Following this Court's decision in the
CATCO case,
360 U. S. 378, and
its vacation of a judgment upholding initial natural gas prices of
21.4� to 23.8� per Mcf. for numerous gas producers in southern
Louisiana, the Federal Power Commission (FPC) instituted an area
rate proceeding, from which the present applications were severed
for a separate hearing. The producers were advised that they would
have to refund amounts ultimately found inconsistent with the
public interest and necessity requirements of § 7 of the Natural
Gas Act. Following the hearing, the FPC imposed conditions on the
certificates granted,
viz., that (1) the producers start
service at 18.5� per Mcf., plus 1.5� tax reimbursement where
applicable -- the "in-line" price for FPC-certificated gas sales
for the contracts here involved, and (2) the producers should not,
before establishment of just and reasonable area rates or July 1,
1967, whichever should be earlier, file rates above 23.55�, the
level at which the FPC found filings might trigger other producers'
increased rates under contract escalation clauses with the
pipelines here involved. The FPC also ordered refunded the excess
of charges under the original certificate, over the proper initial
prices. The Court of Appeals held on review that (1) the producers
should not have been limited to an initial "in-line" gas price
without the FPC's considering evidence of what would be a just and
reasonable price; (2) the FPC lacked power to fix a producer's
maximum future rates; and (3) the measure of the refunds should
have been the difference between the original contract price and
the ultimate just and reasonable price.
Held:
1. The FPC had ample power under § 7 of the Natural Gas Act to
protect the public interest by requiring as an interim
Page 382 U. S. 224
measure that interstate gas prices be no higher than existing
levels under other contemporaneous certificates,
i.e., the
"in-line" prices, without considering the extensive evidence under
which just and reasonable rates are fixed under § 5. Pp.
382 U. S.
227-228.
2. It was a proper exercise of its administrative expertise for
the FPC to fix the 23.55� rate limit, beyond which it found that a
general price rise might be triggered by escalation during the
interim period. Pp.
382 U. S.
228-229.
3. In the exercise of its authorized power to order that refunds
be paid as promptly as possible, the FPC could properly measure the
refunds due by the difference between the original contract rates
which it had erroneously sanctioned and the "in-line" rates; and
the FPC was justified in imposing interest to prevent unjust
enrichment. Pp.
382 U. S.
229-230.
335 F.2d 1004 reversed.
Page 382 U. S. 225
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Power Commission in 1958-1959 granted unconditional
certificates of public convenience and necessity to numerous
producers of gas in south Louisiana, the sales contracts of the
producers calling for initial prices ranging from 21.4 cents to
23.8 cents per Mcf. After deliveries commenced under those
contracts, consumer interests challenged the orders in various
courts of appeals. The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
sustained the Commission's action (
United Gas Improvement Co.
v. Federal Power Comm'n, 269 F.2d 865) but we vacated the
judgment (
Public Service Comm'n v. Federal Power Comm'n,
361 U. S. 195) for
reconsideration in light of
Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public
Service Comm'n (CATCO), 360 U. S. 378; and
the other courts of appeals did likewise. [
Footnote 1]
The Commission thereupon instituted an area rate proceeding for
south Louisiana and consolidated the remanded
Page 382 U. S. 226
cases with that proceeding. 25 F.P.C. 942. It advised the
producers of their potential obligation to refund any amounts
eventually found to be inconsistent "with the requirements of the
public interest and necessity" under § 7 of the Natural Gas Act, 52
Stat. 824, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 717 F. 27 F.P.C. 15. Later, the
Commission, in the interest of expedition, severed the present
group of applications and set them for a hearing in a consolidated
proceeding under § 7. 27 F.P.C. 482. At the end, the Commission
imposed two conditions on the certificates granted in these cases.
First, it provided that the producers commence service at 18.5
cents per Mcf., plus 1.5 cents tax reimbursement where applicable,
a price that it found to be "in line" with prices for
Commission-certificated sales of gas from the southern Louisiana
production area under generally contemporaneous contracts, 30
F.P.C. 283, 288-289. Second, it provided that, until just and
reasonable area rates are determined for south Louisiana, or until
July 1, 1967, whichever is earlier, the producers shall not file
any increased rates above 23.55 cents, the level at which rate
filings might trigger increased rates by other producers under the
escalation provisions of their contracts with the pipeline
companies here involved. 30 F.P.C. 283, 298.
