texas Eastern to a fixed price of $134,395,000 for the life of the field, and that is not true in the conventional certificate proceeding where the price is subject to regulation. The essence of our objection to the lease-sale transaction is its inflexibility. If the price turns out to be too high in the light of changing circumstances, it fails to protect*300 the consumers; if it is too low the producers will not receive an adequate return and this, in turn, may affect their ability to serve the market.213
Before the Commission the producers also argued, as they have here, that the advantageous features of the lease-sale demanded consideration conjunctively with cost data in determining whether it was that arrangement or a conventionally-converted sale that best served the public convenience and necessity.
When this litigation was previously before this court, we extended to the Commission the option to “reopen the record in the certificate proceeding to permit Texas Eastern to establish by adequate evidence that the acquisition costs which it proposes to incur will be consistent with the public convenience and necessity.”
In reviewing the Commission’s decision to conventionalize, we have remained advertent to the difficulty of the problem which it faced and to the appeal which some of the parties’ arguments had for a minority of its members.
IV. SALE PRICE OF THE GAS
A. The Price Adjustments
In Opinion No. 565, the Commission effectuated its decision to equate the lease-sale to a conventional gas sale by attaching to the certificates of public convenience and necessity which it awarded a set of conditions designed to achieve that end.
Utilizing as a base price the area rate of 18.5 cents per Mcf effective October 1, 1968,
In conventionalizing the lease-sale, the Commission felt it unnecessary to reject all of its features, some of which the Commission felt had tax advantages for the contracting parties.
[W]e shall adjust the arrangement so that, up until the entire purchase price of $134,395,700 is paid by Texas Eastern, it will be equivalent in economic effect to a conventional sale at the just and reasonable price of 18.5 cents per Mcf. After that, as proposed by the Applicants, Texas Eastern would^ make no further payments, for if we required continued payments until the Field was exhausted the lease-sale would be, in effect, converted into a conventional sale, presumably with the corresponding tax consequences. To accomplish these ends will clearly involve a reduction of the payments for gas and an extension of the paying period, but the Producers would eventually receive the full purchase price of $134,395,700, although over a longer period, even after making the refunds which [Opinion No. 565 directed].244
And the Commission further explained:
After the end of the production payment until the entire purchase price is paid, the price should continue to be reduced by royalties, state taxes, investments and expenses, but should be increased by liquid revenues and salvage, for the Producers in a conventional sale would receive the benefit of both of these items.
Eventually, even though the payments are reduced, as long as gas continues to flow from the Rayne Field, Texas Eastern will pay the full purchase price of $134,395,700 albeit over a longer period of time. In our opinion the Producers, providing there is sufficient gas, should receive the full amount for which they contracted even though they have been required to make a refund for the period prior to this order. After the full payment has been completed Texas Eastern will pay the Producers no more for gas taken from the Rayne Field. Since it will then have fully paid for the properties, transferred, Texas Eastern, alone, should bear the cost of the royalties, state taxes and costs of operating the Field, but it should receive the benefit of all liquid revenues. Texas Eastern, however, should pay the Producers for any salvage realized on property installed before the purchase price has been fully paid, since the cost of such property under the opinion and order will be deducted from the price of gas of 18.5 cents per Mcf. Of course, salvage realized from property in*304 stalled after the payments have been completed and not charged against the Producers should benefit Texas Eastern.245
In Opinion No. 565-A, however, the Commission changed its treatment of the purchase price completely. The producers had contended that Opinion No. 565, in partially conventionalizing the lease-sale, had unfairly and confiscatorily placed burdens on them without conferring the benefits of a conventional sale.
The Commission was persuaded by these arguments. In Opinion No. 565-A, it declared that “while the Producers, under the arrangement we prescribed, [in Opinion No. 565] will be getting the contract price it will not be of the same value because they will receive it over a much longer period, and they will not receive the benefit of all the gas and liquids produced by the Field as they would under a conventional contract.”
Texas Eastern will retain the leases conveyed to it, and will continue to be responsible for operating expenses and necessary investments.
This means that the conditions prescribed in this Opinion and order with respect to future pricing of the gas from the Rayne Field will be extended until the exhaustion of the field. Thus Texas Eastern shall pay the Producers the appropriate area rate for the gas produced less royalties, state taxes and investments and expenses for the development and operation of the Field. Under the lease-sale arrangement before the termination of the production payments revenues from liquids are used to reimburse Texas Eastern. Therefore, the area price should be reduced only by unreimbursed investments and expenses, and, after the termination of the production payment, the price should be increased by the liquid revenues.251
This modification of Opinion No. 565 was supported in Opinion No. 565-A by four of the five members of the Commission
The Commission’s reversal of position as to the continuing efficacy of the $134 million contract price as a ceiling on Texas Eastern’s payments to the producers for Rayne Field gas engendered an issue which is hotly contested in this court. Texas Eastern argues that the condition extending its payments over the life of the field will compel an expenditure of many millions of dollars over the maximum price agreed to by the producers, and that the Commission exceeded its authority in imposing that requirement. The producers and the Commission, with equal vigor, defend
B. The Power to Change Contract Prices
Two decisions of the Supreme Court, read conjunctively, make it crystal clear that the Commission possesses only limited power to raise prices for natural gas above those contractually fixed by the parties. In United Gas Pipe Line Company v. Mobile Gas Service Corporation,
These sections are simply parts of a single statutory scheme under which all rates are established initially by the natural gas companies, by contract or otherwise, and all rates are subject to being modified by the Commission upon a finding that they are unlawful. The Act merely defines the review powers of the Commission and imposes such duties on natural gas companies as are necessary to effectuate those powers; it purports neither to grant nor to define the initial rate-setting powers of natural gas companies.262
Section 5(a), authorizing the Commission to set aside or modify any rate found to be “unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, or preferential [,]” the Court continued, “is neither a ‘rate-making’ nor a ‘rate-changing’ procedure. It is simply the power to review rates and contracts made in the first instance by natural gas companies and, if they are determined to be unlawful, to remedy them.”
In Mobile, the Court also noted, however, “that this interpretation, while precluding natural gas companies from unilaterally changing their contracts simply because it is in their private interests to do so, does not deprive them of an avenue of relief when their interests coincide with the public interest.”
Section 5(a) authorizes the Commission to investigate rates not only “upon complaint of any State, municipality, State commission, or gas distributing company” but also “upon its own motion.” Thus, while natural gas companies are understandably not given the same explicit standing to complain of. their own contracts as are those who represent the public interest or those who might be discriminated against, there is nothing to prevent them from furnishing to the Commission any relevant information and requesting it to initiate an investigation on its own motion. And if the Commission, after hearing, determines the contract rate to be so low as to conflict with the public interest, it may under § 5(a) authorize the natural gas company to file a schedule increasing the rate.268
On the same day Mobile was decided, the Court announced its opinion in Federal Power Commission v. Sierra Pacific Power Company.
These decisions furnish the standard by which the administrative action under scrutiny must be gauged. In recent years, the Supreme Court has applied them to uphold the Commission’s refusal to fix minimum area rates for producers at levels above their contract prices.
C. The Purchase Price Adjustment
The plan by which the Commission conventionalized the lease-sale arrangement involved contractual deviations of three major types. The first was the substitution of an initial unit price for the original price which the parties had fixed at the lump-sum figure of $134,395,700.
—The Unit Price
We may readily resolve any problem arising from the setting of the initial unit price for the gas. As we have seen, the restriction on contract-alteration by the Commission is not total; the Commission is authorized — indeed, is required — -“to review” the parties’ “rates and contracts . . . and, if they are determined to be unlawful, to remedy them,”
As the Supreme Court said in CATCO,
The purpose of the Natural Gas Act was to underwrite just and reasonable rates to the consumers of natural gas287 .... As the original §*308 7(c) provided, it was “the intention of Congress that natural gas shall be sold in interstate commerce for resale for ultimate public consumption for domestic, commercial, industrial, or any other use at the lowest possible reasonable rate consistent with the maintenance of adequate service in the public interest288 .... The Act was so framed as to afford consumers a complete, permanent and effective bond of protection from excessive rates and charges. The heart of the Act is found in those provisions requiring initially that any “proposed service, sale, operation, construction, extension, or acquisition . . . will be required by the present or future public convenience and necessity,”289 . and that all rates and charges “made, demanded, or received” shall be “just and reasonable”290 ... . The Act prohibits such movements unless and until the Commission issues a certificate of public convenience and necessity therefor291 .... Section 7(e) vests in the Commission control over the conditions under which gas may be initially dedicated to interstate use.292
Moreover, said the Court in CATCO, “[i]n view of [the statutory] framework in which the Commission is authorized and directed to act, the initial certificating of a proposal under § 7(e) of the Act as being required by the public convenience and necessity becomes crucial.”
From the regulatory scheme, thus analyzed, it is apparent that the establishment of an initial price in a Section 7 certificate proceeding does not ordinarily implicate the Mobile-Sierra rule. As in CATCO the Court explained:
This is not an encroachment upon the initial rate-making privileges allowed natural gas companies under the Act, . . .304 but merely the exercise of that duty imposed on the Commission to protect the public interest in determining whether the issuance of the certificate is required by the public convenience and necessity, which is the Act’s standard in § 7 applications. In granting such conditional certificates, the Commission does not determine initial prices nor does it overturn those agreed upon by the parties. Rather, it so conditions the certificate that the consuming public may be protected while the justness' and reasonableness of the price fixed by the parties is being determined under other sections of the Act. Section 7 procedures in such situations thus act to hold the line awaiting adjudication of a just and reasonable rate. Thus the purpose of the Congress “to create a comprehensive and effective regulatory scheme,”305 . . is given full recognition. And § 7 is given only that scope necessary for “a single statutory scheme under which all rates are established initially by the natural gas companies, by contract or otherwise, and all rates are subject to being modified by the Commission. . ”306 . . . . On the other hand, if unconditional certificates are issued where the rate is not clearly shown to be required by the public convenience and necessity, relief is limited to § 5 proceedings, and . . . full protection of the public interest is not afforded.307
In Opinion No. 565, the Commission found that the lease-sale, even as amended by the reserve guaranty,
—The Total Price
As we have stated, Texas Eastern argues strenuously that the Commission’s decision to eliminate the $134 million lease-sale contract price as the ceiling of its monetary liability to the producers for their Rayne Field gas stands on entirely different ground. We find, upon careful examination of this particular change, that Texas Eastern’s position is well taken. We accordingly hold that the Commission’s action in that . regard cannot be supported as an appropriate exercise of its contract-revision authority under the narrow exception to the Mobile-Sierra rule.
Before elucidating the reasons persuading us to that conclusion, we pause to address two preliminary considerations. The producers and the Commission point to the uncertainties as to the volume of gas in the field, the quantity and value of liquids that may be extracted, the amount of future state taxes and the size of salvage recoveries; and on that basis they argue that the displacement of the contract price by a unit price payable throughout the life of the field does not absolutely forebode an increase of the cost of the gas to Texas Eastern. In the view of three members of the Commission- — a majority in Opinion No. 565-A, in which the displacement was directed^ — such an increase would indeed follow. Commissioner O’Connor estimated that the producers would gain “an additional $52,141,000.”
Beyond that, the fundamental teaching of Mobile and Sierra is that the parties’ agreement, and not the Commission’s bent, sets the price of gas for purposes of administrative regulation unless overriding considerations of public convenience and necessity unmistakably appear.
There is another preliminary matter which the producers’ position presents. They contend also that because the applications to the Commission invoked its Section 7 power to confer certification, and not its Section 5 authority to review rates for their reasonableness, the Mobile-Sierra doctrine does not apply. Like the Third Circuit, however, we deem this “an immaterial difference.”
This brings us to a consideration of the propriety of the Commission’s holding in Opinion No. 565-A that instead of discharging the fixed purchase-price obligation defined in the lease-sale contract, Texas Eastern must continue its gas-purchase payments to the producers until the transferred reserves are exhausted. The majority vote
We think it clear that the Commission’s direction to that end does not survive the Mobile-Sierra test. That test, as we have seen, is not whether a contractual provision seems to be equitable to the contracting parties but whether it is detrimental to the public interest.
The Commission did not find that the $134 million contract price was “so low as to adversely affect the public interest.”
That is not to say, however, that its counterpart in Opinion No. 565 is invulnerable. Except as the exigencies of the public interest demanded, the Commission was no more at liberty to alter the lease-sale contract to the prejudice of the producers than to do so in their favor. Opinion No. 565, by limiting Texas Eastern’s financial liability to the contract price and simultaneously spreading its discharge over a longer period of time, would cause the producers to receive less than the quid pro quo for which they contracted. That is because the value to the producers of the money to be paid over the longer time span would be less than its value by the payment schedule embodied in the lease-sale arrangement.
Every member of the Commission has come to recognize the producers’ plight demands rectification,
V. PRODUCER RATES AND REFUNDS
Having decided to conventionalize the lease-sale transaction,
In Opinion No. 565, a majority of the Commission held that the certificates issued to Texas Eastern and the producers should be conditioned upon an initial price of 20 cents per Mcf for gas delivered to October 1, 1968, and at the price of 18.5 cents on deliveries thereafter.
