Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appeal in this rate case is from an order of the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City dismissing a bill of complaint filed by the appellant against the Public Service Commission of Maryland, except to the extent that certain relief prayed therein was granted, and remanding the case to the Commission for further proceedings. The bill of complaint had been filed pursuant to the provisions of Sections 859 and 415, Article 23 of the Code of 1939 (Sections 15 and 74, Article 78 of the Code of 1951), praying that paragraphs (1), (3)
A preliminary question is raised by the cross-appellants, that their demurrers to the original bill should have been sustained on the ground that the Company could not appeal from those parts of the Commission’s order that denied a rate increase to the full extent sought, and at the same time accept the benefits of the partial relief granted. To understand the contention made it is only necessary to quote the concluding paragraphs of the Commission’s opinion: “We have found the rate base to be $118,279,156. We have determined that a rate of return from 5.75% to 6% is reasonable and fair. The Company should therefore be permitted to earn a net of from $6,900,000 to $7,100,000. It, therefore, appears that the Company requires at least from $300,000 to $500,000 additional net income to enable it to earn the rate of return which this Commission has fixed as fair and equitable. * * * the Company may reasonably expect additional gross revenue in the amount of $943,000 annually as the result of a 10^ coin box charge. Giving effect to the current 52%
“The Commission is of the opinion that the Company should be permitted to increase its local coin box telephone call .charge from 5^ to 10^ and that its application for increased rate in other respects should be denied.”
The doctrine of election by the acceptance of benefits under a judgment is subject to certain limitations; as, for example, where there is no controversy as to the appellant’s right to the amount for which the judgment was given. See note 169 A. L. R. 985. In the instant case the Commission found that the Company was entitled to the limited relief granted and the cross-appellants did not challenge the Company’s right to that relief until after the demurrers had been filed. However, we think the doctrine is inapplicable on a broader ground.
Section 16(c), Article 78 of the Code of 1951 provides that “all orders of the Commission shall take effect within such reasonable time as it shall prescribe, and shall continue in force until its further order, or for a specified period of time according as shall be prescribed in the order, unless the same shall be suspended or modified, or set aside by the Commission, or be suspended or set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction.”
Section 16(d) of the same article provides that “any company, corporation, association, person or partner-, ship subject to any of the. provisions of this sub-title or other person or party in interest, including the People’s Counsel shall have the right to proceed in the courts to vacate, set aside or have modified any order of said Commission on the grounds that such order is unreasonable of unlawful, as hereinafter more particularly set forth.”
It seems clear from these provisions, taken in connection with the provisions as to the finality of Com
In Valparaiso Lighting Co. v. Public Service Commission, 190 Ind. 253, 129 N. E. 13, 17, cited by the cross-appellants, the court stated that the doctrine of election and estoppel did not apply to orders of a commission establishing rates. It is true that the court also pointed out that the rates for gas and electricity, contained in the single order in that ease, could be treated as separable, so that the decision was not as broad as the principle announced. However, in Department of Public Utilities v. New England Telephone and Telegraph Company, 325 Mass. 281, 90 N. E. 2d 328, 333, it was squarely held that the company could avail itself of a limited rate increase without abandoning the right to court review of the validity of the order. The practice has been followed without challenge in Maryland and elsewhere. Cf. Public Service Commission v. United Railways Co., 155 Md. 572, 142 A. 870; Hudson
The cross-appellants contend that under Maryland law the Commission is not required to base rates on the “fair value” of a utility’s property. Under Section 55(a), Article 78 of the Code of 1951, (unchanged since its adoption by chapter 180, Acts of 1910), the Commission is directed, in an appropriate case, to “ascertain the fair value of property of any corporation subject to the provisions of this Article and used by it for the convenience of the public.” The cross-appellants contend, however, that this section is limited in its application and does not apply to rate making; that the only standards for fixing telephone rates are in Section 70(a) providing that rates be “just and reasonable and not more than allowed by law or by order of the Commission and made as authorized by this sub-title.” They argue that the words “just and reasonable” should be construed as coextensive with the requirements of the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution, as laid down in the latest Supreme Court cases, to prohibit confiscation, not to prescribe a valuation method.
We think the contention is unsound. In Havre de Grace Bridge Co. v. Public Service Commission, 132 Md. 16, 27, 103 A. 319, 323, a rate case, the court quoted Section 442 of Article 23 (now Section 55, Article 78 of the Code of 1951) and said: “What the Commission in this case was authorized to ascertain under the section referred to was the fair value of the property.” In Miles v. Public Service Commission, 151 Md. 337, 344, 135 A. 579, 582, 49 A. L. R. 1470, the court said: “* * * the very purpose of authorizing
Upon the question of statutory construction we think these three cases are directly in point and controlling. If further support were needed, it could be found in the legislative references to fair value and value in chapter 180, Acts of 1910 and chapter 732, Acts of 1941, and in the uniform and consistent administrative recognition of the principle in the published opinions of the Commission. In the instant case both the Commission and the lower court recognized that the fair value concept was applicable by reason of the statute.
