Boston Consolidated Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities

97 N.E.2d 521, 327 Mass. 103
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 97 N.E.2d 521 (Boston Consolidated Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Consolidated Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, 97 N.E.2d 521, 327 Mass. 103 (Mass. 1951).

Opinion

Qua, C.J.

This is a bill in equity under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 25, § 5, 1 alleging that an order of the department entered September 28,1948, in a proceeding known as D. P. IT. 7966, whereby the department disallowed a schedule of rates for gas to be sold to the public which the company had filed on November 14, 1947, and permitted the company to file new and lower rates, was confiscatory and unconstitutional. The rates filed by the company have been called the proposed rates, and those allowed by the department' have been called the permitted rates.

Upon making the claim of confiscation the company became entitled to a determination of that issue by this court upon its own independent judgment as to both law and facts and upon evidence not confined to that introduced before the department. Lowell Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, 324 Mass. 80, 86-89, and cases cited. The rights of the company in this respect have been fully recog *105 nized and have been accorded to it through the appointrnent of a master by this court, subject to its control, a hearing before him, at which evidence other than that in-traduced before the department was received, his report and supplementary report, and the action of this court taken and to be taken thereon — all in accordance with the usual course of judicial proceedings in suits in equity. The right of judicial review is obviously a right of the com-pony and not of the department. The company makes no complaint as to the manner in which its right has been preserved to it. The department has attempted to object on the ground that the master was not ordered to report all the evidence. If the department has duly saved the point, which seems doubtful, we think it had no more right to have all the evidence reported by the master than any other litigant would have in any suit in equity. The reference was in the form held proper in Lowell Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, 324 Mass. 80, 89. The master has reported the decision of the department in full, and that is before us for any appropriate use. See Donham v. Public Service Commissioners, 232 Mass. 309, 328. We do not understand the case of Knoxville v. Knoxville Water Co. 212 U. S. 1, 8, as laying down any absolute rule that all the evidence heard by a master must be reported to the court of last resort, especially in a case where that court itself appoints the master and has complete control over him and can judge from his report and the nature and detail of his subsidiary findings viewed in connection with the issues whether a report of a part or of the whole of the evidence is necessary to the ends of justice. In this instance single justices have repeatedly refused to order the entire evidence reported, and we now upon study of the master’s report and the detailed subsidiary findings contained in it, are unable to see how we could be assisted if we had the evidence before us. The statute provides for a bill in equity. That seems to imply that, in general, usual equity procedures are to be followed.

The cause is now before the full court by reservation and *106 report of a single justice upon the pleadings, the master’s reports, the department’s exceptions, the company’s motions to confirm the master’s report, and other documents which need not now be enumerated “for determination by the full court of all questions of law and fact appearing on the record, such orders and decrees to be entered as justice and equity may require.”

There was no error of law in denying the department’s motion to recommit in so far as it was denied. 1 Many of the so called “reasons” for recommittal were in reality in the nature of additional exceptions and could not be filed without a special order of the court. Equity Rule 26 (252 Mass. 608). Lowell Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, 324 Mass. 80, 91. Many others rest upon contentions that the master made certain findings not warranted by the evidence or that on the evidence he should have made certain other findings, and request reports of relevant portions of the evidence. Recommittal commonly will not be ordered on such grounds as these unless it is made to appear by affidavit or otherwise that the evidence before the master was at least such as to make it probable that his findings or failures to find were erroneous. Morin v. Clark, 296 Mass. 479, 483-484. Minot v. Minot, 319 Mass. 253, 260. See Common Law Rule 11 (252 Mass. 592). There is at the end of the department’s motion a statement under oath, as to the requests for additional findings, that all are “based on testimony,” but what the testimony was does not appear. This was plainly insufficient. So are certain statements in the body of the motion that the evidence was “conclusive.” In ground 2 the department sought recommittal because, as we understand it, the master admitted before him certain evidence which the department had requested the com-pony to furnish to the department after the close of the public hearing, which evidence related to the company’s *107 operations subsequent to the hearing and was considered by the department. It would seem that this evidence would be competent in this proceeding between the company and the department. Exactly what this evidence was does not appear. At any rate, no error has been shown in the refusal to recommit on this ground. It is unnecessary to state other reasons for the refusal to recommit.

Most of the department’s many exceptions to the master’s first report 1 may be disposed of on the ground that they are addressed to the making of findings or to the refusal to make findings and are of no avail when the evidence is not reported. It seems unnecessary to cite authority for this familiar proposition. Other exceptions relate to immaterial matters, and still others are so plainly without merit that discussion of them would be superfluous. Some have not been argued.

The master rightly included in the capital investment of the company for rate making purposes the premium on the capital stock, debt capital represented by long and short term notes, and reinvested surplus. The report must be construed as showing that all these items represented investment devoted to the public service. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, ante, 81, 96. See Lowell Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, 324 Mass. 80, 96-97. There is no duplication in the way in which the master dealt with surplus and working capital, even though both may have been derived from past earnings not paid out as dividends. Both are not included in the same tabulation. Each is used in its proper place in one of two different methods of arriving at a rate base.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.E.2d 521, 327 Mass. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-consolidated-gas-co-v-department-of-public-utilities-mass-1951.