In Opinion No. 565-A, however, this disposition was changed radically. A majority of the Commission rallied to the position expressed earlier by Chairman White,
We find the resolutions of the Commission majorities in Opinions Nos. 565 and 565-A legally unacceptable. We hold that, as a matter of law, the Commission was compelled to utilize the previously ascertained 18.5-cent just and reasonable' area rate both as the unit price for the gas deliveries to be made and as the basis for refunds by the producers on account of deliveries already made. We further hold that the Commission was legally obliged to order the producers to make those refunds to Texas Eastern immediately.
A. The General Standard For Producer Rates
“The purpose of the Natural Gas Act,” the Supreme Court instructs, “was to underwrite just and reasonable rates to the consumers of natural gas.”
The Commission’s responsibility to hearken to these policies attaches at the very moment it is requested to certificate activities within its regulatory domain. Section 7(e) imposes upon it the duty to determine whether a “proposed service, sale, operation, construction, extension, or acquisition . will be required by the present or future public convenience and necessity.”
To be sure, “the Act does not require a determination of just and reasonable rates in a § 7 proceeding as it does in one under either § 4 or § 5,”
B. The Treatment Of Producer Rates
In Opinion No. 565, a majority of the Commission decided that the price to be paid to the producers for gas deliveries to Texas Eastern after the effective date of the Commission’s decision in Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding
Here we are issuing a certificate under Section 7 of the Natural Gas Act. Section 7(c) provides that we have power to attach to the certificate “such reasonable terms and conditions as the public convenience and necessity may require.”382 We think it reasonable to require that the Producers reduce their rates prospectively to an effective 18.5 cents per Mcf in accordance with [the area rate determination] ,383
In Opinion No. 565-A, the Commission majority held similarly that the just and reasonable rate should govern the initial price for prospective gas deliveries.
Since we have stayed this rate as a result of the court’s review of our area decision386 and the appropriate rate is still subject to further proceedings, we shall require that the producer rate schedule filing be on the basis of 20 cents per Mcf, the in-line price in Southern Louisiana as found in our original opinion. When the Southern Louisiana rate is finally determined, we shall require that this basic producer rate be modified accordingly.387
The challenge we are now summoned to resolve is to the Commission’s substitution by Opinion 565-A of the in-line rate for the just and reasonable rate employed in Opinion No. 565 as the measure of the initial price to be paid by Texas Eastern to the producers for future deliveries of natural gas.
—(1) The Choice Of The In-Line Price
The unfeasibility of establishing a just and reasonable rate within the framework of a Section 7 certification proceeding
It is evident, however, that use of the in-line price as the yardstick for the initial-price determination on certification cannot be justified in situations where a just and reasonable area rate for gas of the vintage in question has already been established. The goal of gas-pricing to which the Act emphatically speaks is the just and reasonable rate,
Just and reasonable rates for jurisdictional gas, we repeat, are the end and aim of price regulation under the Act.
As we see it, only the presence of an overriding consideration promoting an identifiable legislative purpose can justify administrative displacement of the just and reasonable rate through approval of another rate for gas to which the Act applies. The need for prompt setting of an initial price in a Section 7 certification proceeding becomes such a consideration where there is no just and reasonable rate as yet.
Two courts, for the purpose of computing producer refund liabilities in Section 7 proceedings, have passed over the in-line price for natural gas in favor of the just and reasonable area rate which had become available.
—(2) The Status of the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding
On September 25, 1968, the Commission capped a seven-year-old rate investigation with its Opinion No. 546 in Docket No. AR61-2 — the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding
In the meantime, the Commission, on March 20, 1969, had issued its Opinion No. 546-A in response to applications for rehearing of Opinion No. 546.
The order expanding the investigation in Docket No. AR69-1 came shortly prior to oral argument in the Fifth Circuit on its review of Opinion No. 546, the original Southern Louisiana area rate proceeding, occasioning a pause to consider the impact of that investigation on the pending review.
The maximum rates that the Commission has set . . are to remain in effect throughout the new proceeding, which may last for years. Moreover, it was never contemplated that there should be a single area proceeding setting rates once and for all; rather the Commission has always made it clear that it intended to review the rates it had set whenever the circum- . stances made it advisable to do so.411
And in upholding the orders under review, the court stated:
The mandate of this Court should not, however, be interpreted to interfere with Commission action that would change the rates we have approved here. We specifically and emphatically reject the contention . . . that the Commission has no power to set aside rates once determined by it to be just and reasonable when it has reason to believe its determinations may have been erroneous.412 In fact, the existence of the new proceedings, which as*320 we understand will take into account many of the issues whose absence has concerned us here, has been one of the factors we have considered in deciding to affirm the Commission’s decisions.413
Such was the history of the Southern Louisiana area rate inquiry at the time the Commission handed down Opinion No. 565-A. We cannot agree with the Commission that the events we have recited rendered Opinion No. 546 so tentative in character as to support the Commission’s refusal in Opinion No. 565-A to employ the 18.5-cent just and reasonable rate as the initial price to be paid to the producers for gas delivered after the effective date of that rate. By Opinion No. 546 and its related orders, which came long prior to Opinion No. 565-A, the Commission had fixed the just and reasonable rate for Southern Louisiana gas of the Rayne Field vintage at 18.5 cents per Mcf. On review of that rate and others promulgated in Docket No. AR61-2, the Fifth Circuit had affirmed the Commission’s orders.
It is true that the Fifth Circuit, in affirming Opinion No. 546, spoke to the Commission's authority to reopen the orders accompanying it. We read that reference as no more than a recognition of the Commission’s prerogative — and duty — to revise rates when they are found to be inconsistent with the public interest. Section 16 of the Act expressly empowers the Commission to “amend [] and rescind . . . orders ... as it may find necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this [Act]”.
The 18.5-cent just and reasonable rate was established in Opinion No. 546 after a long and comprehensive exploration
In sum, the 18.5-cent rate differs little if any from any other rate that is inherently subject to change upon a suitable showing. The Commission’s authority to alter or discard its prior rate orders is limited to changes which “it may find necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of” the Act.
C. The Standard For Producer Refunds
In 1959, after the Commission announced its ill-fated Opinion No. 322 certificating the extension of Texas Eastern’s pipeline to Rayne Field,
Throughout this lengthy period — a decade — the gas continued to flow through Texas Eastern’s pipeline en route to consumers, and Texas Eastern continued its payments to producers on the schedule specified by the lease-sale contract. Since those remittances, as the Commission found in Opinion No. 565, greatly exceeded the amounts which Texas Eastern would have paid for the gas had it been delivered pursuant to a conventional sale arrangement,
The Natural Gas Act, we have noted, mandates just and reasonable rates for jurisdictional gas and declares that any other rate is unlawful.
Logically, this would seem to imply that to assure the “complete, permanent and effective bond of protection” [which the Act affords consumers “from excessive rates and charges”],434 any rate permitted to be charged dur*323 ing the interim period before a just and reasonable rate can be determined must be accompanied by a condition rendering the producer liable for refunds down to the just and reasonable rate, should that rate prove lower than the initial rate specified in the certificate.435
Although, as the Court acknowledged, the Commission apparently does not impose such a condition and reviewing courts have not insisted that it do so,
We are mindful of considerations which superficially might indicate a preference for the in-line price over the just and reasonable rate as the predicate for calculating refunds, but on analysis they do not support such a preference. Refunds must be made on the basis of the in-line price in lieu of a wait for the just and reasonable rate,
We have concluded that only a consideration subserving an overriding aspect of legislative policy affords adequate justification for a selection of the in-line price over an existing just and reasonable rate as the initial price at which a proposed gas sale is to be cer
D. The Treatment of Producer Refunds
In Opinion No. 565, a majority of the Commission decided that the 18.5-cent rate set in the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding
[Ujnless we are to treat the present sale in the same manner as those contemporaneously contracted for and certificated at the in-line price of 20 cents per Mcf, we will in effect be punishing the producers for litigating their by no means frivolous legal and policy claims in the courts and before this Commission. This in our view would not only be inequitable, but would necessarily lead to unnecessary producer uncertainty when they choose to dedicate gas to the interstate market. Obviously, where their claims to special consideration are rejected they should not benefit by the passage of time in the course of their litigation. But where contemporary sales in the same area have been permanently certificated at in-line prices, approved by the courts, and used for both in-line and refund purposes, we do not believe that the exigencies of the timing of litigation on similar sales should lead to a different result.450
In Opinion No. 565-A, however, the majority position of the Commission shifted; all payments above the just and reasonable rate, that opinion held, should be refunded.
[T]he just and reasonable rates applicable to the Southern Louisiana area in which the Rayne Field is situated have not been fully determined, nor has it been determined whether refunds should be made by the producers in that area either for the periods before or after October 1, 1968. In these circumstances it is our opinion that the public interest precludes our ordering refunds to be paid by the Rayne Field producers at this time. The myriad problems confronting the Commission in coping with producer regulation render our task difficult and complex, at best. However, the one objective that must always be kept in sight is the need to provide fair and equal treatment for all of those regulated. It is essential, therefore, that the four producers involved in this proceeding should be afforded the same treatment as will be given to all other producers in Southern Louisiana. In this regard, we believe that the just and reasonable rates which ultimately flow out of any settlement, or any further proceedings in [the Southern Louisiana, Area Rate Proceeding], should govern the level of payments in this case prior to October 1, 1968, as well as after that date.453
We cannot embrace fully the course of reasoning which the Commission majorities pursued in either of the two opinions. The standard for producer refunds, we have said, is the just and reasonable rate where that rate is available and use of another rate is not vindicated by some overriding facet of congressional policy.
—(1) The Deferral Of Producer Refunds
Even assuming the nonexistence of any just and reasonable rate which might function as the basis for immediate refunds by the producers, that office could readily have been performed by the in-line price, which the Commission ascertained in this very proceeding.
In United Gas Improvement Company v. Callery Properties,
We have said elsewhere that it is the duty of the Commission, “where refunds are found due, to direct their payment at the earliest possible moment consistent with due process.”464 . . . These excessive rates have been collected since 1958; under the circumstances, the Commission was not required to delay this refund further465
The considerably longer period over which the producers here have collected above the in-line price can hardly escape notice.
We are mindful of the fact that in Callery and other cases it was the Commission that ordered refunds based on the in-line price, while in Opinion No. 565-A the Commission did just the opposite : it reversed the direction in Opinion No. 565 to that effect. We deem this difference insufficient to remove the case from the purview of the Callery ruling. The Commission was not merely at liberty to require immediate refunds but, where refunds are due, it also had “the duty ... to direct their payment at the earliest possible moment consistent with due process.”
In his Phase II decision, the presiding examiner found that through 1967 Texas Eastern had paid the producers $21.8 million more than gas deliveries at the in-line price would have brought — a figure which with interest increased to $31.4 million.
The Commission assigned two reasons for its decision to put off all producer refunds while the area rate for Southern Louisiana was undergoing further investigation. The first was the recurring thesis that the 18.5-cent area rate for Rayne Field gas had not been finally determined.
The Commission’s second reason was that a deferral of refunds would foster equality of treatment among Southern Louisiana producers,
■ — -(2) The Amounts Of Producer Refunds
The Commission, then, should have directed immediate producer rate refunds
It will be recalled that in Opinion No. 565 the Commission selected the 20-cent in-line price as the foundation for refunds on payments to producers prior to October 1, 1968, the effective date of the 18.5-cent just and reasonable area rate, and at the 18.5-cent rate on payments made thereafter.
We cannot accept the grounds the Commission put forth in Opinion No. 565 as considerations of a caliber sufficient to outweigh the clear congressional preference for just and reasonable rates when available as indices for initial pricing in Section 7 certification proceedings. Nor can we accept the reasons advanced in Opinion No. 565-A as adequate justification for the Commission’s decision to defer refunding by the producers. We hold that the Commission was legally bound to order the refunds forthwith, and to predicate them upon the just and reasonable rate of 18.5 cents previously established in the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding.
VI. FLOW-THROUGH OF RATE REDUCTIONS AND REFUNDS
The issues remaining for our determination concern the extent to which rate reductions and refunds required of the producers in Texas Eastern’s favor should be passed on to its customers,
In his Phase II decision, the presiding examiner directed Texas Eastern to deposit the customer refunds which he ordered
A. The Treatment of Rate Reductions in Opinion No. 565
Before the Commission, Texas Eastern argued that the Commission had no authority under Section 7 of the Act
As long as Texas Eastern is paying the producers for the gas and until the purchase price of $134,395,700 has been paid, and from then until complete amortization of the Rayne Field balances on Texas Eastern’s books,507 Texas Eastern’s rates shall continue to reflect the cost of the Rayne Field gas at the applicable area rate, now 18.5 cents per Mcf. However, when the amortization of the Rayne Field balances has been completed, Texas Eastern, providing it is still selling gas from Rayne Field, shall file new rates to reflect the fact that it is no longer paying the producers but is merely paying royalties and other expenses.508
B. The Treatment of Refunds in Opinion No. 565
On the subject of producer refunds, the examiner had felt bound by the Commission’s Opinions Nos. 540 and 540-A, rendered in earlier litigation involving Texas Eastern.
