Court Opinion

ID: 3496015
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:03:50.830173+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:55:51.487095
License: Public Domain

Under an order of the Michigan public service commission, entered June 18, 1946, in conformity with the provisions of Act No. 9, Pub. Acts 1929 (2 Comp. Laws 1929, §§ 11632-11651 [Stat. Ann. §§ 22.1311-22.1330]), hereinafter referred to as Act. No. 9, the plaintiff is a common purchaser of natural gas from certain sections in Garfield and Freeman townships in Clare county and Orient and *Page 104 
Sylvan townships in Osceola county, hereinafter called the Garfield-Orient field, in and from which it owns and operates a gathering and transmission pipe line.
Defendant Sohio Petroleum Company is the owner and operator of a natural gas pipe line extending from Coldwater township, Isabella county, to the city of Midland, used for transporting natural gas from wells owned and operated by it in the Coldwater field to a contract purchaser, Dow Chemical Company, at Midland. In the summer of 1947 Sohio began an extension of its pipe line from Coldwater township to the Garfield-Orient field, in which it also owned a number of gas wells, for the purpose of gathering its gas from those wells and transporting and selling it to Dow Chemical Company.
Thereupon plaintiff filed its bill of complaint alleging that Sohio has not sought nor obtained approval of its pipe line from the Michigan public service commission nor a certificate of public convenience and necessity therefor as provided in Act No. 9; that plaintiff, as a common purchaser in the Garfield-Orient field, alone has the right to gather gas therein; that plaintiff is willing and able to purchase all gas produced in that field; that an existing gas shortage makes it impossible for plaintiff, as a utility, to supply all the demands of its customers and that the gas owned by Sohio in its wells in that field should be used for the benefit of plaintiff's customers; that by gathering and transporting and selling gas from its own wells in the Garfield-Orient field Sohio violates the plaintiff's rights as the sole common purchaser of gas in that field; that plaintiff, as a common purchaser, is subject to proration under commission rules as relates to wells from which it gathers gas, that such wells are set-offs to Sohio's wells, and, if Sohio be permitted to proceed without commission regulation and not subject to proration orders, plaintiff *Page 105 
will be deprived of the full amount of gas it would otherwise obtain from wells it owns or as to which it has gas purchase contracts; that two competing gathering systems in the field will cause a waste of gas and will not preserve public peace, safety and convenience; that no one may locate or operate a gas pipe line along or across highways without commission approval; that natural gas is volatile and its transportation involves hazards and, for that reason, Act No. 9 confers regulatory powers with respect thereto on the commission in order to promote public safety; that Sohio may not construct its pipe line without commission approval and a certificate of public convenience and necessity. Plaintiff's bill prays, therefore, that the defendant public service commission be enjoined from giving its approval to construction of such pipe line and gathering branches by Sohio and from granting it a certificate of convenience and necessity until Sohio has filed with the commission the application and information required by section 9 of Act No. 9 and a hearing is had thereon, and that Sohio be enjoined from proceeding with the construction of its transmission line and gathering branches and, if completed, from transporting natural gas through them and from interfering with plaintiff's rights as a common purchaser in the Garfield-Orient field.
A hearing was had on a show cause order for an injunction as prayed during pendency of suit and on defendant Sohio's motion to dismiss plaintiff's bill of complaint. From an order dismissing the bill of complaint and dissolving a temporary injunction restraining Sohio from constructing the pipe line or transporting gas through it the plaintiff appeals.
In its statement of reasons and grounds of appeal, and also in its statement of questions involved on appeal, plaintiff takes the position that the court erred in dismissing plaintiff's bill of complaint and dissolving *Page 106 
the temporary injunction and in holding that Sohio was transporting gas for strictly private use and not for hire and was, therefore, not within the terms of Act. No. 9. The issues raised by plaintiff's bill of complaint and the restraining order are, therefore, before us, including not only the question of Sohio's right to construct the pipe line without previous commission approval, but also its right to operate the pipe line and transport its gas through it without compliance with Act No. 9 and without a certificate of public convenience and necessity.
In contending that Sohio is subject to and must comply with Act No. 9 as relates to its operations here involved, plaintiff relies on the following provisions of the act:
"SECTION 1. Every corporation, association or person, now or hereafter exercising or claiming the right to carry or transport natural gas by or through pipe line or lines, for hire, compensation or otherwise, or now or hereafter exercising or claiming the right to engage in the business of piping or transporting natural gas, or any other person or persons, now or hereafter engaging in the business of buying and selling or transporting natural gas within the limits of this State, shall not have or possess the right to conduct or engage in said business or operations, in whole or in part, as above described, or have or possess the right to locate, maintain or operate the necessary pipe lines, fixtures and equipment thereto belonging, or use in connection therewith, concerning the said business of carrying or transporting natural gas as aforesaid, on, over, along, across, through, in or under any present or future highway, or part thereof, or elsewhere, within the State, or have or possess the right of eminent domain, or any other right or rights, concerning said business or operation, in whole or in part, except as authorized by and subject to the provisions of this act, except, further, and only such right or rights as may already *Page 107 
exist which are valid, vested, and incapable of revocation by any law of this State or of the United States. * * *
"SEC. 9. Any corporation, association or person within the terms of this act desiring to construct transmission mains for the transportation or conveying of natural gas from its source to the locality or localities where utilized, shall submit to the commission, accompanied by due application, a map or plat of such proposed line or lines which it desires to construct, showing the dimensions and character of such proposed pipe line or lines, its compression stations, control valves, and connections, and shall first receive the approval of the commission of such map, route and type of construction before proceeding with the actual construction of such transmission lines, and it shall be the duty of the commission to examine and inquire into the necessity and practicability of such transmission line or lines and to determine that such line or lines will when constructed and in operation serve the convenience and necessities of the public before approval of such map and proposed transmission line or lines."
