New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Public Utilities Commission
New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Public Utilities Commission
Opinion of the Court
The petitioner filed a motion for a stay of the .supplementary report and order No. 9258 of the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission (the commission) dated December 10, 1976. Petitioner also moved for further consideration of the case following hearings before the commission subsequent to our opinion of May 20, 1976. After consideration of both motions, it is hereby ordered by a majority of the court:
1. The commission’s order No. 9258 of December 10, 1956 is hereby stayed and the enforcement thereof is enjoined insofar as it prohibits the petitioner from collecting, in addition to the revenues granted in said supplementary report and order, revenues of $8,984,000, said additional revenues representing those which petitioner would have been awarded had the commission applied its findings on the petitioner’s working capital requirements, rate of return in equity, and erosion adjustment to petitioner’s most recent experience as presented by it to the commission following our remand. The foregoing is without prejudice to the commission’s right, at the hearing before this court, to challenge the figures upon which the amount of $8,984,000 is based.
3. Pursuant to the provisions of G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §39-5-4, as amended, petitioner shall post with the commission a bond in the sum of $100,000, or some lesser amount which can be agreed to by the parties in this case, said bond to be in a form satisfactory to and approved by this court or a Justice thereof.
4. Petitioner shall within thirty (30) days of the entry of the order herein file with this court its brief presenting arguments with respect to all issues which it wishes to argue under its motion for further consideration, with proof of service upon opposing counsel. Briefs by the commission and the Rhode Island Consumer’s Council shall be filed within 20 days after receipt of petitioner’s brief.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I cannot agree with the majority’s order granting New England Telephone and Telegraph Co. a stay of the Public Utilities Commission’s order No. 9258 of December 10, 1976. In the recent case of Narragansett Elec. Co. v. Harsch, 117 R.I. 940, 367 A.2d 195 (1976) (order denying stay), this court adopted the standards used by federal appellate courts to determine whether a stay should be granted:
“A stay will not be issued * * * unless the party seeking the stay makes a ‘strong showing’ that (1) it will prevail on the merits of its appeal; (2) it will suffer irreparable harm if the stay is not granted; (3) no substantial harm will come to other interested parties; and (4) a stay will not harm the public interest.” Id. at 197. (Emphasis added.)
In my opinion petitioner has failed to demonstrate that, in the absence of a stay, it would suffer irreparable injury pending our decision on the merits. The company asserts only that a stay is necessary to permit it to obtain additional revenue that would otherwise be lost during the pendancy of this court’s review.
"Mere injuries, however substantial, in terms of money, time, and energy necessarily expended in the absence of a stay, are not enough. The possibility that adequate compensatory or otherwise corrective relief will be available at a later date, in the ordinary course of litigation, weighs heavily against a claim of irreparable harm.” Id. at 925.
The petitioner has failed to make a sufficiently strong showing to warrant the extraordinary relief accorded by a stay. Adequate relief, should it be justified, is available through the ordinary appellate process.
Nor has petitioner, in my opinion, met its affirmative burden to establish that the stay will not cause substantial harm to the other interested parties. The mere fact that the increase, if unjustified, is subject to later refund for which a bond will be posted does not establish that consumers will not suffer substantial harm. As the Supreme Court observed in Federal Power Comm’n v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., 371 U.S. 145, 154-55, 83 S.Ct. 211, 216, 9 L. Ed.2d 199, 206:
"True, the exaction would have been subject to refund, but experience has shown this to be somewhat illusory in view of the trickling down process necessary to be followed, the*972 incidental cost of which is often borne by the consumer, and in view of the transient nature of our society which often prevents refunds from reaching those to whom they are due.”
Furthermore, in deciding whether to stay a rate order, this court may pay particular attention to the crucial question of the effect of the stay on the public interest. “In litigation involving the administration of regulatory statutes designed to promote the public interests * * * interests of private litigants must give way to the realization of public purposes.” Virginia Petroleum Jobbers Ass’n v. Federal Power Comm’n, supra at 925. This court has said that:
“[T]he ultimate purpose of the legislature in enacting the statute with reference to the manner in which such rates should be fixed or changed from time to time was to secure the orderly promulgation of rates that would be reasonable and just to the company and to the public.” New England Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Kennelly, 75 R.I. 422, 431-32, 67 A.2d 705, 710 (1949).