In addition, the Commission ordered the producers to refund to
their customers the amounts in excess of the proper initial price
which they had already collected under the original certificate. 30
F.P.C. 283, 290.
On review, the Court of Appeals held that the Commission erred
in limiting producers to an initial "in-line" price without first
canvassing evidence bearing on the question of what would be a just
and reasonable price for the gas. It further held that the
Commission had no power to place an upper limit on future rates
that a producer might file. Finally, the Court of Appeals,
while
Page 382 U. S. 227
upholding the power of the Commission to order refunds, held
that the measure of such refunds was not to be the difference
between the "in-line" price and the original contract price, but
between the latter and the just and reasonable price subsequently
to be fixed. 335 F.2d 1004. We granted certiorari,
380 U.
S. 931. We reverse the Court of Appeals.
We think the Commission acted lawfully and responsibly in line
with our decision in the
CATCO case, where we held that it
need not permit gas to be sold in the interstate market at the
producer's contract price, pending determination of just and
reasonable rates under § 5, 52 Stat. 823, 15 U.S.C. § 717d.
360 U. S. 360 U.S.
378,
360 U. S.
388-391. Rather, we held that there is ample power under
§ 7(e), [
Footnote 2] to attach
appropriate protective conditions.
And see Federal Power Comm'n
v. Hunt, 376 U. S. 515,
376 U. S.
524-527. The fixing of an initial "in-line" price
establishes a firm price at which a producer may operate, pending
determination of a just and reasonable rate, without any contingent
obligation to make refunds should a just and reasonable rate turn
out to be lower than the "in-line" price. Consumer protection is
afforded by keeping the "in-line" price at the level where
substantial amounts of gas have been certificated to enter the
market under other contemporaneous certificates, no longer subject
to judicial review or in any way "suspect." We believe the
Commission can properly conclude under § 7 that adequate protection
to the public interest requires as an interim measure that gas not
enter the interstate market at prices higher than existing levels.
To consider in this § 7 proceeding the mass of evidence relevant to
the fixing of just and reasonable
Page 382 U. S. 228
rates under § 5 might, in practical effect, render nugatory any
effort to fix initial prices. [
Footnote 3] We said in
CATCO that § 7 procedures
are designed "to hold the line awaiting adjudication of a just and
reasonable rate" (360 U.S. at
360 U. S.
392), and that "the inordinate delay" in § 5 proceedings
(360 U.S. at
360 U. S. 391)
should not cripple them.
The second condition, which temporarily bars rate increases
beyond 23.55 cents per Mcf., was likewise aimed at keeping the
general price level relatively constant pending determination of
the just and reasonable rate. We noted in
Federal Power Comm'n
v. Hunt, supra, at
376 U. S. 524,
that "a triggering of price rises often results from the
out-of-line initial pricing of certificated gas," and that the
possibility of refund does not afford sufficient protection.
And see Federal Power Comm'n v. Texaco Inc., 377 U. S.
33,
377 U. S. 42-43.
We think, contrary to the Court of Appeals, that there was ample
power under § 7(e) for the Commission to attach these conditions
for consumer protection during this interim period though the
certificate was not a temporary one, as in
Hunt, but a
permanent one,
Page 382 U. S. 229
as in
CATCO and
Federal Power Comm'n v. Texaco
Inc., supra.
The "in-line" price of 18.5 cents is supported by the contract
prices in the south Louisiana area that were not "suspect," and the
selection of 23.55 cents beyond which a price increase might
trigger escalation reflects the Commission's expertise.
We also conclude that the Commission's refund order was
allowable. We reject, as did the Court of Appeals below, the
suggestion that the Commission lacked authority to order any
refund. While the Commission "has no power to make reparation
orders,"
Federal Power Comm'n v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,
320 U. S. 591,
320 U. S. 618,
its power to fix rates under § 5 being prospective only.
Atlantic Refining Co. v. Public Service Comm'n, supra, at
360 U. S. 389,
it is not so restricted where its order, which never became final,
has been overturned by a reviewing court. Here, the original
certificate orders were subject to judicial review; and judicial
review at times results in the return of benefits received under
the upset administrative order.
See Securities & Exchange
Comm'n v. Chenery Corp., 332 U. S. 194,
332 U. S.
200-201. An agency, like a court, can undo what is
wrongfully done by virtue of its order. Under these circumstances,
the Commission could properly conclude that the public interest
required the producers to make refunds [
Footnote 4] for the period in which
Page 382 U. S. 230
they sold their gas at prices exceeding those properly
determined to be in the public interest.
