Alto Village Services Corp. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission

587 P.2d 1334, 92 N.M. 323
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1978
Docket11548
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 587 P.2d 1334 (Alto Village Services Corp. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alto Village Services Corp. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission, 587 P.2d 1334, 92 N.M. 323 (N.M. 1978).

Opinions

OPINION

FEDERICI, Justice.

Upon rehearing, the original opinion is withdrawn and this opinion substituted therefor.

This is an appeal to this Court pursuant to § 68-9-7, N.M.S.A.1953 (Repl.1974), from a judgment of the Lincoln County District Court affirming an order of defendant-appellee New Mexico Public Service Commission (Commission). The order established the rates plaintiff-appellant Alto Village Services Corporation (Alto) shall charge its several classes of customers for water utility services within the Alto Village Subdivision in Lincoln County, New Mexico (Subdivision). The service rate order of the Commission was entered following two hearings held before it, and the order was reviewed and affirmed by the district court.

Alto is a New Mexico corporation engaged in the business of producing, distributing and selling water within the Subdivision, which consists of 940 lots and the Alto Lakes Golf and Country Club.

On January 26, 1976, Lakeside Corporation transferred to Alto 501.94 acre feet of water rights and the entire Subdivision water system which had an original cost value of $1,023,256.21. The water rights alone had a value of $501,940.00. Although Alto’s water plant and system were built to serve all 940 lots of the Subdivision, as well as the golf course and country club at the time of the transfer, it was actually serving the golf course, the country club and metered residences on 140 lots throughout the entire Subdivision. It was anticipated that by the year 1981, an additional 60 homes would have been added for a total of 200 residential customers.

The original cost of Alto’s “water plant in-service” on December 31, 1975 was $1,023,256.21. Accumulated depreciation and amortization deductible from that amount was $109,620.99. After adding cash working capital, materials and supplies, and prepayments in the total amount of $11,-714.48, Alto’s “net original cost rate base” was $925,349.70. Its “fair value rate base” was $1,272,365.61. Although all of Alto’s water plant is “in-service” the Commission found that the “whole system is not needed to serve the present number of customers.” That is, during the five years from 1976 to 1981, only 32.52% of Alto’s water plant will be “used and useful” to serve the customers and the golf course and the country club. Accordingly, the Commission concluded that Alto’s “used and useful,” test-year, original cost rate base is $308,828.65 and its “used and useful” test-year reproduction cost rate base is $421,678.23.

Alto’s annual net operating income after payment of test-year operation and maintenance, depreciation and amortization, and tax costs under its proposed service rates would be $57,895.03. The Commission found that an annual net operating income in the amount of $27,799.03 (9% rate of return on Alto’s “used and useful” original cost rate base of $308,828.65 and a 7.61% rate of return on Alto’s “used and useful” fair value rate base of $421,768.23) is “just and reasonable.” Based upon the foregoing and the recommendation of its staff, the Commission set the monthly rates to be charged by Alto to its customers and to the Golf and Country Club.

On appeal Alto contends that:

(1) The finding of the Commission that only 32.52% of Alto’s water plant was currently “used and useful” is not supported by substantial evidence and the overwhelming weight of the evidence supports Alto’s requested finding that 75% of its water plant was currently “necessary, used and useful” in furnishing water services to its customers, and
(2) The finding of the Commission that a net return on “used and useful” rate base of $27,799 is just and reasonable is not supported by substantial evidence, and the overwhelming weight of the evidence supports Alto’s request for service rates that will generate a net return on “used and useful” rate base of at least $57,895 from the golf course and 200 residential customers.

It is undisputed that the original cost of Alto’s water plant actually “in service” as of December 31, 1975 (end of the test year) was $1,023,256, and that, after deducting accumulated depreciation and amortization, and adding cash working capital, materials, supplies and prepayments, the value of Alto’s “net original cost rate base” was $925,349. Nor is it disputed that the “fair value” of Alto’s rate base was $1,272,365. What is challenged by Alto is the Commission’s determination that only 32.52% of Alto’s “in-service” water plant is currently “used and useful” to serve existing residences, the country club and the golf course within the Subdivision. Alto contends that the value of its existing plant which is actually “necessary, used and useful” to currently serve these customers, after deducting the value or cost of excess capacity is 75% of the total value, whether determined on a fair value or original cost basis.

It is settled in this jurisdiction that on appeal from administrative bodies thé questions to be resolved are restricted to whether the Commission acted fraudulently, arbitrarily or capriciously, whether the Commission order was supported by substantial evidence, and whether the action of the Commission was within the scope of its authority. Llano, Inc. v. Southern Union Gas Company, 75 N.M. 7, 399 P.2d 646 (1964). Alto does not contend that the Commission acted fraudulently or outside the scope of its authority. Rather, Alto claims that the Commission refused to give any. weight to Alto’s “used and useful” testimony, and that, therefore, the Commission’s order is arbitrary and not supported by substantial evidence. Alto contends further that the service rates fixed by the Commission upon the basis of those findings are arbitrary.

Alto does not object to the amount of the rate of return or the type of rate base set by the Commission to which its percentage rates of return were matched. Alto does object to the Commission’s determinations of the rate base values and therefore to the Commission’s quantification of the return requirement and the service rates fixed by it. There is no dispute on the Commission’s valuations of Alto’s water rights and plant. There is a dispute concerning the portions of those values allowed by the Commission in Alto’s rate bases designated as “used and useful.”

Sterling Freeman, a graduate civil engineer and former chief engineer at the El Paso Water Utility, testified for Alto. Mr. Freeman determined the percentage of Alto’s water plant which would be “used and useful” (i. e., actually needed to furnish water services to the residences, golf course and country club) during the five years immediately following December 31, 1975, For purposes of his study, Mr. Freeman assumed a beginning population of 140 residences and a period-ending population of 200, an increase of 12 new residences per year for five years, which corresponded to the Commission’s calculation. Mr. Freeman noted four items which could be reduced and still permit the plant to serve 200 customers plus the golf course.

While he nevertheless believed that all existing water rights and plant, without any reduction, were “necessary to serve the property covered by Alto’s application to the Commission,” Mr.

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Alto Village Services Corp. v. New Mexico Public Service Commission
587 P.2d 1334 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
587 P.2d 1334, 92 N.M. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alto-village-services-corp-v-new-mexico-public-service-commission-nm-1978.