In 1952, respondent natural gas producers and petitioner entered
into a contract under which respondents agreed to sell petitioner
natural gas from a certain gas field in Louisiana. The contract
contained a fixed price schedule and a "favored nations clause,"
which provided that, if petitioner purchased gas from the gas field
from another party at a higher rate than it was paying respondents,
then respondents would be entitled to a higher price for their
sales to petitioner. In 1954, respondents filed the contract and
their rates with the Federal Power Commission (now the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission) and obtained from it a certificate
authorizing the sale of gas at the specified contract rates. In
1961, petitioner purchased certain leases in the same gas field
from the United States and began producing gas on its leasehold. In
1974, respondents filed an action in a Louisiana state court,
contending that petitioner's lease payments to the United States
had triggered the favored nations clause. Because petitioner had
not increased its payments to respondents as required by that
clause, respondents sought as damages an amount equal to the
difference between the price they actually were paid in the
intervening years and the price they would have been paid had that
clause gone into effect. Although finding that the clause had been
triggered, the trial court held that the "filed rate doctrine,"
which prohibits a federally regulated seller of natural gas from
charging rates higher than those filed with the Commission pursuant
to the Natural Gas Act, precluded an award of damages for the
period prior to 1972 (the time during which respondents were
subject to the Commission's jurisdiction). The intermediate
appellate court affirmed, but the Louisiana Supreme Court reversed,
holding that respondents were entitled to damages for the period
between 1961 and 1972 notwithstanding the filed rate doctrine. The
court reasoned that petitioner's failure to inform respondents of
the lease payments to the United States had prevented respondents
from filing rate increases with the Commission, and that, if they
had done so, the increases would have been approved.
Held: The filed rate doctrine prohibits the award of
damages for petitioner's breach during the period that respondents
were subject to the Commission's jurisdiction. Pp.
453 U. S.
576-585.
Page 453 U. S. 572
(a) The Natural Gas Act bars a regulated seller of natural gas
from collecting a rate other than the one filed with the
Commission, and prevents the Commission itself from imposing a rate
increase for gas already sold. Here, the Louisiana Supreme Court's
ruling amounts to nothing less than the award of a retroactive rate
increase based on speculation about what the Commission might have
done had it been faced with the facts of this case. This is
precisely what the filed rate doctrine forbids. It would undermine
the congressional scheme of uniform rate regulation to allow a
state court to award as damages a rate never filed with the
Commission, and thus never found to be reasonable within the
meaning of the Act. Pp.
453 U. S.
576-579.
(b) Congress has granted exclusive authority over rate
regulation to the Commission, and, in so doing, withheld the
authority to grant retroactive rate increases or to permit
collection of a rate other than the one on file. It would be
inconsistent with this purpose to permit a state court to do
through a breach of contract action what the Commission may not do.
Under the filed rate doctrine, the Commission alone is empowered to
approve the higher rate respondents might have filed with it, and
until it has done so, no rate other than the one on file may be
charged. The court below thus has usurped a function that Congress
has assigned to a federal regulatory body.
Cf. Chicago &
North Western Transp. Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile Co.,
450 U. S. 311.
This the Supremacy Clause will not permit. Pp.
453 U. S.
579-582.
(c) Under the filed rate doctrine, when there is a conflict
between the filed rate and the contract rate, the filed rate
prevails. P.
453 U. S.
582.
(d) Permitting the state court to award what amounts to a
retroactive right to collect a rate in excess of the filed rate
"only accentuates the danger of conflict," and no appeal to
equitable principles can justify such usurpation of federal
authority. Pp.
453 U. S.
583-584.
368
So. 2d 984, affirmed in part, vacated in part, and
remanded.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and BRENNAN, WHITE, and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined.
POWELL, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
453 U. S. 585.
STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which REHNQUIST, J.,
joined,
post, p.
453 U. S. 586.
STEWART, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Page 453 U. S. 573
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The "filed rate doctrine" prohibits a federally regulated seller
of natural gas from charging rates higher than those filed with the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to the Natural Gas
Act, 52 Stat. 821, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717
et
seq. (1976 ed. and Supp. III). The question before us is
whether that doctrine forbids a state court to calculate damages in
a breach of contract action based on an assumption that, had a
higher rate been filed, the Commission would have approved it.
I
Respondents are producers of natural gas, and petitioner
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. (Arkla) is a customer who buys their
gas. In 1952, respondents [
Footnote
1] and Arkla entered into a contract under which respondents
agreed to sell Arkla natural gas from the Sligo Gas Field in
Louisiana. The contract contained a fixed price schedule and a
"favored nations clause." The favored nations clause provided that,
if Arkla purchased Sligo Field natural gas from another party at a
rate higher than the one it was paying respondents, then
respondents would be entitled to a higher price for their sales to
Arkla. [
Footnote 2]
Page 453 U. S. 574
In 1954, respondents filed with the Federal Power Commission
(now the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) [
Footnote 3] the contract and their rates and
obtained from the Commission a certificate authorizing the sale of
gas at the rates specified in the contract.
In September, 1961, Arkla purchased certain leases in the Sligo
Field from the United States and began producing gas on its
leasehold. In 1974, respondents filed this state court action
contending that Arkla's lease payments to the United States had
triggered the favored nations clause. Because Arkla had not
increased its payments to respondents as required by the clause,
respondents sought as damages an amount equal to the difference
between the price they actually were paid in the intervening years
and the price they would have been paid had the favored nations
clause gone into effect.
In its answer, Arkla denied that its lease payments were
purchases of gas within the meaning of the favored nations clause.
Arkla subsequently amended its answer to allege in addition that
the Commission had primary jurisdiction over the issues in
contention. Arkla also sought a Commission ruling that its lease
payments had not triggered the favored nations clause. The
Commission did not act immediately, and the case proceeded to
trial. The state trial court found that Arkla's payments had
triggered the favored nations clause, but nonetheless held that the
filed rate doctrine precluded
Page 453 U. S. 575
an award of damages for the period prior to 1972. The
intermediate appellate court affirmed, 359 So. 2d 255 (1978), and
both parties sought leave to appeal. The Supreme Court of Louisiana
denied Arkla's petition for appeal,
362 So.
2d 1120 (1978), and Arkla sought certiorari in this Court on
the question whether the interpretation of the favored nations
clause should have been referred to the Commission. We denied the
petition. 444 U.S. 878 (1979).
While Arkla's petition for certiorari was pending, the Supreme
Court of Louisiana granted respondents' petition for review and
reversed the intermediate court on the measure of damages.
368 So.
2d 984 (1979). The court held that respondents were entitled to
damages for the period between 1961 and 1972 notwithstanding the
filed rate doctrine. The court reasoned that Arkla's failure to
inform respondents of the lease payments to the United States had
prevented respondents from filing rate increases with the
Commission, and that, had respondents filed rate increases with the
Commission, the rate increases would have been approved.
Id. at 991. After the decision by the Supreme Court of
Louisiana, the Commission, in May, 1979, finally declined to
exercise primary jurisdiction over the case, holding that the
interpretation of the favored nations clause raised no matters on
which the Commission had particular expertise.
Arkansas
Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 7 FERC 61, 175, p. 61,321.
[
Footnote 4] The Commission
Page 453 U. S. 576
did, however, state: "It is our opinion that the Louisiana
Supreme Court's award of damages for the 1961-1972 period violates
the filed rate doctrine."
Id. at 61,325. n. 18. [
Footnote 5] Under that doctrine, no
regulated seller is legally entitled to collect a rate in excess of
the one filed with the Commission for a particular period.
See
infra at
453 U. S.
576-579. We granted Arkla's subsequent petition for
certiorari challenging the judgment of the Louisiana Supreme Court.
449 U.S. 1109 (1981). [
Footnote
6]
II
Sections 4 (c) and 4 (d) of the Natural Gas Act, 52 Stat. 822
823, 15 U.S.C. §§ 717c(c) and 717c(d), require sellers
of
Page 453 U. S. 577
natural gas in interstate commerce to file their rates with the
Commission. Under § 4(a) of the Act, 2 Stat. 822, 15 U.S.C.
§ 717c(a), the rates that a regulated gas company files with
the Commission for sale and transportation of natural gas are
lawful only if they are "just and reasonable." No court may
substitute its own judgment on reasonableness for the judgment of
the Commission. The authority to decide whether the rates are
reasonable is vested by § 4 of the Act solely in the
Commission,
see FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 320 U.
S. 591,
320 U. S. 611
(1944), and "the right to a reasonable rate is the right to the
rate which the Commission files or fixes,"
Montana-Dakota
Utilities Co. v. Northwestern Public Service Co., 341 U.
S. 246,
341 U. S. 251
(1951). [
Footnote 7] Except
when the Commission permits a waiver, no regulated seller of
natural gas may collect a rate other than the one filed with the
Commission. § 4(d), 52 Stat. 823, 15 U.S.C. § 717c(d).