We think that the Commission could properly measure the refund
by the difference between the rates charged and the "in-line" rates
to which the original certificates should have been conditioned.
The Court of Appeals would delay the payment of the refund until
the "just and reasonable" rate could be determined. We have said
elsewhere that it is the duty of the Commission, "where refunds are
found due, to direct their payment at the earliest possible moment
consistent with due process."
Federal Power Comm'n v. Tennessee
Gas Transmission Co., 371 U. S. 145,
371 U. S. 155.
These excessive rates have been collected since 1958; under the
circumstances, the Commission was not required to delay this refund
further. And the imposition of interest on refunds is not an
inappropriate means of preventing unjust enrichment.
See
Texaco, Inc. v. Federal Power Comm'n, 290 F.2d 149, 157;
Philip Carey Mfg. Co. v. Labor Board, 331 F.2d 720,
729-731.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS took no part in the consideration or decision
of these cases.
* Together with No. 22,
Public Service Commission of New
York v. Callery Properties, Inc., et al., No. 26,
Ocean
Drilling & Exploration Co. v. Federal Power Commission et
al., and No. 32,
Federal Power Commission v. Callery
Properties, Inc., et al., also on certiorari to the same
court.
[
Footnote 1]
See United Gas Improvement Co. v. Federal Power Comm'n,
283 F.2d 817;
Public Service Comm'n v. Federal Power
Comm'n, 109 U.S.App.D.C. 292, 287 F.2d 146;
United Gas
Improvement Co. v. Federal Power Comm'n, 287 F.2d 159;
United Gas Improvement Co. v. Federal Power Comm'n, 290
F.2d 133; and
United Gas Improvement Co. v. Federal Power
Comm'n, 290 F.2d 147.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 7(e) provides in part:
"The Commission shall have the power to attach to the issuance
of the certificate and to the exercise of the rights granted
thereunder such reasonable terms and conditions as the public
convenience and necessity may require."
[
Footnote 3]
In the early post-
CATCO cases, the Commission
apparently proceeded on a case-by-case basis, considering whatever
evidence might have been presented.
See, e.g., Continental Oil
Co., 27 F.P.C. 96, 102-108. Experience convinced it that the
minimal utility derived from cost and economic trend evidence was
outweighed by the administrative burdens and delays its
consideration inevitably produced.
See Skelly Oil Co., 28
F.P.C. 401, 410-412. The Commission properly and constructively
exercised its discretion in declining to consider this large
quantity of evidence. To have done so would have required a
considerable expenditure of manpower,
cf. State of Wisconsin v.
Federal Power Comm'n, 373 U. S. 294,
373 U. S. 313.
We have previously encouraged the Commission to devise reasonable
means of streamlining its procedures,
see Federal Power Comm'n
v. Hunt, supra, at
376 U. S. 527,
and we regard the Commission's decision here as an appropriate step
in that direction.
Cf. Federal Power Comm'n v. Texaco
Inc., 377 U. S. 33,
377 U. S.
44.
[
Footnote 4]
The problem of refunds for amounts collected above the "in-line"
price is not affected here by any filling under § 4 for increases
within the limits of the triggering moratorium. 52 Stat. 822, 15
U.S.C. § 717c. Under § 4(d), a 30-day notice to the Commission and
to the public is required for all rate increases, the Commission
having authority under § 4(e) to suspend the new rate for five
months and thereafter to act only "after full hearings." If the
Commission has not acted at the expiration of the period of
suspension, the new rates become effective. The Commission may
require the producer to furnish a bond, and thereafter may compel
refund of "the portion of such increased rates or charges by its
decision found not justified."
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
While the Commission's expansive view of its powers seems to me
largely defensible in the abstract, I believe its actual decision
reveals error and unfairness in important respects.
I
The price condition, alone of the three key prongs of the
Commission's order, can, in my view, be wholly sustained. The chief
challenge to it stems from the exclusion
Page 382 U. S. 231
in the § 7 hearing of a mass of cost and supply-demand evidence
tendered by producers. [
Footnote
2/1] Although the encompassing § 7 standard of public
convenience and necessity encourages a broad inquiry, the
Commission has given valid reasons for limiting itself to the
in-line price for the time being. Area pricing ultimately aims to
simplify proceedings under the statute, but the transition to it is
said to strain the Commission's present resources for
investigation.
