
    DISCRIMINATION BY A PUBLIC LIGHTING COMPANY.
    Circuit Court of Hamilton County.
    State of Ohio, on Relation of Henry T. Hunt, Prosecuting Attorney of Hamilton County, Ohio, v. The Union Gas & Electric Company.
    Decided, February 5, 1910.
    
      Public Utilities — Discrimination by a Gas and Electric Company Not Unlawful, When — Lack, of Uniformity in Rates — Competition— Pleading — Quo Warranto.
    
    Mere discrimination by a public service corporation without substantial injury is not necessarily unlawful; and it follows that allegations will not lie as to discrimination in rates charged for electric current, where made without regard to circumstances and conditions or any averment that consumers are unfavorably affected thereby.
    
      Miller Outcalt, Lawrence Maxwell and J. 8. Graydon, for the motion.
    
      Henry T. Hunt, Prosecuting Attorney, contra.
    The defendant, a corporation under the laws of Ohio, exercising rights and privileges in the city of Cincinnati, and engaged in supplying gas to the inhabitants thereof, and also electric current for light and power, was charged in the petition with discrimination in the matter of rates, which the petition alleged were not uniform but are based on whim, favor and caprice; and the court was asked because of the. discrimination so practiced to oust the company from its rights and franchises.
    Giffen, P. J.; Smith, J., and Swing, J., concur.
   It is charged in the petition that—

“The defendant discriminates in the price charged and exacted from the users and consumers of its product, basing said prices in multitudious instances not upon the cost of service, but upon various other irrelevant and unlawful facts, circumstances and conditions:

“1st. It charges a less rate per kilowatt for electric current used for power than for electric current used for light.”

There is no averment that the rate charged for electric current used for light is unreasonable, nor is there any averment of other facts' tending to prove that the discrimination is unjust or unlawful. On the other hand the very difference in the conditions suggests a discrimination in rates, and the burden of alleging and proving its illegality rests upon the relator.

“2d. It charges rates based on the average consumption of electric current per 16-candle-power lamp possessed and available by the said users and consumers, and not upon the actual amount of current consumed.”

The objection to this discrimination is, like the first instance, based on the theory that the rate should be uniform, regardless of conditions. If one consumer has available ten times as many lamps as another, but they both use the same number, it is manifest that the additional expense of preparing for the unused lamps should be borne by the customer causing it. Hence the actual amount of current consumed is not the true and correct basis for fixing rates, unless the circumstances and conditions are similar.

‘ ‘ 3d. ' It charges such users and consumers as have access to other sources of supply, a less rate per kilowatt consumed than the rate per kilowatt charged to such users and consumers as have not access to other sources of supply. ’ ’

There is no averment that the rate charged to the latter class is unreasonable, nor that the discrimination in favor of the former class is unjust to the latter, nor of facts warranting such inference. It is manifest that this discrimination is based upon competition, which is a proper element to be considered in fixing rates, although by no means conclusive. If the discriminating rate will tend to create a monopoly by excluding from the market the products of the competitors of the favored class it is not justifiable, even though defendant could not otherwise secure the custom. State, ex rel, v. Ry. Co., 47 O. S., 130.

The same objection applies with equal force to paragraphs four and five of the petition, and assailed, by the motion of the defendant, which in effect is, that the pleader assumes the only correct basis for determining the rates to be charged is the amount of current consumed, without regard to circumstances and conditions, and whether or not injuriously affecting consumers. The question whether the charges of a public service corporation are unjust and unreasonable, and whether they unjustly discriminate, often depends upon a variety of circumstances, mating it complex and difficult of solution, as shown by the exhaustive discussion in the case of Scofield v. Railway Co., 43 O. S., 571.

It is apparent from that case, as well as others following and approving it, that mere discrimination, without substantial injury is insufficient to mate it unjust -and unlawful,-but the facts-showing such injury must be averred and proved.

We are of opinion therefore that the motion to strike out certain paragraphs of the petition should be sustained.  