These straightforward principles underlie the "filed rate
doctrine," which forbids a regulated entity to charge rates for its
services other than those properly filed with the appropriate
federal regulatory authority.
See, e.g., T.I.M.E. Inc. v.
United States, 359 U. S. 464,
359 U. S. 473
(1959). The filed rate doctrine has its origins in this Court's
cases interpreting the Interstate Commerce Act,
see, e.g.,
Lowden v. Simonds-Shields-Lonsdale Grain Co., 306 U.
S. 516,
306 U. S.
520-521 (1939);
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. International
Coal Co., 230 U. S. 184,
230 U. S.
196-197 (1913), and has been extended across the
spectrum of regulated utilities.
"The considerations underlying the doctrine . . . are
preservation of the agency's primary jurisdiction
Page 453 U. S. 578
over reasonableness of rates and the need to insure that
regulated companies charge only those rates of which the agency has
been made cognizant."
City of Cleveland v. FPC, 174 U.S.App.D.C. 1, 10, 525
F.2d 845, 854 (1976).
See City of Piqua v. FERC, 198
U.S.App.D.C. 8, 13, 610 F.2d 950, 955 (1979).
Not only do the courts lack authority to impose a different rate
than the one approved by the Commission, but the Commission itself
has no power to alter a rate retroactively. [
Footnote 8] When the Commission finds a rate
unreasonable, it "shall determine the just and reasonable rate . .
. to be
thereafter observed and in force." § 5(a), 52
Stat. 823, 15 U.S.C. § 717d(a) (emphasis added).
See,
e.g., FPC v. Tennessee Gas Co., 371 U.
S. 145,
371 U. S.
152-153 (1962);
FPC v. Sierra Pacific Power
Co., 350 U. S. 348,
350 U. S. 353
(1956). This rule bars "the Commission's retroactive substitution
of an unreasonably high or low rate with a just and reasonable
rate."
City of Piqua v. FERC, supra, at 12, 610 F.2d at
954.
In sum, the Act bars a regulated seller of natural gas from
collecting a rate other than the one filed with the Commission, and
prevents the Commission itself from imposing a rate increase for
gas already sold. Petitioner Arkla and the Commission as
amicus
curiae both argue that these rules, taken in tandem, are
sufficient to dispose of this case. No matter how the ruling of the
Louisiana Supreme Court may be characterized, they argue, it
amounts to nothing less than the award of a retroactive rate
increase based on speculation
Page 453 U. S. 579
about what the Commission might have done had it been faced with
the facts of this case. This, they contend, is precisely what the
filed rate doctrine forbids. We agree. It would undermine the
congressional scheme of uniform rate regulation to allow a state
court to award as damages a rate never filed with the Commission,
and thus never found to be reasonable within the meaning of the
Act. Following that course would permit state courts to grant
regulated sellers greater relief than they could obtain from the
Commission itself.
In asserting that the filed rate doctrine has no application
here, respondents contend first that the state court has done no
more than determine the damages they have suffered as a result of
Arkla's breach of the contract. [
Footnote 9] No federal interests, they maintain, are
affected by the state court's action. But the Commission itself has
found that permitting this damages award could have an "unsettling
effect . . . on other gas purchase transactions," and would have a
"potential for disruption of natural gas markets. . . ."
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 13 FERC �
61,100, p. 61,213 (1980). [
Footnote 10]
Page 453 U. S. 580
Even were the Commission not on record in this case, the mere
fact that respondents brought this suit under state law would not
rescue it, for when Congress has established an exclusive form of
regulation, "there can be no divided authority over interstate
commerce."
Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Stroud, 267 U.
S. 404,
267 U. S. 408
(1925). Congress here has granted exclusive authority over rate
regulation to the Commission. In so doing, Congress withheld the
authority to grant retroactive rate increases or to permit
collection of a rate other than the one on file. It would surely be
inconsistent with this congressional purpose to permit a state
court to do, through a breach of contract action, what the
Commission itself may not do.
We rejected an analogous claim earlier this Term in
Chicago
& North Western Transp. Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile Co.,
450 U. S. 311
(1981). There, a shipper of goods by rail sought to assert a state
common law tort action for damages stemming from a regulated rail
carrier's decision to cease service on a rail line. We held
unanimously that, because the Interstate Commerce Commission had,
in approving the cessation, ruled on all issues that the shipper
sought to raise in the state court suit, the common law action was
preempted. In reaching our conclusion, we explained that
"[a] system under which each State could, through its courts,
impose on railroad carriers its own version of reasonable service
requirements could hardly be more at odds with the uniformity
contemplated by Congress in enacting the Interstate Commerce
Act."
Id. at
450 U. S. 326.
To hold otherwise, we said, would merely approve "an attempt by a
disappointed shipper to gain from the Iowa courts the relief it was
denied by the Commission."
Id. at
450 U. S.
324.
In the case before us, the Louisiana Supreme Court's award of
damages to respondents was necessarily supported by an assumption
that the higher rate respondents might have filed with the
Commission was reasonable. Otherwise, there would have been no
basis for that court's conclusion, 368
Page 453 U. S. 581
So.2d at 991, that the Commission would have approved the rate.
But under the filed rate doctrine, the Commission alone is
empowered to make that judgment, and until it has done so, no rate
other than the one on file may be charged. And far from approving
the rate here in issue, the Commission has expressly declined to
speculate on what its predecessor might have done. [
Footnote 11] The court below, like the
state
Page 453 U. S. 582
court in
Kalo Brick, has consequently usurped a
function that Congress has assigned to a federal regulatory body.
This the Supremacy Clause will not permit.
Respondents' theory of the case would give inordinate importance
to the role of contracts between buyers and sellers in the federal
scheme for regulating the sale of natural gas. Of course, as we
have held on more than one occasion, nothing in the Act forbids
parties to set their rates by contract.
E.g., Permian Basin
Area Rate Cases, 390 U. S. 747,
390 U. S.
820-822 (1968);
United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile
Gas Service Corp., 350 U. S. 332,
350 U. S.
338-340 (1956). But those cases stand only for the
proposition that the Commission itself lacks affirmative authority,
absent extraordinary circumstances, to "abrogate existing
contractual arrangements."
Permian Basin Area Rate Cases,
supra, at
390 U. S. 820.
See United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Service Corp.,
supra, at
350 U. S.
338-339. That rule does not affect the supremacy of the
Act itself, and, under the filed rate doctrine, when there is a
conflict between the filed rate and the contract rate, the filed
rate controls.
See, e.g., Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v.
Maxwell, 237 U. S. 94,
237 U. S. 97
(1915);
Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. Mugg, 202 U.
S. 242,
202 U. S. 245
(1906).
"This rule is undeniably strict, and it obviously may work
hardship in some cases, but it embodies the policy which has been
adopted by Congress. . . ."
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Maxwell, supra, at
237 U. S. 97.
Moreover, to permit parties to vary by private agreement the rates
filed with the Commission would undercut the clear purpose of the
congressional scheme: granting the Commission an opportunity in
every case to judge the reasonableness of the rate.
Cf. United
Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Service Corp., supra, at
350 U. S.
338-339. [
Footnote
12]
Page 453 U. S. 583
Respondents also appeal to what they say are equitable
considerations. The filed rate doctrine and the Supremacy Clause,
we are told, should not bar recovery when the defendant's
misconduct prevented filing of a higher rate. We do not find this
argument compelling. The court below did not find that Arkla
intentionally failed to inform respondents of its lease payments to
the United States in an effort to defraud them. Consequently, we
are not faced with affirmative misconduct, and we need not consider
the application of the filed rate doctrine in such a case.
[
Footnote 13] The courts
Page 453 U. S. 584
below found that Arkla has done no more than commit a simple
breach of its contract. But when a court is called upon to decide
whether state and federal laws are in conflict, the fact that the
state law has been violated does not affect the analysis. Every
preemption case involves a conflict between a claim of right under
federal law and a claim of right under state law. A finding that
federal law provides a shield for the challenged conduct will
almost always leave the state law violation unredressed. Thus in
San Diego Building Trades Council v. Garmon, 359 U.
S. 236 (1959), the mere fact that a group of unions
violated state law through their peaceful picketing did not permit
enforcement of that law when it would conflict with the federal
regulatory scheme. That the state court suit was one for damages,
rather than for the type of relief available from the National
Labor Relations Board, weighed against preemption, not in favor of
it. "[S]ince remedies form an ingredient of any integrated scheme
of regulation," Justice Frankfurter wrote for the Court,
"to allow the State to grant a remedy here which has been
withheld from the National Labor Relations Board only accentuates
the danger of conflict."
Id. at
359 U. S.
247.
The same principle applies here. Permitting the state court to
award what amounts to a retroactive right to collect a rate in
excess of the filed rate "only accentuates the danger of conflict."
No appeal to equitable principles can justify this usurpation of
federal authority.