In the proceeding now before us, Texas Eastern did not file a tracking rate increase. The examiner found that Texas Eastern “earned a fair return despite having paid too much for Rayne Field gas,”
There is no supplier rate increase involved here, the annual expense of which Texas Eastern could have passed on to its customers through a rate increase filing, had it believed the rate increase could be justified. Instead, under the lease-sale (which will remain in existence, though gas payments therefrom are conventionalized), the down payment, note payments and most of the other capital expenditures were reasonably treated by Texas Eastern as a capital investment, and as such in any rate case Texas Eastern could not have recovered anything more than the approved rate of annual return on such expenditures, depreciation, depletion and amortization, and certain expenses and taxes.520
In consequence, the Commission held that it “should not prescribe a complete flow-through by Texas Eastern of the refunds from the Producers.”
A complete flow-through of the producer refunds would put Texas Eastern in the position of paying too much for part of the Rayne Field gas without any relief and then paying the just and reasonable price for additional gas until the Producers shall have received the full purchase price of $134,395,700, so that Texas Eastern would end up paying some $21,000,-000 more than it had originally contracted to pay. However, to the extent the excessive payments in the years from 1959 to the present have fallen on its customers, Texas Eastern has already been reimbursed and the customers should receive a flow-through refund of that amount.524
Looking then to the evidence, the Commission found that, on the basis of the excess of the actual per-Mcf cost of the gas, by virtue of the lease-sale arrangement, over an in-line price of 20 cents per Mef,
Thus the Commission arrived at the point at which it was able to address the investment which Texas Eastern had made in Rayne Field while the lease-sale arrangement was in vogue. At the end of 1967, the net investment was $20,882,-996,
C. The Impact of Opinion No. 565-A
Such was the Commission’s analysis and disposition of the flow-through issue in Opinion No. 565, but in Opinion No. 565-A it was completely discarded. Since, in the latter opinion, a 4-1 majority of the Commission ruled that no rate reduction or refund by the producers to Texas Eastern should be ordered before the area rate for Southern Louisiana underwent further consideration,
D. The Present Problems
There is, in the litigation before us, no demurrer to the Commission’s jurisdiction to deal, as between Texas Eastern and the customers to which Opinion No. 565 applies, with any rate reductions or refunds receivable by Texas Eastern from the producers.
We have held that the Commission cannot defer longer the rate reductions and refunds by the producers to Texas Eastern which conventionalization of the parties’ lease-sale agreement demands.
We do not approach these problems on the broad premise that invalidity of an administrative decision undertaking to change an earlier administrative decision invariably reinstates the earlier decision. We realize that the agency may legally have a choice as to the action it will take in the matter, and that a court may not be able to say that the agency, had it known that the later decision would not pass judicial muster, would have left the earlier decision as its final action. On the other hand, it is obviously unnecessary to indulge further administrative consideration of problems as to which but one solution is legally open.
The Commission’s power to modify its prior orders, we have said, is confined to changes which “it may find necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions” of the Act.
E. The Standards for Flow-Through of Rate Reductions and Refunds
The principles governing flow-through by a pipeline of rate reductions and refunds by its suppliers trace their origin to policy ingrained in the regulatory scheme of the Natural Gas Act. Since we have already had occasion to discuss that topic in another context,
The import of these considerations for flow-through of rate reductions and refunds to pipelines is evident. The rightful beneficiaries of such reductions are consumers when the prices they pay reflect excessive prices paid suppliers by the pipeline. To be sure, pipelines are entitled to charge their customers just and reasonable rates for gas sold them,
The Commission possesses Section 7 authority to condition any certificate of public convenience and necessity which a pipeline seeks by an imposition of requirements designed to serve the public interest
Entitlement to refunds of excessive rates charged pipelines by suppliers rests upon similar considerations. The only real difference in principle results from the difference in character of a rate reduction as remediation for the future and a rate refund as restitution for the past. A pipeline does not merit a supplier refund rectifying exorbitance in a supplier rate .simply because it was the pipeline that directly paid the supplier that rate.
F. Flow-Through of Rate Reductions
The presiding examiner concluded that in consequence of the reduction, through conventionalization of the lease-sale, of the rate which producers could obtain from Texas Eastern, the commodity charge in the latter’s systemwide rates should be lowered.
The Commission’s general authority to issue interim rate orders is beyond question.
The woes of rate-reduction flow-through do not end at this point, however, for the disposition ordained in Opinion No. 565 was soon cast aside. In Opinion No. 565-A, the Commission substituted the 20-cent in-line price for the 18.5-cent area rate as the basis for a producer rate-schedule filing to reflect what the Commission then deemed the appropriate producer reduction.
We have seen that the objective of initial gas-pricing in Section 7 certification proceedings must constantly be protection of consumers against exorbitance during the period prior to establishment of firm prices by the ratemaking process.
In this posture of the case, it is clear that as a matter of law Opinion No. 565-A is erroneous and Opinion No. 565 is right in its treatment of rate-reduction by Texas Eastern. We must, then, set Opinion No. 565-A aside on that score. By the same token, since the Commission had no perceivable legal alternative to the disposition it assigned that matter in Opinion No. 565, we sustain the Commission’s position in that respect.
G. Flow-Through of Rate Refunds
For some time the Commission appears to have allocated supplier refunds between pipelines and their customers by application of a simple principle. Entitlement depended upon whether the pipeline had increased its rates to accommodate the increase in the supplier rates. If it had, customers got the refund ; if it had not, the pipeline was preferred.
In 1968, in its Opinions Nos. 540 and 540-A, as we have explained, the Commission superimposed upon that principle the requirement that a pipeline contending for a refund resulting from a supplier-rate increase later disallowed must have filed a tracking rate increase of its own.
On review of that ruling in the Fifth Circuit, the Commission was sustained.
Our view is that the Commission was authorized to see to disposition of the refunds in question on the basis of the purpose of the Act to protect ultimate consumers of natural gas. It must be borne in mind that the Commission created the refunds by disallowing supplier rate increases and by requiring that the sums in question be retained by the suppliers pending determination of entitlement. Texas Eastern could have filed rate increases ¿to track the supplier increases. It chose not to do so for reasons of its own. One reason, no doubt, was that the Commission could have investigated the rates in the light of Texas Eastern’s earnings.
Here the Commission afforded Texas Eastern the opportunity of justifying its entitlement to the refunds on a earnings basis without the concomitant risk of an investigation of its rates as would have been the case in the event of rate filings. This procedure was adopted to protect Texas Eastern in the face of the change in Commis*340 sion policy as to disposition of refunds. This was a fair approach from the standpoint of protecting the interest of Texas Eastern and the consumer. To adopt Texas Eastern’s position that it is, ipso facto, entitled to the refunds by virtue of having paid and absorbed them would be to countenance rate making by the producer-suppliers and Texas Eastern outside the protective ambit of § 4(e). This approach would do violence to the statutory scheme by avoiding, to the extent the refunds exceed a fair return to Texas Eastern, any rate regulation whatever except under § 5 of the Act.606
We agree with the Fifth Circuit that the requirement of a tracking rate increase is amply supported by the goals sought by the Act. In Opinion No. 565, however, the Commission held that the fact that Texas Eastern did not file such an increase did not totally bar it from sharing in the refunds ordered by the producers. Disagreeing with the examiner, the Commission distinguished Opinions Nos. 540 and 540-A on grounds hardly characterizable as irrational. Instead of a supplier-rate increase which might have been tracked by a pipeline increase filing, there was a lease-sale transaction involving a large capital investment which was not itself susceptible of tracking.
On this analysis, the Commission in Opinion No. 565, required Texas Eastern to flow through nearly $14 million of the producers’ refund, together with an aliquot portion of the interest thereon charged the producers,
By our assessment, we cannot compel the Commission to accept any of these claims. The question is not how we ourselves would dispose of these arguments but whether the disposition the Commission chooses is arbitrary or otherwise inconsistent with law.
Looking first to Texas Eastern’s contentions, we start from the premise that a public utility’s investors have a general right to recoup from consumers the full amount of the capital outlay they have devoted to the public service.
Our examination of the administrative record convinces us that these facts, upon which the Commission mainly rested the refund flow-through framed
For similar reasons, and contrary to PSC’s position, we cannot disregard the Commission’s determination in Opinion No. 565 that the residue of the refund should be applied to reduce the net balance of Texas Eastern’s investment in Rayne Field. Given the breadth of administrative authority to set practices which are matters purely of desirable accounting,
Were the only issue emerging the legal vulnerability of Opinion No. 565, we would affirm its treatment of refund flow-through. The litigation, however, is further complicated by the course the Commission subsequently took in Opinion No. 565-A. Producer refunds were deferred pending reconsideration of the area rate for Southern Louisiana, leaving nothing to flow through to Texas Eastern’s customers.
As we have previously ruled, the Commission erred in postponing refunds by the producers to Texas Eastern.
But -notwithstanding that, and though we leave untouched the flow-through principles which the Commission applied in Opinion No. 565, we must reject the amounts -which that opinion would have respectively allotted to Texas Eastern and its customers from the producer refund. The Commission, for part of the relevant period, calculated the refund on the basis of the in-line unit price of the gas delivered to Texas Eastern.
VII. THE SECOND SOUTHERN LOUISIANA AREA Rate proceeding
After this litigation made its appearance in this court, the Commission ¿nnounced Opinion No. 598 and an effectuating order, by which the maximum rates chargeable for gas produced in the Southern Louisiana area were revised upward.
Of course, by the terms of Opinion No. 565, the maximum price which Texas Eastern could pay the producers for gas extracted from Rayne Field rose to the applicable new area rate on the date it took effect.
During the pendency of the proceeding leading to Opinion No. 598, a settlement conference was convened by the Commission, and eventually a settlement proposal was submitted by 32 major producing companies.
Very importantly, however, neither the settlement proposal, nor Opinion No. 598 or its related order embraced the refund questions presented in the case at bar. The settlement proposal explicitly admonished -that “[t]he terms hereof do not dispose of any issues in the Rayne Field (Docket No. G-12446, et al.) . . . proceedings”
We need not, in these circumstances, consider whether Opinion No. 598 could in any event affect the refund and flow-through issues which the Commission was called on to resolve several years previous to its promulgation. The critical fact is that Opinion No. 598 left those issues untouched. For that reason, we have concluded that our disposition of the refund and flow-through questions presented on this review must remain uninfluenced by Opinion No. 598.
VIII. SUMMARY AND DISPOSITION
The Commission’s action in the controversy we have reviewed is incorporated in Opinion No. 565 as changed by Opinion No. 565-A, in Opinion No. 565-A, and in the orders emanating from those opinions.
We hold, however, that the Commission’ erred (a) in eliminating, by Opinion No. 565-A, the lease-sale contract price as the ceiling for the aggregate of Texas Eastern’s payments to the producers;
Our rulings necessitate a remand of the cases under review to the Commission. We instruct the Commission, on remand, (a) to increase, beyond the lease-sale contract price, the aggregate amount which Texas Eastern is to pay the producers by a sum equal to the time value of the monies otherwise to be paid;
So ordered.
ORDER
PER CURIAM.
Upon consideration of the petitions of the Federal Power Commission, Continental Oil Company, Sun Oil Company, M. H. Marr and General Crude Oil Company for rehearing, it is
Ordered by the Court unanimously that the petitions be and hereby are denied.
Notes
. Act of June 21, 1938, ch. 556, 52 Stat. 821, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717 et seq. (1970).
. Texas Eastern operates a pipeline system extending from Texas to the Northeast. Its principal markets are in New England and the Middle Atlantic region.
. PGW, a customer of Texas Eastern, operates under contract the municipally-owned gas facilities serving some 600,000 consum-' ers in Philadelphia.
.At the time, Rayne Field was a large and fully developed gas reserve uncommitted to serving a market. It was only 22 miles distant from one of Texas Eastern’s major pipeline systems, with which it could be connected at relatively small cost.
. The price included 1.8 cents for reimbursement of state taxes. The contracts provided for escalations during future years.
. See Natural Gas Act § 7(c), 15 U.S.C. § 717f (c) (1970) ; Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin,
. See Natural Gas Act § 7(a), 15 U.S.C. § 717f (a) (1970) ; Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. FPC,
. See text infra at note 11.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 21 F. P.C. 869 (1959) (examiner’s decision).
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC,
. The CATCO initial price was 22.4 cents per Mcf, including tax.
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC, supra note 10,
. By that agreement, Texas Eastern acquired the producers’ entire working interest in Rayne Field gas, with an exception not here material. Assignment and conveyance of the leasehold interests was expressly made subject to four conditions. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 322), 21 F.P.C. 860, 864 & n. 5, 865 & n. 6 (1959). For a succinct summary of other salient features of the lease-sale arrangement, see Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
The lease-sale agreement was made between the producers and Louisiana Gas Corporation, a subsidiary of Texas Eastern incorporated for the purpose of transacting the sale. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 322), supra, 21 F.P.C. at 864, 865. The Commission has consistently recognized Texas Eastern as the real party in interest, and has treated the agreement as though Texas Eastern was the direct purchaser thereunder. We do the same.
