Legal Question in Consumer Law in Pennsylvania

Gas Utility

Purchased home in 2001. Use

natural gas to heat home, cook, dry

clothes, hot water. Gas meter was

individualy read by meter reader. In

Feb 07 the gas utility installed

electronic readers on meeter.

Discovered my meter was tilted at

45 degree angle. This is the way the

meter was installed when I puchased

the home. I was not aware of the

problem. Utility says a tilted meter

only reads 55% of gas used so they

are backcharging me for the balance

going back at least 4 years. I

disputed to PUC but they say the

best thing is to pay the backcharge

since the law favors the utility co.

Utility has offered me to pay the

backcharge in 60 monthly payments.

Do I have any legal recourse since

the meter was read by an employee

of the utility until Feb 07. Wouldn't

the employee have noticed the

problem and reported it to the

utility? Any advice would be

appreciated.


Asked on 3/30/07, 8:04 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Roger Traversa Arjont Group (Law Office of Roger Traversa)

Re: Gas Utility

You asked about paying utility back charges for gas used.

This could go either way, in the company's favor is the fact that you may have actually used gas for which you did not pay.

In your favor is the fact that the company can't conclusively establish that you actually used any more gas than you have been charged for. Moreover, 1) no one can establish when the meter was titled, and 2) the utility had the opportunity each and every month that the meter was wrong to correct the problem. This would be a defense called laches (essentially, the company allowed the problem to exist and continue and therefore the company bears responsibility).

I would suggest that you negotiate with the company. You will probably need to either defend a claim from them or prosecute them when they send the matter to collections. It may be easier to settle for a much much smaller number for a back-charge. I would suggest starting at 10% and going up from there. At some point it will not be cost effective for them to argue or you to hold out.

Stop dealing with the telephone operators and insist on speaking with more and more senior managers. Don't be afraid to send letters to the President, CEO or members of the board. Squeaky wheel gets the greased.

Regards,

Roger

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Answered on 3/30/07, 9:54 pm
John Gibson John W. Gibson, Esquire

Re: Gas Utility

A client of mine recently had a problem with a utility company which he alleged was overbilling him. He filed a Complaint with the PUC and resolved the Complaint with the Utility Company after filing. Prior to filing they would not negotiate. You may have to file a Complaint to get negotiation going. Since this is a 60 month payment they are asking for, the amount must be significant. If so, it is probably a good idea to be represented by a local attorney.

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Answered on 3/31/07, 11:09 am


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