III
We hold that the filed rate doctrine prohibits the award of
damages for Arkla's breach during the period that respondents were
subject to Commission jurisdiction. [
Footnote 14] In all respects other than those relating to
damages, the judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana is
affirmed. With respect
Page 453 U. S. 585
to its calculation of damages, the judgment is vacated, and the
case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
So ordered.
JUSTICE STEWART took no part in the consideration or decision of
this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Respondents include both original parties to the contract and
successors in interest to parties to the contract.
[
Footnote 2]
The favored nations clause provided in relevant part:
"If at any time during the term of this agreement Buyer should
purchase from another party seller gas produced from the subject
wells or any other well or wells located in the Sligo Gas Field at
a higher price than is provided to be paid for gas delivered under
this agreement, then in such event the price to be paid for gas
thereafter delivered hereunder shall be increased by an amount
equal to the difference between the price provisions hereof and the
concurrently effective higher price provisions of such subsequent
contract."
App. 99.
[
Footnote 3]
On October 1, 1977, the relevant responsibilities of the Federal
Power Commission were transferred to the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
See 10 CFR § 1000.1(d) (1980). The term
"Commission" in this opinion refers to the Federal Power Commission
when referring to action taken prior to that date and to the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission when referring to action taken
after that date.
[
Footnote 4]
The May, 1979, order was actually the Commission's second
decision on primary jurisdiction. The Commission initially declined
to exercise primary jurisdiction in March, 1976, citing a
then-existing policy against assuming jurisdiction over matters
pending before a court.
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v.
Hall, 55 F.P.C. 1018, 1020-1021. On rehearing, the Commission
further noted that, on October 19, 1972, respondents had gained
"small producer" status,
see n 5,
infra, and were therefore no longer required
to make rate increase filings.
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v.
Hall, 56 F.P.C. 2905 (1976). Arkla challenged the Commission's
automatic deferral policy before the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit. While the matter was pending
before that court, the Commission asked that the record be remanded
to it for further consideration, and the Court of Appeals granted
the motion. The May, 1979, order resulted from this remand, and
review of that order is pending before the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 5]
The Commission limited its disagreement with the state court to
the period before 1972 because of its additional finding that, as
of October, 1972, respondents had become "small producers," and
were no longer required to file their rates with the Commission.
See 18 CFR § 157.40 (1980). It therefore took the
position that the filed rate doctrine did not apply to respondents
after that date. Arkla disputes here the administrative
determination that respondents met the criteria to be considered
"small producers." The Commission's finding itself is not before
us, and we do not believe that the state courts erred in deferring
to that finding.
[
Footnote 6]
Subsequent to the award of damages but prior to our action on
Arkla's petition for certiorari, the Commission informed
respondents that, in order to collect a damages award amounting to
a retroactive rate increase, they would have to ask the Commission
to waive the filing requirements of the Natural Gas Act.
Respondents sought a waiver, which was denied by the Commission.
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 13 FERC �
61,000 (1980). In its order, the Commission explained that, in
order to grant a waiver, it would have to "speculat[e] as to what
the Commission would or would not have done in 1961. . . ."
Id. at 61,213. The Commission added that, because the
request for an increase called for contract interpretation, the
1961 Commission "would almost certainly have either suspended or
rejected the filing."
Ibid. The Commission added that
granting a waiver in this case would present a "potential for
disruption of natural gas markets."
Ibid. Review of that
order is pending before the United States Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit.
[
Footnote 7]
Montana-Dakota Utilities was a case under the Federal
Power Act, rather than under the Natural Gas Act, but, as we have
previously said, the relevant provisions of the two statutes "are
in all material respects substantially identical."
FPC v.
Sierra Pacific Power Co., 350 U. S. 348,
350 U. S. 353
(1956). In this opinion we therefore follow our established
practice of citing interchangeably decisions interpreting the
pertinent sections of the two statutes.
See, e.g., ibid.;
Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390 U.
S. 747,
390 U. S.
820-821 (1968).
[
Footnote 8]
Although the Commission may not impose a retroactive rate
alteration, and, in particular, may not order reparations,
see,
e.g., FPC v. Sunray DX Oil Co., 391 U. S.
9,
391 U. S. 24
(1968), it may, "for good cause shown," 15 U.S.C. § 717c(d),
waive the usual requirement of timely filing of an alteration in a
rate. Assuming,
arguendo, that waiver is available for
retroactive collection of a higher rate than the one on file, we
note that, in this case, the Commission has expressly found that
respondents have not demonstrated that good cause exists for
waiving the filing requirements on their behalf.
See
n 6,
supra.
[
Footnote 9]
Arkla seeks to have this Court determine, as a matter of law,
whether it actually breached its contract with respondents. This we
decline to do. We see no reason to disagree with the Commission's
judgment that interpretation of the favored nations clause raises
only questions of state law. The state court found that the
contract had been breached. We will not overturn the construction
of Louisiana law by the highest court of that State.
[
Footnote 10]
Apparently in an effort to challenge this determination,
respondents assert that the damages would be paid entirely from
Arkla's corporate assets, and would not be passed on to consumers.
We see no reason why this fact, even if true, would alter our
analysis. In any case, the record does not support respondents'
assertion that Arkla could not pass the damages award along to its
customers. In its order denying respondents' request for a waiver
of the § 4(d) notice requirement, the Commission conceded that
Arkla would have the right to do so, even though all the natural
gas for which Arkla would be paying was long since sold. 13 FERC,
at 61,213.
[
Footnote 11]
Respondents assert, and the Supreme Court of Louisiana found,
that the Commission has expressly approved the damages award
through its repeated statements that the award is not in excess of
applicable ceilings. This is simply not the case. The court below
based its conclusion on the Commission's order denying rehearing on
Arkla's request that it exercise primary jurisdiction. 368 So. 2d
at 991, citing
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 56
F.P.C. 2905 (1976). Nothing in that order approves the retroactive
rate increase; it only lists, at the request of the parties, "the
maximum rates . . . which, if contractually authorized and if
proper filing procedures had been followed, would have been
approved. . . ."
Id. at 2906. The fact that the
retroactive rate increase was within the rate ceiling does not mean
that it would have been approved if actually submitted, and
certainly does not mean that it would be approved after the fact.
In rejecting respondents' request for a waiver of its filing
requirements, the Commission set forth several reasons for
disapproving a rate increase falling within the ceiling rates, and
expressly declined to speculate on what the earlier Commission
might have done.
See n
6,
supra.
In addition to the order denying rehearing, respondents also
rely on language in the Commission's May 18, 1979, order declining
to exercise primary jurisdiction and in a letter from the
Commission's staff counsel. Staff counsel's letter is ambiguous, at
best, and, in any case, it should be unnecessary to add that staff
counsel may not speak for the Commission. The language relied on in
the May 18 order appears to have reference only to damages for the
period after 1972. The same order twice disapproves granting
damages for the period prior to respondents' assumption of small
producer status.
See Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 7
FERC � 61,175, p. 61,325, n. 18 (1979) ("It is our opinion
that the Louisiana Supreme Court's award of damages for the
1961-1972 period violates the filed rate doctrine");
id.
at 61,325, n. 20 ("As we stated above, the Louisiana Supreme Court,
in effect, waived one of this Commission's filing requirements when
it determined that [respondents'] group was entitled to damages
back to 1961. This holding of the Louisiana Supreme Court conflicts
with the filed rate doctrine"). The unconnected and ambiguous
references on which respondents and the court below rely to find
Commission "approval" of the retroactive rate increase cannot
override these express statements of disapproval.
[
Footnote 12]
None of the other cases relied on by respondents commands a
contrary result.
Skelly Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
339 U.S.
667 (1950), held only that federal courts are not granted
jurisdiction over state law declaratory judgment actions merely
because a federal question might potentially be raised in defense
of the suit. The only issue in
Skelly Oil was whether
certain contracts had properly been terminated, so there was no
occasion to consider whether the filed rate doctrine barred a
damages remedy.
United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Memphis Light, Gas
and Water Division, 358 U. S. 103
(1958), like the cases mentioned in text, held only that the Act
does not automatically abrogate all private contracts. And
Pan
American Petroleum Corp. v. Superior Court, 366 U.
S. 656 (1961), stated only that a state rather, than a
federal, court was the proper forum in which a buyer should bring a
breach of contract action to obtain a refund of charges in excess
of the filed rate. Permitting that action in no way contravened the
filed rate doctrine; in fact, it furthered the doctrine's
purpose.
We note that a panel of the District of Columbia Circuit stated
in
City of Cleveland v. FPC, 174 U.S.App.D.C. 1, 10-11,
525 F.2d 845, 854-855 (1976), that "the proposition that a filed
rate variant from an agreed rate is nonetheless the legal rate
wages war with basic premises of the . . . Act." That case is
immediately distinguishable from the one before us, because it
involved a claim that the rate itself had been filed in violation
of a contract. We express no opinion on the merits of that case,
but, to the extent that the quoted dictum would lead to a contrary
result in the instant case, it is expressly disapproved.
