On July 12, 1951, the Federal Power Commission ordered the Wisconsin Power and Light Company to file rate schedules for the Company’s electric service to four municipalities in southwestern Wisconsin. The Company petitioned this court under section 313(b) of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C.A. § 8251(b), to review and set aside the Commission’s order of July 12, as well as another issued by it on August 27, 1951, denying the Company’s application for a rehearing. A like petition was filed by the State of Wisconsin and the Public Service Commission o-f Wisconsin. Proceedings on these petitions were consolidated by order of this court.
fl] We think the petitioners’ principal contentions are disposed of by the able opinion of the Seventh Circuit in Wisconsin-Michigan Power Co v. Federal Power Commission, 1952,
A procedural point urged by the petitioner Company requires consideration, however. It contends that the Commission *186 entered the order of July 12, 1951, without according the Company due process of law. The basis of its contention is that it did not acquire the distribution facilities here involved until after the close of the Commission’s hearings; that it “has had no opportunity since it became the owner of the * * * property, to be heard with reference to its operation of said property,” and that the Commission therefore was not justified in finding it to be a “public utility,” subject to the filing requirements of the Act.
The sequence of events underlying this contention is as follows: When the hearing before the Federal Power Commission Examiner closed on June 9, 1950, the Company was not yet the owner of the facilities in question. But it had previously made application to the -Commission for authorization (under section 203 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C.A. § 824b) to acquire them (R. 704-808). As a result of this'application it had been designated by the Commission as an additional respondent in the original proceeding, and ordered to show cause why it should not file rate schedules “if, when and as the acquisition * * * is approved and authorized.” (R. 1047). The Company did not appear at the hearing or offer evidence. In its return to the show-cause order it simply denied’ that the Commission had any jurisdiction to require it to file schedules. The acquisition was approved by order of the Commission on June 21, 1950. The Company actually took over the facilities on June 30, 1950, a fact of which it notified the Commission by formal report on July 31. The Examiner took notice of this fact in his decision, announced on March 14, 1951. He found that “there is at least a presumption that the existing method of operation [i.e., securing the electricity sold from out-of-state] * * will be continued * * *and ordered the Company to file rate schedules for its service to the municipálities. The Company filed exceptions to this decision, as will more fully appear, but did not except to the taking of notice. The Commission’s decision was filed on July 12, 1951. It also took “official notice” of the Company’s report of the completion of the acquisition, “pursuant to” its approval order of June 21, which it interpreted as requiring that energy for the municipalities continue to come from the out-of-state source during the next two years. On that basis, it confirmed the filing requirement.
The Company now complains of this taking of notice and of alleged misinterpretation by the Commission of the terms on which it approved the acquisition. Its theory is that these actions were essential to the finding that it is a “public utility,” and hence that this finding, essential to -Commission jurisdiction, is unjustifiable. The Company further urges that it should have been heard upon the allegations of its petition for rehearing. These were to the effect that, “pursuant to a predetermined plan to supply the four municipalities” with Wisconsin energy, three of them had received no out-of-state energy since twelve days after the transfer of ownership, except in emergencies. 2 The Company appears to contend that these allegations, if true, required that the Com-, mission withdraw or modify its order of July 12, 1951.
We think the Company’s arguments quite untenable. In the first place, there are many occasions — and this would’ seem to be one of them — on which a regulatory agency can and should take official notice of the reports filed with it by a regulated company. See Market Street R. Co. v. Railroad Commission, 1945,
Nor did
the Commission abuse its discretion when it denied the petition for rehearing. If the actual facts are as there set forth, i.e., that three of the towns had for some time been connected to Wisconsin power sources, the Company should have given the Commission prompt notice of the change. Instead, it delayed for more than a year in doing so, and in the interval made contrary representations to the Commission. Orderly dispatch of administrative business — as of judicial business — demands that parties give timely notice of changed positions or changed facts. If they do not, they must take the consequences. See Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. v. Castle, 1912,
The orders of the Commission will accordingly 'be affirmed.
Notes
. The Commission made no finding that these sales were “national in character.” The Company urges that such a finding was necessary. We disagree. Where interstate transmission is involved, the controlling distinction is between wholesale and retail sales. See Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. Michigan Public Service Commission, 1951,
. As to the fourth municipality, the Company alleges in its petition to this court that that town too is now served by power from Wisconsin sources. But that fact — if it be a fact — cannot under the eireumstanees be raised for the first time in this court. See Section 313(b) of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C.A. § 8251(b).
. Section 1.31 (c) of the Commission’s General Rules and Regulations provides that “Failure to file exceptions within the time allowed under this section shall constitute a waiver of all objections to the intermediate decision served * * * and any matter not included in such exceptions shall be deemed waived.”