See Wisconsin v. FPC, 373 U.
S. 294,
373 U. S.
298-300,
373 U. S.
313-314. The in-line price, comparatively easy to fix,
provides a firm basis for producers, helps avoid unrefundable
initial overcharges, and exerts a downward pressure on price; at
the same time, producers can file increases under § 4 with a
six-month delay, at most. The Commission has given a fair trial to
cost evidence, [
Footnote 2/2] and
nothing in the offer of proof suggests a supply-demand crisis
warranting court intervention with this administrative
approach.
In locating the in-line price, the Commission has ignored a
number of contemporaneous high-price contracts labeled "suspect"
because then under review, disapproved, or deemed influenced by
those under review or disapproved. Although the danger of using a
crooked measuring rod demands some precaution, this blanket
exclusion also chances some distortion in favor of an unduly low
in-line price. In the main, the producers have chosen not to brief
this question, apparently under the misapprehension that the
Government has not here sought to sustain the exclusion of these
contracts, or that the lower court's failure to reach the question
precluded this Court from doing so. [
Footnote 2/3] But while the suspect order rule may by
default be abided in this instance, I would
Page 382 U. S. 232
not close the door to future arguments for a different solution
of the dilemma.
A last troubling aspect of the in-line price derives from a
critical and unusual circumstance: it, like the other conditions in
this case, was imposed for the first time on remand, several years
after an unconditional permanent certificate had issued. Presumably
for six months hence, producers will be compelled to sell at a
price they might not have accepted when free to refuse; for all
that appears, the price may even be below cost, let alone a fair
profit. However, in general, the producers apparently did not seek
an option to cancel future sales if dissatisfied by the newly
conditioned certificates, the six-month delay is both brief and
familiar, and I cannot say the Commission did not have a legitimate
interest in imposing the in-line price at the time it did.
II
The price increase moratorium also seems to me a measure not
generally beyond the Commission's grasp, but it should not be
sustained on the record before us. Recognizing force in the
contrary view of the Court of Appeals, I do not believe that § 4
must be read to bestow on producers an invincible right to raise
prices subject only to a six-month delay and refund liability.
Cf. FPC v. Texaco Inc., 377 U. S. 33;
FPC v. Hunt, 376 U. S. 515. A
freeze until 1967 is not permanent price-fixing, and, in this
interregnum between individual and area pricing, the hazard of
irreversible price increases warrants imposing some brake. A
lengthy moratorium -- coupled with a refusal to consider cost or
supply-demand figures in setting prices for duration -- might
present a real risk of choking off supply, but such a case is not
before us.
Nevertheless, a moratorium instituted on remand is a hazardous
device, at best, and the present one is simply not supported by
evidence. Because the producers have
Page 382 U. S. 233
no chance to refuse the certificates after commencing delivery,
the ceiling may coerce sales at unfairly low prices. Yet, while the
present moratorium must be endured longer than the in-line price,
at least it permits the producers to charge a markedly higher
amount; and, as the safety valve for a price explosion, the
moratorium could be upheld. At this point, however, the
Government's argument fails for lack of proof that a price
explosion is likely if increases rise above the moratorium figure.
The Commission's figure was not considered by its hearing examiner,
who made no recommendation for a moratorium. The Commission report
itself devotes no more than one conclusory sentence, qualified by a
footnote, to the question of what specific price rise will trigger
increases at large, 30 F.P.C. at 298; rather than amplifying, the
Government brief merely contends that the point has not been
adequately preserved under § 19 -- a contention I do not accept.
[
Footnote 2/4] Several producers
state that the Commission's fear of triggering has not been
realized, although sales are currently being made by them at levels
above the intended moratorium price.
III
While agreeing that the Commission has power to order refunds in
the case before us, I believe the measure of repayment it selected
is illogical and harsh. On the initial question of power, it must
be conceded that nothing
Page 382 U. S. 234
in the statute provides for refunds when a sale has been
approved without qualification; but approval in the present
instances had not become final for want of judicial review, and an
equitable power to order refunds may fairly be implied.