[
Footnote 13]
We agree with the Commission's finding that Arkla "could have
reasonably assumed that the government royalty payment did not
trigger the [favored nations clause]." 13 FERC at 61,213. Because
the record contains no findings of misconduct, respondents'
argument that this Court has consistently recognized the doctrine
of estoppel has no relevance. We save for another day the question
whether the filed rate doctrine applies in the face of fraudulent
conduct.
[
Footnote 14]
There is no bar to damages for the period after respondents
gained "small producer" status.
See n 5,
supra.
JUSTICE POWELL, dissenting.
I agree with much of JUSTICE STEVENS' dissenting opinion, and
would affirm the judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Respondents are entitled to the relief they seek based on Louisiana
state contract law.
By virtue of the "most favored nations" clause in its contract
with respondents, petitioner was obligated to pay respondents the
higher rate it paid a comparable supplier. Petitioner did not
comply with this provision, but the Court today holds that
respondents nevertheless may not recover damages because they
failed to file with the Commission the increased rate. It is said
that the "filed rate doctrine" requires such a filing.
I would agree with the Court if it were clear that respondents
were neglectful or otherwise at fault in not filing and seeking
Commission approval of the higher rate. But the Louisiana courts
found that petitioner was responsible for respondents' failure to
file. Petitioner did not disclose that it was paying higher rates
to another producer from the same field under comparable
conditions. The Louisiana Court of Appeal expressly found that
respondents' failure to comply with the filed rate doctrine was
caused primarily by the "uncooperative and evasive" conduct of
petitioner's officials.
See 359 So. 2d 255, 264 (1978).
Petitioner knew the facts, and the Louisiana Supreme Court held
that petitioner had a state law duty to disclose them in order not
to frustrate the "most favored nations" clause. There is no showing
that respondents
Page 453 U. S. 586
had any knowledge of their entitlement to invoke the clause
until they finally obtained the facts through the Freedom of
Information Act. In these circumstances, the filed rate doctrine
should not preclude a state law damages action. In holding to the
contrary, the Court in effect rewards petitioner's breach of its
state law contractual duty to notify respondents that it was paying
a higher rate to a comparable supplier.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE REHNQUIST joins,
dissenting.
From 1961 through 1975, petitioner Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co.
(Arkla) acquired natural gas from two different sources in the
Sligo Gas Field in Louisiana. By the terms of a contract that was
entirely consistent with the federal policies reflected in the
Natural Gas Act, 52 Stat. 821, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717
et seq. (1976 ed. and Supp. III), Arkla was obligated to
pay both sources of supply the same price. [
Footnote 2/1] In fact, however, unbeknown to
respondents, and in violation of their contract, Arkla paid them a
substantially lower price than it paid to the United States, its
other source for Sligo Field gas. No one, not even Arkla, suggests
that there is any legitimate justification for the
discrimination.
Despite the fact that Arkla breached its contract, and despite
the fact that no federal policy is threatened by allowing the
Louisiana courts to redress that breach, the Court today denies
respondents the benefit of their lawful bargain. Surely, if the
price paid to the United States was just and reasonable, the same
price paid to private sellers of gas taken from the same field at
the same time and delivered to the same customer also would be just
and reasonable. The statutory policy favors uniformity, not secret
discrimination.
Page 453 U. S. 587
Yet the Court, by a wondrous extension of the so-called "filed
rate doctrine," concludes that the Louisiana courts may not assess
damages against petitioner for breach of its contract to pay
respondents the same price it paid to a comparable supplier.
Because no federal rule of law deprives the State of Louisiana of
the power to prevent Arkla from profiting so handsomely from its
own wrong, and because I believe that enforcement of the state
court's judgment is not only consistent with federal regulatory
policies, but actually will further those policies, I respectfully
dissent.
I
As a result of lengthy proceedings in the state courts, the
relevant facts have been established. Arkla is an integrated
utility company engaged in the natural gas business in six States.
[
Footnote 2/2] Over the years, it
has purchased large quantities of natural gas produced in the Sligo
Gas Field in Bossier Parish, La.; some of that gas was acquired
from respondents, and some from the United States. By law, Arkla
was prohibited from paying either of these suppliers more than the
area ceiling price set by the Federal Power Commission, and it did
not do so. [
Footnote 2/3] By
contract with the United States, Arkla was required to pay an
amount established by reference "to the highest price paid for a
part or for a majority of production of like quality in the same
field." App. 123. By contract with respondents, Arkla was obligated
to pay them a price at least as high as it paid for other gas
produced from any well
Page 453 U. S. 588
located in the Sligo Field. [
Footnote 2/4]
See ante at
453 U. S.
573-574, n. 2. In fact, however, it paid respondents
only about two-thirds of the price paid to the United States.
Arkla did not disclose the price differential to respondents.
The Louisiana Court of Appeal found that, in response to inquiries
from respondents about the arrangement with the United States, "the
officials of Arkla were uncooperative and evasive." 359 So. 2d 255,
264 (1978). That court characterized Arkla's nondisclosure and
evasiveness as "not commendable," but held that, because, under the
law of Louisiana, a "party alleging fraud has the burden of
establishing it by more than a mere preponderance of the evidence,"
respondents had failed to prove that Arkla was guilty of actual
fraud.
Ibid. It is clear, however, that Arkla's failure to
disclose to respondents its discriminatory payments to another
supplier in the same gas field constituted a breach of contract.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Louisiana Supreme Court decided that the damages for Arkla's
breach of contract should be measured by the difference between the
price paid to the United States and the price paid to respondents.
For the period after 1972, when
Page 453 U. S. 589
respondents had been formally certificated as "small producers,"
the court held that respondents had no obligation to file new rate
schedules with the Federal Power Commission because the increased
rates did not exceed the ceiling rate set by the Commission.
[
Footnote 2/6] Although the court
recognized that respondents could not have collected higher prices
during the period between 1961 and 1972 without first filing new
rate schedules with the Commission, [
Footnote 2/7] it held that damages for that period were
nevertheless recoverable for two reasons. First, as a matter of
Louisiana law, when a party's entitlement is subject to a
condition, the condition is considered to have been fulfilled when
performance is prevented by the other party. [
Footnote 2/8] In this case, the court squarely held that
respondents had been effectively precluded from making the
Page 453 U. S. 590
necessary filings by Arkla's failure to inform them of its
contractual arrangement with the United States. [
Footnote 2/9] Second, after noting that respondents
made no claim that they would have been entitled to an increase in
excess of the area base rate ceilings established by the
Commission, [
Footnote 2/10] and
after noting that an order of the Commission had indicated that it
would have approved the rate increase if it had been filed,
[
Footnote 2/11] the court
concluded that
"it was more probable than not that the Commission would have
approved a contractually authorized price increase if the proper
filing procedures had been followed."
368
So. 2d 984, 991 (1979).
Summarizing the effect of the state courts' rulings, these
Page 453 U. S. 591
propositions must be taken as having been established: (1) Arkla
breached its contract with respondents; (2) Arkla is responsible
for respondents' failure to file new rate schedules with the
Commission; (3) if such schedules had been filed, and if Arkla had
paid respondents the same prices it paid to the United States,
those prices would not have exceeded the applicable area rate
ceilings established by the Commission; and (4) because prices well
below the applicable rate ceilings are, at the very least,
presumptively "just and reasonable," it is indeed more probable
than not that the Commission would have approved the new rate
schedule if it had been promptly filed. These propositions are
plainly adequate to support respondents' recovery of damages as a
matter of state law. In my opinion, they also support the
conclusion that the applicable rules of state law have not been
preempted by federal law.
II
Section 4 of the Natural Gas Act, 52 Stat. 822, 15 U.S.C. §
717c, identifies four separate federal policies that are arguably
implicated by this litigation. The judgment of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana is fully consistent with each of these policies.
First, subsection (a) of § 4 requires that all charges paid
or received by regulated companies for the sale of natural gas
shall be "just and reasonable." [
Footnote 2/12] In this case, there is no dispute about
the fact that the prices received from Arkla by the United States
were well below the relevant area ceiling rates fixed by the
Federal Power Commission. It is equally clear that payment of the
same prices to respondents for comparable
Page 453 U. S. 592
gas contemporaneously produced in the same field also would have
been well below the ceiling. Both the Louisiana courts and the
Commission have repeatedly and unambiguously determined that, if
respondents had been paid in accordance with the terms of their
contract, there would have been no violation of the applicable area
ceiling rates. [
Footnote 2/13]
Indeed, in noting that respondents were not required to file new
rates for the period after they had been certificated as small
producers in 1972, the Commission expressly found "that the rates
requested are within what the Commission has determined to be the
zone of reasonableness." [
Footnote
2/14]
Page 453 U. S. 593
It is perfectly clear that an award of damages against Arkla
measured by the prices it paid to the United States will not
violate the Act's substantive prohibition against charging rates
that are not "just and reasonable." That prohibition has the same
application to respondents for the period after 1972, when they
were certificated as small producers, as it does for the period
prior to 1972. In neither of those periods did the Commission
specifically determine that the rates were "just and reasonable,"
but the record makes it clear that those rates were, in fact,
within the zone of reasonableness established by the Commission
during both periods. For the purpose of determining whether damages
are recoverable in a state court breach of contract suit, there is
no reason to treat the two periods differently. There is simply
nothing in this record to suggest that a state court judgment that
has the effect of allowing respondents to receive the same prices
that Arkla paid to the United States would violate the
substantive policy underlying the statutory requirement
that all rates be just and reasonable. [
Footnote 2/15]
Page 453 U. S. 594
Second, subsection (b) of § 4 expresses the strong federal
policy -- reflected in most regulatory statutes -- against
discriminatory pricing. [
Footnote
2/16] The result the Court reaches today not only tolerates a
blatant violation of that policy, but also will encourage such
violations in the future.
