California Water & Telephone Co. v. Railroad Commission

19 F. Supp. 11, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1806, 1937 WL 63925
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 24, 1937
DocketNo. 3668-S
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F. Supp. 11 (California Water & Telephone Co. v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Water & Telephone Co. v. Railroad Commission, 19 F. Supp. 11, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1806, 1937 WL 63925 (N.D. Cal. 1937).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Following complaints by National City and Chula Vista, the.Railroad Commission of California, upon its own motion, investigated the rates and service of the Sweet-[12]*12water Water Company, now called the California Water & Telephone Company. On December 1, 1933, the commission made an order reducing rates. Plaintiff brought suit for temporary and permanent injunction. A restraining order was issued. Thereafter, upon stipulation, an interlocutory injunction was issued. The case was submitted for decision to a court of three judges upon the record made before the commission, supplemented by affidavits.

The system owned by plaintiff obtains its water by impounding the surface flow of the Sweetwater river and its tributaries. It serves the public in the cities of Chula Vista and National City, a portion of the city of San Diego, and certain unincorporated areas in the vicinity of said municipalities, all in San Diego county, Cal. The average number of consumers is 4,620. The population served is about 20,000 and the area about 5,300 acres. Plaintiff claims that the fair value of its properties used and useful in the conduct of the business is over $3,000,000.

The commission determined that “a rate base developed as follows would be reasonable :

Physical Property — Non-landed $2,000,000
Lands and Rights of Way..... 150,000
Water Rights................ 20,000
Cash Working Capital and Material and Supplies......... 35,000
Total Rate Base'............. $2,205,000”

In its decision the commission sees “$265,000.00 as a safe conception of annual revenue,”’ and says that the company will earn “slightly more than six per cent on the rate base.”

The company points out that the commission “found a rate base predicated on its finding that the historical or original cost of plaintiff’s plant, taking land at present values and including an allowance for cash working capital and materials and supplies, was $2,205,000.00. It found that a gross revenue of $265,000.00 would normally be produced under the old rate schedule and that its new rate schedule would reduce this by $29,000.00. Deducting the operating expenses as found by the Commission •of $89,602.00 and depreciation, likewise as found by it and based on the sinking fund method, of $17,000.00, leaves a net revenue •of $129,398.00. On the rate base of $2,205,-000.00 this net revenue produces a rate return of only 5.8%. * * *”

And in this connection it is asserted by the company that “water rights having an uncontradicted minimum appraised value of at least $250,000 were eliminated and in lieu thereof only '$20,000, an alleged historical cost, was allowed;” that “going concern value, having an uncontradicted appraised value of at least $200,000, was entirely disallowed;” that there were also erroneous disallowances for lands and rights of way, for the present value of nonlanded operative properties, for depreciation, uncollectible bills, operating, and other expenses; that adjusting the findings of the commission to correct these alleged disallowances, the rate base would be $2,940,228; that aftey proper deductions, the net return would be $112,586, which would produce a rate of return of less than 4 per cent, on the rate base of $2,205,000 found by the commission.

Invoking the Fourteenth' Amendment, plaintiff attacks the validity of the order fixing the rates, upon the grounds (1) “that the Commission acted in excess of its powers, arbitrarily, and intentionally contrary to law;” and denied the company due process of law in taking the property; (2) that the rates prescribed are confiscatory in that they do not furnish a fair return upon the fair value of the property.

The general principle applicable to rate cases has been so often declared by the United States Supreme Court that it may be said to be axiomatic. “The established principle is that as the due process clauses (Amendments 5 and 14) safeguard private property against a taking for public use without just compensation, neither Nation nor State may require the use of privately owned property without just compensation. When the property itself is taken by the exertion of the power of eminent domain, just compensation is its value at the time of the taking. So, where by legislation prescribing rates or charges the use of the property is taken, just compensation assured by these constitutional provisions is a reasonable rate of return upon that value.” West v. Chesapeake & P. Tel. Co., 295 U.S. 662, 671, 55 S.Ct. 894, 897, 79 L.Ed. 1640, and see cases cited in footnote. “To an extent value must be a matter of sound judgment, involving fact data.”

Was due process accorded the plaintiff? The plaintiff contends that it was denied due process among other things, because (1) the commission arbitrarily rejected reproduction cost estimates and determined the rates [13]*13without considering reproduction costs; (2) the commission arbitrarily rejected the evidence concerning the going-concern value and fixed the rate base without any consideration thereof or allowance therefor; (3) in arriving at its value of the real estate used and useful in plaintiff’s business the commission ignored the testimony thereon and arbitrarily fixed the value; and (4) in fixing the valuation of plaintiff’s water rights it arbitrarily rejected the testimony as to these values and arbitrarily assigned the value of $20,000 instead of the amount shown by the evidence to be $250,000.

Reproduction costs. We will first consider the question of whether the commission denied due process of law in its determination with reference to reproduction costs. It is true that the value fixed by the commission was within the range of values assigned by the witnesses as the reproduction -cost of the system, but as we shall presently show this result was obtained not by consideration of reproduction costs in connection with the other evidence but by rejecting such cost estimates upon the theory announced by the commission that the reproduction cost estimates were unreliable.

A similar situation was recently presented to this court in the case of Pacific Gas & Electric Company v. Railroad Commission of California, wherein we held that a failure to consider reproduction costs in arriving at the fair value of the property of a public utility was a denial of due process, although based upon the contention that the estimates furnished were not reliable, because, in so doing, the commission arrived at its rate without considering one of the elements essential to the proper fixing of the fair value of the property. Pacific Gas & Electric Company v. Railroad Commission, 5 F.Supp. 878. The question'involved in that case cannot be distinguished from that involved in the case at bar and the commission has not attempted so to do.

In the case at bar, reproduction cost estimates were submitted by the commission and by the company, and both were rejected. Of the company’s estimates the commission said in its decision fixing the rates that. they were “nebulous and too speculative as a basis for fixing rates.” Of the estimates presented by its own engineers it said, quoting further from the decision:

“With respect to the Commission engineer’s reproduction cost estimate, it was shown that certain items of property had been omitted.

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Related

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Railroad Commission
5 F. Supp. 878 (N.D. California, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 11, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1806, 1937 WL 63925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-water-telephone-co-v-railroad-commission-cand-1937.