76 S.W.2d 343 | Mo. | 1934
— This consolidated case recently came to the writer on reassignment. This proceeding was commenced by the St. Joseph Railway, Light, Heat & Power Company making application to the Public Service Commission for the necessary certificate or permit to authorize and permit it to build 'and operate an electric transmission line to a pumping station of the Great Lakes Pipe Line Company located in C'lay County. The Kansas City Power & Light Company, the Missouri Power & Light Company and the Missouri Gas & Electric Service Company intervened ■ and opposed the application of the St. Joseph Company. The Pipe Line Company also intervened but appeared in support of the application. Upon a hearing the Public Service Commission made an order granting the application and thereafter overruled the separate motions of the three protesting interveners for a rehearing. Thereupon the three protesting interveners, separately, applied to the Circuit Court of Cole1 County for a writ of review. In the circuit court the three review causes were consolidated and after a hearing the circuit court entered a judgment reversing the order of the commission “as being unlawful and unreasonable.” The Public Service Commission will generally hereafter be referred to as the Commission; the St. Joseph Railway, Light, Heat & Power Company as the St. Joseph Company; the Great Lakes Pipe Line Company as the Pipe Line Company; the Kansas City Power & Light Company as the Kansas City Company; the Missouri Power & Light Company as the Missouri Company and the Missouri Gas & Electric Service Company as the Service Company.
The territory involved, into which the transmission lines of the' four electric companies extend, as shown by the various maps filed as exhibits, includes the counties of Buchanan, Clinton, Platte and-Clay, or, as described in ■ the report and order of the Commission, that territory south of an' east and west , line passing through the
In May, 1931; the Missouri Company and the Service Company entered into a territorial agreement which was filed with and approved by the Commission by.its order made in case 7327. This was a voluntary - territorial agreement as between these -two companies. The original voluntary agreement, and order of the Commission approving same, fixed a north and south -dividing line through Clay County g,s between these two companies.- The St. .Joseph Company was not a patty to this agreement and had no knowledge of the proceeding (case 7327) before the Commission whereby the division of territory- in Clay County was made as between these two companies. Later under date of September 24, 1931, the two companies, the Service Company and the Missouri Company, entered into an amended or supplemental territorial agreement whereby they agreed that, as between themselyes, the. north and south dividing line theretofore .established through Clay County should be continued and extended westwardly a specified distance along the north line between Clinton and Clay County thence .north, into- Clinton County and. thence in a zigzag line northwestwardly, in Clinton County, to the east line of Buchanan County. The two companies then made a supplemental - application to the Commission for a further order in case 7237 .approving their amended: territorial agreement extending -the agreed dividing line as between- themselves. Thereupon the St.-Joseph Company having had notice of such supplemental application and being Concerned asto the effect'thereof-intervened and filed a protest with the Commission. The. order of the Commission-making the: St. Joseph’ Company a party intervener in such supplemental proceeding was made on December 17, 1931. On the next day, December 18, 1931, the Missouri Company- and the
. The foregoing sketches in a very general way the relative situation of' the four electrical companies, parties hereto, at and during the time involved in this inquiry. The Great Lakes Pipe Line Company is a common carrier engaged in the transportation of petroleum products by means of a pipe line. It owns and operates a gasoline pipe line running in a general northeastwardly direction from the Oklahoma fields to Des Moines, Iowa, thence eastwardly to Chicago and northwardly to. St. Paul and thence westwardly to Omaha. This pipé line passes near Kansas City, Missouri, and runs in a practically straight line northeastwardly across the northwestern part of Missouri passing near''the town of Osborn, in Clinton County heretofore noted. The pipe line was completed in the fall of 1931. There was twenty-one primary booster stations along the entire line. Two or three of these primary booster-stations were between Kansas City and Des Moines. There was one such station adjacent to Kansas City, Kansas, and within the acknowledged and recognized field of electrical service' of the Kansas City Company. The first' primary booster station north of Kansas City was located about a mile east of Osborn “right under” the lines of the Missouri Company serving that town. However-both the Kansas City fand Osborn booster stations were operated:by Diesel oil engines. In fact only one-of the Pipe Line Company’s twenty-one primary booster stations, the one at Des Moines,'had been electrified though such stations were susceptible
It appears that tbe St. Joseph Company bad for some time been interested' in tbe desirability and practicability of substituting electrical power for Diesel engines at stations on this and other pipe lines. It bad become interested in tbe Power Club movement having such objective; Tbe Power Club was an association of power and pipe line companies of the middle west district to work out a uniform type of rate and contract 'between tbe electric power companies and the pipe line companies covering this' type of service. Tbe St. Joseph
Conferences were had with the Pipe Line Company officials, an agreement reached and a contract submitted and executed ón May 28, 1932, subject of course to approval by the Commission. Because of the topography of the territory along that sector the capacity of the Pipe Line between Kansas City and Osborn was less than its capacity beyond that section of the line and extra pressure was necessary to increase such capacity. The installation of the station near Paradise would increase the capacity over the entire line and make possible an additional capacity of about 200 barrels per hour. The Pipe Line Company was under obligation to deliver the increased amount of gasoline, which it would thus be enabled to carry, over this line by August 1st. The pumping station required continuous twenty-four hour service and assurance of continuity of service direct from the generating plant was desired by the Pipe Line Company and considered by it to be of the utmost importance. The Pipe Line Company estimated the cost to it of the construction and equipment of this station at approximately $40,000. The pump at this Station was to be driven by a 700 horse power motor requiring a capacity of 450 kilowatts and as stated “this 450 kilowatt load would be a twenty-four hour load.”