. The exact price was $134,395,700. Of that sum, $12,420,500 was to be paid in cash and the balance in installments spread over a 16-year period ending in 1975, notwithstanding an anticipated lifetime of the field to 1986. After 1975, Texas Eastern would obtain the gas by payment of royalties, severance taxes and operating expenses. Texas Eastern was also required to remit to the producers, until production of some 600 million Mcf of gas, the proceeds of condensate liquids less costs for operating the field.
. The years 1959-67. The equated per-Mcf cost stated in text includes only the $134 million purchase price, and not other costs falling upon Texas Eastern.
. The in-line price, see note 44, infra, for gas sold under 1958 contracts was 20 cents per Mcf, as the Commission was later to determine. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), 42 F.P.C. 376, 384 (1968). See also Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 42 F.P.C. 446, 448-49 (1968) (examiner’s initial decision).
. Three of the producers did so promptly, and the fourth somewhat later. The producers’ theory was that, with a sale of the gas leases rather than the gas itself, Commission approval of the sale, as distinguished from Texas Eastern’s proposed construction, was unnecessary. But see text infra at notes 22-29.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 322), supra note 13. An application by PSC for rehearing was subsequently denied. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 22 F.P.C. 451 (1959) (order denying rehearing).
. Natural Gas Act §§ 4, 5, 15 U.S.C. §§ 717c, 717d (1970). In Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin, supra note 6,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 322), supra note 13, 21 F.P.C. at 864. The Commission relied on FPC v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 322), supra note 13, 21 F.P.C. at 864.
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC,
.
. See text infra at note 37.
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC, supra note 22,
. Id. See Natural Gas Act § 7, 15 U.S.C. § 717f (1970).
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC, supra note 22,
. Id.
. Id. at 292,
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC, supra note 22,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378), 29 F.P.C. 249 (1963).
. Id. at 252-56.
. Id. at 256.
. Id. at 256-57.
. Id. at 257, 258. By Opinion No. 378-A, the Commission denied rehearing of Opinion No. 378, Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378-A), 30 F.P.C. 153 (1963), with a modification extending the filing period for producers to six months after completion of any judicial review, id. at 157.
. Marr v. FPC,
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Continental Oil Co., supra note 23. The Court distinguished FPC v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., supra note 20, on the grounds that in the latter the transferred leases were undeveloped, and the transfer was to a production company in contemplation of sales of
. Id. at 399,
. Reported at 42 F.P.C. 446.
. Id. at 451.
In March, 1967, while the applications were pending, Texas Eastern and the producers formalized an agreement obligating the latter to reimburse Texas Eastern at the rate of 20.625 cents per Mcf for any amount beneath 814,339,000 Mcf that their holdings in Rayne Field might fail to produce. This guaranty was deemed insufficient to dispel the uncertainty because reliance on it depended on other assumptions which were equally risky: the ability of producers individually to meet the financial demands in the future; the cost to Texas Eastern of realizing upon it; and the estimates as to production of liquids, the revenues from which would- accrue to Texas Eastern and would be unaffected by any deficiency in gas output. Id.
. Id. at 453.
. Id. at 448-52.
. Reported at 42 F.P.C. 455 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. The in-line price is the field price in a given time period at which the bulk of proper sales of gas have been made. We have already noted that the in-line price was 20 cents per Mcf when the lease-sale agreement was made. See note 16, supra. The examiner recommended that the in-line price be supplanted by just and reasonable prices as they become available. Id. at 458, 461, 467. See note 53, infra, and accompanying text.
. Id. at 461, 463, 464.
. Id. at 466.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16. The principal difference between . the Commission and the examiner related to the amount of producer refunds which Texas Eastern should immediately flow through to its customers. Compare text supra at note 45 and infra at note 58. See also Part VI, infra.
. Id. at 382-90.
. See note 40, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-83. See note 40, supra.
. Id. at 383.
. Id.
. After issuance of the examiner’s Phase II decision but before rendition of Opinion No. 565, the Commission had set a just and reasonable rate of 18.5 cents per Mcf for Southern Louisiana gas of the Rayne Field vintage. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), 40 F.P.C. 530 1968), on rehearing, (Opinion No. 456-A), 41 F.P.C. 301 (1969), aff’d sub nom., Austral Oil Co. v. FPC.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390, 403. The figure derived by application of this formula would be increased by the addition of Texas Eastern’s net receipts from sales of liquids after completion of the producer payments, and by the addition of salvage realized by Texas Eastern under certain conditions, and decreased by the amounts of royalties, state taxes and specified development and operating expenses. Id. at 403.
. Id. at 404. Producers would, however, receive additionally the amount of any salvage which Texas Eastern might realize from investments made before the final payment. Id.
. Id. at 404-05.
. Id.
. Id. at 398-99, 405. The Commission also required Texas Eastern to compute and escrow the amount of customer refunds, id. at 405-06, to shape its accounting practices to exclude the producer refunds from its rate base, id. at 406-07, and to amend its rates to reflect reductions in costs made possible by Opinion No. 565, id.
. Id. at 401, 407.
. Id. at 401.
. Id. at 354, 407.
. Id. at 417.
. Id. at 438.
. Id. at 422-23.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (F.P.C. Sept. 2, 1969) (unreported).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (F.P.C. Sept. 18, 1969) (unreported).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 42 F. P.C. 684 (1969) (order granting stay).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), 44 F.P.C. 1079 (1970).
. Phillips Petroleum Co., 24 F.P.C. 537, 547 (1960) ; Statement of General Policy Xo. 61-1, 24 F.P.C. 818 (1960). See also Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC),
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53. Docket No. AR 61-2 awaited developments in Docket Xo. AR 61-1, related to the Permian Basin in Texas. See Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53, 40 F.P.C. at 648.
. Austral Oil Co. v. FPC supra note 53.
. The petitions were denied,
. Austral Oil Co. v. FPC, supra note 53,
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53.
. Chairman Nassikas and Commissioner Bagge joined positions. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion Xo. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1080-89. Commissioners Carver and Brooke joined in different positions, but voted with Chairman XTassikas and Commissioner Bagge to enable a disposition. Id. at 1098. Commissioner O’Connor stood on his position in Opinion No. 565. Id. at 1092. Chairman White had left the Commission.
. Chairman Nassikas and Commissioners O’Connor and Bagge.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-86, 1092.
. See text and notes infra this part.
. See text supra at note 62.
. See text supra at notes 48-57.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1084, 1088.
. Id. at 1087-88.
. See text supra at notes 52-55.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1081.
. See text supra at notes 61-64.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1098-1107.
. Id. at 1097.
. Id. at 1098.
. Id.
. Id. at 1081, 1087-88, 1089,1097-98.
. See text supra at notes 53-55.
. See text supra at notes 56-57.
. See text supra at note 58.
. See text supra at notes 59-60.
. See note 58, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1091.
. Id. at 1089-90.
. The applicants íor a rehearing of Opinion No. 565-A were Texas Eastern and three of the four producers. PGW, the intervenor here, submitted an application for rehearing which the Commission rejected as untimely by one day, but accepted it as a motion for reconsideration. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 44 F.P.C. 1471 (1970) (order denying rehearing). PSC, a petitioner here, did not seek rehearing of Opinion No. 565-A. See note 116, infra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. Id. at 1471.
. Id. at 1472.
. Id. at 1474.
. Id.
. See text supra at notes 61-62.
. See text supra at note 62.
. See text supra at note 62.
. See text supra at notes 56-57, 61.
. See text supra at note 63.
. See text supra at note 64.
. See text supra at notes 80-85.
. See text supra at notes 88-90.
. See text supra at notes 86-87.
. See text supra at notes 101-102.
. See text supra at notes 103-104.
. PSC sought rehearing of Opinion No. 565 but not Opinion No. 565-A, and on that account Texas Eastern and Continental have moved to dismiss PSC’s petition for review to the extent that it complains of the order accompanying Opinion No. 565-A. Texas Eastern contends that Opinion No. 565 was-
Section 19(a) of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717r(a) (1970), provides that “[n]o proceeding to review any order of the Commission shall be brought by any person unless such person shall have made application to the Commission for a rehearing thereon.” Thus an application for rehearing is a jurisdictional prerequisite to judicial review. Dayton Power & Light Co. v. FPC,
The obvious purpose of the statutory requirements is to afford the Commission the first opportunity to consider, and perhaps dissipate, issues which are headed for the courts. See Dayton Power & Light Co. v. FPC, supra,
As Continental says, judicial review is reserved by § 19(b), 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1970), to a “party to a proceeding under [the Actj aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission in such proceeding. . . . ” But contrary to Continental’s assessment, we are satisfied that the effect of Opinion No. 565-A was to intensify rather than ameliorate PSC’s complaints as to Opinion No. 565. Put another way, PSC remains “aggrieved” — as much by the one decision as by the other.
. Natural Gas Act § 19, 15 U.S.C. § 717r (1970).
. See Braniff Airways v. CAB,
. In Braniff Airways v. CAB, supra note 118, three members of the five-member Civil Aeronautics Board participated in and agreed unanimously upon a decision, but on a motion for reconsideration two of four participating members voted to deny and the remaining two to grant. The two members voting to grant filed a statement which contained findings additional to the earlier findings of the board. We held that the additional findings could not validly supplement or buttress the original findings because
. . . they were the findings of only two out of four members. Even though these two members were among the three who concurred in the [earlier] decision, we are concerned with reviewing institutional decisions. Despite their personal connection with that opinion the statement of two members of an equally divided regulatory agency possesses no authoritative significance.
. See text supra at note 117.
. See text supra at note 117.
. Baltimore & O. R.R. v. United States,
. In WIBC v. FCC, supra note 118, where the votes of six of seven members of the Federal Communications Commission present were equally divided, we rejected the contention that the vote of the seventh commissioner, which broke the tie, was not decisive.
. FTC v. Flotill Prods., Inc.,
. See 16 U.S.C. § 792 (1970).
. In this view, we have no occasion to consider whether action of a majority of a quorum of three commissioners, see 16 U.S.C. § 792 (1970), as distinguished from a majority of the full Commission, is prerequisite to the promulgation or modification of an opinion or order. See FTC v. Flotill Prods., Inc., supra note 124,
. Sperry Gyroscope Co. v. NLRB, supra note 119,
. Id.
. Compare Screws v. United States,
. Compare Greater Boston Television Corp. v. FCC, supra note 123,
. See text supra at notes 88-90.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471-73 (order denying rehearing).
. These included applications for rehearing by Texas Eastern and the producers and a motion for reconsideration by PGW. PSC. did not seek rehearing or reconsideration of Opinion No. 565-A. gee notes 99, 116, supra.
. See text supra at note 117.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 1471-73.
. Id. at 1471.
. Id. at 1471.
. Id. at 1472.
. Id. at 1473-74.
. So concluding, we do not reach the question whether an agency opinion or order can be rescinded .or amended without a prior vote to reconsider it.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. As to Opinion No. 565, Chairman White and Commissioners O’Connor and Bagge; as to Opinion No. 565-A, Chairman Nassikas and Commissioners O’Connor and Bagge. See text supra at notes 61-62, 78-79, 86-87.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-90; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-85.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390-93; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 P.P.C. at 1085-87.
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 380; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378-A), supra note 35, 30 F.P.C. at 256; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378), supra note 31, 29 F.P.C. at 156.
. 15 U.S.C. § 717f (1970).
. Natural gas companies must obtain certificates of public convenience and necessity prior to engaging in sales of natural gas subject to the Commission’s jurisdiction. Natural Gas Act § 7(c), 15 U.S.C. § 717f(c) (1970). Notice to interested parties and hearing are prerequisite to the issuance of a permanent certificate, but not to the issuance in a case of emergency of a temporary certificate pending application for a permanent certificate. Id. Another prerequisite to issuance of a permanent certificate is a finding by the Commission that the sale “is or will be required by the present or future public convenience or necessity,” id. § 7(e), 15 U.S.C. § 717f (e) (1970), and the Commission may qualify the certificate by “such reasonable terms and conditions as the public convenience and necessity may require.” Id. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co.,
. Supra note 6.
. 15 U.S.C. § 717c (1970).
. 15 U.S.C. § 717d (1970).
. See the discussion in FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. See Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10.
. “Favored nation” clauses assure producers that they will receive the highest price currently being paid in the same area by their own purchasers or, as it may be provided, by any purchaser. See FPC v. Sun-ray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. In ascertaining the in-line price, the Commission and the courts have usually excluded or discounted certain prices which for one reason or another might reflect impermissible price jumps. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Id. at 21-36,
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151,
. Natural Gas Act § 4(d), 15 U.S.C. § 717c(d) (1970). The notice is given by filing with the Commission and keeping open for public inspection new schedules specifying the rate changes and the time they are to go into effect. Id.
. Natural Gas Act § 4(e), 15 U.S.C. § 717c(e) (1970).