If “fair value” is the rule prescribed by the statute, as we hold, we are faced then with an inquiry as to the true meaning of those words. The appellant contends that the words amount to a legislative adoption of the rule recognized by the Supreme Court at the time when the statute was passed in 1910, that rates fixed by a state for a public utility must allow a reasonable return upon the present fair value of the property used for the public. The right of court review in rate cases, on an issue of constitutionality under the fourteenth amendment, was clearly recognized in Chicago, M. & St. P. Railway Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418, 10 S. Ct. 462, 702, 33 L. Ed. 970, and Reagan v. Farmers Loan & Trust Co., 154 U. S. 362, 14 S. Ct. 1047, 38
The cross-appellants strongly contend that the fair value doctrine was repudiated by the Supreme Court in Federal Power Commission v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 320 U. S. 591, 64 S. Ct. 281, 282, 88 L. Ed. 333. In that case the court was dealing with a federal statute that did not mention fair value as the rate base but empowered the Federal Power Commission to fix “just and reasonable” rates. For present purposes it is not necessary to determine the exact scope or implications of the several opinions in that case. It may well be that the Supreme Court, following earlier intimations, did in that case abandon the test of fair value as an element of due process. See note 8 Md. L. R. 122, 126. Or it may be that the decision, instead of repudiating Smyth v. Ames, sub silentio, merely placed the emphasis on the end product or result reached, rather than the method employed, and in effect extended the area of administrative discretion, within the limits of due process. In either event, we think the test of fair value is explicit in the Maryland statute, as construed by this court. Cf. Northern States Power Co. v. Public Service Commission, 73 N. D. 211, 13 N. W. 2d 779, 785. Whether it is implicit in the Maryland, as distinguished from the federal, constitution, is a question we need not and do not now consider.
The appellant has cited no case, however, holding that in determining fair value any particular formula must be adopted, or that controlling effect must be given to reproduction cost, as compared to original cost. In its brief it is stated that the principal ground on which
We come, then, to the heart of the question presented by the Company’s appeal, whether the Commission failed to give to reproduction cost the consideration required by the concept of fair value. The proceedings that culminated in the final order appealed from were initiated in 1946. On March 31, 1947 the Commission found the depreciated original cost of the intrastate property of the Company to be $63,487,491, and on September 30, 1951 to be $115,219,017. The difference of some 52 millions represents new capital put into the enterprise in modernizing and improving the plant. The cross-appellants contended for a lower original cost figure. The appellant produced evidence to show that the depreciated reproduction cost of the Company’s property on the latter date was at least $140,446,097. The Commission found the fair value of the property on the latter date to be $118,279,156, or $3,060,139 in excess of the original cost claimed by the Company.
Estimates of reproduction cost are conjectural at best, not merely because they rest on opinion, but for the obvious reason that probably no plant would ever be reproduced in its present form. Even the physical structures to replace the old would be designed, so far as possible, to compensate in efficiency and convenience for the higher construction costs. Cf. Schreiber v. Pacific Coast Fire Insurance Co., 195 Md. 639, 645-646, 75 A. 2d 108, 111, 20 A. L. R. 2d 951. In regard to plant equipment, the increased cost of reproduction would likewise be measurably offset by the technological improvements constantly discovered and introduced to meet the rising costs of labor and materials. One result is that equipment becomes obsolete before it wears out. The fact that evidence as to a substitute plant has been held irrelevant, McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., supra, does not mean that the Commission must close its eyes to the obvious in weighing evidence of reproduction cost.
There can be no doubt that the Commission took these factors into account. In its earlier opinion, reaffirmed in the opinion filed in 1951, it said:
“In its major aspect, reproduction cost is an estimate of the cost of producting the same plant at the same locations and constructed of the same materials at
■ “As heretofore mentioned, the Company is engaged in a major transition from manual to dial equipment. It has a large backlog of orders for telephone service which requires an enlargement and, to a large extent, rearrangement of some of its present facilities. Many of its buildings and much of its equipment is presently to be discarded. New buildings are to be (some are in process) constructed and new equipment is to be installed and substituted for old, all of which will involve the expenditüre of & huge sum of money, estimated to be $47,000,000 during the years 1947 and 1948 and $90,000,000 during the next five years. These enormous changes strongly indicate that there would be very little reality involved in undertaking to determine value from an estimate of the current cost of reproducing the entire plánt.”
At the time of the final order the Commission noted that huge expenditures had been made at post-war prices, but that a large construction program was still ahead, including extensions and changes in the type of services, the heaviest expenditures to date having
The inherent weaknesses in estimates of this character have been fully recognized by the courts. See Georgia Railway & Power Co. v. Railroad Commission, 262 U. S. 625, 629, 43 S. Ct. 680, 67 L. Ed. 1144; Los Angeles Gas & Electric Corp. v. Railroad Commission, 289 U. S. 287, 53 S. Ct. 637, 77 L. Ed. 1180; Railroad Commission v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 302 U. S. 388, 58 S. Ct. 334, 82 L. Ed. 319; New Jersey Power & Light Co. v. State, supra; New England Tel. & Tel. Co. v. State, 95 N. H. 353, 64 A. 2d 9. In these cases estimates of reproduction cost were totally rejected. In the instant case it is indisputable that the Commission did give weight to the estimates of reproduction cost, to the extent of over $3,000,000 above the Company’s original cost.
