Bangor Water Co. v. Public Service Commission

82 Pa. Super. 48, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 231
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 11, 1923
DocketAppeal, 288
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 Pa. Super. 48 (Bangor Water Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bangor Water Co. v. Public Service Commission, 82 Pa. Super. 48, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 231 (Pa. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

Bangor Water Company filed with the Public Service Commission a new schedule of rates, calculated to produce an annual revenue of about $32,000, and increasing the rates charged both domestic and commercial users of water. Before its effective date complaint was filed by various customers alleging that the new rates were excessive, unfair, unjust' and unreasonable. Testimony was taken before an examiner appointed by the commission. Argument was had before the commission, and an order filed. The case was subsequently reopened, and additional testimony taken, and the commission then filed its order sustaining the complaint, reducing the minimum monthly charges for meter service, and disapproving of certain rules. It valued the used and useful property of the water company at $218,000 (including about $15,000 expended in improvements since the filing of the complaint), and allowed 7% annual fair return thereon, ($15,260), annual depreciation of % of 1% on $178,000 ($1,335), operating expenses, $6,500, and amortization of expenses of litigation to the extent of $500 a year for three years, and directed the company to filé a schedule of rates, equitably apportioned, calculated to produce a gross annual revenue of $23,595. From this order the water company has appealed, alleging that the rates thus imposed are confiscatory of its property.

Bangor Water Company was incorporated June 17, 1884, with an authorized capital stock of $20,000. Accurate records are available only since February 2,1896, at which time it had outstanding capital stock of the par value of $16,200, and bonds of the face value of $35,000. It obtains its water from a number of springs and artesian wells located on high ground, which it impounds in reservoirs and supplies by gravity to its patrons in the boroughs of Bangor and Roseto. It operates in the latter borough under a ninety-nine year lease from the Roseto Water Company, made in 1913; it is, however, conducted as one system and will be treated as such.

*52 As the appellant claims the order of the commission will result in confiscation of its property, we are required to examine the record and determine upon our own independent judgment as to both law and facts whether such claim is justified: Ohio Valley Water Co. v. Ben Avon Boro., 253 U. S. 287; Ben Avon Boro. v. Ohio Valley Water Co., 271 Pa. 346; and confiscation results when the order of the commission refuses the utility compány a fair return upon its property devoted to and used for public purposes: Ibid, 271 Pa. 353.

Our public service company law (Art. V. Sec. 20) directs the commission to give due weight to all the elements of value proper to be considered in ascertaining and determining the fair value of the utility company’s property, specifically mentioning the following: (1) the original cost of construction, particularly with reference to the amount expended in the existing and permanent improvements; (2) such consideration for the (a) amount in [and] market value of its bonds and stocks, (b) the probable earning capacity of the property under the rates fixed by the commission and (c) the items of expenditure for obsolete equipment and construction, as the circumstances and the historical development of the enterprise may warrant; (3) the reproduction costs of the property based upon the fair average price of materials, property and labor; and (4) its developmental and going concern value;

With respect .to the original cost of construction, there seemed to be a wide divergence between the figures as shown by the books of the company and as set forth in the report of the Bureau of Accounts and Statistics of the commission, the former being $314,448.83, the latter, $187,141.03; but an examination of the company’s books show fictitious expenditures for real estate amounting to $127,800, — subterfuges for the issue of bonds and stock to that amount — , and deducting this sum, the company’s books show an original construction cost of $186,648.83, practically: the commission’s figures. Adding the *53 amount expended for permanent improvements since the making of that report, we find the original cost of the present plant to be approximately $202,000. While this is to be considered in determining the value of appellant’s property, it is not the measure of such value. ■ “As the company may not be protected in its actual investment, if the value of the. property be plainly less, so the making of a just return for the use of the' property involves the recognition of its fair value if it be more than its cost. The property is held in private ownership, and it is that property and not the original cost of it, of which the . owner may not be deprived without due process of law” ■: Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U. S. 352, 454.

. Capital stock is outstanding of the par value of $80,-920. Of this, $27,300 was issued in 1899, ostensibly for the purchase of real estate, but really as the declaration of a 150% stock dividend; and $20,500 was issued in 1902 in connection with the purchase of another tract of land, but in reality as a cloak for other purposes. Bonds of the par value of $150,500 are issued and outstanding, but of this amount, $81,000 represents bonds issued in 1902, in connection with the purchase of the same land for. which $20,500 stock was.given, but actually for other purposes. No evidence was given as to the market value of the bonds and stock, beyond that the interest on the bonds (5%) was regularly paid and dividends on the stock regularly distributed since 1896, ranging from 4% to 7% annually since 1907.

The company owns approximately 766 acres of land and a number of rights of way in connection with its wells, water shed, reservoirs, stand pipe and distribution system. The complainants valued this land, etc., at its. approximate original cost, $25,000. The commission found this amount to be “insufficient” but did not state its present fair market value, which is, ordinarily, the true criterion as to real estate: Minnesota Rate Cases, supra, pp. 451-456; Denver v. Denver Union Water Co., 246 U. S. 178, pp. 183,191; Ben Avon Boro. v. Ohio Val *54 ley Water Co., 68 Pa. Superior Ct. 561, 583; 75 Pa. Superior Ct. 290, 295; 271 Pa. 346, 355. Witnesses for the appellant fixed the value of this land at from $49,750 to $76,600, four valuing it at $50,000. We are satisfied that its present fair market value is approximately $50,000. No additions will be made to this amount “by the use of multipliers or otherwise to cover hypothetical outlays”: Minnesota Rate Cases, supra, p. 455.

With respect to the reproduction cost of the plant, exclusive of real estate, the appellant’s engineers submitted three estimates based as follows: (1) On average unit costs for the ten year period ending September 1, 1920; (2) on average unit costs for the five year period ending the same date; and (3) on average unit costs as of September 1, 1920. On the rehearing they also presented three additional estimates based on average unit' costs as of, (4) June, Í920, (5) June, 1921, and (6) June, 1922.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Pa. Super. 48, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bangor-water-co-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1923.