Except for the allegations that Sohio is not a utility and that it is constructing a pipe line with the avowed intention of gathering and transmitting gas owned by it from its own wells, plaintiff's bill of complaint is silent as to the nature, purpose, character or destination of such transmission by Sohio. Is it thus made to appear that Sohio is within the terms of Act No. 9 so as to be subject to the provisions of section 9 thereof? We think not. Had plaintiff's bill further alleged, as established by testimony, that it was Sohio's purpose to transport its own gas for sale to a single contract purchaser, we think the case would be no different.
Section 1 of the act specifies three classes, namely:
(1) Those transporting natural gas through pipe lines for hire, compensation or otherwise: *Page 108 
Plaintiff's bill does not allege that Sohio has or intends to transport gas for others for hire or compensation nor do the proofs so show. In People v. Montgomery, 92 Col. 201 (19 Pac.[2d] 205) the court held that a statute purporting to regulate private carriers "for compensation or hire" did not apply to one "hauling for sale at a profit his own coal in his own motor truck over the public highways of the State from the place of purchase to the place of delivery upon sale." The term "transport for hire" has been defined as follows:
"In order to support the conclusion that defendant is a carrier for hire, there must be evidence showing that defendant is equipped for carrying persons or property, and that it is engaged in carrying or offers to carry persons or property other than itself or its own property for a compensation in some form."Murphy v. Standard Oil Co., 49 S.D. 197 (207 N.W. 92).
"`For hire or reward,' as used in these ordinances, means to transport passengers or the property of other persons than the owner or operator of such truck for a reward or stipend, to be paid by such passengers or the persons for whom such property is transported to the person owning or operating the truck." Cityof Sioux Falls v. Collins, 43 S.D. 311 (178 N.W. 950).
See, also, State v. Manhattan Oil Co., 199 Iowa, 1213
(203 N.W. 301); Kroger Grocery  Baking Co. v. City of Cynthiana,240 Ky. 701 (42 S.W. [2d] 904); Hughson Condensed Milk Co. v.State Board of Equalization, 23 Cal.App.2d 281
(73 Pac.[2d] 290).
(2) Those engaged in the business of piping or transporting natural gas:
Plaintiff's bill of complaint alleges no facts from which it may be concluded that Sohio is engaged in such business. Whether or not a farmer transporting *Page 109 
his own produce to market for sale might be said to be engaged in the business of selling produce, he can hardly be held, by reason thereof, to be engaged in the business of transporting produce. To transport one's own goods is not to be engaged in the transportation business.
(3) Those engaged in the business of buying and selling or transporting natural gas:
Plaintiff's bill contains no allegations to the effect that Sohio is or will be so engaged. If, as disclosed by the proofs, Sohio's sole operations in this connection consist of producing gas from its own wells, piping and transporting and selling it to a single contract purchaser, it cannot be said that Sohio is engaged in the business of buying and selling natural gas for the reason that it sells but does not buy.
Inasmuch as plaintiff's bill of complaint fails to bring Sohio within any of the classifications specified in section 1 of the act, it would seem to follow that, therefore, Sohio is not a corporation referred to in section 9 of the act as being "within the terms of the act" and required to obtain commission approval of its pipe line under said section 9. This conclusion is supported by an examination of the act as a whole. Section 9 itself, in requiring that those "within the terms of the act" shall apply to the commission for approval of a pipe line before its construction, imposes on the commission the duty to "inquire into the necessity and practicability of such transmission line" and to "determine that such line or lines will when constructed and in operation serve the convenience and necessities of the public before approval." Manifestly, the transportation of one's own gas for sale to a single contract purchaser cannot be demonstrated to be a matter of public convenience and necessity. Failing in this, is Sohio to be prohibited from transporting the gas from its own wells to a contract purchaser? There is nothing in the act to *Page 110 
evidence such an intent. Section 4 of the act requires those within the classifications specified in section 1 to be common purchasers and to purchase all natural gas in the vicinity, et cetera. It cannot be said that it was the legislative intent to impose such a duty upon one undertaking to transport its own gas from its own wells. Neither can the right of eminent domain conferred by section 2 upon those within the terms of the act be conferred upon an operator such as Sohio engaged in a purely private enterprise. Mansfield, C.  L.M.R. Co. v. Clark,23 Mich. 519; Pere Marquette R. Co. v. United States Gypsum Co.,154 Mich. 290 (22 L.R.A. [N.S.] 181). Section 3 of the act, which vests in the commission certain powers of regulation and control, places thereunder only those engaged "in the business of purchasing or selling or transporting natural gas for publicuse." The conclusion is inescapable that the requirements of section 9 have no application to one in the position of Sohio as described in plaintiff's bill of complaint and that Sohio may construct its gathering and transmission lines and transport its own gas from its own wells through these lines to its contract purchaser without commission approval or a certificate of convenience and necessity as provided for in Act No. 9. In so holding we are not unmindful of the applicability of the proration provisions of section 7 of the act to all who produce or receive gas from producers.
Our view that the bill of complaint was properly dismissed for the reasons indicated renders a consideration of other questions raised unnecessary. The order of the trial court is affirmed, with costs to defendant, Sohio Petroleum Company, against plaintiff.
SHARPE, REID, BUTZEL, and CARR, JJ., concurred with DETHMERS, J. *Page 111