1. Where a corporation selling natural gas locally procures its
supply by agreement in interstate commerce from a pipeline company
with which it is so affiliated that the two are not at arm's length
in their dealings, the reasonableness of the interstate price is
subject to be inquired into by state authority when applied to be
the local company for permission to increase its local rate.
Smith v. Illinois Bell Telephone Co., 282 U.
S. 133. P.
285 U. S.
123.
2. A local distributor of natural gas, in a common corporate
control with an interstate pipeline company from which it brought
its supply in interstate commerce, sought to enjoin the enforcement
of a local rate in a particular city which the state commission had
declined to increase without proof that the interstate price was
reasonable.
Held:
(1) Adjudications upholding the same wholesale rate in relation
to other cities of the state, in suits to which the city now in
question was not a party, do not make a
prima facie case
here. P.
285 U. S.
125.
Page 285 U. S. 120
(2) Undenied allegations to the effect that the distributor,
though it has tried, cannot obtain its supply otherwise or at a
lower price than from the pipeline company, that that the same
price is charged by that and other lines to other distributors, do
not establish the reasonableness of the price in this case in view
of the affiliation of the two companies. P.
285 U. S.
125.
(3) In view of the relations of the two corporations and the
power implicit therein arbitrarily to fix and maintain costs, as
respects the distributing company, which do not represent the true
value of the service rendered, the state authority is entitled to a
fair showing of the reasonableness of such costs, although this may
involve a presentation of evidence which would not be required in
the case of parties dealing at arm's length and in the general and
open market. P.
285 U. S.
126.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court of three judges
dismissing a bill to enjoin a state commission and a city from
enforcing local rates for gas alleged to have become
confiscatory.
Page 285 U. S. 121
Mr. Justice ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, a West Virginia corporation, owns and operates a
distribution system for natural gas in Eldorado,
Page 285 U. S. 122
Kansas. August 17, 1920, rates for supplying local consumers
were fixed by order of the Court of Industrial Relations of the
State of Kansas, the body then vested with authority in the
premises. July 30, 1929, the company filed application with the
Public Service Commission, one of the appellees, for an increase,
averring that the existing rates were insufficient to produce a
fair return, and asking an investigation and the establishment of
such as would be just and equitable.
When the order of 1920 was made, the appellant was purchasing
gas, delivered at the city gate, from Cities Service Gas Company,
and still obtains its supply from the same company. The current
price is forty cents per thousand cubic feet, which is paid under a
day-to-day verbal contract. This rate was originally established by
the Public Utilities Commission of Kansas in March, 1923, but its
order in that behalf was subsequently rescinded for the reason that
Cities Service Gas Company is an interstate carrier, and not
subject to regulation by the state. The forty-cent rate therefore
is not fixed pursuant to the order or leave of any public
authority.
Cities Service Gas Company is the owner and operator of
interstate pipelines, and sells natural gas therefrom to various
distributing companies. The present corporate relation between
appellant and Cities Service Gas Company is as follows: the common
stock of appellant is owned by Gas Service Company, the capital
stock of which is in turn owned by Cities Service Company. The
common stock of Cities Service Gas Company is owned by Empire Gas
& Fuel Company, a controlling interest in the capital stock of
which is owned by Cities Service Company. In 1923, when the
forty-cent rate was put into effect, the distributing companies,
including the appellant, were not affiliated with the pipeline
company, but, in the following years, Gas Service Company has
acquired control of the appellant and other local distributing
companies
Page 285 U. S. 123
which are dependent on the pipeline for their supply of natural
gas.
Appellant submitted to the commission a valuation of the
property, on which a fair return should be earned. The showing was
that there were no net earnings on this value, but an annual loss
of approximately $40,000. The total expenses of operation and
maintenance of the property for the year ending November 30, 1930,
according to the evidence, were $283,049.07, of which far the
largest item, $176,260.32, was for gas purchased. In view of these
facts, the commission insisted that, in order to determine the
reasonableness of the requested increase in retail charges, inquiry
must be made as to the propriety of the forty-cent rate. The
company declined to make any showing with respect thereto, claiming
that the commission was bound to allow it as a proper element of
cost in fixing the new retail scale. The commission dismissed the
proceeding. The appellant then filed a bill in the district court
to restrain the further enforcement of the order of August 17,
1920, or the existing rates thereby established, and to enjoin the
commission from interfering with the charging of reasonable rates
until such time as some lawful authority, acting in conformity with
law, should approve a new schedule, and to prevent the commission,
its members and representatives, from instituting or prosecuting in
any court or tribunal proceedings to litigate any of the matters
involved in the hearings before the commission. After answer by the
appellees, the matter was heard before a court of three judges,
constituted as required by section 266 of the Judicial Code, on the
pleadings and proofs submitted, and the bill was dismissed on the
ground that the appellant had not exhausted its remedy before the
commission. Thereupon this appeal was taken.
