Alton Water Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission

279 F. 869, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 892
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 279 F. 869 (Alton Water Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alton Water Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission, 279 F. 869, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 892 (S.D. Ill. 1922).

Opinion

FITZHENRY, District Judge.

The complainant seeks to enjoin the Illinois Commerce Commission, its members, and the Attorney General of Illinois, from enforcing penalties provided in the Illinois Com.merce Commission Act, for collecting water rates in excess of those allowed by the Commission.

The Water Company, on November 30, 1920, as required by the'law in force-at that time, filed its schedule of rates to go into effect January 1, 1921. After due notice the matter was heard by the Commission, and on December 20, 1920, the Commission passed an order suspending the effective date of the schedule until April 30, 1921. On April 26, 1921, a further extension until October 30, 1921, was made. October 26, 1921, the Commission entered a permanent suspension order.

■ The' Commission made no finding that the rates contained in the schedule submitted by the Water Company were unreasonable, nor did it attempt to fix a schedule of reasonable rates.

The Illinois statute (Daws 1921, p. 722, § 36) provides:

“The period of suspension of such rate or other charge, classification, contact, practice, rule or regulation shall not extend more than one hundred and swenty days beyond the time when such rate or other charge, classification, contract, practice, rule or regulation would otherwise go into effect unless :he Commission, in its discretion, extends the period of suspension for a lurther period not exceeding six months. On such hearing the Commission shall establish the rates or other charges, classifications, contracts, practices, rales or regulations proposed, in whole or in part or others in lieu thereof, which it shall find to be just and reasonable.”

It is claimed that the action of the Commission with reference to the order permanently suspending the rates was without authority and void; that the suspension of the rates amounted to an order against the complainant to continue to charge the rates in force .at the time of the filing of the schedule in November, 1920, which ranged considerably less than the rafes sought to be charged to the extent that it amounted to a confiscation and the deprivation of the complainant of its property without due process of law.

Upon the hearing it developed that the present fair cash value of complainant’s property in question was $1,177,935; that its gross earnings for 1919, 1920, and 1921 were, 1919, $110,781.56; 1920, $110,460.47; 1921, $105,339.82; that the net revenues for these three years were, 1919, $25,273.43; 1920, $9,916.21; 1921, $3,340.24; that the net revenues available for return on investment for 1921 was a trifle more than one-half of 1 per cent, upon the present fair cash value of the property. The Commission contends that the revenues should be limited to such rates as will produce a reasonable return upon the original cost of the property. It was shown by the testimony of the engineers of the Commission that the original cost of the property was $538,196. During the years in question the net returns of which are [871]*871above detailed, the old rates have been in force. It was shown that under the schedule sought to be enforced by the Water Company, the gross income of the complainant would be approximately $177,000 annually, leaving, after deducting operating expenses of approximately $102,000, $75,000 net income ffom the property.

This case turns upon two questions: (1) Did the Commission have the power to permanently suspend the effective date of complainant’s schedule of rates filed November 30, 1920? (2) Is the present fair cash value of the property to be considered in determining what the rates shall be in order to be reasonable, or must the calculation be made upon the basis of the actual cost or the original cost of the property and its appurtenances available for use in its service?

[1] The Illinois Commerce Commission, which is the successor of the Public Utilities Commission, is a governmental agency created by the General Assembly of Illinois, for the purpose of applying certain rules and regulations of the legislative branch of the state government. When it acts within the powers granted to it by the statute creating it, its acts and orders have the force and effect of the acts of the General Assembly itself. In this respect the Illinois Commerce Commission is very similar in its regulatory powers to the Interstate Commerce Commission in the scheme of the federal government. The General Assembly declared the public policy and fixed the legal principles that were to control and charge an administrative body with the duty of ascertaining, within particular fields, from time to time, the facts on which ^ the legal principles established by law would be brought into play, just as Congress had done with reference to rates involved in interstate commerce. National Pole Co. v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., 211 Fed. 65, 127 C. C. A. 561; Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 426, 27 Sup. Ct. 350, 51 L. Ed. 553, 9 Ann. Cas. 1075; Keogh v. C. & N. W. Ry. Co. (C. C. A.) 271 Fed. 444.

[2] So, on the contrary, any acts or orders of the Illinois Commerce Commission that do not come clearly within the powers granted to it by the General Assembly are void. The statute authorizing the Illinois Commerce Commission to suspend rates provides:

“The period of suspension of such rate * * * shall not extend more than one hundred and twenty days beyond the time when such rate » * * would otherwise go into effect unless the Commission, in its discretion, extends the period of suspension for a further period not exceeding six months. On snch hearing the Commission shall establish the rates * * * proposed, in whole or in part, or others in lieu thereof, which it shall find to be just and reasonable.” Illinois Commerce Commission Act, Laws 1921, § 36, p. 722.

Following the above excerpt of the statute, it is further provided, in the same section:

“All such rates * * * not so suspended shall, on the expiration of thirty days from the time of filing the same with the Commission, or of such lesser time as the Commission may grant, go into effect and be the established and effective rates, * * * subject to the power of the Commission, after a hearing had on its own motion or upon complaint, as herein provided, to alter or modify the same.”

[872]*872[3] In this particular case, the Commission heard evidence, but made no finding, and has not altered the schedule filed by the complainant in any respect. A fair reading of section 36 of the act does not disclose any authority granted by the General Assembly to the Commission to suspend rates for a longer period than 120 days and 6 months; but, on the contrary, the section itself provides that all rates filed as provided by the act, shall become effective, except such parts thereof as may have been altered or modified by the Commission itself ir. accordance with the provisions of the law. No other provision of the statute which might sustain the passing of the permanent suspension order, and no decision of the Illinois Supreme Court authorizing such an order, has been called to our attention, so that the order of permanent suspension comes clearly within the rule that an administratiye governmental board or commission, whose order or act is beyond the scope of its powers, is void.

[4]

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Bluebook (online)
279 F. 869, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alton-water-co-v-illinois-commerce-commission-ilsd-1922.