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. But the initial rate established by an unconditional permanent certificate issued under § 7 represents a firm floor below which refunds cannot subsequently be required. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. 15 U.S.C. § 717d (1970).
. See Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69.
. Id. at 755,
. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. See Sunray DX Oil Co. v. FPC, supra note 151,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 380.
. Id. at 379.
. Id. at 380.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10.
.
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. See text supra at notes 167-172.
. See note 171, supra, and accompanying text.
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. Natural Gas Act § 19(b), as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1970).
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. FTC,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378), supra note 31.
. 29 P.P.C. at 256.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 16, 42 P.P.C. at 447 (examiner’s decision).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion'No. 378), supra note 31, 29 P.P.C. at 256-57.
. See note 40, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 16, 42 P.P.C. at 447 (examiner’s decision).
. Id. at 447-53.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-90; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-85; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99 (order denying rehearing).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 383.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. H.
. Id. at 387.
. Id.
. This was the effective date of the Commission’s decision in the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 E.P.C. at 387.
. Id.
. Id.
. See text supra at notes 190-200.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 389.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1088.
. The producers also contend that one of the modifications effected by Opinion No. 565-A so undermined one of the assumptions underlying the decision in Opinion No. 565 to conventionalize as to leave it without sufficient evidentiary support. As we have seen, one of the factors contributing to that conclusion in Opinion No. 565 was the Commission’s finding that the lease-sale would ultimately involve a cost of some $6 million more than a conventional sale of the Rayne Field gas. See text supra at notes 205-210. In so finding, the Commission calculated gas costs at the in-line price of 20 cents per Mcf to October 1, 1968, and at the just and reasonable rate of 18.5 cents thereafter. See text supra at notes 207-208. In Opinion No. 565-A, however, the Commission held that producer refunds should be computed from the beginning on the basis of the just and reasonable rate to be established in the ongoing investigation in the Southern Louisiana area. See text supra at notes 80-83. The producers argue that this change of position upset the earlier position on conventionalization. We think it does not.
The higher cost of lease-sale gas which the Commission found in Opinion No. 565 was not the only reason for the Commission’s refusal to unconditionally certificate the arrangement ; another was the grave uncertainty as to just what the gas would eventually cost under that arrangement. See text supra at notes 211-213. Whatever may he said as to the effect on Opinion No. 565 of the refund-base change made in Opinion No. 565-A, it is clear that the Commission had no intention of altering its decision on conventionalization. Opinion No. 565-A not only confirms the Commission’s resolve in Opinion No. 565 to conventionalize, but also modified Opinion No. 565 in several particulars “so as to bring it closer to a conventional sale.” Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1081. We have no warrant to set aside a Commission determination simply on the thesis that it rests on one valid ground instead of two.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-90; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-85.
. In so concluding, the Commission discounted testimony by three witnesses offered by the producers in an attempt to demonstrate financial advantages for the lease-sale. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 388; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1084-85. The Commission pointed out that one of the witnesses failed to take into account about $18 million in severance taxes which Texas Eastern would pay over the life of the field, Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C.at 388; that another failed to take into account the time value of Texas Eastern’s advance payments to producers, id.; and that, the third omitted that factor and other costs to Texas Eastern as well, id.; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085. In these circumstances, we have no occasion to disturb the Commission’s action in that respect.
. As we have stated, the Commission in Opinion No. 565 concluded that the reserve guaranty, standing alone, did not eliminate the objectionable uncertainty in the lease-sale arrangement. See text supra at notes 194-200. And in Opinion No. 565-A, the Commission expressed the view that the
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 389.
. Id.; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F. P.C. at 1084.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 389. See note 241, infra. And in Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-84, the Commission stated that “ [i] t is impossible on this record, and it would be extremely difficult on any record, to appraise the advantage to Texas Eastern of large daily swings,” and that in any event that opinion would require a take at a lower level and limits on downward swings. Compare Phillips Petroleum Co. v. FPC,
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 389-90 (footnote omitted).
. See text supra at note 30.
. See text supra at notes 31-35.
. See text supra at notes 194-200.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 435-38, 439 — 40; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1097-99, 1102-09; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1473-74 (order denying rehearing).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-90; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-84; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. See text supra at notes 198-225.
. See text supra at notes 198-225.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390-407.
. Id. at 390-93.
. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390.
. Id. at 390-93.
. Id. at 390. The lease-sale contract provided that until 613,406,700 Mcfs of gas were produced, revenues from liquids would be used to reimburse Texas Eastern for part of the production investments and expenses. The reduction of the 18.5 cent price on account of these items was accordingly limited to the amount of unreimbursed investments and expenses. Id.
. Id.
. This aspect of the matter will shortly be addressed extensively.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390-91.
. These included a requirement that Texas Eastern remove the gas at a specified minimum pace over a 20-year maximum period, id, at 391; and a provision giving the producers the right of prior approval of Texas Eastern’s expenditures for royalties and developmental expenses, id. at 392.
. Id. at 389. So, in addition to the total price ceiling soon to be discussed, the Commission decided not to amend the notes evidencing the unpaid installments of purchase price, and observed that any change as to them should be made by the parties or other holders. Id. at 391. The Commission also declined to make provision for periodic price increases, reimbursement for new taxes, take-or-pay or the buyer’s bearing cost of compression, stating “that if the Producers for their own purposes including possible tax advantages, entered into a lease-sale arrangement, they are not entitled to claim the benefit of provisions found in a conventional sale.” Id. at 393.
. Id. at 390.
. Id. at 389.
. Id. at 390-91 (footnote omitted).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 1085-86.
. Chairman Nassikas and Commissioners Bagge, Carver and Brooke. Id. at 1081, 1098.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. Part IV (B), infra.
. Part IV(C), infra.
.
. Id. at 344,
. See Natural Gas Act § 4(d), 15 U.S.C. § 717c(d) (1970).
. United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp., supra note 256,
. 15 U.S.C. § 717c(d) and (e) (1970).
. 15 U.S.C. § 717d(a) (1970).
. United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp., supra note 256,
. Id.
. Id. at 343,
. Id. (emphasis in original).
. Id. at 343-344,
. Id. at 344,
. Id. at 344-345,
.
. Id. at 354-355,
. 16 U.S.C. § 824e (1970).
. FPC v. Sierra Pac. Power Co., supra note 269,
. Id. at 355,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. “The regulatory system created by the Act is premised on contractual agreements voluntarily devised by the regulated companies ; it contemplates abrogation of these agreements only in circumstances of unequivocal public necessity.” Id. at 822,
. See Portsmouth Gas Co. v. FPC,
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53, 40 F.P.C. at 624.
. See text supra at notes 53-55, 80-83, 232-241.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 398-400, 404-07.
. See text supra at notes 84-87, 242-253.
. See Part IV(B), supra.
. See text supra at note 263.
. See text supra at note 278.
. Citing FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co., supra note 229.
. Citing 52 Stat. 725 (1938). In its footnote to text at this point, the Court observed :
The 1942 amendments to § 7, 56 Stat. 83, were not intended to change this declaration of purpose. See Hearings, .House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, on H.R. 5249, 77th Cong., 1st Sess. 18-19; H.R.Rep.No.1290, 77th Cong., 1st Sess.; S.Rep.No.948, 77th Cong., 2d Sess.
Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Citing Natural Gas Act § 7(e), as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717f(e) (1970).
. Citing Natural Gas Act § 4, 15 U.S.C. § 717c (1970).
. Citing Natural Gas Act § 7(c), 15 U.S.C. § 717f(c) (1970).
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Id. at 389,
. Id. The Court pointed out that “long delay, without the protection of a refund, as is possible in a § 4 proceeding, would provide a windfall for the natural gas company with a consequent squall for the consumers,” id. at 390,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Id. at 390-391,
. Id. at 391,
. Id. See also text supra at notes 162-163.
. Id.
. See text supra at notes 150-163.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Id.
.. Id.
. Citing United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp., supra note 256.
. Quoting Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
. Quoting United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp., supra note 256,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See note 40, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-90. See also Part III(C), supra.
. Id.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1081, 1083-85. See also text supra at note 213.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 P.P.C. at 383-87.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085-87.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390-400.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565 — A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085-89.
. See text supra at notes 285-307.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 389; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1096.
. Id. at 1103.
. Id. at 1096 n. 11, 1103.
. See id. at 1085-1086.
. Compare United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151, 382 U.S.
. See Part IV(B), supra.
. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. v. FPC, 253 F.2d 3, 7 (3d Cir.), cert. denied,
. See Part IV (B), supra.
. See Part IV (B), supra.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10.
. See notes 161-163, 304-307, supra.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. We remind that Opinion No. 565-A gained a majority only because Commissioners Carver and Brooke joined Chairman Nassikas and Commissioner Bagge to make possible a disposition more palatable to them
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085.
. U.
. See Part IV (B), supra.
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. Id.
. See text supra at notes 285-317.
. FPC v. Sierra Pac. Power Co., supra note 269,
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. Counsel for the Commission argue that the scrapping of the $134 million contract price was a necessary step in conventionalization of the lease-sale so as to make it regulable. The Commission, however, did not rely on that ground, see Part III(C) supra, and rationalizations by counsel which were not reasons for the agency decision are unacceptable on judicial review. Burlington Truck Lines v. Unites States,
. Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 69,
. See, e. g., the discussion in Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471-73 (separate opinion of Commissioner O’Connor) (order denying rehearing) .
. See Part III (C), supra.
. See text supra at notes 308-317.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 436 (Commissioners Carver and Brooke; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085 (Chairman Nassikas and Commissioner Bagge) ; id. at 1098 (Commissioners Carver and Brooke) ; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1472 (Commissioner O’Connor) (order denying rehearing) ; id. at 1473 (Commissioners Carver and Brooke).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378), supra note 31, 29 F.P.C. at 256-57; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 378-A), supra note 35, 30 F.P.C. at 156; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-83, 387-90; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-85; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 389-90; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1083-85.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 390-91; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085-86.
. Texas Eastern seems also to recognize the need for this adjustment. In its reply brief (p. 11), it agreed that the elimination in Opinion No. 565-A of the $134 million price ceiling was unnecessary since, as an alternative its payments to producers could he adjusted upward to take account of the time value of the money paid on the plan of conventionalization set forth in Opinion No. 565, and the producers would thereby realize the same consideration as they would have under the lease-sale contract.
. We disagree with the Commission’s conclusion in Opinion No. 565-A that the $134
. See Part III(C), supra.
. See Part IV(A), (C), (2), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 383-93.
. Id. at 384. See also Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1086-87.
. (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53.
. See Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546-A), supra note 53, 41 F.P.C. at 309, 341.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 403-05.
. Id. at 417-22.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1085-86.
. Id. at 1086.
. Id. at 1087.
. id. at 1087-88.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99, 44 F.P.C. at 1471 (order denying rehearing).
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co., supra note 229,
. The producers are “natural gas compan [ies]” within the meaning of the Act. Natural Gas Act § 2(6), 15 U.S.C. § 717a (6) (1970) ; Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin, supra note 6,
. “All rates and charges made, demanded, or received by any natural-gas company for or in connection with the transportation or sale of natural gas subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, and all rules and regulations affecting or pertaining to such rates or charges, shall be just and reasonable, and any such rate or charge that is not just and reasonable is declared to be unlawful.” Natural Gas Act § 4(a), 15 U.S.C. § 717c(a) (1970).
. See note 366, supra.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Natural Gas Act § 7(e), 15 U.S.C. § 717f(e) (1970). See also Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See text supra at notes 263, 278, and Part IV(C) (1), supra.
. 52 Stat. 825 (1938).
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Id. at 390,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See Part III (A) supra.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Id. at 392,
. (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 383-93.
. 15 U.S.C. § 717f (c) (1970).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 385.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F. P.C. at 1085-86.
. Id.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1086 (Footnote omitted).
. See Part III (A), supra.
. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. F.P.C. v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. See Part V (A), supra.
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
Any such assurance would necessarily be based on a belief that the current contract prices in an area approximate closely the “true” market price — the just and reasonable rate. Although there is doubtless some relationship, and some economists have argued that it is intimate, such a belief would contradict the basic assumption that has caused natural gas production to be subjected to regulation and which must have underlain this Court’s OATCO decision — namely, that the purchasing pipeline, whose cost of purchase is a current operating expense which the pipeline is entitled to pass on to its customers as part of its rates, lacks sufficient incentive to bargain prices down.
. See text supra at notes 388-391.
. See Part V (A), supra.
. See text supra at note 372 (emphasis supplied).
. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Hunt Oil Co. v. FPC,
. See text supra at note 363.
. (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53. The proceeding had been instituted by an order issued May 10, 1961. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding, 25 F.P.C. 942 (1961) (order instituting proceeding).
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53, 40 F.P.C. at 544, 636, 648.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases, (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 53.
.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546-A), supra note 53.
. Id. at 306-42.
. Id. at 306-07. The new investigation, Docket No. AR69-1, was launched immediately. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding, 41 F.P.C. 378 (1969) (order instituting proceeding).
. Id. at 307-08.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding, 42 F.P.C. 1110, 1111, 1113 (1969) (order enlarging proceeding).