The proposal of the St. Joseph Company met all the requirements of the situation and the rate agreed upon was satisfactory. The rate at which the St. Joseph Company'proposed to furnish electrical service to this station was in line with the Power Club rate and was developed by the St. Joseph Company as the best form of rate for this type of service. This rate was based, as we have noted, upon the experience of its sister companies in supplying such service of which the St. Joseph Company was informed. The rate proposed and agreed1 upon was also worked out as competitive with other forms of power particularly the Diesel oil engine. As we shall later noté the protesting companies eventually abandoned the schedule of rates which they had offered and acknowledged and eoneéded that this rate, worked out and proposed by the St. Joseph' Company, was a fair and proper rate for this class of service.
The St. Joseph Company proposed to rebuild its existing line to Gower changing it from a 6909 to a 22,000 volt line tied in with its 22,000 volt loop circuit- serving St. Joseph and extend the line' from Gower as a new 22,000 - volt line southeastwardly to the pumping station. Its patrons at Gower and its rural customers along the line from St. Joseph to Gower would be served by placing a: single phase
A complete agreement having been reached the St. Joseph Company on the 11th day of June, 1932, filed its application, with the Commission, for the necessary certificate authorizing it to build such power line, and supply electrical service, to said pump station. The application was set for hearing on June 24. On the 17th day of June the Kansas City Company filed an intervening petition which is in effect merely a protest against the granting of the application of the St. Joseph Company. It contains no proposal or offer on the part of the Kansas City Company to supply the service required by the Pipe Line Company. The Missouri Company filed a protest which is confined wholly to a protest against the granting of the application on the ground that to permit the St. Joseph Company to serve this pump station would be in contravention of the orders of the Commission in case 7237. The Service Company also filed a protest against the granting of the application the effect of which was that the order of the Commission, in case 7237, approving a territorial division line between it and the Missouri Company was a bar to the construction of the proposed line by the St. Joseph Company to this pump station, the site of which was in Clay County and west of such division line and therefore in territory which was by such agreement and order allocated to it, and then asserts that it is “ready and willing to do and perform any and all required service as a public utility” in the field allotted to it in ease 7237 “and to faithfully comply with any and all additional reasonable orders of the Commission incident thereto.” The Service Company did not have the electrical current at its disposal to supply this service, nor any contract therefor, and therefore was not in a position to adequately meet the requirements, or serve this station, of the Pipe Line Company at the time its protest was filed. As stated in the beginning the Pipe Line Company intervened in support of the application of the St. Joseph Company.
