147 A. 735 | N.J. | 1929
This case comes up on writ of certiorari issued at the instance of the Sixty-seven South Munn, Incorporated, the owner of an apartment house, to review an order made by the board of public utility commissioners, in effect, refusing *46 to direct the Public Service Electric and Gas Company to deliver electricity at the prosecutor's apartment house to a master meter at wholesale rates to be redistributed and resold through the agency of the Meter Service Corporation to the respective tenants of the property. The real issue is whether the Public Service Electric and Gas Company is to be compelled, contrary to its own policy and against the order of the public utility commission, to sell at wholesale rates electric current to be remetered and resold at retail to the ultimate consumer by either the landlord or its agent.
Seventeen points are argued by the prosecutor in its main and supplemental briefs. For the purposes of this discussion these points will be thus consolidated:
1. Electric current is property, a commodity, and the owner thereof may use the same as he will, subject only to the lawful exercise of the police power.
2. The owner of an apartment house, being also the owner of the commodity known as electric current, may contract as he will with respect to that commodity and any effort on the part of either the state or any agency of the state, such as the board of public utility commissioners or otherwise, to interfere with such contractual rights is an impairment of the obligation of contracts and an interference with his property rights and therefore unconstitutional.
3. The legislature of the State of New Jersey has not authorized the board of public utility commissioners to control the owner of an apartment house in the redistribution and resale of electric current inasmuch as such owner is not a public utility.
4. The owner is a customer and is entitled as a matter of right to receive current for resale to its tenants and the refusal of the electric company to supply the current is unjust, discriminatory and unreasonable; and the refusal of the board to compel the company to supply the current is a violation of its obligation under the utility law.
Applying these contentions, the prosecutor claims that it is entitled as of right to be supplied at its master meter with *47 electricity at wholesale rates, which electricity it may then redistribute and resell to its tenants at such rate as it may arrange with them and that the function of installing and owning the sub-meters, checking the current used, billing the tenants for the same, collecting from the tenants for the current used, and remitting to the owner, shall be delegated to a third party, namely, the Meter Corporation of New Jersey, which corporation, after calculating the expenses, is to divide the profits with the owner. The owner calls the meter company its agent, and for present purposes the relationship will be considered one of agency.
It is an accepted proposition that electric current is property, and it is admitted for the purposes of this case that it is a commodity; and it may be assumed that the owner of an apartment house, having also become the owner of electric current, may, unless in its activities it becomes a utility, resell and redistribute without being under the control of the board of public utility commissioners, and without limitations on its right of resale, except such conditions as may have been lawfully imposed in the transaction by which title to the commodity was acquired. It frequently occurs that the purchaser of property, either real or personal, finds himself restricted in the use or disposition of the same by the terms under which it was acquired. Likewise it is possible for the owner of electric current to be limited in the disposition thereof by restrictions lawfully imposed as an incident of the sale to him. The prosecutor's difficulty, so far as point one as set out above is concerned, is that he is not yet the owner, either with or without restrictions, of the current that he wishes to sell.
With respect to the proposition contained in point two above: We do not understand how the constitutional provision with respect to the protection of private property is violated when the prosecutor has not acquired title to the property and has no right as yet in the property. If he has a right, it is the right to have property sold to him, which is a very different proposition and hardly within the purview of that constitutional provision. Neither do we understand *48 how the refusal of the electric company to sell its current to the prosecutor, or the refusal of the board of public utility commissioners to direct such sale to be made, constitutes a violation of any contract made between the prosecutor and the prosecutor's tenants. If the prosecutor has contracted to sell that which it does not own and for any reason is unable to procure the subject-matter of the sale in order to make delivery, that is its misfortune but not necessarily an impairment of its right to contract. A may contract with B whereby A undertakes to sell to B, and B undertakes to buy from A the property which belongs to C, and if A is able to procure the property and make delivery thereof all is well; but the refusal of C to convey can scarcely be called an impairment of A's right to contract, nor, indeed, a violation of any contractual rights.
As to the third point: The board of public utility commissioners does not, by its order, undertake to control the operations of the prosecutors in selling to its tenants any electric current which it may become possessed of or which it may itself manufacture so long as the prosecutor is able to perform such functions without contact either with a public utility or the commodity sold by such public utility. The prosecutor is not a public utility and the meter company is not a public utility, and these parties, either as principal and agent or otherwise, may sell and distribute electric current without interference by the board of public utility commissioners so long as there is no effort on the part of the prosecutor or the meter company to invade the sphere within which manifestly the board of public utility commissioners does have power.
It seems that the controversy resolves itself into the matters contained within point four.
It should be noted that since all parties to the cause concede and base their contentions upon the proposition that electric current is property, it must necessarily follow that the board has general supervision and regulation of, jurisdiction and control over the same if and so long as it is in the ownership of the utility; paragraph 15 of the act concerning *49
public utilities (Pamph. L. 1911, p. 374 (at p. 376);Atlantic Coast Electric Railway Co. v. Public Utility Board,
The prosecutor argues that the landlord who receives his current by meter and pays for it at such rates as the amount consumed shall justify and allows his tenants ad libitum without specific charge to use electricity in their several apartments is not to be distinguished from the landlord who sets up a master meter, and individual meters in the premises of each tenant, and conducts with each such tenant the business of sale of electricity at a profit. We think that to state that proposition is to refute it. In the one instance the service to the consumer is by a controlled utility. In the other it is not.
The order of the board of public utility commissioners will be affirmed. *51