Entirely apart from Arkla's contractual undertaking to pay
respondents the same price it paid to other producers of comparable
gas in the same field, this statutory policy surely favors a
holding that results in equal treatment of competing suppliers.
Nothing other than Arkla's proven wrongdoing provides any
explanation for its discrimination against respondents. For no one
has pointed to any even arguably legitimate justification for any
differential pricing at all -- let alone a differential of the
magnitude revealed by this record. The lesson this case will teach
is that, notwithstanding the plain language in § 4(b), it is
perfectly proper to grant an undue preference if one can conceal
it.
Third, subsection (c) of § 4 expresses a policy favoring
the public disclosure of all rates and charges and all contracts
which affect rates. [
Footnote
2/17] The contractual arrangement between
Page 453 U. S. 595
Arkla and the United States relating to production in the Sligo
Gas Field was not made available to the public. Only by resort to
the remedies provided by the Freedom of Information Act were
respondents able to obtain access to that contract and to confirm
their suspicions that Arkla was violating its "favored nations"
undertaking. By rewarding Arkla's successful concealment of a
contract that directly affected rates payable for gas produced in
the Sligo Field, the Court simply ignores the statutory policy
which the Louisiana Supreme Court's judgment would plainly
serve.
Fourth, subsection (d) of § 4 imposes a procedural
requirement that is designed to protect the substantive policy
interests reflected in the three preceding subsections. [
Footnote 2/18] Because none of these
substantive policies is infringed in the slightest by the state
court's judgment, it surely exalts procedure over substance to deny
respondents relief because they were wrongfully prevented from
following the normal statutory procedures.
Under the normal procedures, no change in rates may take effect
until after 30 days' notice is given to the Commission and to the
public by filing a new schedule with the Commission. This filing
requirement is designed to give the Commission the opportunity to
prevent new rates from going into effect if it has reason to
believe the new rates are not just and
Page 453 U. S. 596
reasonable. In this case, if the record provided any basis for
believing that the rates that Arkla paid to the United States were
not just and reasonable -- or that paying the same rates to these
respondents would not have been equally just and reasonable -- it
might make some sense to argue that the filing requirement of
§ 4(d) precludes recovery of damages for breach of contract.
But to regard the filing requirement as an inflexible barrier to
any recovery regardless of the substantive merits of the claim is
neither necessary to further, nor even consistent with, the purpose
of § 4(d). [
Footnote
2/19]
It is commonplace that damages must often be measured by
reference to a standard or an event that did not actually
materialize. When an executory contract is breached, the attempt to
measure the injured party's damages requires an evaluation of the
benefits that probably would have resulted if the breach had not
occurred. [
Footnote 2/20] If an
attorney hired by
Page 453 U. S. 597
respondents to file a new rate schedule negligently failed to do
so, he might defend against a malpractice complaint by arguing that
respondents were not damaged because the Commission would have
rejected the new rates in all events. But if respondents could
prove that rejection was highly unlikely, it would be absurd to
deny them any recovery at all simply because the defendant's own
wrongdoing had made it impossible to know with absolute certainty
that new rates would have been accepted as "just and reasonable."
In damages actions, whether in tort or in breach of contract, it is
often necessary to deal in probabilities.
This case also raises a question that requires the evaluation of
probabilities. Because the rates in issue were below the applicable
Commission ceilings, and because no legitimate reason for rejecting
them has been adduced, it is only reasonable to presume that they
would have become effective routinely. As a garden-variety issue of
damages, there is no significant difference between this case and
one in which a purchaser might have employed thugs to waylay the
respondents' lawyer on the way to the Commission to prevent him
from filing a new schedule.
Nor, in terms of federal regulatory policy, is there any
difference between this case and hypothetical cases involving
actual fraud or violence. [
Footnote
2/21] If damages cannot be measured
Page 453 U. S. 598
by reference to any standard except a rate that has been duly
filed with the Commission in accordance with the procedural
requirements of § 4(d), there could be no state law recovery
no matter what kind of wrong prevented respondents from filing. And
conversely, if a high probability that a timely filing would have
been accepted is an adequate standard for measuring damages in a
tort case, why should not that probability be adequate in a breach
of contract case, as well? The fact that a regulated carrier or
seller has no right to collect a rate or price that has not been
duly filed with the appropriate regulatory body is surely not a
sufficient reason for leaping to the conclusion that an injured
party may never prove damages by reference to a standard that is
less certain than a filed rate.
The federal policy that comes closest to supporting Arkla's
position is that of protecting the Commission's primary
jurisdiction to determine whether or not a new rate is reasonable.
But, in this case, the basic reasonableness determination was made
by the Commission when it established the area rate ceilings.
Because the rates at issue in this case are well below those
ceilings, the danger that a court might venture into the area of
ratemaking on its own is not present. Moreover, on more than one
occasion, Arkla requested the Commission to assume jurisdiction of
this controversy and the Commission consistently declined to do so.
[
Footnote 2/22] In assessing
damages for the breach of an executory contract, the state courts
exercised a jurisdiction that the Commission did not have. In no
sense did the Louisiana courts usurp the primary jurisdiction of
the Commission. In sum, whether we test the state court judgment
against the substantive or the procedural requirements of the
federal statute, it seems perfectly clear that the relief that has
been awarded is fully consistent with federal policy.
Page 453 U. S. 599
III
Although, until today, the term "filed rate doctrine" had never
been used by this Court, our prior decisions have established
rather clear contours for the doctrine. It apparently encompasses
two components, both of which are entirely consistent with the
award of damages ordered by the Louisiana Supreme Court in this
case.
First, the two cases that are generally accepted as the source
of the doctrine,
Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. Northwestern
Public Service Co., 341 U. S. 246,
[
Footnote 2/23] and
T.I.M.E.
Inc. v. United States, 359 U. S. 464,
[
Footnote 2/24] established that
an
Page 453 U. S. 600
entity whose prices or rates are regulated by a federal agency
has no federal right to claim any rate or price that has not been
filed with and approved by the agency. Thus, these respondents,
without either filing the escalated rates or obtaining a waiver of
the filing requirement, have no
federal right to require
Arkla to pay the higher rates. That does not mean, however, that
they have no
contractual right to require Arkla to do so.
Cf. Pan American Petroleum Corp. v. Superior Court,
366 U. S. 656,
366 U. S.
662-664. The question whether a state court could
measure damages for breach of contract, or a tort, by reference to
a rate schedule that presumably would have been accepted if it had
been filed earlier is by no means the same as the question whether
respondents had a federal right to collect such rates. There would
be a valid federal objection to such a damages award if there were
reason to believe that the parties had entered into an agreement to
circumvent either a procedural or a substantive requirement of the
Natural Gas Act, or if the litigation arguably represented a
collusive method of granting an unlawful preference. But no such
considerations are present in this case.
Second,
Montana-Dakota Utilities and
T.I.M.E.
Inc. also recognize that the task of determining in the first
instance what rate should be considered "reasonable" within the
meaning of a regulatory statute is not a judicial task, but rather
is a task for the administrative agency. But when the zone of
reasonableness has already been established by an agency --
Page 453 U. S. 601
as it has been in this case -- that consideration simply does
not apply to an award of damages measured by reference to a
standard that is well within that zone.
In my judgment, the cases which gave rise to the filed rate
doctrine are plainly distinguishable from the present case, and
thus do not support the result the Court reaches today. In
Montana-Dakota Utilities and
T.I.M.E. Inc., the
plaintiff's claim was that the filed rate, which had already been
approved by the relevant federal regulatory body, was nonetheless
unreasonable in violation of federal statutory requirements.
[
Footnote 2/25] The plaintiff's
suit thus directly challenged the rate determinations of the
federal agency without compliance with the judicial review
procedures established in the governing statute. [
Footnote 2/26] In the present case, in contrast,
respondents do not contend that the filed rate, approved by the
Commission, is unreasonable or otherwise inconsistent with federal
law; they contend only that they had a contractual right to receive
a different reasonable rate under their contract with Arkla.
Respondents do not seek to enforce a federal right outside
Page 453 U. S. 602
the procedures established for the vindication of such rights,
nor do they seek to overturn the determinations of the expert
federal agency; respondents merely seek to recover the higher of
two rates, both of which are within the federal zone of
reasonableness, because it is the rate they contracted to receive.
