In 1947, petitioner, an independent producer of natural gas,
contracted to sell gas from a specified field to an interstate
pipeline company at a specified price for a term of 10 years.
Subsequently petitioner applied for, and obtained from, the Federal
Power Commission a certificate of public convenience and necessity
authorizing such sales, and its contract rate schedule was accepted
as its rate schedule under the Natural Gas Act. Upon expiration of
its 10-year contract, petitioner contracted with the same pipeline
company for the sale of gas from the same field for a new 20-year
term, but at a higher rate. Petitioner then applied for a new
certificate covering the new contract and filed the new contract as
an initial rate schedule under the new certificate pursuant to
§ 5 of the Act. The Commission rejected the certificate
application as duplicative of petitioner's existing certificate to
make sales from the field in question, and rejected the rate
schedule filing on the ground that the purported initial rate
schedule was actually a change in petitioner's existing rate
schedule. Petitioner then filed under protest, as rate changes
pursuant to § 4(d), the rates in its new contract, and the
Commission ordered those rates suspended under § 4(e).
Held: the Commission's orders are sustained. Pp.
364 U. S.
171-176.
(a) In acting upon petitioner's 1947 application, based on its
10-year contract, the Commission was authorized to issue a
certificate unlimited as to time.
Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co.
v. Federal Power Commission, ante, p.
364 U. S. 137. P.
364 U. S.
174.
(b) The Commission properly construed the certificate issued
pursuant to that application as being unlimited as to time. Pp.
364 U. S.
174-176.
266 F.2d 222, affirmed.
Page 364 U. S. 171
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents many of the same issues as
Sunray
Mid-Continent Oil Co. v. Federal Power Comm'n, ante, p.
364 U. S. 137.
Petitioner, Sun Oil Company, is an independent producer making
sales of natural gas to transmission companies in interstate
commerce for ultimate resale to the public. In 1947, it entered
into a contract with the Southern Natural Gas Company, a
transmission company, for the sale of natural gas which petitioner
controlled in the Gwinville Gas Field in Jefferson Davis and
Simpson Counties, Mississippi. The term of the contract was 10
years, and the sales price was roughly eight cents per Mcf.
After this Court's decisions in
Phillips Petroleum Co. v.
Wisconsin, 347 U. S. 672, on
June 7, 1954, the Commission, in a series of orders, required
independent producers engaging in jurisdictional sales on or after
the date of the decision to apply for certificates of public
convenience and necessity pursuant to § 7(c) of the Natural
Gas Act. [
Footnote 1] Under
protest, petitioner applied for a certificate "authorizing the sale
of natural gas in the circumstances . . . described" in its
application. The described circumstances consisted simply of a
reference to its contract with Southern Natural, which was at the
same time submitted by petitioner as its rate schedule. In an
abbreviated and consolidated proceeding disposing of over 100
separate docket certificate applications from 40-odd
independent
Page 364 U. S. 172
producers, scattered from Colorado and New Mexico to West
Virginia, the Commission on May 28, 1956, ordered issued to
petitioner and each of the other applicants a certificate of public
convenience and necessity, in the terms set out in the margin.
[
Footnote 2] Petitioner's
contract rate schedule was accepted as its FPC Gas Rate Schedule
No. 55.
The 1947 contract between petitioner and Southern Natural
expired on August 26, 1957. The parties, however, entered into a
new 20-year contract for continued sale of gas from the same field,
commencing on September 3, 1957. The contract called for an initial
price increase
Page 364 U. S. 173
of roughly 150 per cent, to 20 cents per Mcf. [
Footnote 3] Petitioner took the view that the
certificate it had received in 1956 was limited in term to the
duration of the old contract. It accordingly filed on application
for a new certificate covering the new contract, and filed the new
contract as an initial rate schedule under the new certificate,
pursuant to § 5 of the Act. [
Footnote 4] The Commission, in a letter order of September
12, 1957, rejected the certificate application as duplicative of
petitioner's existing certificate to make sales from the field in
question, and rejected the rate schedule filing on the ground that
the purported initial rate schedule was actually a change in its
existing Schedule No. 55. A motion for reconsideration was later
denied, and, at the same time, the Commission ordered suspended,
under § 4(e) of the Act, [
Footnote 5] the effectiveness of the rates in the new
contract, which petitioner had, after their rejection as an initial
rate schedule, filed under protest, as rate changes pursuant to
§ 4(d). 18 F.P.C. 609, 611. After an application for rehearing
of the suspension order was rejected, petitioner petitioned for
review of all these orders of the Commission in the Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. [
Footnote 6] That court affirmed by a divided vote. 266
F.2d 222. We granted certiorari. 361 U.S. 880.
Page 364 U. S. 174
Petitioner's contention here, as it was below, is that the
initial certificate it obtained in 1956 was to remain in effect
only during the life of the 1947 contract. This, in its view, would
leave it free to discontinue interstate sales after the 1957
expiration of the contract, or to apply for a new certificate for
new sales, and, not unimportantly, file the new sales contract as
an initial rate schedule thereunder, rather than as a rate change,
We reject this contention, and affirm the judgment of the Court of
Appeals.
First. The major part of petitioner's argument is based
on a want of authority in the Commission, over objection, to grant
an independent producer a certificate for a longer duration than
the term of a sales contract which its application seeks permission
to fulfill. To be sure, if the Commission had no such authority, we
might take pains to read the petitioner's application as seeking a
certificate so limited in time, though, as compared with Sunray's
in the companion case, it is highly inexplicit as to its desire
that only a term certificate be issued. But we have held today in
the
Sunray case,
ante at
364 U. S. 137,
that, in these circumstances, the Commission has authority to
tender a permanent certificate under an application for a term
certificate; and accordingly this keystone of petitioner's argument
falls.