The measure of refunds is another matter. The Commission has now
directed that the producers repay the difference between the
amounts collected over four to six years and the figure it has now
established as the original in-line price. [
Footnote 2/5] Since the in-line price has been fixed
without reference to cost evidence, and falls below the opening
levels set in the negotiated contracts, the producers may well be
receiving less than cost, as some of them expressly claim; and this
imposed revision downward of prices covers not six months, but a
period of years.
The obvious refund formula, implicated by the statute itself and
adopted by the Court of Appeals, would call for repayment of all
amounts collected in excess of the "just and reasonable" price;
that price, measured under §§ 4 and 5, naturally takes due account
of costs. The Government retorts that producers have no "right" to
sell their gas for a "just and reasonable" price under the statute,
a proposition perhaps true in the limited sense that the public
convenience and necessity might yet exclude fair-profit sales by a
uniquely high cost producer or in the face of a glutted market. No
attempt is made, however, to class the present facts with such
imaginable situations. Nor is advance exclusion from the
interstate
Page 382 U. S. 235
market so fearsome as an unexpected repricing of a completed
sale depriving the seller of profit or costs.
On the present facts, the Government has failed to point to any
public interest overriding the potent claims of the producers to a
fair return on their past four to six years of sales. Any
triggering caused by the amounts previously charged has already
spent its force, and cannot be undone. Unconvincingly, the
Government implies the producers may be comparatively well off with
the present formula because it provides a final figure now, and the
"just and reasonable" price might prove to be below the in-line
price; however, instant certainty as to past prices is no great
gain, since taxes and royalties have already been paid, and the
chance that producers may get more than they deserve by following
the in-line price is not a substitute for assuring them a fair
return. About the only concrete advantage cited by the Government
for the in-line price is that it speeds refunds to consumers.
Assuming that a compromise cannot be reached as in other cases,
[
Footnote 2/6] elaborate cost data
should become available in the next year or two with the completion
of the southern Louisiana area rate proceeding. Consumers, who
assuredly expected no refunds when they paid their gas bills as
long ago as six years, certainly do not suffer seriously in waiting
a bit longer for refunds that individually must be minute in most
cases.
The incongruity of the Commission's refund formula is well
portrayed by considering what would have happened if the Commission
had originally granted the certificates now thought proper by this
Court. By accepting certificates conditioning sales at the in-line
price, the producers
Page 382 U. S. 236
could immediately have filed for increases, suffering, at most,
a six-month delay. Even if the Commission's moratorium survived,
the ceiling during this four-to-six-year period would have been
23.55 cents, rather than the 18.5-cent figure now imposed. Thus,
even had the Commission not erred in the first instance in favor of
the producers, they still could have collected payments well in
excess of 18.5 cents, subject only to the ultimate finding of a
"just and reasonable" price now denied them by the Commission.
In line with the foregoing discussion, I would uphold the
Commission's decision fixing an in-line price, remand the case for
further findings on the triggering price for a moratorium if the
Commission wishes to pursue the point, and set aside the refund
with leave to order repayments based on the "just and reasonable"
price.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section citations herein are all to the Natural Gas Act, 52
Stat. 821, as amended, 15 U.S.C. §§ 717-717w (1964 ed.).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See the majority's
note
3 ante, p. 228.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See Petition of the FPC for Certiorari, p. 15, n.
14.
[
Footnote 2/4]
This precise ground of attack upon the moratorium was set forth
by at least one producer.
See ODECO Application for
Rehearing Before the FPC. R. 603. Applications of other producers
argued instead that any moratorium was plainly illegal under the
Fifth Circuit's decision in
Hunt v. FPC, 306 F.2d 334,
which had not then been reversed by this Court.
376 U.
S. 515.
See Petition of Placid Oil et al. for
Rehearing Before the FPC, p. 35. Under these circumstances, § 19
does not seem to me to preclude allowing all producers the benefit
of the error pinpointed by ODECO.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Deliveries commenced under all or nearly all the contracts in
1959 at prices exceeding 18.5 cents. The Commission's order
directing the in-line price, refunds, and the moratorium issued
four years later in 1963, and it has been under judicial review for
the past two years. The record does not clearly indicate what rate
increases the producers may already have filed with the
Commission.
[
Footnote 2/6]
On several occasions, the Commission has approved agreements by
producers to refund a fixed fraction of the difference between the
amounts collected and the settlement price.
See Texaco
Inc., 28 F.P.C. 247 (other producers severed from the instant
case);
Continental Oil Co., 28 F.P.C. 1090 (on remand from
CATCO).