Alabama Power Co. v. Federal Power Commission

134 F.2d 602, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 4215
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 1943
Docket10227
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 134 F.2d 602 (Alabama Power Co. v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama Power Co. v. Federal Power Commission, 134 F.2d 602, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 4215 (5th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

Pursuant to Section 4(b) of the Federal Power Act, as amended, Í6 U.S.C.A. § 797(b), the Federal Power Commission had hearings to determine the actual legitimate original cost of Alabama Power Company’s Martin Dam project on the Tallapoosa River in Alabama, built under a license issued by the Commission on June 6, 1923, to Alabama Interstate Power Company (herein called Interstate) and transferred by the Commission’s consent to Alabama Power Company (hereinafter called Alabama) on June 22, 1923. . Alabama claimed a cost of about seventeen and a half million dollars. The Commission fixed the cost as of Dec. 31, 1929, at $15,-209,611. Of the difference of some two and a quarter million dollars a portion was ordered transferred to other capital investment accounts, but a large portion was ordered charged out of the surplus account, but later permitted to be charged out of a capital surplus reserve account. We are called upon to review these orders under Section 313(b) of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C.A. § 8251(b). Numerous items of expenditure are asserted to have been improperly reduced or totally excluded from the cost of the project, and the icquirement that any be wholly charged out of the assets of the Company is asserted to be unlawful. Under the last cited section of the Act, the findings of the Commission as to the facts, if supported by substantial evidence, are conclusive. The controversy is not over mere matters of bookkeeping, for the rights of Alabama may be affected in the future by the accounts established if federal rate regulation, the expropriation of excess profits, or the taking over of the project by the United States shall occur under the provisions of the license and the Federal Power Act.

As an aid to the Commission in its determination, Section 4(b) requirés the licensee to file a statement “Showing the actual legitimate original cost of construction of such project * * * and of the price paid for water rights, rights-of-way, lands, or interest in lands.” Section 14, 16 U.S.C. A. § 807, again refers to the value of lands as not “in excess of the actual reasonable cost thereof at the time of acquisition by the licensee.” We take up first the exceptions relating to “price paid” for lands and interests in land, to-wit: the site of the dam; settlement with Russell of his power contract; Chapman homestead; and Kowaliga highway rights.

Cost of Dam Site.

The dam site was acquired by Alabama from Interstate in connection with the assignment of the latter’s license, the two companies having originally been strangers. What Alabama Power Company paid Interstate is not the point, for the project had already been undertaken by Interstate and defined by the license to Interstate. Interstate was the licensee. The assignment of the license to Alabama Power Company operated to place Alabama in the shoes of Interstate, to complete the project under the license in accordance with its terms. The price that Interstate had paid for the dam site and other land interests, as well as the construction costs expended by it go into the original cost account, but the price Alabama may have paid Interstate for them is immaterial, as the Commission rightly held.

Interstate was on Feb. 8, 1907, a corporation organized in Maine, with little more than qualifying shares of its authorized $1,000,000 common stock subscribed, and owning nothing. Washburn and Baker owned the stock of Muscle Shoals Hydroelectric Power Company, and an option to purchase for $150,000 the entire capital stock (par value $100,000) of Cherokee Power and Development Company, which then owned the site of Martin Dam and apparently nothing else. On that date they sold “the entire control and ownership of both the Muscle Shoals and Cherokee Company and the properties which they carry” to Interstate in exchange for its entire common stock, $1,000,000, which was on March 19, 1908, issued to Washburn and Baker, except three shares to three other men to qualify them to act as officers. It does not clearly appear just how or by whom the $150,000 due under the option for the Cherokee stock was paid, but it would seem that Interstate paid it by issuing its bonds a few days later; because $147,000 of the issue is stated to be a balance of purchase due three named persons for their *607 stock in Cherokee and for monies advanced by them to Cherokee, and $14,700 a balance due Washburn and Baker for another person’s Cherokee stock. How this aggregate of $161,700 is to be reconciled with the $150,000 due under the option is not explained, but we presume the bonds were not accepted at par. The Commission’s conclusion that Interstate invested only $150,000 of present value in the stock of Cherokee Company is supported by evidence. Cherokee Company (under a new name of Birmingham, Montgomery and Gulf Power Company) continued to hold legal title to the dam site until Jan. 11, 1912, when it made a conveyance to Interstate, for a recited consideration of $100 and other valuable considerations. We understand that there was no consideration, beyond the $100, except that Interstate already owned the Cherokee Company. If Alabama’s view be taken that Interstate never purchased this land until it got this deed, then the purchase price would be only $100. The Commission’s view is more reasonable that the substance of the matter ought to be regarded, and the price paid for the capital stock of Cherokee Company ought to measure the value of the site, for that gave the virtual ownership which was merely perfected by the deed. Accordingly $150,000 was fixed as the actual original cost to Interstate of the dam site.

Alabama complains that the Board did not accept as controlling the opinion value of $1,500,000 placed upon the dam site by its expert witness. This valuation rested mainly upon a comparison of the cost of producing power at this dam site, if developed, with the cost of producing the same amount of power by steam, making due allowance for differences in plant investments, and capitalizing the saving on a conservative basis to arrive at what a purchaser could afford to pay for the dam site. The Commission recognized that there was no technical market value for this property, and admitted this opinion in evidence and considered it, but did not regard it as a good criterion of value. It thought a better light was to be had from the price paid in 1908 for the Cherokee stock, which carried virtual ownership of the property and got its value wholly from the property. This is a permissible weighing of evidence in a fact finding of value. The price for this land having been paid in Interstate stocks, or bonds, for which no certain market value appears, unless in the value of what they bought, and what they bought having its price fixed at $150,000 in money, it seems to us that the allowance of $150,-000 as the cost of this land is supported by substantial evidence. If there were debts of the Cherokee Company involved which ought to be considered as deducted from the value of the Cherokee’s property in pricing its stock, the amount and validity of them was not shown.

Russell’s Power Contract.

The Russell settlement grew out of the necessity to acquire a power development undertaken by Russell above the Martin Dam, which would be overflowed if Martin Dam were made as high as desired.

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Bluebook (online)
134 F.2d 602, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 4215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-power-co-v-federal-power-commission-ca5-1943.