There are two schools of thought as to the scope of judicial review of questions of fact in a rate case, where the rates are claimed to be confiscatory under the fourteenth amendment. The opposing views are well stated in the majority and minority opinions in St. Joseph Stockyards Co. v. United States, 298 U. S. 38, 56 S. Ct. 720, 80 L. Ed. 1033, although the whole court was in agreement that the findings should be sustained. Under one view findings of fact made by a rate-making body, as in the case of other administrative bodies called on to determine value, are final, at least in the absence of a clear showing that they are unsupported by substantial evidence or otherwise unlawful. Under the other view, it is said that there is a judicial duty to exercise an independent judgment on the facts on a constitutional question, e.g., of confiscation, or a jurisdictional question. But even
The appellant further contends that the Commission erred in disallowing its claim that the cash on hand as of September 30, 1951 be allowed as a part of the rate base as cash working capital. That such an allowance is a proper one has long been accepted. Cf. C. & P. Telephone Co. v. West, D. C., 7 F. S. 215, 234; and City of Columbus v. Public Utilities Commission, 154 Ohio St. 107, 93 N. E. 2d 693, 697. It is usually based on the assumption that there will be a time lag between the performance of the service and the actual collection of revenues therefor. A flat allowance estimated at thirty days may yield to a showing that the lag is not so great. City of Norfolk v. C. & P. Telephone Co., 192 Va. 292, 64 S. E. 2d 772, 780. In the instant case the Commission found the weighted average time lag to be 23.2 days. “While much service is billed in advance, it manifestly is impossible to bill for toll service and excess local calls until after the service is given.” The Commission found the weighted average lag in payment of operating expenses was a negative figure of 1.8 days.
The appellant attacks this conclusion on the ground that it is an adoption of the so-called “alternative funds” theory, that funds collected from consumers for the payment of taxes are available for use by the Company until the taxes are paid. It argues that the fallacy in the reasoning is that it presupposes that revenues collected are contributions by the customers and that if such revenues are used as cash working capital it is the customers who are furnishing them. Actually, it argues, the customers are paying for services, and when bills are collected they become the property of the Company, citing Board of Public Utility Commissioners v. New York Telephone Co., 271 U. S. 23, 31, 46 S. Ct. 363, 70 L. Ed. 808. Thus all of the funds collected are risked by the investors, not by the tax collectors or the customers.
We think the theory does not depend, however, upon the question of risk or ownership, but upon the fact that rates are calculated to yield a profit over and above taxes and the tax burden is shifted to the customers. Since these advance payments are available
The cross-appellants contend that the Commission erred in approving as a part of the annual operating expense the sum paid by it under the license contract with the American T. & T. Company. They argue that there is no relation between the amount paid (1% of the gross revenues) and the value of the service rendered. But it does not follow that the amount paid is excessive as of the valuation date. It would be extremely difficult to say, for example, what part of a particular dollar, spent by the parent Company for research, actually went to the benefit of the Maryland Company or any other Bell System company. Nevertheless, cost allocation studies have been made, the matter was carefully studied by the Commission, and its conclusion that the payments were not unreasonable is clearly supported by the evidence. The standard contract used has been widely approved by the courts. City of Norfolk v. C. & P. Telephone Co., supra; Alabama Public Service Commission v. Southern Bell T. & T. Co., 253 Ala. 1, 42 S. 2d 655; Pacific T. & T. Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 34 Cal. 2d 822, 215 P. 2d 441; Southern Bell T. & T. Co. v. Georgia Public Service Commission, 203 Ga. 832, 49 S. E. 2d 38; City of Columbus v. Public Utilities Commission, 154 Ohio St. 107, 93 N. E. 2d 693; Pacific T. & T. Co. v. Flagg, 189 Or. 370, 220 P. 2d 522; Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. State Corporation Commission, 169 Kan. 457, 219 P. 2d 361.
If we assume, without deciding, that the Commission was legally bound to consider and give weight to possible or hypothetical savings in fixing the rate of return, we think it is clear that they did so in the instant case. Both of the experts who testified in the case as to the cost of capital, based their conclusions on an assumed ratio of debt to equity capital, not on the actual ratio. The Commission adopted the highest of these, as proposed by Dr. Thatcher, called by the appellees, a ratio of 45% debt and 55% equity capital. It found a rate of return of from 5.75 to 6% to be reasonable. In so doing it virtually adopted Dr. Thatcher’s recommendation. Dr. Thatcher testified that he took into account the impact of the federal tax rates in fixing a proper debt ratio. While conceding that the determination of whether debt or equity capital should be issued was for management, the Commission said: “Still, the Commission, in fixing a rate of return, has the right
Order reversed and bill and cross-bill dismissed, costs to be paid by the respective appellants.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CHESAPEAKE AND POTOMAC TELEPHONE COMPANY OF BALTIMORE CITY v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION PEOPLE'S COUNSEL v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION (Two Appeals in One Record)
- Cited By
- 40 cases
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- Published