Second. Of course, if, despite its authority to grant a
permanent certificate, the Commission had, in 1956, actually
granted a term certificate to petitioner, petitioner would, after
the term, have been free to apply for a new certificate to
authorize the sale under the new contract.
Page 364 U. S. 175
But we agree with the Commission that the 1956 certificate was a
permanent one. The application itself, under the construction we
have given the statute in
Sunray, did not with any
explicitness ask for a limited certificate. It asked for one
"authorizing the sale of natural gas" under the 1947 contract; but,
as we said in
Sunray, a permanent certificate would do
that.
See ante, p.
364 U. S. 364.
And the certificate issued makes no reference to any limitation of
time. This is in contrast with explicit references to the
limitation in those instances where the Commission had previously
issued term certificates. [
Footnote
7] The Commission's order, which blanketed the many
applications before it in the mass proceeding, is no more explicit
about limitation than the application, and refers, in fact, to the
certificate as both "authorizing the sale" of natural gas, and
authorizing a "service," which accords with our construction of
§ 7(e) in
Sunray. Under these circumstances, we would
hardly see any basis for overturning the Commission's view that no
limitation as to time was implied.
Cf. Andrew G. Nelson, Inc.
v. United States, 355 U. S. 554,
355 U. S.
560.
Moreover, if there were any doubt as to the matter, it would be
removed by the fact that the batch of certificates containing
petitioner's was issued at a time when the Commission was asserting
that it lacked even the power to issue a term certificate. The
certificate in question was issued May 28, 1956. The Commission had
taken the position that it lacked such authority on July 25, 1955,
in
Sunray Oil Corp., 14 F.P.C. 877. It was not until
October 29, 1956, that judicial rejection of the Commission's
position occurred. [
Footnote 8]
Sunray Mid-Continent
Page 364 U. S. 176
Oil Co. v. Federal Power Comm'n, 239 F.2d 97,
reversed on other grounds, 353 U.S. 944. Nothing in
petitioner's application shows an attempt to take issue with that
conception of the Commission, which of course would mean that every
certificate granted under its influence would be intended to be
permanent. It would surpass belief to say that under these
circumstances the Commission tendered and the applicants received
these certificates under the assumption that they were limited in
time to the terms of the contracts on which the applications were
based.
Affirmed.
[For dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE
FRANKFURTER, MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER, and MR. JUSTICE STEWART join,
see ante, p.
364 U. S.
159.]
[
Footnote 1]
The pertinent provisions of § 7(c) are set forth in our
opinion in the
Sunray case,
ante, p.
364 U. S. 149,
note 15.
[
Footnote 2]
"The Commission Orders:"
"(A) A certificate of public convenience and necessity be and is
hereby issued, upon the terms and conditions of this order,
authorizing the sale by Applicant of natural gas in interstate
commerce for resale, together with the operation of any facilities,
subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, used for the sale of
natural gas in interstate commerce, as hereinbefore described and
as more fully described in the application and exhibits in this
proceeding."
"(B) The certificate issued herein shall be deemed accepted and
of full force and effect unless refused in writing and under oath
by Applicant within 30 days from issuance of this order."
"(C) The certificate is not transferable, and shall be effective
only so long as Applicant continues the acts or operations hereby
authorized in accordance with the provisions of the Natural Gas
Act, and the applicable rules, regulations and orders of the
Commission."
"(D) The grant of the certificate herein shall not be construed
as a waiver of the requirements of Section 4 of the Natural Gas Act
or of Section 154 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations
thereunder requiring the filing of rate schedules for the service
herein authorized, and is without prejudice to any findings or
orders which have been or may hereafter be made by the Commission
in any proceeding now pending or hereafter instituted by or against
the Applicant. Further, our action in this proceeding shall not
foreclose nor prejudice any future proceedings or objection
relating to the operation of any price or related provision in the
gas purchase contracts herein involved."
[
Footnote 3]
There are slight discrepancies in comparison between the old and
new rates, due to the fact that they are computed on somewhat
different pressure bases. The Commission states that giving effect
to the difference would somewhat increase the spread between the
old and the new rates.
[
Footnote 4]
For the pertinent provisions,
see the
Sunray
opinion,
ante, p.
364 U. S. 144, note 11.
[
Footnote 5]
For the provisions,
see the
Sunray opinion,
ante, p.
364 U. S. 145,
note 13.
[
Footnote 6]
The Commission takes the position that an order suspending a
rate change under § 4(e) is not directly reviewable in the
Court of Appeals. But since the very same issues are presented in
this case by the Commission's rejection of the application for a
new certificate, and its rejection of the filing of the 1957
contract rate as an initial rate under § 4(c), which orders
are concededly reviewable in the Court of Appeals, all the
contested issues raised before the Commission were properly subject
to review in the proceedings below and here, as the Commission
concedes. If the Commission was in error in rejecting the
application for a new certificate and the purported initial rate
filing, the § 4(e) rate change filing, which the petitioner
made under protest, doubtless would be withdrawn.
[
Footnote 7]
See, e.g., Louisiana-Nevada Transit Co., 2 F.P.C. 546,
549 (10 years);
Ray Phebus, 2 F.P.C. 1044, 1045 (8 years);
Southern Natural Gas Co., 8 F.P.C. 688, 689 (1 year).
[
Footnote 8]
While the Court of Appeals there affirmed the Commission's order
on other grounds from those on which it had proceeded -- for which
action the Court of Appeals' judgment was reversed here -- the
Commission had, before the Court of Appeals, maintained its
position that it was without authority to grant a limited term
certificate. 239 F.2d at 100, note 7. It abandoned that position
when application for certiorari was made here. 353 U.S. 944.