First. The appellant asserts that the rate charged by
the pipeline company for gas delivered at the city gate is an
interstate rate, and not the subject of regulation by any
Page 285 U. S. 124
state authority. The soundness of this contention is conceded by
the appellees. But the appellant argues that any inquiry by the
state commission into the reasonableness of this charge amounts to
an indirect attempt at regulation, an effort on the part of the
state to circumvent the paramount federal authority over interstate
commerce, and hence an attempt to do by indirection what is
forbidden by the Federal Constitution. The appellees disclaim any
intent to control rates charged for interstate service, but say
that, as the commission's function is to set reasonable rates for
the intrastate service rendered by appellant in the City of
Eldorado, this necessarily requires a determination of the question
whether the price paid for the gas distributed is fair and
reasonable. To this end, the commission insists upon its authority
to make such investigation as will satisfy it upon this point.
Having in mind the affiliation of buyer and seller and the unity
of control thus engendered, we think the position of the appellees
is sound, and that the court below was right in holding that, if
appellant desired an increase of rates, it was bound to offer
satisfactory evidence with respect to all the costs which entered
into the ascertainment of a reasonable rate. Those in control of
the situation have combined the interstate carriage of the
commodity with its local distribution in what is, in practical
effect, one organization. There is an absence of arms' length
bargaining between the two corporate entities involved, and of all
the elements which ordinarily go to fix market value. The
opportunity exists for one member of the combination to charge the
other an unreasonable rate for the gas furnished, and thus to make
such unfair charge in part the basis of the retail rate. The state
authority whose powers are invoked to fix a reasonable rate is
certainly entitled to be informed whether advantage has been taken
of the situation to put an unreasonable burden
Page 285 U. S. 125
upon the distributing company, and the mere fact that the charge
is made for an interstate service does not constrain the commission
to desist from all inquiry as to its fairness. Any other rule would
make possible the gravest injustice, and would tie the hands of the
state authority in such fashion that it could not effectively
regulate the intrastate service which unquestionably lies within
its jurisdiction.
The principles applicable in a rate investigation, where similar
corporate relationship existed, were recently announced in
Smith v. Illinois Bell Telephone Co., 282 U.
S. 133,
282 U. S. 152,
and no purpose would be served by repetition or elaboration of what
was there said.
Second. It was shown that, in proceedings in the state
courts of Kansas and in the United States District Court for
Kansas, the forty-cent wholesale rate had quite recently been held
reasonable with respect to sales at the gates of other cities. The
decisions in those cases were put in evidence before the
commission, and the contention is that these constituted at least a
prima facie case for the propriety of the same rate at the
city gate of Eldorado. The city, though a party to this proceeding,
was not such in the cases mentioned. Obviously it is not bound by
the findings made with respect to other cities and towns. Nor is
the commission so bound, for it is admitted that the reasonableness
of the rate as respects Eldorado was not in issue in the earlier
cases. How much weight the commission should give to these
adjudications we need not here determine. What we do hold is that
they do not make a
prima facie case in support of the
charge under attack.
Third. The appellant adverts to the fact that in its
bill of complaint are included a number of averments not denied by
the appellees. In brief, these are that the company does not own or
produce any natural gas; that the only source of supply for the
city of Eldorado is the main
Page 285 U. S. 126
of the Cities Service Gas Company; that no supply at a lower
price can be obtained from any other source; that the same rate is
being charged to other distributing companies along the lines of
the Cities Service Gas Company, and was being charged by another
independent pipeline to another city; that an ineffectual effort
had been made to find local gas available to Eldorado; and that
appellant had attempted to get a lower rate from Cities Service Gas
Company, but could not do so. It is urged that, as these averments
were uncontradicted, they constitute, when taken with the facts
previously stated, a
prima facie case for the
reasonableness of the rate charged. This might well be true were it
not for the fact of unity of ownership and control of the pipeline
and the distribution system. An averment of negotiation and effort
to procure a reduction in the wholesale rate means little in the
light of the fact that the negotiators are both acting in the same
interest -- that of the holding company which controls both. All of
these facts so averred in the pleadings would be far more
persuasive with respect to the propriety of the rate if the parties
were independent of each other and dealing at arms' length. Where,
however, they constitute but a single interest, and involve the
embarkation of the total capital in what is in effect one
enterprise, the elements of double profit and of the reasonableness
of inter-company charges must necessarily be the subject of inquiry
and scrutiny before the question as to the lawfulness of the retail
rate based thereon can be satisfactorily answered.
Fourth. The argument is made that the proofs demanded
by the commission will involve an extensive and unnecessary
valuation of the pipeline company's property and an analysis of its
business, and that this burden should not be thrown upon appellant.
Whether this is so we need not now decide. It is enough to say
that, in view of the relations of the parties and the power
implicit
Page 285 U. S. 127
therein arbitrarily to fix and maintain costs as respects the
distributing company which do not represent the true value of the
service rendered, the state authority is entitled to a fair showing
of the reasonableness of such costs, although this may involve a
presentation of evidence which would not be required in the case of
parties dealing at arms' length and in the general and open market,
subject to the usual safeguards of bargaining and competition.
The judgment of the court below was right, and it is
Affirmed.