Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission

330 A.2d 236, 1974 D.C. App. LEXIS 316, 1974 WL 333476
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1974
Docket8424
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 330 A.2d 236 (Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals 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. v. Public Service Commission, 330 A.2d 236, 1974 D.C. App. LEXIS 316, 1974 WL 333476 (D.C. 1974).

Opinion

YEAGLEY, Associate Judge:

This petition for review challenges two orders of the Public Service Commission of the District of Columbia (hereinafter “Commission”) denying the motions of the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company (hereinafter “Company”) for immediate interim rate relief pending the prescription of new permanent rates. The Company’s motions, filed between the Phase I rate of return hearing and the *238 Phase II rate design hearing, requested that the rate schedules which the Company intended to propose in the Phase II hearings be implemented immediately on a temporary basis with excess charges refundable if different permanent rates were adopted, or in the alternative, that a nonrefundable temporary uniform surcharge be approved. Finding that either plan proposed by the Company would be impracticable, yet recognizing the Company was entitled to some form of interim relief, the Commission fashioned its own plan based on a formula for a surcharge intended to permit the Company to earn at the 8.8% rate of return authorized in Phase I. Its order was to be effective immediately (May 10, 1974), but the actual collection of the higher rate of return for the interim period was to be postponed until after the Phase II hearing and the establishment of permanent rate schedules to which it would be added as a surcharge in proportion to the increases approved for the various classes of users and amortized over a three-year period.

The Company contends that the relief proposed by the Commission is unlawful and, being postponed, is inadequate. It argues that the rates which it is presently allowed to charge are confiscatory and that the court should reverse the Commission’s order and remand the case with directions that one of the interim relief plans proposed by the Company be implemented immediately. Finding the Commission’s order is not contrary to law and its relevant findings are not unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious, we affirm and therefore do not reach the other issues raised by the Company.

The original case from which these proceedings developed was instituted on April 19, 1973, when the Company filed a complaint and application for permanent rate relief with the Commission pursuant to D. C.Code 1973, §§ 43-401, 43-408, and 43-417 (Formal Case No. 595) , 1 Pursuant to its established practice the Commission divided the hearings on the Company’s application into two phases. In Phase I the Commission would determine the overall revenue requirements of the Company for its District operations and in Phase II it would decide upon a rate structure allocating the authorized revenue increase among the various classes of telephone users so as to provide the required annual revenue.

The Phase I hearing culminated in a proposed order released January 25, 1974, in which the Commission found that the Company was entitled to an 8.8% return on its local investment and that an $8,063,000-in-crease in annual gross revenue requirements would be necessary to insure that rate of return. 2 Twelve days later the Company filed its motion for interim rate relief, asserting that the rate schedules which it intended to propose in Phase II would undoubtedly provoke strenuous objections requiring a prolonged Phase II hearing which would postpone substantially the date the Company would begin to realize the increased earnings authorized in Phase I.

The Company anticipated such objections would be forthcoming because the rate schedule, which it intended to propose at the Phase II hearing as permanent rates, allocated the rate increases disproportionately among the various class of of users 3 *239 and four parties had already announced an intention to intervene. 4 The Company further supported its application for interim rate relief by asserting that “since 1968 the Company has been unable to earn the rate of return allowed it by the Commission” and that its present earnings were confiscatory.

On April 5, 1974, the Commission issued its final Phase I order, No. 5634, approving its earlier proposed order. Simultaneously it issued Order No. 5636, under appeal here, denying the Company’s motion for interim relief stating that a prima facie showing of the type required to establish an interim rate had not been made. The Company promptly filed a motion for reconsideration, 5 reiterating its previous request and proposing, in the alternative, an unrefundable interim surcharge of 7.-76% to be uniformly applied to the presently existing rate schedule.

On May 10, 1974, the Commission denied both of the Company’s proposals in Order No. 5644, the other order under appeal here. But in view of the anticipated deficiency in earnings during the extraordinary delay anticipated in Phase II, which would compound the regulatory lag already experienced, the Commission incorporated in its order interim relief in the form of the novel surcharge plan described supra.

The Commission adopted that novel form of interim relief in preference to authorizing the immediate implementation of the proposed new rates of the Company primarily because it felt that the rates the Company requested allocated the cost increases so disproportionately, 6 that an additional hearing would be necessary before it could approve such a modification of rates, even on a temporary basis.

It noted that such a hearing was held before the interim rate was approved in Re Washington Gas Light Co., Formal Case No. 567, Order No. 5517 (June 26, 1972) and that, while no such hearing was held prior to approval of interim relief in Re Potomac Electric Power Co., Formal Case No. 541, Order No. 5419, 82 P.U.R.3d 209 (January 30, 1970), the Company here had not established that it was experiencing the severe emergency financial predicament which faced the Potomac Electric Power Company. Although different minds may not agree on distinctions that hinge on a difference in degree of severity, such differences are a fact of life and we will not attempt to substitute our judgment for the Commission’s in this instance.

With that background we turn to a determination of the validity of the two Commission orders on appeal here. In the first order the Commission rejected the Company’s proposal for the imposition of interim rates and in the latter it rejected the Company’s alternate proposal for a 7.-76% surcharge but delineated its own surcharge proposal as previously described.

In considering the Company’s contentions we are mindful that Congress has vested rate-making authority in the Commission and not in this court. The scope of our review is limited to determining “questions of law . . . and the findings of fact by the Commission shall be conclusive unless it shall appear that such findings of the Commission are unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious.” 7 D.C.Code 1973, § 43-706. See Watergate Improvement Associates v. Public Service Commission, D.C.App., 326 A.2d 778 (1974); Telephone Users Ass’n v.

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Bluebook (online)
330 A.2d 236, 1974 D.C. App. LEXIS 316, 1974 WL 333476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-potomac-telephone-co-v-public-service-commission-dc-1974.