Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. of Baltimore City v. Whitman

3 F.2d 938, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 908, 1925 WL 63396
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 27, 1925
Docket727
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 938 (Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. of Baltimore City v. Whitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. of Baltimore City v. Whitman, 3 F.2d 938, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 908, 1925 WL 63396 (D. Md. 1925).

Opinion

ROSE, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff in this cause is the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company of Baltimore City, a Maryland corporation. Whenever there is occasion to distinguish it from any other body corporate, it will be referred to as the Maryland Company, and when there is not, it will be more briefly styled the Company. It supplies telephone service throughout the state. In June, 1924, it wished to raise its charges. As required by law, it published its proposed schedules of rates and filed copies of them with the Public Service Commission of Maryland, herein called the Commission. The changes it contemplated would have increased by over $1,100,000, or by about one-eighth, the total cost to the public of services identical with those rendered by it in 1923.

At the instance of the Commission, and for the purpose of giving the latter time to inquire into the reasonableness of the new rates, the Company postponed the date at which they would be put into effect until November 1, 1924. The hearings before the Commission began on the 22d of September. When the 1st of November arrived they had not been concluded, and at the ur-. *940 gent request of the Governor of the state the Company substituted January 1, 1925, for November 1, 1924, as the day upon .which it purposed.to put in force the new and higher charges.

The hearings before the Commission continued until December 22, 1924. One week later it announced its conclusions. It embodied them in an elaborate opinion and order, which refused the increase asked for and continued the previously existing rates in force for two years from January 1, 1925, until .December'31, 1926, both dates inclusive, unless within that time the Commission should otherwise direct.

' The Company began this suit on December 31st, two days after the order was entered. In its bill of complaint it says that under the rates the Commission requires it to maintain it. cannot get a fair return upon the fair and reasonable value of its property exclusively devoted to furnishing intrastate telephone service in Maryland. It prays that the order imposing such rates upon it shall be declared void, the Commission enjoined during the litigation, as well as permanently, from attempting to compel it to keep' them in force, and in like manner restrained pending the hearing of the application for an interlocutory injunction.

Judge Soper who was asked to issue the temporary restraining order, at once conferred with the Attorney General of the state and with the other counsel on both sides of the case. He concluded that there was small occasion for such a stay,, as the motion for a preliminary injunction could ‘b'e set for hearing within a week from the filing of the bill. Such dispatch was, under the circumstances, both possible and desirable. Both parties were then full of the ease. The trial before the Commission had extended over 3 months, 49 days of which had been occupied in public hearings. They ended only 16 days before the date upon which they began again in. this court. The witnesses required by either party to sustain its position on the important issues involved were accessible in at least as large a proportion as they were ever likely to be again.

The members of the court knew how unsatisfactory affidavit evidence usually is. At their instance and with the cordial concurrence of all the counsel engaged, the witnesses were examined and cross-examined in open court. We are indebted to our professional brethren appearing in the ease for their hearty, able, and effective, co-operation with us and with each other in expediting the proceedings, and for the skill with which in the examination of the witnesses, speed, and thoroughness were successfully combined. The hearing before us occupied some 8 days, of rather more than normal length. We regret that the inescapable pressure of other judicial duties has made it necessary for us to keep the case under consideration for a longer time than would have been otherwise required, even after all due allowance is made for the importance and difficulty of many of the questions involved.

The Controverted Questions.

At the hearing, every one agreed that the Company was entitled to a fair return upon the actual present value of its property employed-in the service of its patrons, for as the Supreme Court has said: “Rates which are not sufficient to yield a reasonable return on the value of the property used at the time it is being used to render the service are unjust, unreasonable, and confiscatory, and their enforcement deprives the public utility company of its property in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.” (The italics are ours.) Bluefield Waterworks v. Public Service Commission, 262 U. S. 679, 690, 43 S. Ct. 675, 678 (67 L. Ed. 1176).

As usual, however, in rate eases, there was wide difference of opinion, both as to what that value is and as to the relative accuracy of the several conceivable ways of aseertaining.it. There were, moreover, two other questions as to which the parties were in conflict. One of them was as to whether certain payments made by the Company to other 'corporations should be charged, as the Company claimed, to expenses, or were, as the Commission held, a part of the net earnings. The other matter in dispute was the minimum percentage of return to which the Company was lawfully entitled. These questions will be considered in the reverse order in which they have been stated.

Present Value of Company’s Property-Market Value.

Usually the law assumes that, at any particular time, a thing is worth what it will then fetch in the open market. Some commodities are habitually dealt with on exchanges, which keep a record of what is sold on them and of the prices realized. As a rule, the law .for its purposes will accept such quotations as accurately determining what the commodity was worth on any particular day, although doubtless it *941 sometimes may he permissible to show the existence of peculiar conditions which would make the ordinary assumption untrue and unjust. Other articles are subjects of almost daily purchase and sale, but the transactions in them are matters of private bargaining, and the prices paid at the same time by different people may vary considerably. In sueh cases the trier of fact may not find it quite so easy to determine what, at any particular time, may have been the precise actual worth of a unit of the commodity involved in the controversy, but the margin of possible uncertainty is usually relatively small. Then, again, the property, the value of which is to be ascertained, may have peculiarities of its own, as is usually the case with land.

Court or jury may have not a little difficulty in determining from conflicting testimony what the real market value is; but the law says they must come as near as they can to valuing the land at the best price which its owner, if willing to sell, but not compelled to do so, could obtain for it from a buyer who wanted it, but who could get along very well without it. It is doubtless easier to state the rule than it is to apply it, by putting oneself in the position of sueh purely imaginary buyers and sellers; but on the whole, in practice, it has worked fairly well. In the nature of things, there can he seldom anything like a free market for a public utility.

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3 F.2d 938, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 908, 1925 WL 63396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-potomac-telephone-co-of-baltimore-city-v-whitman-mdd-1925.