UNITED GAS IMPROVEMENT CO. ET AL. v. CALLERY PROPERTIES, INC., ET AL.
No. 21
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided December 7, 1965
382 U.S. 223
Argued October 18-19, 1965. *Together with No. 22, Public Service Commission of New York v. Callery Properties, Inc., et al., No. 26, Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co. v. Federal Power Commission et al., and No. 32, Federal Power Commission v. Callery Properties, Inc., et al., also on certiorari to the same court.
William T. Coleman, Jr., argued the cause for United Gas Improvement Co. et al., petitioners in No. 21 and respondents in No. 26. With him on the briefs were Samuel Graff Miller, Richardson Dilworth, Harold E. Kohn, Bertram D. Moll and Vincent P. McDevitt.
Kent H. Brown argued the cause for Public Service Commission of New York, petitioner in No. 22 and respondent in No. 26. With him on the briefs was Morton L. Simons.
J. Evans Attwell argued the cause for Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co., petitioner in No. 26 and respondent in Nos. 21, 22 and 32. With him on the briefs were W. H. Drushel, Jr., J. A. O‘Connor, Jr., and H. Y. Rowe.
Herbert W. Varner argued the cause for Superior Oil Co. et al., respondents in Nos. 21, 22 and 32. With him on the brief was H. H. Hillyer, Jr.
Paul W. Hicks argued the cause for Placid Oil Co. et al., respondents in Nos. 21, 22 and 26. With him on the brief were Robert W. Henderson and Thomas G. Crouch.
H. H. Hillyer, Jr., filed a brief for J. R. Frankel et al., respondents in Nos. 21, 22 and 32.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Power Commission in 1958-1959 granted unconditional certificates of public convenience and necessity to numerous producers of gas in south Louisiana, the sales contracts of the producers calling for initial prices ranging from 21.4 cents to 23.8 cents per Mcf. After deliveries commenced under those contracts, consumer interests challenged the orders in various courts of appeals. The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit sustained the Commission‘s action (United Gas Improvement Co. v. Federal Power Comm‘n, 269 F. 2d 865) but we vacated the judgment (Public Service Comm‘n v. Federal Power Comm‘n, 361 U. S. 195) for reconsideration in light of Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public Service Comm‘n (CATCO), 360 U. S. 378; and the other courts of appeals did likewise.1
The Commission thereupon instituted an area rate proceeding for south Louisiana and consolidated the re-
In addition, the Commission ordered the producers to refund to their customers the amounts in excess of the proper initial price which they had already collected under the original certificate. 30 F. P. C. 283, 290.
On review the Court of Appeals held that the Commission erred in limiting producers to an initial “in-line” price without first canvassing evidence bearing on the question of what would be a just and reasonable price for the gas. It further held that the Commission had no power to place an upper limit on future rates that a producer might file. Finally, the Court of Appeals, while
We think the Commission acted lawfully and responsibly in line with our decision in the CATCO case where we held that it need not permit gas to be sold in the interstate market at the producer‘s contract price, pending determination of just and reasonable rates under
The second condition, which temporarily bars rate increases beyond 23.55 cents per Mcf., was likewise aimed at keeping the general price level relatively constant pending determination of the just and reasonable rate. We noted in Federal Power Comm‘n v. Hunt, supra, at 524, that “a triggering of price rises often results from the out-of-line initial pricing of certificated gas” and that the possibility of refund does not afford sufficient protection. And see Federal Power Comm‘n v. Texaco Inc., 377 U. S. 33, 42-43. We think, contrary to the Court of Appeals, that there was ample power under § 7 (e) for the Commission to attach these conditions for consumer protection during this interim period though the certificate was not a temporary one, as in Hunt, but a permanent one,
The “in-line” price of 18.5 cents is supported by the contract prices in the south Louisiana area that were not “suspect,” and the selection of 23.55 cents beyond which a price increase might trigger escalation reflects the Commission‘s expertise.
We also conclude that the Commission‘s refund order was allowable. We reject, as did the Court of Appeals below, the suggestion that the Commission lacked authority to order any refund. While the Commission “has no power to make reparation orders,” Federal Power Comm‘n v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 320 U. S. 591, 618, its power to fix rates under § 5 being prospective only, Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public Service Comm‘n, supra, at 389, it is not so restricted where its order, which never became final, has been 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. An agency, like a court, can undo what is wrongfully done by virtue of its order. Under these circumstances, the Commission could properly conclude that the public interest required the producers to make refunds4 for the period in which
We think that the Commission could properly measure the refund by the difference between the rates charged and the “in-line” rates to which the original certificates should have been conditioned. The Court of Appeals would delay the payment of the refund until the “just and reasonable” rate could be determined. 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.” Federal Power Comm‘n v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., 371 U. S. 145, 155. These excessive rates have been collected since 1958; under the circumstances, the Commission was not required to delay this refund further. And the imposition of interest on refunds is not an inappropriate means of preventing unjust enrichment. See Texaco, Inc. v. Federal Power Comm‘n, 290 F. 2d 149, 157; Philip Carey Mfg. Co. v. Labor Board, 331 F. 2d 720, 729-731.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS took no part in the consideration or decision of these cases.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
While the Commission‘s expansive view of its powers seems to me largely defensible in the abstract, I believe its actual decision reveals error and unfairness in important respects.
