Boston Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities

269 N.E.2d 248, 359 Mass. 292, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 817
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 15, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 269 N.E.2d 248 (Boston 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 Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities, 269 N.E.2d 248, 359 Mass. 292, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 817 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

Cuttee, J.

Boston Gas Company (Company) filed with the Department of Public Utilities (D.P.U.) on February 12, 1969, new rate schedules to become effective March 1, 1969. The D.P.U. suspended these rates until January 9, 1970, pending investigation. On January 8, 1970, it disallowed the rates, which originally had been designed to produce additional gross annual revenues of $3,493,600. 1 It, however, permitted Company to file hew rates to produce additional annual gross revenues . of $1,974,000. Later (because of D.P.U. mistakes in computations) a new order (March 4, 1970) permitted the additional gross revenues to be increased to $2,021,022 *295 (see fn. 1). Company then filed its appeal in the county court under G. L. c. 25, § 5 (as amended through St. 1956, c. 190). 2 A single justice reported the case for the determination of the full court upon the record before the D.P.U. and certain papers filed in the county court. Upon Company’s petition, another single justice (June 24, 1970) directed that additional evidence 3 be transmitted to this court (but without any “determination by . . . [the county c]curt that . . . [such] additional evidence is properly includible in” the record).

General Background.

Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Eastern Gas & Fuel Associates, serves thirty-two cities and towns (including Boston) running in a strip from Groton and Shirley on the northwest to Rockland and Whitman on the southeast. It obtains natural gas from the pipelines of Algonquin Gas Transmission Company. All but about two per cent of the gas sold by Company in 1968 was natural gas. The small amount of manufactured gas was used to meet winter “peak” demand. In the future, for such “peak” needs, Company plans to rely on liquefied natural gas (LNG) stored by it.

Company’s last rate increase was in 1956. It avoided increases from 1956 to 1969 (at a time when most other prices were rising rapidly) by greater use of labor saving machinery, by increased employee productivity, by efforts to increase sales, and because of the savings effected by the introduction of natural gas in the 1950’s. In 1969, an application for higher rates was induced by continuing in *296 flationary pressures, increases in wages and operating expenses, the need of additional plant investment, and other factors. The amount of the requested increase was influenced (see fn. 1) by Company’s competition with other utilities and (especially in the home heating market) with the “unregulated fuel oil industry.” Home heating has become an increasingly large part of Company’s business.

Before the D.P.U. both Company and counsel for the department dealt with the issues as being (a) Company’s proper rate of return and its rate base; and (b) Company’s cost of rendering the services which produce its revenues. In the late autumn of 1969, at the hearings, 1968 was the most recent year for which complete figures were available and was used as a “test year” (see fn. 23, infra). The D.P.U., however, made certain adjustments of the 1968 figures, the propriety of which Company disputes.

Rate of Return and Cost of Capital.

1. On December 31, 1968, Company’s long-term debt consisted of $27,305,000 of first mortgage bonds, due in. 1990, and $16,000,000 of short-term debt. In 1969 the short-term debt was converted into $15,000,000 of three-year notes. This conversion gave Company, at the time of the hearings, a capital structure of 53.7% debt and 46.3% common stock equity. It was then anticipated that soon there would be $14,000,000 of new debt financing to meet Company’s planned construction expenditures in 1969-1970. If this amount of financing had taken place, Company would have had 60% debt and 40% equity. 4 The D.P.U. determined that it was prudent for Company to continue a “policy of financing by debt” and proceeded *297 to fix fair return by adjusting Company’s outstanding debt ratio to an assumed 60% (with a 40% equity ratio) in order to reflect the expected cost of additional debt capital soon to be acquired. This the D.P.U. said was so as not to “predicate a finding of fair rate of return on a capital structure and cost of capital which will not actually exist during the period when the proposed rates are expected to be in effect.”

The D.P.U. thereupon computed the composite cost of debt to Company as follows:

Issue Net Cost Rate Annual Charges

First Mortgage 4.68% (Actual) $1,228,734

Bonds issued 1965, due 1990 ($26,255,000)

3-year Notes 8.00% 1,200,000 ($15,000,000)

Anticipated 1969-70 8.00% (Estimated) 1,120,000 ($14,000,000)

On this expected debt of $55,255,000, the annual charges anticipated by the D.P.U. were $3,548,734 with an expected composite debt cost rate of 6.42%.

On January 8, 1970, when the D.P.U. announced its rate decision, it thus expected that Company would be able to borrow at 8%. Later financing, however, did not work out as well as had been anticipated. Company in fact was authorized by the D.P.U. on March 25, 1970, to redeem its $15,000,000 of notes from the proceeds of $20,000,000 of additional first mortgage bonds, payable in not more than twenty-five years from the date of issue. On April 23, 1970, the D.P.U. approved additional provisions of the new bonds, including an “effective interest cost of the bonds to” Company of 9.73%. 5

*298 Company thereupon (as has been stated) obtained in the county court an order directing the D.P.U. to transmit to this court the evidence concerning the unexpectedly high cost and more limited amount of the new 1970 debt. If Company’s actual outstanding debt, after the new bond issue, had been employed in arriving at the rate decision (in computing Company’s cost of debt and debt ratio) the computation would have been as follows:

Mortgage Debt Net Cost Rate

1965 issue $26,255,000 4.68%

1970 issue $20,000,000 9.73%

or a composite debt rate of 6.86% on $46,255,000 of mortgage debt (constituting 56% of Company’s capital), instead of the 6.42% composite rate (on $55,255,000) estimated by the D.P.U. in its rate decision.

2. Company contends that, in fixing the cost of debt for rate purpose, the new composite 6.86% cost of debt rate on Company’s total mortgage debt of $46,255,000 should be used, and that Company should be treated as having the 56%-44% debt-equity capital structure then in effect (with D.P.U. acquiescence) after the 1970 bond issue. The D.P.U. now argues that this court should not consider the changed circumstances which arose after the D.P.U.’s rate decision of January 8, 1970, and, indeed, even after the modification of that decision on March 4, 1970. 6

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Bluebook (online)
269 N.E.2d 248, 359 Mass. 292, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-gas-co-v-department-of-public-utilities-mass-1971.