Board of Supervisors v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.

87 S.E.2d 139, 196 Va. 1102, 1955 Va. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 25, 1955
DocketRecord 4336
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 87 S.E.2d 139 (Board of Supervisors v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors v. Virginia Electric & Power Co., 87 S.E.2d 139, 196 Va. 1102, 1955 Va. LEXIS 182 (Va. 1955).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Board of Supervisors of Arlington County appeals from a decision and order of the State Corporation Commission entered on December 30, 1953, authorizing the Virginia Electric and Power Company, a public service corporation engaged in supplying electricity for heat, light and power, to increase its rates and charges for service rendered by it in this State. National Utility Service, Inc., representing certain commercial consumers of electric energy, also filed a petition for an appeal, which it subsequently withdrew. The Board of Supervisors of Arlington County, the sole appellant, will be hereinafter referred to as the County, the Virginia Electric and Power Company as the Company, and the State Corporation Commission as the Commission.

The Company provides electric service in sixty-seven counties in Virginia, in nineteen counties in northeastern North Carolina, and five counties in eastern West Virginia. The territory comprises about two-thirds of the area of Virginia, 32,000 square miles, including many large urban areas, such as the Richmond, Hampton Roads and Alexan *1105 dria-Arlington areas. The areas served in North Carolina and West Virginia are predominantly rural like much of the Virginia territory. It has approximately 600,000 electric customers. The Company also distributes natural gas in the Hampton Roads area; but this proceeding concerns only its rates and charges for electric service.

This proceeding was instituted October 6, 1953, when the Company filed with the Commission an application for the approval of a revised schedule of its rates and charges for electric service provided within the areas served by it in Virginia, and for the simplification of its rate schedule structure throughout its entire system. The Company alleged that its existing rates and charges failed to provide a reasonable return upon its investment, and that increased rates were necessary to enable it to efficiently operate, discharge its.public duties, and market its securities on favorable terms in order to raise sums for a large continuing construction program to meet the public needs. It prayed that new rate schedules, filed as exhibits with its application, be approved as effective on successive billing dates on and after January 1, 1954.

The Company filed similar applications with the proper Commissions in North Carolina and West Virginia to put the same rates into effect within the territory served by it in those States. 1

The Virginia Commission immediately set the Company’s application for hearing on November 10, 1953. It ordered that “an investigation of the reasonableness and justness of the proposed rates and charges be entered upon,” and directed publication of a notice of the hearing and service of a copy of its order on the officials of the local governing *1106 bodies within the area concerned. Publication of the notice was duly had, and a copy of the order was served on the Board of Supervisors of Arlington County on October 9, 1953.

When the application of the Company came on for hearing on November 10, 1953, a number of municipalities, including Arlington County, the National Public Utility Service, Inc., the Virginia Farm Bureau Federation, the Virginia Motion Picture Theater Association, and other interested groups and individuals, appeared to oppose the proposed increase in rates.

Counsel for the objectors examined the witnesses for the Company at length. At the conclusion of the direct case for the Company on November 11th, the Commission adjourned until December 14, 1953, for further cross-examination and to enable the objectors to present such testimony as they desired. Upon the continuation of the hearing on December 14th, witnesses for the Company were further cross-examined for two days, and several witnesses testified on behalf of certain objectors.

On December 18, 1953, after hearing rebuttal testimony on behalf of the Company, the Commission announced that it would take the case under advisement. Thereupon, counsel for the Board of Supervisors of Arlington County moved for a further postponement of thirty to sixty days, so that his client might “prepare direct testimony and accompanying exhibits.” The motion was overruled.

On December 30, 1953, the Commission rendered its decision in which it found the requested rate increase to be justified and reasonable, and ordered that it be put in effect as of March 1, 1954. In its order, the Commission further specifically provided as follows:

“The Commission further finds that a study should be made under the direction and supervision of the Commission of the cost of service of each of the classes or types of service rendered by the applicant under any and all of its filed and approved schedules of rates and charges in order to *1107 determine whether any of said schedules under which applicant renders service are unjust and unreasonable and it directs the Staff of the Commission under the supervision of the Commission to make arrangements forthwith for such study.

“It Is, Therefore, Ordered:

#######

“(2) That the Staff of the Commission take immediate steps to arrange for the rate study found necessary by the Commission in this proceeding and report the results thereof to the Commission; * *

II

Two written opinions were rendered, one by Commissioner Hooker, in which Commissioner King concurred, concluding that the rate base or present fair value of the Company for rate-making purposes was the net original cost investment of its property as of June 30, 1953. They determined that base to be $313,954,000 for the system as a whole, and $281,930,000 for the Virginia portion. They found that the gross revenues of the Company for the twelve months’ test period ending June 30, 1953, were $76,559,058 for the entire system, and $70,072,939 for the Virginia portion. After making certain adjustments in depreciation charges and cash working capital claimed, they found the net operating income to have been $16,244,105 for the system as a whole, and $15,284,925 for Virginia, on the basis of actual geographical receipts. The rate of return was thus shown to be 5.14% for the entire system and 5.38% for Virginia. They ascertained that the requested $4,800,000 of additional gross revenues for the system as a whole would, after deduction of Federal income taxes and State and local gross receipts taxes, increase the net earnings only by $2,201,000 for the system, which ad *1108 ditional net increase would raise the rate of return upon the ascertained rate base to 5.87%, a rate of return which was deemed fair both to the Company and its customers. All of the Commissioners approved a simplification and consolidation of the rate schedules for the Company. Accordingly, sixty-one schedules and thirteen riders on file with the Commission were ordered to be replaced by nine schedules and four riders.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E.2d 139, 196 Va. 1102, 1955 Va. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-v-virginia-electric-power-co-va-1955.