The testimony shows that the site of the pumping station is slightly to the west of the center of an area approximately twenty miles in length, north and south, and varying from eight to twelve miles in width, east and west, in which there are no electrical transmission lines. This area is bordered on the north by the lines of the St. Joseph Company extending to a point near Plattsburg; on the east by lines of the Missouri Company and on the south and west by
At the hearing before the Commission the Service Company offered to serve the station at the rates offered by the St. Joseph Company provided it could make a special arrangement and contract with the Kansas City Company applicable alone to the power used at this station whereby it could purchase such power from the Kansas City Company at a rate which would enable them to sell it to the Pipe Line Company at a profit. The vice president and manager of the Service Company testified that though he learned of the St. Joseph Company rate on May 28, the date of the contract between that company and the Pipe Line Company, he had not done anything about making such special arrangement with the Kansas City Company to meet the St. Joseph Company rate until two days before the hearing when he 'learned for the first time, and received verbal assurance from officials of the Kansas City Company, that such arrangement could be made but no contract concerning the matter was had. The evidence showed that the existing lines of the Service Company could not carry the load required for the pump station in addition to the electrical current then being carried and distributed by it. The capacity of its Ferrelview substation was only 750 kilowatts; the peak load already required for its customers along that section of its system supplied from its Ferrelview substation was 415 kilowatts and an additional1 load of 450 kilowatts would be required to serve the station. Its engineer proposed two separate plans both requiring readjustments, reconstruction, extensions and the addition of certain new equipment to enable the Service Company to reach the station and deliver sufficient power to operate it. One plan involved a cost of about $23,000; the other calling for the construction of a new and separate 33,000 volt line the entire distance from Ferrelview to' the'pump station was estimated at about $25,000. The first plan provided for serving all its other light, heat and power loads from the same circuit used to carry the pump load. This was objectionable to the Pipe Line • Company'. The Service, Company engineer could not specify which plan the company would adopt saying both plans Were feasible and it was “ just'a matter' of'engineer’s choice.” The Pipe Line 'Company’s engineer -expressed a preference,for the definite
The Commission took The view, which the protesting companies advanced, that the issue was between the Service Company and the St. Joseph Company and-found that the Service Company had not theretofore “ professed a willingness to furnish this class of service at the rates proposed” whereas the. St. Joseph Company was “anxious and willing'to secure the customer” and ‘‘.was able, ready and
Our statute allows a review by the courts of the Commission’s order "for the purpose of having the reasonableness or lawfulness” of the order "inquired into or determined” (Sec. 5234, R. S. 1929) but upon such review the court considers only such objections to the order as are “specifically” set forth in the application to the Commission for a rehearing (Sec. 5233, R. S. 1929) and the burden is upon the party seeking'to set aside the order of the Commission to show that it is unreasonable or unlawful. [State ex rel. Chicago
Keeping in mind the limits of a review as prescribed by statute and declared by the decisions we undertake an examination of the objections to the order of the Commission set forth by the protestants in their application for a r.ehearing. The Commission’s brief advances a very logical and well-reasoned contention that neither the Missouri Company nor the Kansas City Company is “interested” in the Commission’s order within the meaning of Section 5233, Revised Statutes 1929, i. e., that neither is legally interested therein and too there appears to be much force to the further contention that the matter set forth in the applications for a rehearing while proper for the Commission to weigh and consider in determining the question whether the Service Company or the St. Joseph Company should be permitted to serve the pump station falls far short of allegations showing the action of the' Commission to be arbitrary, capricious or unlawful but with the -view we have of this case we shall pass these contentions, endeavor to take a comprehensive view of the whole situation and. examine the objections to the order set forth in the applications for a rehearing with the sole view and purpose of determining as the statute (Sec. 5234, R. S. 1929) provides, “the reasonableness or lawfulness” of the order. We shall consider together the claims that .the pump station was within both the “actual” and “allotted” territory of the Service Company; that it was therefore entitled to a monopoly of electrical service in that area and that to allow the • St. Joseph Company to extend its line to and serve the pump- station would permit it .to enter into harmful competition with the Service Company within- its own occupied territory and result in duplication of investment - and operation, contrary to sound and established principles-.of public utility regulation; wherefore, the protesting companies- say, the order of -the Commission “was a gross maladministration of its lawful functions and an unjust and arbitrary abuse of its discretionary powers.”