To secure the orderly promulgation of fair rates, the General Assembly has committed the complex factfinding and judgment functions essential to balancing the utility’s need for revenue and the consumer’s need for a reasonable cost of an essential service to the expertise of an administrative tribunal, the commission. Absent a patently confiscatory situation, which has not been established in this case, the judiciary is not institutionally well-suited to allocate the distribution of economic loss from delay and inflation among the various public interests the regulatory agency is required to protect.
In my opinion, the court can best serve the public interest by preserving to the fullest extent possible the integrity of the process for resolution of rate conflicts set out in the statute. To this end, we remand to insure that the commission, despite its expertise, demonstrates the evidentiary basis of its findings and judgment; to the same end we should refrain if possible from
Mr. Justice Kelleher, dissenting. In giving a brief explanation as to why I could not ¡subscribe to the stay order that was entered in this controversy on January 18, 1977, at the direction of my Brothers Paolino, Joslin, and Doris, I am assuming arguendo that the telephone company satisfied the criteria for a stay which we delineated in Narragansett Electric Co. v. Harsch, 117 R.I. 940, 367 A.2d 195 (1976).
There are three general 'determinations that must be made in any public utility rate case. The first is the selection of an appropriate test year (usually a 12-month period) by which the utility’s income, expenses, rate base, and rate of return may be measured. Second, there must be established the utility’s rate base, which is its investment in or fair value of the used and useful property necessarily devoted to the rendering of the regulated service. Once the rate base has been established, with a proper adjustment being made for the utility’s operating expenses and revenues, all that remains is the setting of an allowable rate of return, i.e., the percentage by which the rate base is multipled in order to determine the revenue needed to pay expenses and to attract investment capital. This short synopsis of what a rate hearing is all about can be found and further explicated in a masterful opinion written by my Brother Joslin in Rhode Island Consumers’ Council v. Smith, 111 R.I. 271, 302 A.2d 737 (1973).
Last spring, after hearing the telephone company’s appeal, we issued an opinion in which we denied several of the company’s contentions but remanded the controversy to the Public Utilities Commission for its reconsideration of four specific areas
After our remand, the commission took additional evidence and issued a supplementary order where it (1) revised upward its original finding as to the cost of equity from 11.25 percent to 11.53 percent; (2) found no fault with the prices being charged by Western Electric; (3) reduced the working capital allowance from a period covering 45 days to one covering 19.59 days; and (4) compensated for any erosion in the earnings it had allowed the company by adding $13,290,000 to the rate base which the commission had determined was proper for the test period ending in June 1974. (The commission’s original erosion allowance would have caused an increase in earnings of $553,000.)
The commission’s supplementary order was dated December 10, 1976, and within a week the telephone company was seeking a stay. The January 18, 1977, order issued by this court stayed the commission’s order and enjoined its enforcement insofar as it barred the telephone company “* * * from collecting, in addition to the revenues granted in said supplementary report and order, revenues of $8,984,000, said additional revenues representing those which petitioner would have been awarded had the commission applied its findings on the petitioner’s working capital requirements, rate of return in equity, and erosion adjustment to petitioner’s most recent experience as presented by it to the commission following our remand.”
General Laws 1956 (1969 Reenactment) chap. 5 of title 39 deals with judicial review of the commission’s orders or deci
It is obvious from the language of the statute that the General Assembly contemplated that there would be times when this court might order a stay to maintain the status quo while the commission’s actions are under judicial scrutiny. This is especially true where the commission has conducted an initial hearing on an application for a rate increase and has made findings of fact upon all facets of the myriad of variables that go into a determination of what is a just and reasonable rate. Here the commission had made its findings as to the facts and figures for a test year that ended in June 1974. On remand, the commission was directed to consider four specific areas in which there was a complete absence of supportive evidence. The commission obeyed our mandate and applied its findings in these four areas to a 1974 rate base. The $8 million plus increase in rates alluded to in the January 1977 order comes about because the order implicitly adopts the company’s contention that the commission’s findings in those four areas should have been “updated” by their incorporation into a rate base which was being used by the company for the year ending March 31, 1976.
My disagreement with the January stay is based upon several basic principles common to all public utility rate cases. On appeal from the commission, this court does not act as a fact-finder; that is the commission’s job. The reasonableness of a
Unlike the petitioner in Narragansett Elec. Co. v. Harsch, 117 R.I. 940, 367 A.2d 195 (1976), in which the motion for a stay was denied, petitioner in the instant case does not even claim incipient bankruptcy.
Reference
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- New England Telephone and Telegraph Company v. Public Utilities Commission
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