I.
The price condition, alone of the three key prongs of the Commission‘s order, can in my view be wholly sustained. The chief challenge to it stems from the exclu-
In locating the in-line price, the Commission has ignored a number of contemporaneous high-price contracts labeled “suspect” because then under review, disapproved, or deemed influenced by those under review or disapproved. Although the danger of using a crooked measuring rod demands some precaution, this blanket exclusion also chances some distortion in favor of an unduly low in-line price. In the main the producers have chosen not to brief this question, apparently under the misapprehension that the Government has not here sought to sustain the exclusion of these contracts or that the lower court‘s failure to reach the question precluded this Court from doing so.3 But while the suspect order rule may by default be abided in this instance, I would
A last troubling aspect of the in-line price derives from a critical and unusual circumstance: it, like the other conditions in this case, was imposed for the first time on remand, several years after an unconditioned permanent certificate had issued. Presumably for six months hence, producers will be compelled to sell at a price they might not have accepted when free to refuse; for all that appears, the price may even be below cost, let alone a fair profit. However, in general the producers apparently did not seek an option to cancel future sales if dissatisfied by the newly conditioned certificates, the six-month delay is both brief and familiar, and I cannot say the Commission did not have a legitimate interest in imposing the in-line price at the time it did.
II.
The price-increase moratorium also seems to me a measure not generally beyond the Commission‘s grasp, but it should not be sustained on the record before us. Recognizing force in the contrary view of the Court of Appeals, I do not believe that § 4 must be read to bestow on producers an invincible right to raise prices subject only to a six-month delay and refund liability. Cf. FPC v. Texaco Inc., 377 U. S. 33; FPC v. Hunt, 376 U. S. 515. A freeze until 1967 is not permanent price-fixing, and in this interregnum between individual and area pricing, the hazard of irreversible price increases warrants imposing some brake. A lengthy moratorium-coupled with a refusal to consider cost or supply-demand figures in setting prices for the duration-might present a real risk of choking off supply, but such a case is not before us.
Nevertheless, a moratorium instituted on remand is a hazardous device at best, and the present one is simply not supported by evidence. Because the producers have
III.
While agreeing that the Commission has power to order refunds in the case before us, I believe the measure of repayment it selected is illogical and harsh. On the initial question of power, it must be conceded that noth-
The measure of refunds is another matter. The Commission has now directed that the producers repay the difference between the amounts collected over four to six years and the figure it has now established as the original in-line price.5 Since the in-line price has been fixed without reference to cost evidence and falls below the opening levels set in the negotiated contracts, the producers may well be receiving less than cost, as some of them expressly claim; and this imposed revision downward of prices covers not six months but a period of years.
The obvious refund formula, implicated by the statute itself and adopted by the Court of Appeals, would call for repayment of all amounts collected in excess of the “just and reasonable” price; that price, measured under §§ 4 and 5, naturally takes due account of costs. The Government retorts that producers have no “right” to sell their gas for a “just and reasonable” price under the statute, a proposition perhaps true in the limited sense that the public convenience and necessity might yet exclude fair-profit sales by a uniquely high cost producer or in the face of a glutted market. No attempt is made, however, to class the present facts with such imaginable situations. Nor is advance exclusion from the interstate
On the present facts the Government has failed to point to any public interest overriding the potent claims of the producers to a fair return on their past four to six years of sales. Any triggering caused by the amounts previously charged has already spent its force and cannot be undone. Unconvincingly, the Government implies the producers may be comparatively well off with the present formula because it provides a final figure now and the “just and reasonable” price might prove to be below the in-line price; however, instant certainty as to past prices is no great gain since taxes and royalties have already been paid, and the chance that producers may get more than they deserve by following the in-line price is not a substitute for assuring them a fair return. About the only concrete advantage cited by the Government for the in-line price is that it speeds refunds to consumers. Assuming that a compromise cannot be reached as in other cases,6 elaborate cost data should become available in the next year or two with the completion of the southern Louisiana area rate proceeding. Consumers, who assuredly expected no refunds when they paid their gas bills as long ago as six years, certainly do not suffer seriously in waiting a bit longer for refunds that individually must be minute in most cases.
The incongruity of the Commission‘s refund formula is well portrayed by considering what would have happened if the Commission had originally granted the certificates now thought proper by this Court. By accepting certificates conditioning sales at the in-line price, the producers
In line with the foregoing discussion, I would uphold the Commission‘s decision fixing an in-line price, remand the case for further findings on the triggering price for a moratorium if the Commission wishes to pursue the point, and set aside the refund with leave to order repayments based on the “just and reasonable” price.
