Bronx Gas & Electric Co. v. Maltbie

197 N.E. 281, 268 N.Y. 278, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 937
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 11, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 281 (Bronx Gas & Electric Co. v. Maltbie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bronx Gas & Electric Co. v. Maltbie, 197 N.E. 281, 268 N.Y. 278, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 937 (N.Y. 1935).

Opinion

Crane, Ch. J.

The provisions of the Public Service Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 48) relating to gas and electrical *283 corporations are to be found in article 4. Section 71, as amended, provides that, upon tbe complaint in writing of tbe mayor of a city, tbe trustees of a village or tbe town board of a town, or, upon tbe complaint in writing of not less than twenty-five customers, or, upon tbe complaint of the corporation supplying tbe gas or electricity, tbe rates charged shall be investigated by tbe Commission. When such complaint is made, tbe commission may, by its agents, examiners and inspectors, inspect tbe works, system, plant, devices, appliances and methods used by such person or corporation in manufacturing, transmitting and supplying such gas or electricity, and may examine or cause to be examined tbe books and papers of such person, or corporation pertaining to tbe manufacture, sale, transmitting and supplying of such gas or electricity. Tbe form and contents of complaints made as provided in this section shall be prescribed by the commission. Such complaints shall be signed by tbe officers, or by tbe customers, purchasers or subscribers making them, who must add to their signatures their places of residence, by street and number, if any.”

Section 72 provides for notice of bearing in respect to tbe matters complained of. It states further: An investigation may be instituted by tbe commission of its own motion as to any matter of which complaint may be made, as provided in section seventy-one of this chapter, or to enable it to ascertain tbe facts requisite to tbe exercise of any power conferred upon it.” After tbe bearing of such investigation tbe Commission may by order fix just and reasonable rates. Tbe power of tbe Public Service Commission to make investigation upon complaint or of its own motion into tbe affairs of public service corporations and to fix tbe rates to be charged is no longer open to question. (Village of Saratoga Springs v. Saratoga Gas, Electric Light & Power Co., 191 N. Y. 123.)

*284 Heretofore, the costs and expenses of maintaining the Public Service Commission and its staff have been borne by the public at large through the process of general taxation. The public funds have been appropriated to meet the charges incidental to conducting investigations required by these sections 71 and 72 of the Public Service Law. As early as 1891, in Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta R. R. Co. v. (142 U. S. 386, 394), it was held to be consistent with the provisions of the Federal Constitution to charge the cost and expenses of these Commissions or regulatory bodies to the public service corporations, thus relieving the public of taxation for this purpose. In that case it was held that the statutes of South Carolina requiring the salaries and expenses of the State Railroad Commission to be borne by the several corporations owning or operating railroads within the State were not in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. Mr. Justice Field said, in writing the opinion: “ The mode or manner of regulation is a matter of legislative discretion. When exercised through commissioners, their services are for the benefit of the railroad corporations as well as of the public. Both are served by the required supervision over the roads and means of transportation, and there would seem to be no sound reason why the compensation of the commissioners in such case should not be met by the corporations, the operation of whose roads and the exercise of whose franchises are supervised. In exacting this there is no encroachment upon the Fourteenth Amendment. Requiring that the burden of a service deemed essential to the public, in consequence of the existence of the corporations and the exercise of privileges obtained at request, should be borne by the corporations in relation to whom the service is rendered, and to whom it is useful,- is neither denying to the corporations the equal protection of the laws or making any unjust discrimination against them.”

*285 As late as 1934, by chapter 282 of the laws of that year, the Legislature of this State shifted the cost of investigation from the general public to the corporations. As the legality of these sections has been challenged, it is necessary to give them in full. They are now sections 18-a and 18-b of the Public Service Law.

§ 18-a. Costs and expenses of proceedings before the commission. Whenever the public service commission in a proceeding upon its own motion, upon complaint, or upon application to it, shall deem it necessary in order to carry out its statutory duties, to investigate the operations, service, practices, accounting records, rates, charges, rules and regulations, or to make valuations or revaluations of the property of any public utility, such public utility shall be charged with and pay such portion of the compensation and expenses of the commission, its officers, agents and employees, including employees temporarily employed, as is reasonably attributable to such investigation, valuation or revaluation, provided an opportunity to be heard thereon shall first have been granted to such public utility. The commission shall ascertain the costs, including the compensation and expenses of the commission, its officers, agents and employees, and shall determine the amount to be paid by the public utility and shall render a bill therefor by registered mail to the public utility. Such bill shall be rendered either at the conclusion of the investigation, valuation or revaluation, or from time to time during its progress, and the amount of such bill so rendered by the commission shall be paid by such public utility to the commission within thirty days from the date of its rendition. The total amount which may be charged by the commission to any public utility under authority of this section in any calendar year shall not exceed one-half of one per centum of such public utility’s gross operating revenues derived from intrastate utility operations in the last preceding calendar year. The amount assessed against a *286 public utility, not paid thirty days after such determination, shall draw interest at the rate of six per centum per annum.

“ § 18-b. Establishment of revolving fund; appropriation. The sum of three hundred thousand dollars is hereby appropriated to the department of public service out of any moneys in the state treasury not otherwise appropriated, to establish and provide a revolving fund for the use of the public service commission in paying the compensation and expenses of employees temporarily employed in investigating the operations, service, practices, accounting records, rates, charges, rules and regulations, or in making valuations or revaluations of the property of any public utility.

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 281, 268 N.Y. 278, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bronx-gas-electric-co-v-maltbie-ny-1935.