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases . (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 53,
. Id.
. Id. at 421 n. 27. In the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 53, 40 F.P.C. at 644, the Commission had stated that area rates “will be modified if a showing is made that unit costs — reflecting amounts spent and reserves found — have increased to such an extent that an increase in area rates is required.”
. In a footnote at this point, the court noted that “Section 16 of the National Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717o (1963), gives the Commission power to ‘perform any and all acts, and to prescribe, issue, make, amend, and rescind such orders as it may find necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this chapter’.” Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 53,
. Id. at 444 — 445. Subsequently, on rehearing, the court further explained:
At the same time, we emphasize that our judgment is an affirmance and not a remand. The appropriate place for originally considering what parts of the orders must be reopened in light of new evidence is before the Commission. It may be that the Commission will decide that the refunds it has ordered are just and reasonable or at least that their significance to the public interest is outweighed by the confusion and delay that would result from their reopening. In this event, the Commission will allow its refund orders to stand as they are. Or it may be that the refunds are too burdensome in light of new evidence to be in the public interest. In that case, it is our judgment that the Commission shall have the power and the duty to remedy the situation by changing its orders.
Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 53,
. And the Supreme Court subsequently denied all applications for review of Opinion No. 546 on certiorari. See note 53, supra.
. See text supra at notes 409-415.
The act does not expressly confine judicial review in natural gas cases to final orders. Rather, it provides that “[a]ny party to a proceeding under this chapter aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission in such proceeding may obtain a review of such order. . . .” Natural Gas Act § 19(b), U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1970). Construed in context, however, that provision requires a substantial degree of finality in an order of which review is sought. Its exact counterpart in the Federal Power Act “relates to orders of a definitive character dealing with the merits of a proceeding before the Commission and resulting from a hearing upon evidence and supported by findings appropriate to the case.” FPC v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
In the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases, the Fifth Circuit, with the concurrence of all parties, concluded that the area rates fixed by Opinion No. 546 and its related orders were reviewable notwithstanding that the rate investigation in Docket No. AR69-1 “will probably result in substantial modifications on the rates set in this case,”
. Natural Gas Act § 16, 15 U.S.C. § 717o (1970).
. See Part III (A), supra.
. See Part III(A), supra.
. See text supra at notes 885-387.
. Compare City of Chicago v. FPC, supra note 415,
. See text supra at notes 400-403.
. See text supra at note 416.
. See Part III (A), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 322), supra note 9. See Part 1(A), supra.
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC, supra note 22. See Part. 1(B), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion Xo. 378), supra note 31, 29 F.P.C. at 252-57. See Part 1(C), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 382-95. See Part III (D), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1087-88. See Part III(E), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion Xo. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 387. See text supra at notes 205-10.
. In United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151, the court stated:
While the Commission “has no power to make reparation orders,” Federal Power Comm’n v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,320 U. S. 591 , 618 [64 S.Ct. 281 , 295,88 L.Ed. 333 ], its power to fix rates under § 5 being prospective only, Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public Service Comm’n, supra,360 U.S. at 389 [79 S.Ct. 1246 at 1254] it is not so restricted where its order, which never became final, lias béen overturned by a reviewing court. Here the original certificate orders were subject to judicial review; and judicial review at times results in the return of benefits received under the upset administrative order. See Securities & Exchange Comm’n v. Chenery Corp.,332 U.S. 194 , 200-201 [67 S.Ct. 1575 , 1579-1580, 1760,91 L.Ed. 1995 ],
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151,
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151,
. See Part V (A), supra.
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Id. at 37-40,
. See Part V (A) (1), supra.
. We recognize that an initial price may serve both as a ceiling for future transactions and as a floor for refunds on account of the past, and that the price ceiling and the refund floor “conceivably may serve significantly different ends.” FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151,
. See Part V (D) (1), infra.
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Id. at 24,
. E. g., FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Hunt Oil Co. v. FPC, supra note 398,
. See Part V (A), supra.
. Supra note 53. See text supra at notes 69-75.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 383-84.
. Id. at 384-87.
. See text supra at note 355.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 385. The Commission added :
Certificates in this proceeding cannot be is-, sued without doing justice to all parties, including the consumers of gas, and this requires consideration of what lias already happened. The first time this proceeding was before us in 1959 we approved the transaction; the second time it was before us after remand in 1963 we condemned its form but 'afforded the parties opportunity to file new arrangements, and, on rehearing, denied we were requiring the parties to execute any particular kind of contract. In the present proceeding the lease-sale has again been presented to us. By this time a large part of the gas has been delivered and payment made. Various advantages are available to the parties— among others, tax benefits to the Producers, a flexible supply of gas for Texas Eastern, and as provided below, if there is sufficient gas in the Field, a benefit to the consumers in purchase price free gas after the purchase price has been paid and Texas Eastern has been compensated for its outlays of funds. We have been partly responsible for this extended consideration of the lease-sale arrangement. When it first came before us, we might have denied it finally or conditioned it in such a way that our action would have'satisfied the Court. Our original failure to consider the problem fully led to the first remand. On review of this history and the present relations of the parties we think it equitable to treat the Producers as though they had been granted a certificate when the delivery of gas commenced at the in-line price of 20 cents per Mcf.
Id. at 386.
.Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F. P.C. at 1081, 1087-88.
. Id.
. Id. at 1087-88.
. See Part V (B), supra.
. See text supra at note 447. While that holding was superseded by the decision in Opinion No. 565-A to defer all producer refunds, see Part II, supra, it was the only holding open to the Commission under the principles we have discussed. See Part • V(C), supra.
. See text supra at note 451.
. See Part V(B) (2), supra.
. See Part (V) (D) (2), infra.
. See Part V (D) (1), infra.
. See text supra at note 353.
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Supra note 151.
. Callery Properties v. FPC,
. Quoting FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co.,
.
. Compare also FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 460-61 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 393-405.
. See Part VI (G), infra.
. See text supra at note 453.
. See Part V (B) (2), supra.
. See text supra at note 469. There we point out the large excess of payments to producers over the in-line rate. That excess, of course, is even greater in reference to the 18.5-cent just and reasonable area rate.
. See text supra at note 453.
. See text supra at note 453.
. See Part V(B) (2), supra.
. Any inequality of which the Commission speaks is manifestly the result of suspensions of the 18.5-cent just and reasonable rate pending completion of its reexamination of that and other area rates, a course upon which we do not put the stamp of approval. See Part V (B) (2), supra.
. United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151.
. See text supra at notes 462-65.
. The extent to which it could do so might depend in part upon whether initial prices allowed producers were all fixed at the same level, since those prices established refund floors. See note 171, supra.
. At best, the refunding process is “somewhat illusory in view of the trickling down process necessary to be followed, the incidental cost of which is often borne by the consumer, and in view of the transient nature of our society which often prevents refunds from reaching those to whom they are due”. FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See text supra at notes 462-465.
. For the purpose, we assume, without deciding, that so much of Opinion No. 565 was not nullified by the supersession of that opinion by Opinion No. 565-A.
. See text supra at notes 446-450.
. See Part Y (C), supra.
. See text supra at note 453.
. See text supra at notes 477-78. In Opinion No. 565-A, the Commission recognized as much but erroneously decided that the just and reasonable rate was yet to be finalized. See text supra at note 453.
. FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 151,
. Nor can we accept the Commission’s reasoning that the in-line price should operate as the basis for refunds on payments prior to establishment of the just and reasonable rate to avoid “punishing the producers for litigating their” claims. See text supra at note 450 and accompanying note. The difficulty arises, not because the producers engaged in litigation, but because they engaged in field operations before the litigation ended. The hazards of commencing operations on the strength of a contested certification that had not run its course through the court is obvious. See United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 151,
.See note 552, infra.
. The investment consists in unrecovered amounts which Texas Eastern spent to acquire the working interest in Rayne Field pursuant to the lease-sale contract. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 461-62 (examiner’s Phase II decision). After consummation and certification of the lease-sale transaction in 1959, Texas Eastern treated its payments to producers partly as capital items and partly as expenses as the field produced gas. Id. From December 1, 1959, onward, the rates at which Texas Eastern supplied gas to its distributor-customers reflected some of this expense as a part of its cost of service. Id. As of December 31, 1967, Texas' Eastern had recorded on its books a gross investment of $76,665,683 and a net investment of $20,882,996 in Rayne Field. Id. at 562. Texas Eastern also asserts that it expended an additional $3,040,821 in connection with the Rayne Field leaseholds for which it has not been reimbursed. Id.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 395-402, 405-06.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1088-89, 1091.
. See Part V, supra.
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43. 42 F.P.C. at 464, 467 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. Id. at 464-65, 467.
. It will be recalled that the reduction envisioned by the examiner and by the Commission in Opinion No. 565 was to 20 cents per Mcf from the beginning of production until establishment of the initial area rate for Southern Louisiana, and thereafter at the just and reasonable rate for the area, Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 447-52 (examiner’s initial decision), Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 393-95; and that we have held that, for purposes of computing producer refunds, the reduction should have been to the just and reasonable rate throughout. See Part V, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 465-66 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. 15 U.S.C. § 717f (1970).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 400.
. 15 U.S.C. § 717c (a) (1970).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 400.
. Id.
. Id. at 400-01.
. See note 493, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 401.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), 39 F.P.C. 630 (1968), rehearing denied, (Opinion No. 540-A), 40 F.P.C. 62 (1969), aff’d sub nom., Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. FPC,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P.C. at 634-48; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion 540-A), supra note 509, 40 F.P.C. at 63-65.
. Previously, on disallowance of a supplier-rate increase, the Commission had permitted pipelines to retain the refunds unless they had increased their own rates in response to supplier increases. In the latter event, the Commission required the pipelines to flow the refund through to customers. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P.C. at 646-47; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540-A), supra note 509, 40 F.P.C. at 63-64.
. Pursuant to § 4(c), (d) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717c(c), (d) (1970).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P.C. at 638-43.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P.C. at 642-43; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540-A), supra note 509, 40 F.P.C. at 64.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P.C. at 642-43, 648-49.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 463 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. Id.
. See note 493, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 462-63 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 395.
. Id.
. The reference here is obviously to “depreciation, depletion and amortization, and certain expenses and taxes.” See text supra at note 520.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 395. The Commission pointed out, id. at 395-96, that at the beginning of Texas Eastern’s Bayne Field operations on July 27, 1959, there were effective settlement rates in Docket No. G-12706, arising from a filing on May 10, 1957, which rates were not, but could have been, supported by Rayne Field costs; that from December 1, 1959, until January 1, 1964, there were in effect rates derived by a settlement in Docket No. G-18841, on the basis of computations which did include Rayne Field costs, of Texas Eastern’s rate-increase filing of May 28, 1959, Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 25 F.P.C. 172 (1961) ; that on January 1, 1964, there became effective a voluntary rate reduction filed by Texas Eastern in Docket No. FP64-36 to reflect a decrease in corporate income tax; and that still another change in Texas Eastern’s rates became effective on June 1, 1965, as a result of conferences with the Commission’s staff in Docket No. RP65-59, and Rayne Field costs were again included, see Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 34 F.P.C. 98, 100 (1965) ; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 34 F.P.C. 732, 733 (1965).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 396.
. It will be remembered that in Opinion No. 565 the Commission held that producer refunds should be based on the in-line price
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 E.P.C. at 396 — 98.
. See text supra at notes 469-70.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 398.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 398. See also note 493, supra.
. Id. See also note 538, infra.
. See text supra at notes 516-19.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 399-400.
. See text supra at notes 516-19.
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 460-61 (examiner’s Phase II decision).
. Broken down, this figure represents the residue of $8,005,081 in principal and $3,514,629 in interest due from the producers. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 399.
. Id. In addition to the investment balance of $20,882,996, Texas Eastern also sought reimbursement out of producer refunds of $3,040,821 in previously unrecovered and uncapitalized expenditures. Id. at 398. See also note 493, supra. The Commission found that this additional sum “results principally from the facts that amounts expended in connection with the Rayne Eield were not included among the costs underlying Texas Eastern’s rates prior to December 1, 1959, when'the settlement rates in Docket No. G-18841 became effective, [Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 523,] 25 F.P.C. 172.” Id. at 399. To the Commission, it was “clear that Texas Eastern cannot now claim costs that were not covered by rates filed on May 10, 1957, in Docket No. G-12706, effective as its filed rates until December 1, 1959, and eventually covered by the settlement of January 25, 1961 ([Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 523,] 25 F.P.C. 172).” Id. See note 523, supra.
.On this score the Commission said
The balance of $9,303,286 brought up-to-date, may remain on Texas Eastern’s books if the company desires, but it shall be recorded in other than “rate base” accounts. In some ways this represents a prepayment for gas, and we have allowed pipelines to earn a return on prepayments. See Michigan Wisconsin Pipe Line Company, 27 F.P.C. 449, 455 (1962), cited by Texas Eastern and [Transwestern Pipeline Co. (Opinion No. 500)], 36 F.P.C. 176, 216 (1966). However, prepayments ordinarily occur where the pipeline under*333 a conventional contract has taken less than the required quantity of gas. Here we have an uncommon situation involving large payments, as part of the basic transaction calling for such payments in the early years of the contract. We think, therefore, that the cost of Rayne gas which will be reflected in future rates to Texas Eastern’s customers should not be increased above the 18.5 cent just and reasonable- level by permitting Texas Eastern to add tiie Rayne Field balances to its rate base and earn a return on them.
