Central Maine Power Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

136 A.2d 726, 153 Me. 228, 1957 Me. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 7, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 136 A.2d 726 (Central Maine Power Co. v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Maine Power Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 136 A.2d 726, 153 Me. 228, 1957 Me. LEXIS 54 (Me. 1957).

Opinion

Williamson, C. J.

This rate case is before us on exceptions by the Central Maine Power Company to the denial by the Public Utilities Commission of its request for an increase in electrical rates. Rates under the statute must be just and reasonable. R. S. Chap. 44, Sec. 17. Questions of law may be raised by exceptions to the ruling of the Commission on an agreed statement of facts or, as here, on facts found by the Commission. R. S. Chap. 44, Sec. 67.

The basic issue before the Commission was well stated in the Company’s brief, “What were just and reasonable rates required by the Company in order to provide a fair return on the reasonable value of all of the Company’s property used or required to be used in its service to the public?”

*230 Two of the major points necessary to a solution of the issue were disposed of by the Commission without complaint of the Company. First, the rate base was established at $179,250,000, and second, the gross revenues produced by the existing rate schedules were not in dispute. Thus the issues were narrowed to the determination of expenses to be charged against revenues, and of the amount required to constitute a fair return on the rate base.

There are certain fundamental principles to be kept in mind in passing upon exceptions to a decree of the Public Utilities Commission. (1) Questions of law, and only questions of law, are presented by exceptions. R. S. Chap. 44, Sec. 67. (2) Thev facts are found by the Commission and not by the Court. (3) The burden is upon the complaining party, here the Company, to establish the error of law. (4) Errors of law are committed if the Commission: (a) erroneously interprets and applies by its ultimate ruling the law applicable to the facts found by it, or, (b) in its findings of fact, which form the basis of such ultimate ruling, misinterprets the evidence, or, (c) makes such findings of fact unsupported by substantial evidence. (5) Further, the rates must not be confiscatory in violation of the due process clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions. State, Art. I, Sec. 19; Federal, 14th Amendment.

“The Commission is the judge of the facts in rate cases such as this. This court under the statute which created it is only a court to decide questions of law. It must be so, for it has not at its disposal the engineering and the technical skill to decide questions of fact which were wisely left within the province of the Commission. Only when the Commission abuses the discretion entrusted to it, or fails to follow the mandate of the legislature, or to be bound by the prohibitions of the constitution, can this court intervene. Then the question becomes one of law. We cannot review the Commission’s findings of fact and seek to determine *231 what rates are reasonable and just. When the Commission decides a case before it without evidence, or on inadmissible evidence, or improperly interprets the evidence before it, then the question becomes one of law.”
N. E. Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Public Utilities Comm., 148 Me. 374, 377, 94 A. (2nd) 801.

The above statement was quoted with approval in Central Maine Power Co. v. P. U. C., 150 Me. 257, 261, 109 A. (2nd) 512. Among other cases illustrating the “substantial evidence” rule are: Hamilton v. Power Co., 121 Me. 422, 117 A. 582; Public Utilities Commission v. Utterstrom, 136 Me. 263, 8 A. (2nd) 207; Public Utilities Commission v. Gallop, 143 Me. 290, 62 A. (2nd) 166; Public Utilities Commission v. Johnson Motor Transport, 147 Me. 138, 84 A. (2nd) 142; Chapman, Re: Petition to Amend, 151 Me. 68, 118 A. (2nd) 130; State of Maine v. Ballard, 152 Me. 158, 125 A. (2nd) 861.

In an earlier statement of the rule Chief Justice Cornish, speaking for the court, said in Public Utilities Commission v. Lewiston Water Comm., 123 Me. 389, 390, 123 A. 177:

“This Court is not an Appellate Court from the Public Utilities Commission, to retry questions of fact already tried and decided by that tribunal. The only power of review relates to questions of law. ‘Questions of law may be raised by alleging exceptions to the rulings of the Commission on an agreed statement of facts, or on facts found by the Commission.’ (Now R. S. Chap. 44, Sec. 67). ‘Facts found by the Commission are not open to question in this Court unless the Commission should find facts to exist without any substantial evidence to support them, when such finding would be open to exceptions as being unwarranted in law.’ Hamilton v. Caribou Water, Light and Power Company, 121 Maine, 422, a case which determines the power of this court on review in this class of cases and establishes the practice in such proceedings.”

*232 We are not here concerned with the provisions for additional court review enacted in 1953 under which no case has yet been brought to the Law Court. R. S. Chap. 44, Sec. 69. The present case is governed by Section 67, unchanged in the pertinent language since first enacted in Laws of 1913, Chap. 129, Sec. 53.

The problem before us, as is so often the case, lies not chiefly in the ascertainment of the applicable rules of law, but in their application to the facts.

The contentions of the Company are conveniently summarized in the following table from its brief:

TABLE

“Return found by Commission........ $10,064,075

(Percent of $179,250,000 rate base — 5.61%). Overstatement of above return through erroneous rulings of the Commission as to operating expenses properly includable on a test year basis:

Additional Federal income tax...... $ 118,000

Additional wage costs.............. 105,000

Additional fuel costs............... 191,000

Promotional expenses disallowed .... 80,000

Federal income taxes deferred because of accelerated depreciation........ 353,000

Total $ 847,000

A. Return which can be earned under present rates ................... $ 9,217,075

B. Additional amount required to produce a return equal to 5.8% on the rate base ....................... 1,179,425 *

5.8% return on the $179,250,000 rate base found by the Commission .... $10,396,500

*233 We here note that for the purposes of this case an income tax rate of 52% is applicable to all of the charges in operating expenses and to any additional amount necessary to produce a given return on the rate base. To bring 48 cents additional into the return upon the rate base requires $1.00 in revenue from the customer.

For the Company, the Commission, and the Court, the income tax is neither more nor less than an inescapable fact.

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Bluebook (online)
136 A.2d 726, 153 Me. 228, 1957 Me. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-maine-power-co-v-public-utilities-commission-me-1957.