The order of the Commission in case 7327 approving a voluntary territorial division as between the Service Company and the Missouri Company and designating the territorial division line fixed and agreed upon by the two companies cannot, -under the facts in this record, be- invoked as.-a bar against the St. .Joseph Company
Tbe site of tbe pump station- is in territory, a little west of tbe center of an area, wbicb is not reached or served by tbe transmission lines of any electrical company. We have described, supra, tbe extent of this unoccupied area and tbe location and capacity of transmission lines of the St. Joseph Company, tbe Service Company and tbe Missouri Company on the north, west and south, and east thereof respectively. Tbe nearest line of any kind to tbe station site is tbe Service Company’s 2300 volt line to Paradise wbicb is of sufficient .capacity only for tbe local service in tbe small town of Paradise. This pump station is the only consumer of electricity of that type in all tbe territory first described south of the east and west line from St. Joseph to Osborn and coming to a point on tbe south at Kansas City. It constituted a new and distinct type of service. It alone required more electrical power than used over tbe entire system served by the Service Company from its Ferrel-view substation. Tbe existing lines ■ and equipment of neither of tbe companies operating within a service radius of this station were of sufficient capacity to carry the load required for adequate service. For either of tbe four electrical companies, who are parties hereto, to meet tbe requirements of this station it would, as we have pointed out, be necessary for it to first reconstruct existing, lines,- greatly increasing tbe capacity thereof, build new and additional lines and install certain new equipment. Thus in a sense this pump station constituted a wholly new. and -distinct field: a field neither of tbe contesting companies was in position with its existing lines and facilities, to serve. As -we earlier observed in defining tbe territory immediately involved and the course, and location of tbe various transmission lines therein, as shown by the' maps filed as exhibits, the lines of tbe various companies so closely approach, each other at several points and are so located that tbe site of the pump station-at and near tbe center of tbe territory might well and reasonably be deemed within 'the proper service radius ,of each of said companies. And since tbe Commission did not find; nor can we say, that the pump station site was within • the -exclusive, territory of the Service
It is contended that to allow the St. Joseph Company to serve this station permits competition with established service in occupied territory and duplication of investment and service in violation of correct principles of regulation. Most of the cases cited, by protestants, in this connection, deal with facts showing an attempt by one utility to enter a field already being adequately served by another company with an established service so that to admit the applicant would result in injurious competition, economic waste and loss and duplication of investment and service. Such is not the situation here but as we have heretofore pointed out this pump station constitutes a new and distinct field of electrical service in that territory. The St. Joseph Company, did not seek permission to serve any other consumer or “take on any business” other than service to the pump station. The' Commission found that “the applicant (the St. Joseph Company) is able, ready and willing to supply the load and can do so without invading the territory of the Missouri das and Electric Service Company in so far as it concerns that class of customers it is now serving or those future customers of the same class it may desire to serve, and it will not be deprived of any of these rights by granting the application.” The facts sustain the finding. Each of the protesting companies had established systems for distributing and selling electricity. They existed long prior to the. time the Pipe Line Company decided to install this pump station. Service of the pump station by the St. Joseph Company does not and cannot deprive them, or either of them, of any customer they are how serving or might in the future desire to serve. No competition, results in the field in which they are established and serving and to which the capacity of their present lines and equipment is'• adjusted. The case does not involve “destructive competition.” To supply the type, quality, and satisfactory continuity of service required and insisted uuon bv the Pine Line Company it would be’necessary, as we have' ih more detail heretofore stated, for either of the companies to which the service might be allotted,
It is further contended that while the protesting companies, or either of them, and especially the Service Company which is now, with the support and aid of the Kansas City Company and the Missouri Company, contesting with the St. Joseph Company for this business, can serve the pump station at the rates developed by the St. Joseph Company and upon the same conditions of service and earn a reasonable return upon the investment and service required that according to calculations made by protestants, upon data outside the evidence, based upon the value of' the plant capacity of the St. Joseph Company required to serve a 450 kilowatt load in addition to the cost of reconstruction and extension of its transmission lines, the St. Joseph Company would be serving the station at a loss which they say would have to be borne by other customers of the St. Joseph Company; hence the rates would be discriminatory. However, the evidence does not warrant such conclusion. The evidence shows that the St. Joseph Company had ample surplus, unused capacity to carry the load and that the load would not take care of all such surplus capacity. The St. Joseph Company’s engineer taking into consideration “the line investment” and “value of plant capacity” “plus generating cost of current at the plant” estimated that the pump station business “will still give a return of about 15 per cent on the investment.” The manager of the St. Joseph Company testified the company officials considered “it a very provident contract” and that “the revenue is ample to justify the investment.” Without undertaking here to review and analyze the computations made it appears that the Commission made an express finding, which is supported by substantial evidence, that the income which the St. Joseph Company would receive would, under the circumstances, justify the additional investment required.
The remaining assignments set out in the applications for rehearing may be reduced to this, that now after the hearing, and for the first time, the Service Company unconditionally proposes and offers to serve the pump station at the same rates and upon the same service conditions proposed by the St. Joseph Company; that it could do so at a larger profit than could the St. Joseph Company; that it cam render equally as good service as the St. Joseph Company and that in view of these considerations the Commission acted arbitrarily in permitting the St. Joseph Company to serve the station in preference to it. Taking into consideration the Service Company’s
The order made by the Commission was supported by substantial evidence and we do not find it to be either unlawful or unreasonable. Therefore the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to that court to enter judgment affirming the order of the Commission.
PER. CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion by FergusoN, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur, except