[
Footnote 2/27]
Cf.
Hewitt-Robins Inc. v. Eastern Freight-Ways, Inc., 371 U. S.
84.
The unanimous decision in
United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile
Gas Service Co., 350 U. S. 332,
sheds more light on this case than do the cases on which the Court
places its primary reliance. In
United Gas, United, a
regulated natural gas producer, supplied gas to Mobile under a
long-term contract which had been filed with and approved by the
Federal Power Commission. United thereafter filed with the
Commission a new rate that purported to increase the price payable
by Mobile under the contract. The Commission denied Mobile's
request that it reject United's filing, and held that the increased
rate was the applicable rate unless and until it was declared
unlawful by the Commission.
Id. at
350 U. S.
336-337. This Court rejected the Commission's position,
holding that compliance with the filing procedure of § 4(d)
was effective to establish a new rate only if that rate were
otherwise lawful, that is, in compliance with contractual
requirements.
Id. at
350 U. S.
339-340. The Court found that, although the new rate
filed by United had been established in compliance with federal
Page 453 U. S. 603
law, it was unlawful under the contract. The Court accordingly
held that the Commission had erred in failing to reject United's
filing, and directed that United make restitution to Mobile of all
overpayments.
Id. at
350 U. S.
347.
Under the rationale in
United Gas, private parties have
a right to establish a lawful rate by contract as long as the rate
they have agreed upon is just and reasonable. When the contract
rate is within the zone of reasonableness established by the
Commission, that contract rate is presumptively lawful, [
Footnote 2/28] and not subject to
unilateral change. [
Footnote
2/29] The Commission has no power to specify a rate other than
the contract rate when that rate is itself just and reasonable.
[
Footnote 2/30] Neither the filed
rate
Page 453 U. S. 604
doctrine, nor any other principle of federal regulatory law,
requires the result the Court announces today.
IV
In an attempt to bolster its reliance on the filed rate
doctrine, Arkla contends that we cannot be sure that, if
respondents had been notified of the United States lease and had
filed a new rate schedule in 1961, the Commission would have
approved their new rates. This argument is supported by statements
in an order entered by the Commission on November 5, 1980.
[
Footnote 2/31] That order was
entered after the petition for certiorari had been filed, and after
the United States and the Commission had taken the position as
amici in this Court
Page 453 U. S. 605
that the Louisiana Supreme Court had erred in awarding damages
for the period between 1961 and 1972. [
Footnote 2/32] Because the Commission had decided to
lend its support to Arkla in this Court, it is not surprising that
some of the statements in that order are consistent with Arkla's
argument. What is most significant about that order is the fact
that the Commission does not advance any reason why a rate schedule
filed by respondents in 1961 in accordance with the favored nations
clause of their contract with Arkla would not have been deemed just
and reasonable.
Although the Commission stated that it was reluctant to
speculate about what its predecessors might have done in response
to such a filing, the only issues that it now can describe as
speculative are issues that have been decided against Arkla. I do
not believe speculation that the Commission might have committed
error in 1961 is an adequate reason for not presuming that just and
reasonable rates would have been routinely approved when filed.
The first issue on which the Commission indicates a reluctance
to speculate is a question of contract interpretation, namely,
whether the favored nations clause had been triggered by Arkla's
arrangement with the United States. There is no reason for the
Commission, or anyone else, to speculate on this question. The
Commission twice was presented with the opportunity to decide this
question, and it twice declined
Page 453 U. S. 606
to do so. [
Footnote 2/33] That
question now has been correctly resolved by the Louisiana courts.
The other issue on which the Commission declines to speculate is
whether its predecessor would have regarded a favored nations
clause in a pre-1961 contract as lawful. Again, speculation is
wholly unnecessary. The Commission actually confronted that precise
issue in 1961. Although it concluded that such escalation clauses
should be prohibited in the future, it specifically decided that it
would not eliminate such provisions from previously executed
contracts. [
Footnote 2/34] That
the Commission's treatment of that issue in
Page 453 U. S. 607
1961 is applicable to the contracts between respondents and
Arkla is demonstrated by the fact that the escalated rates are
accepted by the Court and the Commission for the purpose of
computing respondents' damages for the period between 1972 and
1975. If the favored nations clause in this pre-1961 contract were
not perfectly lawful, respondents would receive no damages at all,
rather than the truncated recovery which the Court's holding today
allows.
The Commission also has expressed concern about the impact of
this damages award on its broader "regulatory responsibilities."
See Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 13 FERC �
61,100, p. 61,213 (1980). Two specific concerns are identified --
that the burden of the award might be passed on to consumers and
that it might give rise to other claims that favored nations
clauses have been breached. The short answer to the first concern
is that there is no more reason to assume that this award will
justify an increase in utility rates than any other damages
judgment that a public utility may be required to pay; if the
regulatory concern is valid, the agency having jurisdiction over
Arkla's sales has ample authority to require its stockholders,
rather than its customers, to bear this additional cost. The second
concern seems exaggerated, because it applies only to contracts
executed before 1961,
see supra at
453 U. S. 606
and this page and
453
U.S. 571fn2/34|>n. 34, and it seems unlikely that many large
purchasers of natural gas could successfully have concealed
violations of escalation clauses from their suppliers. To the
extent that this case does have counterparts in such contracts,
however, it seems to me
Page 453 U. S. 608
that those cases should be decided in the same way. After all,
we are concerned here merely with cases in which a utility has
failed to pay an agreed price that is well below the just and
reasonable ceiling set by the Commission.
I agree that speculation about what the Commissioners might have
done in 1961 is inappropriate. Unlike the Court, however, I see no
need to speculate in this case. Rather than speculate, I would
presume that the Commission would have acted in a lawful manner and
that it would then have perceived the correct answer to disputed
questions that have subsequently been resolved.
In my judgment, the Court's decision today is founded on nothing
more than the mechanical application to this case of principles
developed in other contexts to serve other purposes. The Court
commits manifest error by applying the filed rate doctrine to
ratify action by Arkla that not only breached its contract with
respondents, but also directly undercut the substantive policies
identified in § 4 of the Natural Gas Act. Because absolutely
no federal interest is served by today's intrusion into state
contract law, I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
This obligation was created by the "favored nations clause" in
the natural gas sales contract between Arkla and respondents. The
clause is quoted
ante at
453 U. S.
573-574, n. 2.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Arkla does business in Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma,
Kansas, and Missouri.
[
Footnote 2/3]
For example, in 1968, the relevant area base rate ceiling
established by the Federal Power Commission for sales of natural
gas was 18.6 cents per thousand cubic feet (Mcf).
See Arkansas
Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 56 F.P.C. 2905, 2906 (1976). The
trial court in this case found that, during 1968, Arkla paid the
United States a fraction over 14 cents per Mcf.
See App.
11. Under the terms of the 1952 contract with respondents, Arkla
paid a fraction under 10 cents per Mcf for gas produced during
1968.
See id. at 98.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Although Arkla consistently has contended that its lease
arrangement with the United States was not a "purchase" within the
meaning of the favored nations clause in its contract with
respondents, that issue has been resolved against Arkla by every
court that has considered it.
See id. at 16; 359 So. 2d
255, 261-262 (La.App.1978);
368
So. 2d 984, 989, and n. 4 (La.1979).
See also Eastern
Petroleum Co. v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 447 F.2d 569 (CA7 1971).
The Court properly declines to reopen this question of state law.
See ante at
453 U. S. 579,
n. 9.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Because the Louisiana courts held that the contract required
Arkla to pay to respondents the higher price that was being paid to
the United States, and because such payments could not have been
made without revealing the existence of the higher price, there can
be no doubt about Arkla's contractual duty to disclose the
differential even though the Louisiana Supreme Court had no
occasion to comment on this specific obligation other than by
noting the applicability of the principle "that one should not be
able to take advantage of his own wrongful act." 368 So. 2d at
990.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The court explained the significance of respondents'
certification as small producers:
"A 'small producer' (as defined by the Commission's regulations)
may obtain a 'small producer certificate' exempting it from the
requirement of having to file a rate schedule as long as the
increase in rate does not exceed the ceiling rate set by the
Commission.
See 18 C.F.R. § 157.40. Several of the
plaintiffs obtained 'small producer certificates' in October, 1972,
and the certificates issued to those parties were made effective as
to all plaintiffs by order of the Commission."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Throughout this opinion, the term "Commission" refers to the
Federal Power Commission with respect to actions taken before
October 1, 1977, and to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
with respect to actions taken thereafter.
See ante at
453 U. S. 574,
n. 3.
[
Footnote 2/8]
This state law rule was explained, as follows:
"Article 2040, properly interpreted, means that the condition is
considered fulfilled when it is the debtor, bound under that
condition, who prevents the fulfillment.
George W. Garig
Transfer v. Harris, [226 La. 117,
75 So.
2d 28 (1954)];
Southport Mill v. Friedrichs, [171 La.