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 399.
.The Commission elucidated :
[W]e do not think Texas Eastern should be penalized for entering into this transaction if it can be made whole without loss to its customers. Therefore it may compute a return on the Rayne Field balances and accumulate it each year. As already discussed, Texas Eastern on the basis of the 18.5 cent price per Mcf shall complete paying the full purchase price of $134,395,700, including the return to the Producers of the refunds they have made ($21,854,000 brought up-to-date). At that point, provided the Field is still productive, we shall require that Texas Eastern use the difference between what it then must pay for gas (royalties, taxes, and other costs less credits) and what it would have to pay under the applicable area price to amortize the balance. Texas Eastern will incur the risk that there will not be enough gas from the field to enable it to completely amortize the balance, but this is a consequence of the lease-sale type of contract. It may be protected, in part, by the Producers’ reserve guarantee if the certificate issued by us is satisfactory to the Producers.
Id. at 399-400.
. See Parts V(B), (D), supra.
. The Commission held, moreover, that “it would not now be in the public interest to require Texas Eastern to file new rates to track the producer rate filing here ordered.” Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1089. “To require Texas Eastern to make a filing now,” the Commission said, “might result in only a temporary reduction to its customers, and thus would bring about only a condition of instability without commensurate benefits.” Id. “However,” the Commission added, “in deferring any rate filing by Texas Eastern to track the producer rate filing we shall require that Texas Eastern be subject to refund to the extent its present rates are higher than they would be if they reflected a 20-cent Rayne Field producer rate. . . . Texas Eastern, of course, would also remain subject to our requiring a flow-through of producer refunds if that should be deemed appropriate.” Id.
. Id. at 1088.
. Id. at 1091-96.
. Id. at 1088-89, 1091.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 99 (order denying rehearing).
. While Texas Eastern has a minuscule group of nonjurisdictional customers of Rayne Field gas, it seems clear that the refunding directives of Opinion No. 565 were not intended to affect them. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P.C. at 643 — 45 ; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 9, 21 F.P.C. at 872-73, 880-81 (examiner’s decision) ; Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 P.P.C. at 643-45.
. See Parts 1(B), (C), supra.
. Natural Gas Act §§ 1(b), 2(6)-(7), 15 U.S.C. §§ 717(b), 717a(6)-(7) (1970). See also FPC v. Amerada Petroleum Corp.,
. See Parts V(A), (C), supra.
. The Commission’s authority over flow-through of rate reductions and refunds extends only to those to be made by pipelines to jurisdictional customers. Those to be made by distributor-customers to ultimate customers are matters for state regulation. See FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
The Commission’s view [is] that it [is] serving the statutory purpose of the Act of benefiting ultimate consumers by placing the refunds within the jurisdiction of the state regulatory authorities so as to place them in position to benefit the ultimate consumers. The Commission could not guarantee benefits for the ultimate consumers but absent its new policy there would be no way to benefit the ultimate consumers. . . . [This is] an approach to effective Federalism within the framework and dictates of the Act.
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. FPC, supra note 509,
. E.g., FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. Although § 7, unlike §§ 4(e) and 5(a), does not expressly confer upon the Commission authority to reduce unjust or unreasonable rates, we have seen that the Commission’s power to condition § 7 certificates of public convenience and necessity upon specified maximum rates is well established. See Parts III (A), V(A), supra. And an exercise of the conditioning authority with respect to the certificate sought by Texas Eastern was undoubtedly as much the Commission’s prerogative as was its exercise with respect to the certificate requested by the producers. E. g., Central Illinois Pub. Serv. Co. v. FPC,
The basis of the Commission’s § 7 power in each situation — rate reductions and refunds — is its responsibility to foster, through invocation of its authority to condition certificates in the public interest, see note 151, supra, “the overriding purpose of the Natural Gas Act to protect consumers in their purchase of gas to the end of keeping rates as low as possible.” Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. FPC, supra note 509,
.See Parts V(A), (B)(2), (C), (D)(1), supra.
. See Parts V(C), (D) (1), supra.
. See Parts V(C), (D) (2), supra.
. See Part V (D) (2), supra.
. See text supra at note 416.
. See Parts VI (E), (F), (G), infra.
. See Parts VI(E), (F), infra.
. See Parts VI (E), (F), infra.
. See Part V(A), supra.
. See text supra at note 363, quoting Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See text supra at note 372, quoting 52 Stat. 825 (1938). See also text supra at note 373.
. See text supra at note 368, quoting Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 10,
. See text supra at note 370, quoting id. at 389,
. See text supra at note 379, quoting id. at 392,
. See text supra at notes 365-366.
. See text infra at notes 575-578.
. See text supra at notes 365-368.
. See Part III (A), supra.
. See Part III (A), supra.
. See Part III (A), supra.
. FPC v. Interstate Natural Gas Co., supra note 550,
. Id. (citation omitted). See also note 552, supra.
. “The rates charged a wholesaler are part of its costs, reflected in its rate base. Reduction of those costs normally will lead in due course to reduction in its resale rates, unless we are to assume that the passage of the Natural Gas Act was an exercise in futility. It is of course conceivable that a wholesaler might be warranted in keeping all or a part of the rate reduction under the standards of reasonableness prescribed by the Act. But a court would not be warranted in assuming that the rates which have been charged are so low as to be unreasonable. No such presumption attends rates which have been fixed pursuant to rate orders of the commission. Nor can we make any such presumption as respects rates fixed by the utilities themselves without the compulsion of a rate order. For experience does not indicate that utilities are wont to charge themselves out of business.” Id. at 581-582,
. Id. at 582,
. See text supra at note 500.
. See text supra at notes 501-502.
. See text supra at notes 503-505.
. See text supra at notes 506-508.
. FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. While the order in question looks rather far into the future, we accept it as the interim measure the Commission says it is — to be continued or superseded according to the outcome of the Section 4 proceeding.
. See Part VI (E), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Order No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 400.
. See Part III (A), ««pro.
. See Part III (A), supra.
. FPC v. Interstate Natural Gas Co., supra note 550,
. See Part VI(C), supra.
. See note 542, supra.
. See note 542, supra.
. See Parts III(A), V(B), supra.
. See Part V(B) (1), supra.
. See text supra at notes 372-373.
. See discussion in Parts V(B)(1), (2).
. See FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. See the discussion in Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. FPC, supra note 509,
. See Part VI (E), supra.
. See Part V(B), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 540), supra note 509, 39 F.P. C. at 638-41.
. The new requirement of a tracking rate increase filing was adopted prospectively, and the Commission gave Texas Eastern an opportunity to establish factually its entitlement to the refund. Id. at 641-43.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. FPC, supra note 509.
.
. See text supra at note 520.
. See text supra at notes 520.
. See text supra at notes 522-524.
. See text supra at notes 525-526.
. The amount to be flowed through, as to both principal and interest, was to be updated. See text supra at note 529.
. See text mirra at notes 531-540.
. Opinion No. 565 so stated. See text supra at note 520.
.The examiner concluded that under the circumstances Texas Eastern could not be permitted to treat any of its Rayne Field expenditures as prepayments. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., supra note 43, 42 F.P.C. at 462-63 (examiner’s Phase II decision). A majority of the Commission in Opinion No. 565 concluded similarly, Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 399, see note 539, supra, as did two commissioners in Opinion No. 565-A. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F.P.C. at 1088. See Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC,
. See note 539, supra.
. In finding the amount of Rayne Field costs which Texas Eastern had already imposed on its customers, the Commission examined the testimony of three expert witnesses, each of whom had made computations on the basis of the costs of the Rayne Field gas to Texas Eastern. The Commission accepted the testimony of one of the three witnesses who made his calculations on the basis of the costs used to compute Texas Eastern’s successive rate settlements, see note 523, supra, an approach which the Commission deemed the most accurate reflection of Rayne Field costs. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 16, 42 F.P.C. at 396-98.
. United States v. Pierce Auto Freight Lines,
. Natural Gas Act § 19(b), 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1970).
. Rochester Tel. Corp. v. United States, supra note 189,
. FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co., supra note 229,
. E. g., Williams v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Comm’n, supra note 431,
. See text supra at note 526.
. See text supra at notes 520-523.
. See notes 539, 614, supra.
. See text supra at notes 520-523.
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. FPC, supra note 509,
. See Part VI (D), supra.
. Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. FPC, supra note 7,
. See FPC v. East Ohio Gas Co.,
. See note 616, supra.
. See Part III (A), supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 68, 44 F. P.C. at 1093 (separate opinion).
. Id.
. Id.
. See Part VI (C), supra.
. See Parts III (A), V(C), (D), supra.
. FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 464,
. See Parts V (D) (1), (2), sxipra.
. See Part V(D) (2), supra.
. See Part V (D) (2), supra.
. The increase in the amount of the refund will result from the difference between the 20-cent in-line price, which the Commission used, and an 18.5-cent just and reasonable-rate as the measure of the amount properly payable by Texas Eastern to the producers for the gas delivered.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 598), 46 F.P.C. 86 (1971), aff’d sub nom., Placid Oil Co. v. FPC,
. See Parts V(C), (D) (1), (2), supra.
. See Parts VI (E), (G), supra.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 598), supra note 642, 46 F.P.C. at 142.
. See text supra at note 56.
. See Part VI (E), supra.
. See Parts V(C), (D) (2), supra.
. See Part VI (G), supra.
. See Parts V(A), (B)(2), VI (E), (G), supra.
. Supra note 53.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 598), supra note 642, 46 F.P.C. at 103-10, 153-64.
. Id. at 155-60.
. Id. at 160-63.
. Id. at 103-10.
. Id., passim.
. Id. at 155.
. Id. at 160.
. Id. at 140.
. Id. at 145. The order specifies the proceedings, by docket references, in which the refunds provided were due, and the proceedings we now review were not included.
. See Part 11(C), supra.
. See Part III(C), supra.
. See Part IV (C) (1), supra.
. See Part IV (C) (2), supra.
. See Parts V (B) (1), (2), VII, supra.
. See Part V (B) (2), supra.
. See Part V (D) (1), supra.
. See Part VI(F), supra.
. See Part VI (G), supra.
. See Part VI (G), supra.
. See Parts IV(B), (G) (2), supra.
. See Parts V (C), (D) (2), VII, supra.
. See Part VI(G), supra.
. See Parts VI(G), VII, supra.
. See Part VII, supra.
.See Parts V(B)(2), (D)(1), VI(F), (G), supra. We have also indicated our approval of rate-reduction flow-through, as decided by the Commission in Opinion No. 565. See Part VI (F), supra. New area rates for Southern Louisiana, however, are now in effect, see Part VII, supra, which by force of Opinion No. 565 govern the prices Texas Eastern must pay the producers. See Parts V(A), (B)(1), supra. The Commission will, of course, be guided on remand by the views we have expressed in that connection.
Rehearing
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROBINSON.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION ON PETITIONS FOR REHEARING
with whom TAMM, Circuit Judge, joins:
The Commission and the producers petition for rehearing and modification of our decision
I
In Mobil Oil Corporation v. Federal Power Commission,
On September 25, 1968, a seven-year investigation by the Commission culminated in Opinion No. 546
During most of the period covered by area ratemaking in Southern Louisiana, the Commission continued its quest for initial pricing of the Rayne Field gas, in suit, which had been certificated in 1959 and flowing through Texas Eastern’s pipeline system since then.
In that posture, the litigation arrived in this court. We affirmed the Commission’s decision, reached in each of the opinions, to conventionalize the transaction.
We differed with that opinion, however, as to the deferral of refunds which it undertook to make. We 'concluded that the postponement could not be justified by the Commission’s desire to await finalization of just and reasonable rates for Southern Louisiana.
These petitions for rehearing followed. In its petition, the Commission requested alternatively that we withhold our ruling pending the Supreme Court’s action in Mobil. That we have done, and since have given the petitions the most careful consideration in light of the Mobil decision. We perceive no reason justifying change in our original disposition, and accordingly we deny the petitions.
Lest, in traversing the maze of problems bred by this litigation, its main
Our decision calls for prompt refunds by the producers and flow-through by the pipeline, subject not only to any unrealized offsets occasioned by the new area rate effective on and after August 1, 1971,
II
Irrespective of the status of the Southern Louisiana area rate investigation and of just and reasonable rates for that area when the Commission promulgated Order No. 565-A, by our lights it was clear error to delay the matter of producer refunds to the conclusion of the reopened rate proceeding. In Opinion No. 565, a Commission majority ordered refunds on a finding that the producers had been greatly overpaid for gas deliveries made through 1967.