786, 132 So. 346 (1931)];
Morrison v. Mioton, [163 La.
1065, 113 So. 456 (1927)]. This rule is but an application of the
long-established principles of law that he who prevents a thing may
not avail himself of the nonperformance he has occasioned, and that
one should not be able to take advantage of his own wrongful act.
See Cox v. Department of Highways, 252 La. 22,
209 So. 2d
9 (1968)."
368 So. 2d at 990.
[
Footnote 2/9]
"To realize this higher, contractually authorized price,
plaintiffs, pursuant to the Natural Gas Act, were required to file
new rate schedules with the Commission. However, plaintiffs were
effectively precluded from making the requisite filings because
they were not, at any time, informed by defendant that it was, in
fact, paying a higher price to another party seller. Although
defendant was only bound to pay plaintiffs a higher price if
plaintiffs filed new rate schedules with the Commission, it is
apparent that defendant prevented the fulfillment of that condition
(plaintiffs filing with the Commission) by failing to inform
plaintiffs of its contractual arrangements with the United States
government. Pursuant to article 2040 and this court's jurisprudence
interpreting that article, the condition (that plaintiffs file new
rate schedules) is considered fulfilled."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/10]
The Louisiana Supreme Court expressly noted its understanding of
respondents' position:
"We note that plaintiffs make no claim that they would have been
entitled to a price increase under their contract in excess of the
respective area base rate ceilings for sales of natural gas as
established by order of the Commission."
Id. at 991, n. 7.
[
Footnote 2/11]
"At trial, a November 8, 1976, order of the Commission was
produced which indicated the maximum rates to which plaintiffs
would have been entitled if contractually authorized and
if proper filing procedures had been followed (Exhibit
59). The Commission clearly indicated in its order that it would
have approved such rates. No evidence was adduced by defendant to
establish that Commission approval would have been unlikely."
Id. at 991 (emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 2/12]
Section 4(a) of the Act provides:
"All rates and charges made, demanded, or received by any
natural gas company for or in connection with the transportation or
sale of natural gas subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission,
and all rules and regulations affecting or pertaining to such rates
or charges, shall be just and reasonable, and any such rate or
charge that is not just and reasonable is declared to be
unlawful."
52 Stat. 822, 15 U.S.C. § 717c(a).
[
Footnote 2/13]
See App. 18-19; 368 So. 2d at 991, and n. 7; 56 F.P.C.
at 2906.
[
Footnote 2/14]
In an order entered on May 18, 1979, declining to exercise
jurisdiction to determine whether Arkla had violated the favored
nations clause in its contract with respondents, the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission stated:
"Finally, we must decide now what impact this case has on our
regulatory responsibilities. This type of case, involving small
producers not required by regulation under the Natural Gas Act to
file for rate increases authorized by contract, is not a matter of
great import to our regulatory responsibility, as we find no need
for a uniform interpretation of a contractual provision, and find
that the rates requested are within what the Commission has
determined to be the zone of reasonableness."
"On the facts of this case, the damages do not exceed applicable
area ceiling rates. The Louisiana Supreme Court concluded that the
Hall group was entitled to damages measured by the difference
between the price Arkla paid the United States under the royalty
agreement and the price it paid the Hall group. In so doing, it
noted that it considered the fact that the Commission, in previous
orders in this case, had stated the maximum rates to which the Hall
group would have been entitled if contractually authorized and if
proper filing procedures had been followed. The Supreme Court of
Louisiana further stated:"
"We note that plaintiffs make no claim that they would have been
entitled to a price increase under their contract in excess of the
respective area base rate ceilings for sales of natural gas as
established by order of the Commission."
"In light of the fact that the Hall group makes no claim for
damages higher than the applicable area ceiling rates, that the
Louisiana Supreme Court did not authorize rates higher than the
applicable area ceiling rates, and that the state district court on
remand from the Louisiana Supreme Court will presumably not award
damages higher than the area ceiling rates, we do not feel that our
regulatory responsibilities are so affected that we must exercise
our jurisdiction in this case."
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 7 FERC �
61,175, pp. 61,323-61,324 (1979) (footnotes omitted).
[
Footnote 2/15]
Arkla has argued that the award of damages improperly included
an amount attributable to the liquefiable hydrocarbons in the
natural gas produced from respondents' wells. If that argument were
valid, it would simply establish an error in the computation of the
amount required to be paid to respondents under their contract, and
would require adjustment of the post-1972, as well as the pre-1972,
award. No tribunal has found any greater merit in this argument
than in Arkla's continuing claims that it did not breach its
contract because its lease arrangement with the United States did
not trigger the favored nations clause, and that respondents are
not really small producers. At any rate, Arkla has challenged the
Louisiana courts' computation of damages in a separate petition for
certiorari, No. 79-1896,
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v.
Hall (vacated and remanded,
post, p. 917), and the
question thus is not properly presented here.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Section 4(b) provides:
"No natural gas company shall, with respect to any
transportation or sale of natural gas subject to the jurisdiction
of the Commission, (1) make or grant any undue preference or
advantage to any person or subject any person to any undue
prejudice or disadvantage, or (2) maintain any unreasonable
difference in rates, charges, service, facilities, or in any other
respect, either as between localities or as between classes of
service."
52 Stat. 822, 15 U.S.C. § 717c(b).
[
Footnote 2/17]
Section 4(c) provides:
"Under such rules and regulations as the Commission may
prescribe, every natural gas company shall file with the
Commission, within such time . . . and in such form as the
Commission may designate, and shall keep open in convenient form
and place for public inspection, schedules showing all rates and
charges for any transportation or sale subject to the jurisdiction
of the Commission, and the classifications, practices, and
regulations affecting such rates and charges, together with all
contracts which in any manner affect or relate to such rates,
charges, classifications, and services."
52 Stat. 822, 15 U.S.C. § 717c(c).
[
Footnote 2/18]
Section 4(d) provides:
"Unless the Commission otherwise orders, no change shall be made
by any natural gas company in any such rate, charge,
classification, or service, or in any rule, regulation, or contract
relating thereto, except after thirty days' notice to the
Commission and to the public. Such notice shall be given by filing
with the Commission and keeping open for public inspection new
schedules stating plainly the change or changes to be made in the
schedule or schedules then in force and the time when the change or
changes will go into effect. The Commission, for good cause shown,
may allow changes to take effect without requiring the thirty days'
notice herein provided for by an order specifying the changes so to
be made and the time when they shall take effect and the manner in
which they shall be filed and published."
52 Stat. 823, 15 U.S.C. § 717c(d).
[
Footnote 2/19]
One of the weaknesses in the Court's consideration of this issue
is its implicit assumption that the filing requirement has the same
importance under all regulatory statutes. Under the Natural Gas
Act, however, the source of the rate is the parties' contract,
which must be filed to enable the Commission to review its
reasonableness; in contrast, under the Interstate Commerce Act,
because private rate agreements are precluded, the source of the
rate is the carrier's filed tariff. As Justice Harlan pointed out
for a unanimous Court in
United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas
Service Corp., 350 U. S. 332,
350 U. S.
338:
"In construing the Act, we should bear in mind that it evinces
no purpose to abrogate private rate contracts as such. To the
contrary, by requiring contracts to be filed with the Commission,
the Act expressly recognizes that rates to particular customers may
be set by individual contracts. In this respect, the Act is in
marked contrast to the Interstate Commerce Act, which, in effect,
precludes private rate agreements by its requirement that the rates
to all shippers be uniform, a requirement which made unnecessary
any provision for filing contracts."
[
Footnote 2/20]
Every first-year law student is familiar with this rule:
"Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has
broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in
respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and
reasonably be considered either arising naturally,
i.e.,
according to the usual course of things, from such breach of
contract itself, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been
in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the
contract, as the probable result of the breach of it."
Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Ex. 341, 354, 156 Eng.Rep. 145,
151 (1854).
[
Footnote 2/21]
The Court seems to attach great significance to the fact that
respondents failed to prove that Arkla was guilty of actual fraud,
see ante at
453 U. S.
583-584, and n. 13, but suggests no reason why the case
might be decided differently if actual fraud had been proved by
clear and convincing evidence. Surely a state court should not be
able to avoid federal preemption of state remedies by applying a
different label to conduct with precisely the same economic
consequences.
Cf. Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. Northwestern
Public Service Co., 341 U. S. 246,
341 U. S.
252-253.
[
Footnote 2/22]
See Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 55 F.P.C. 1018
(1976); 7 FERC � 61,175 (1979).
[
Footnote 2/23]
In
Montana-Dakota Utilities, the plaintiff claimed
injury because the filed rates that had applied to past
transactions with an affiliate allegedly were unjust and
unreasonable, and had been fraudulently established. The ultimate
issue was whether a federal claim for relief had been alleged,
because there was no diversity of citizenship to support federal
jurisdiction. The Court first held that the Federal Power Act's
requirement that rates be reasonable did not provide a statutory
basis for a federal cause of action, because the courts have no
authority to determine what a reasonable rate in the past should
have been. The Court then held that the allegations of fraud added
nothing to the plaintiff's federal claim. Assuming that an
actionable wrong had been alleged, the Court concluded that, in the
absence of diversity, a federal court could only dismiss the
complaint for failure to state a claim cognizable in federal court.