In our earlier opinion, we deemed that action a disregard of the Supreme Court’s admonition that “it is the duty of the Commission, ‘where refunds are found due, to direct their payment at the earliest possible moment consistent with due process.’ ”
The Commission and the producers still urge nonetheless the propriety of the postponement on the ground, advanced in Opinion No. 565 — A, that it promoted equality of treatment vis-á-vis other producers in Southern Louisiana.
Ill
Beyond the delay in refunding commanded by Opinion No. 565 — A is the problem of the rate therein selected as the basis for refunds. All are agreed that the applicable area rate ultimately upheld in Mobil controls the parties’ financial relationships after August 1, 1971, the date the rate became operative. For Opinion No. 565 and its accompanying order specified that pipeline-producer payments would rise prospectively to the area rate, and to levels fixed by subsequent revisions thereof,
We concluded in our original opinion that neither Opinion No. 598 nor its related order itself undertook to extend the Commission’s retroactive refund formula
The controversy now before us arose, it will be recalled, from administrative proceedings conducted under Section 7 of the Natural Gas Act.
To be sure, at least before the advent of area
As we stated in our first opinion, however, “[i]t is evident . . . that use of the in-line price as the yardstick for the initial-price determination on certification cannot be justified in situations where a just and reasonable area rate for gas of the vintage in question has already been established.”
With this position the Commission has manifested full agreement in other cases,
In our previous opinion we disagreed with the Commission that the accompanying circumstances “rendered Opinion No. 546 so tentative in character as to support the Commission’s refusal in Opinion No. 565 — A to employ the 18.5-cent just and reasonable rate as the initial price to be paid to the producers for gas delivered after the effective date of that rate.”
That was the situation when the Commission issued Opinion No. 565 — A.
We recognize that in consequence of administrative and judicial stays the 18.-5-cent rate never went into general operation
The same could not be said for the in-line price — the going field price
Petitions denied.
. Public Serv. Comm’n v. FPC, No. 24,716,
. Mobil Oil Corp. v. FPC,
. See notes 42, 43, 46, 108, infra.
. Supra note 2.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 598), 46 F.P.C. 86 (1971), on rehearing (Opinion No. 598-A), 46 F.P.C. 633 (1971), aff’d sub nom., Placid Oil Co. v. FPC,
. We have already, in our previous opinion, referred quite extensively to area ratemaking in Southern Louisiana. See Op. text at ns. 69-75 & pts. V(B)(2), VII. See also Mobil Oil Corp. v. FPC, supra note 2,
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), 40 F.P.C. 530 (1968), on rehearing (Opinion No. 546-A), 41 F.P.C. 301 (1969), aff’d sub nom., Austral Oil Co. v. FPC,
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 7, 40 F.P.C. at 544, 636, 648.
. Id. at 626-628, 652-654. By the end of 1970, the refunds ordered totaled some $375 million. Mobil Oil Corp. v. FPC, supra note 2,
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 7.
.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding, 44 F.P.C. 1638 (1970) (order reopening and consolidating proceedings.)
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 598), supra note 5.
. Id. at 105, 135-138, 142-143.
. Id. at 138-139, 143.
. Id. at 140 n. 140.
. id. at 140-141, 145-148.
. Placid Oil Co. v. FPC, supra note 5.
. Mobil Oil Corp. v. FPC, supra note 2.
. See Op. pt. I.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), 42 F.P.C. 376 (1968). See Op. pt. 1(D).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 21, 42 F.P.C. at 382-393.
. Id. at 383-390, 403.
. Id. at 393-398, 404-405.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), 44 F.P.C. 1079 (1970).
. Id. at 1081-1085, 1092.
. Id. at 1084, 1088, 1097-1107.
. Id. at 1087-1088, 1097-1107.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 44 F.P.C. 1471 (1970) (order denying rehearing).
. Op. pt. III.
. Op. pts. V(A), (B).
. Op. pts. V(C), (D)(2), VI(B)-(E), (G).
. Op. pt. V(D)(1).
. Op. pts. V(B), (C), (D)(1).
. Op. text at ns. 143-144.
. See Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
. Act of June 21, 1938, ch. 556, 52 Stat. 824, § 7, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717f (1970).
. See Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 36,
. As amended, 15 U.S.C. §§ 717c, 717d (1970).
. See Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 598), supra note 5, 46 F.P.C. at 138-139, 140-141, 142-148.
. See Op. text at ns. 646-649.
. The Commission asserts that we erred in holding that the doctrine laid down in United Gas Pipeline Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp.,
A Commission majority has repeatedly and consistently held that the parties’ lease-sale disserved the public interest, and at least twice has held that the transaction should accordingly be conventionalized. Op. text at ns. 345-347 and references in ns. 345-346. As we have explained, “limiting [the pipeline’s] financial liability to the contract price and [through conventionalization] spreading its discharge over a longer period of time [ ] would cause the producers to receive less than the quid pro quo for which they had contracted because the value to the producers of the money to be paid over the longer time span would be less than its value by the payment schedule embodied in the lease-sale arrangement,” Op. text at n. 340; and various members of the Commission have recognized that the producers are entitled to relief. Op. text at n. 344 and references in n. 344. As we have declared “[e]xcept as the exigencies of the public interest demanded, the Commission was no more at liberty to alter the lease-sale contract to the prejudice of the producers than to do so in their favor.” Op. text following n. 340. Obviously, such prejudice could be avoided only by awarding the producers the time value of the money due them under the contract, a need which even the pipeline seemingly had recognized, Op. at n. 348, and which even now it does not dispute.
We realize that a court may not compel an administrative agency to pursue a particular course of action when another is open to it. FPC v. Idaho Power Co.,
. For this reason, we cannot agree with the producers that they face financial loss in consequence of our decision. They are assured of ultimate receipt of the $134 million price for which they contracted, together with compensation for the rearranged timing in payment. See Op. pts. IV(B), (C)(2). See also note 42, supra.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 21, 42 F.P.C. at 390, 403-405. The presiding examiner had found that the producers collected through 1967 $21.8 million — with interest, $31.4 million — more than deliveries at the 20-cent in-line rate would have commanded. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., 42 F.P.C. 455, 460 — 461 (1968) (examiner’s Phase II decision). The Commission adopted that finding in Opinion No. 565. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 21, 42 F.P.C. at 393-405. The bases of the Commission-directed refunds were the 20-cent in-line rate to October 1, 1968, and the 18.5-cent just and reasonable rate thereafter. Id. at 390, 403-405. Although we disagreed with the first element of that formula, Op. pts. V(B)(1), (C), (D)(2), we found no fault with the Commission’s conclusion that refunds were due. Op. pt. V(D).
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 25, 44 F.P.C. at 1081, 1087-1088.
. Op. text at n. 464. The quotation is from United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties,
. Op. at ns. 462 — 168. In United Gas Improvement Co. v. Callery Properties, supra note 46, the Supreme Court reversed a judicial
. Op. text at n. 460. That was the course approved in Callery,
. Supra note 2.
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Co. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 25, 44 F.P.C. at 1087-1088. The only other ground averred in Opinion No. 5665-A was that the 18.5-cent just and reasonable area rate for gas of Rayne Field vintage had not been finally determined. Id. We address that ground in Part III, infra.
. Op. text at ns. 476-484.
. See Op. text at ns. 481-482. See also FPC v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., supra note 46,
. See text infra at note 69.
. See Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 36,
. As we pointed out in our prior opinion, the extent to which the deferral of refunds could promote producer equality “might depend in part upon whether initial prices allowed producers were all fixed at the same level, since those prices established refund floors.” Op. at n. 481. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 46,
. The Court found that the refund formula eventually adopted for the Southern Louisiana area impacted producers unequally, but that the differences were justified by other regulatory concerns.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 21, 42 F.P.C. at 390, 403.
. See Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 25, 44 F.P.C. at 1084, 1088.
. Op. text at ns. 646-649.
. See text supra at notes 16-17.
. Op. text pt. VII.
. Op. text at n. 657.
. Op. text at n. 658.
. Op. text at n. 659.
. Op. text at n. 660.
. Op. text following n. 660.
. Op. text following n. 660.
. Act of June 21, 1938, chi. 556, 52 Stat. 824, § 7, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717f (1970). See Op. pt. III(A).
. Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm'n, supra note 36,
. Natural Gas Act § 4(a), 15 U.S.C. § 717c(a) (1970).
. Id. See also FPC v. Texaco, Inc.,
. See, e. g., Permian Basin Area Rate Cases (Continental Oil Co. v. FPC),
. See Just And Reasonable National Rates For Sales Of Natural Gas From Wells Commenced On Or After January 1, 1973, And New Dedications Of Natural Gas To Interstate Commerce On Or After January 1, 1973 (Opinion No. 699),-F.P.C.2d-(June 21, 1974).
. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 46,
. See Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm'n, supra note 36,
. See Atlantic Ref. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, supra note 36,
. See FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 46,
. Op. text following n. 391. Compare Hunt Oil Co. v. FPC,
. See Op. text at ns. 388-391.
. Op. text following n. 396.
. Op. text at n. 399.
. See Hunt Oil Co. v. FPC, supra note 78,
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565), supra note 21, 42 F.P.C. at 383-393, 403-405.
. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (Opinion No. 565-A), supra note 25, 44 F.P.C. at 1084, 1087-1088.
. Id. at 1087-1088.
. Id.
. Op. text following n. 413.
. Op. text at ns. 414--423.
. Id.
. The history of area ratemaking in Southern Louisiana is adequately summarized in our earlier opinion, text at ns. 69-75 & pts. V(B)(2), VII, and in others. Mobil Oil Corp. v. FPC, supra note 2,
. See Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding, 25 F.P.C. 942 (1961) (order instituting proceeding); Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546), supra note 7.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Proceeding (Opinion No. 546-A), supra note 7, 41 F.P.C. at 306-309. The Commission felt that the importance of more abundant gas supplies from offshore areas of Southern Louisiana called for a new investigation of the adequacy of price ceilings for offshore gas, id. at 307-308, but that “[t]he reasons for instituting a new proceeding do not apply to the onshore prices at this time.” Id. at 308. It was nearly nine months later that the onshore ceilings were brought into the new investigation. See Op. text at ns. 406 — 408.
. See note 92, supra.
. Southern Louisiana Area Rate Cases (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 7,
. Id. at 444-445. See also Op. text at ns. 409-413 & n. 413. The court clearly contem- ' plated that these rates remain in effect wnue the new rate investigation proceeded, for it stated that “[t]he maximum rates which the Commission has set are to remain in effect throughout the new proceeding, which may last for years.”
. Slightly more than two months after announcement of Opinion No. 565-A, the Supreme Court declined to review the Fifth Circuit’s decision in the Southern Louisiana Area Rate Case (Austral Oil Co. v. FPC), supra note 7,
. Op. text at ns. 414-423.
. Op. text at ns. 472^75 & pt. V(D)(2).
. Op. text following n. 423.
. See note 95, supra.
. See Op. text at n. 44.
. The Commission requests clarification of our directions regarding flow-through to Texas Eastern’s customers of producer refunds accruing to Texas Eastern prior to the effective date of the 1971 area rate. See Op. text at ns. 673-676. In Opinion No. 565, the Commission formulated a flow-through plan which we deemed objectionable only to the extent that it utilized the 20-cent in-line price as the basis for computations for part of the relevant period instead of the 18.5-cent area rate throughout. Op. pt. VI(G). In Opinion No. 565-A, however, the Commission deferred the matter of refund flow-through in its entirety, and we held that it erred in doing so. Op. text at ns. 635-638, 669-670. We said that the Commission must calculate, after due regard for Texas Eastern’s Rayne Field investment, the amount to be flowed through on the basis of the 18.5-cent rate, and after updating the computation must order flow-through as soon as practicable. Op. text at ns. 673-676. The Commission asks whether on remand it has discretion to refashion, in some undisclosed manner, the flow-through plan, or whether it must employ the plan it constructed in Opinion No. 565.
It was not our purpose to bind the Commission to the flow-through methodology specified in Opinion No. 565, even as revisable in light of our criticism. We reviewed that methodology because some of the parties attacked it and, since the Commission did not disapprove it in Opinion No. 565-A, because it thus appeared that the Commission might still resort to it eventually. See Op. pt. VI(G). But we took pains to state that we did not proceed “on the broad premise that invalidity of an administrative decision undertaking to change an earlier administrative decision invariably reinstates the earlier decision,” but in the realization “that the agency may legally have a choice as to the action it will take in the matter, and that a court may not be able to say that the agency, had it known that the latter decision would not pass judicial muster, would have left the earlier decision as its final action.” Op. text following n. 558. See also note 42, supra. We added our recognition “that the refunding aspects of Opinion No. 565 may have lost their vitality by reason of supersession by the suspension provisions of Opinion No. 565-A, notwithstanding the invalidity of the latter.” Op. text at n. 627. It is for the Commission, not us, to say whether in properly revised form the Opinion No. 565 flow-through plan survives, and if not just what, within the limitations we imposed, the plan shall be.
. Op. text at n. 393, quoting FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., supra note 46,
. FPC v. Texaco, Inc., supra note 71,
. See Op. text at ns. 460-461.
. See text supra at note 70.
. See text supra at note 71.
. See text supra at note 69.