And finally, the Court rejected the argument of Justice Frankfurter
in dissent that it should fashion an implied federal judicial
remedy in which the issue of reasonableness could be referred to
the Commission. In refusing to create a federal remedy for a common
law fraud, the Court assumed that appropriate relief would be
available in a state tribunal. Its opinion surely cannot be read as
preempting any such state claim.
[
Footnote 2/24]
In
T.I.M.E. Inc., the Court refused to find a federal
remedy for a shipper who claimed that the rates charged by a motor
carrier were unreasonable and unlawful even though they had been
properly filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The case
involved little more than a determination that the express remedies
afforded against rail carriers in Part I and against water carriers
in Part III of the Interstate Commerce Act, having been
deliberately omitted from Part II, which regulated motor carriers,
would not be judicially implied. In
T.I.M.E. Inc., as in
Montana-Dakota Utilities, the question was whether a
federal court had authority to decide that a filed rate was
unlawful because it violated the reasonableness requirement of the
relevant regulatory statute. In the present case, however, there is
no claim that the price that Arkla paid to respondents was illegal
in any sense. Both that price and the higher price paid to the
United States were well within the zone of reasonableness and in
full compliance with the statute's substantive requirements. The
fact that respondent might not be able to assert a federal claim
for violation of the federal statute sheds no light on the question
whether their state law cause of action for breach of contract may
be maintained.
[
Footnote 2/25]
See also Texas Pacific R. Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil
Co., 204 U. S. 426.
[
Footnote 2/26]
The concise statement of the holding in
Montana-Dakota
Utilities indicates that the Court's central concern was to
bar actions which asserted a federal right to a "reasonable" rate
other than that declared to be reasonable by the Commission:
"We hold that the right to a reasonable rate is the right to the
rate which the Commission files or fixes, and that, except for
review of the Commission's orders, the courts can assume no right
to a different one on the ground that, in its opinion, it is the
only or the more reasonable one."
341 U.S. at
341 U. S.
251-252. Of course, in this case, respondents are not
invoking a federal right to receive a reasonable rate, but rather a
state law right to receive the rate for which they contracted.
Similarly, the Louisiana Supreme Court's decision is not based on a
determination that the rate requested by respondents is "the only
or the more reasonable one," but rather on a determination that
respondents are entitled to that rate under their contract with
Arkla.
[
Footnote 2/27]
This distinction not only undercuts the Court's reliance on the
filed rate doctrine, but also renders wholly inapposite our
decision earlier this Term in
Chicago & North Western
Transp. Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile Co., 450 U.
S. 311, on which the Court relies heavily.
See
ante at
453 U. S.
580-582. The filed rate doctrine was not remotely
implicated in that decision. Our holding in
Kalo Brick
that the Interstate Commerce Commission had decided the precise
issues that the shipper sought to raise in state court litigation
is wholly dissimilar from this case in which the regulatory agency
rejected the opportunity to decide the questions presented to the
Louisiana courts. This is not merely an attempt by a disappointed
litigant to gain from the state courts the relief it has been
denied by the Commission.
See ante at
453 U. S.
580.
[
Footnote 2/28]
As the Court noted, whenever a new rate is filed, "the
Commission's only concern is with the reasonableness of the
new rate." 350 U.S. at
350 U. S. 340
(emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 2/29]
This prohibition is founded not only on the law of contracts,
but also on the Act itself:
"Our conclusion that the Natural Gas Act does not empower
natural gas companies unilaterally to change their contracts fully
promotes the purposes of the Act. By preserving the integrity of
contracts, it permits the stability of supply arrangements which
all agree is essential to the health of the natural gas
industry."
Id. at
350 U. S.
344.
[
Footnote 2/30]
While there are differences between this case and
United
Gas, it seems to me that the cases are nonetheless closely
analogous. In the present case, as in
United Gas, one
party to a duly filed contract attempted unilaterally to change the
price at which natural gas would be sold under the contract. In
United Gas, United did so directly by filing an increased
rate with the Commission; in this case, the unilateral change was
accomplished indirectly when Arkla prevented respondents from
taking the steps necessary to recover the contractually authorized
higher rate. Of course, in
United Gas, the lawful contract
rate had actually been approved by the Commission, while in this
case, the contract rate claimed by respondents has never been
filed. This distinction is not, however, of controlling
significance. In
United Gas, the Court was confronted with
two rates, both presumptively reasonable, of which only one was
lawful under the contract. In the present case, we are confronted
with essentially the same situation. While the rate ultimately
awarded in
United Gas had, in fact, been filed with the
Commission, it was not the rate currently recognized by the
Commission as "just and reasonable," because it had been replaced
by the new rate filed by United. The Court nonetheless directed
that Mobile pay only the old rate, which the Commission's order had
purported to supersede. The lawful rate in
United Gas is
analogous to the contractually authorized rate in this case,
because it was presumptively reasonable, having received Commission
approval, but was not the currently applicable filed rate for the
gas sales at issue. In light of this fact, I can see no reason why
respondents should be precluded from recovering from Arkla a
presumptively reasonable rate, well below applicable Commission
rate ceilings, merely because Arkla's own breach of contract
prevented respondents from filing that rate with the
Commission.
[
Footnote 2/31]
The Commission stated:
"Finally, we confess that we are at least troubled by the
prospect of speculating as to what the Commission would or would
not have done in 1961 had it been confronted at that time with a
rate increase filing by the Hall group. . . . Whether the
Commission in 1961 would have provided a forum for resolving the
contractual dispute is a question we cannot answer definitively. .
. . At that time, the Commission might well have concluded that the
favored nations clause was not triggered. More importantly, even if
the Commission in 1961 had reached the same contractional
interpretation as the Louisiana court, the Commission might have
determined that the public interest would not permit the grant of
rate increases based upon the triggering of favored nations clauses
even in existing contracts."
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v. Hall, 13 FERC �
61,100, p. 61,213 (1980).
[
Footnote 2/32]
The petition was filed on May 29, 1979. On October 1, 1979, the
Court requested the views of the Solicitor General. A brief was
filed by the Solicitor General on behalf of the United States and
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on February 11, 1980, in
which the
amici took the position that the Louisiana
Supreme Court had erred. The
amici maintained that the
error was sufficiently serious to warrant review, but recommended
that the Court defer action until the Commission had acted on
respondents' request for a waiver of the § 4(d) filing
requirement. The Commission denied that request in its November 5
order, and, shortly thereafter, the
amici recommended that
certiorari be granted, and that the decision of the Louisiana
Supreme Court be reversed.
[
Footnote 2/33]
On September 11, 1975, Arkla filed a petition with the Federal
Power Commission requesting a declaratory order holding that the
"favored nations" clause in its contract with respondents had not
been triggered by the royalty payments made by Arkla to the United
States. The Commission denied the petition, stating in part:
"This case presents a question of concurrent jurisdiction, not
primary or exclusive jurisdiction. The Commission has jurisdiction
over rates, filing and notice as to both Arkla and Respondents.
While this Commission has jurisdiction to decide the subject
contract question, the Louisiana court also has jurisdiction over
an action based upon asserted breach of contract. Accordingly, we
believe it appropriate to defer to the court to decide these
contract questions."
55 F.P.C. at 1020 (footnote omitted). On May 18, 1979, the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission reexamined this issue and came
to the same conclusion, although for different reasons, in the
order from which I have quoted in
453
U.S. 571fn2/14|>n. 14,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/34]
After explaining its reasons for prohibiting indefinite
escalation clauses in newly executed contracts, the Commission
stated:
"However, we are convinced that we cannot declare the escalation
provisions in Pure's contracts with El Paso void or voidable, and
thus in effect strike them from the contracts. There is no question
but that these exceedingly material parts of the contracts were a
basic part of the exchange between the parties in arriving at these
agreements. Under familiar rules of law, if these material
provisions are stricken, the contracts, which lack any provisions
for the severability of parts found invalid, must also fall. This
would result in legal and regulatory problems that might cause
material harm to the public, harm that might well exceed the
injurious effects of the escalation provisions themselves. For
example, if these provisions were stricken and the contracts fell,
the producer's sales might then presumably constitute
ex
parte offerings of gas and the producer could change its rates
at will, unimpeded by any contractual limitations of the kind that
presently exist. Thus, instead of being limited under the
Mobile and related decisions only to increases permitted
by contractual provisions, the company could file for increases
whenever it happened to feel justified in doing so. Thus, the
uncertainty and spiraling prices resulting from the escalation
clauses might well be compounded many times over."
The Pre Oil Co., 25 F.P.C. 383, 388-389 (1961).