City of Erie v. Public Service Commission

96 Pa. Super. 42, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 103
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 19, 1928
DocketAppeal 1551
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 Pa. Super. 42 (City of Erie v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Erie v. Public Service Commission, 96 Pa. Super. 42, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 103 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The City of Erie, appellant herein, was the complainant in a proceeding before the Public Service Commission, in which an increase in the rates of the Mutual Telephone Company for its service in the City and County of Erie was attacked as “excessive, unfair, unjust and unreasonable,” and violative of our Public Service Company Law. The new schedule was filed March 2, to become effective April 1, 1926, and the complaint was filed March 24, thereby casting upon the utility the burden of showing the reasonableness of the increase in its rates. A number of hearings were conducted by the commission between June 3, 1926, and May 8, 1927. On January 4, 1928, the commission filed its report and order dismissing the complaint, from which order we have this appeal by the City of Erie.

The company contended before the commission that the fair value of its property for rate making purposes, as it existed on August 31, 1926, and based upon its reproduction cost, less accrued depreciation, was at least $5,023,494. Appellant contended that its fair value upon that basis was only $4,251,828. The company, however, insisted that the reproduction cost of its property, without any deduction for depreciation, namely, $5,714,060, should be considered as a proper rate base — a contention which the commission properly rejected. The commission found that the fair value of the company’s property as of August 31, 1926, was $4,825,000. Upon this amount it allowed a seven per cent, rate of return, or $337,750 per annum; made an allowance of $548,762 for annual operating expenses and an allowance of $150,000 for annual de *45 predation, or a total of $1,036,512 as the annual revenue the company might reasonably be permitted to collect from the users of its service.

During the progress of the proceeding before the commission it was estimated that the rates in the new schedule would produce approximately $1,018,463 annually; to this the commission found should be added $980 of non-operating revenue (rents); and the commission therefore estimated the total annual revenue which the new schedule might reasonably be expected to produce at $1,019,443. It subsequently developed, as a result of the actual experience of the company under the new rates for the first year — April 1, 1926, to March 31, 1927, — that they produced $1,029,843 as operating income. If the same amount of non-operating income be added, and no deduction's made for uncollectible items, the total revenue under the new rates for the first year they were in operation would be $1,030,823 or $5,689 less than the allowable revenue fixed by the commission. Appellant contends that this result is due to the fact that the commission not only fixed the rate base at an unreasonably high figure but also made an excessive allowance for annual operating expense's, including taxes. No question of confiscation is involved in this case; the complaint is in behalf of ratepayers and it therefore becomes our duty upon this appeal to inquire only whether the commission has “arbitrarily fixed the rates contrary to-evidence, or without evidence to support it, or in a grossly unreasonable manner”: Lewistown Borough v. Public Service Commission, 80 Pa. Superior Ct. 528, 533, and cases there cited. The form of the assignments of error as printed in appellant’s brief should not be permitted to pass without comment. The first and second relate to. the final order and are not objectionable but the third, fourth and fifth are drafted in terms so general that they fail to afford us any indication of the specific findings of the com *46 mission which, appellant’ deems erroneous. For instance, hy the third it is averred that the commission “erred In its finding that the fair value of the properties of the Mutual Telephone Company was $4,825,-000,” and then follows merely a quotation of the general finding. No attempt is made to specify the items which appellant contends were improperly included in the rate base. By the fourth assignment it is charged that the commission erred in making an allowance of $548,762 for operating expenses but there is no specification of any item or items which should not have been allowed or which should have been included at a lower figure than that fixed by the commission. The fifth is open to the same objection. The petition on this appeal, in which the appellant should have set forth “specifically and concisely the error or errors assigned to the finding, determination, or order of the commission,” has been improperly omitted from the printed record. We have, however, examined the original petition as returned with the record and find that it contains fifteen assignments of alleged errors, many of which are in general terms. From a consideration of the assignments, petition and appellant’s statement of the questions involved we gather that- its material complaints are that the commission erred in these five particulars:

1. Including in the rate base an'item of $99,546 for property — the Ninth Street Exchange — which is no longer used or useful;

2. Including in its finding of fair value the sum of $245,000 as cost of financing;

3. Finding the sum of $190,000 to be reasonable and necessary for working capital;

4. Including in its finding of fair value the sum of $657,444 as representing the additions made to plant facilities between October 1,1925, and August 31,1926, which item appellant contends should not have exceeded $405,496;

*47 5. Allowing $548,762 for annual operating expenses, including federal and other taxes, and exclusive of the allowance for annual depreciation.

Several other matters are discussed in appellant’s brief, among them being the propriety of including in the allowance for operating expenses all federal and state taxes and at the same time allowing a seven per cent, return. The commission has not made any specific findings with respect to the matter of taxes and it does not appear that the question which appellant now seeks to argue was raised before the commission. Even if we assume that the federa! income tax and the state tax on corporate loans were both included in the allowance for operating expenses, the record does not contain the data necessary for a disposition of the questions appellant now endeavors to raise. Moreover, the learned counsel for appellant state in their brief, in connection with their discussion of operating expenses, that “the appellant [does] not contend that this sum [$548,762] included any improper expenditures, but [does] contend that expenditures in large amounts were made for purpose's which would not occur again, at least for many years.” Under all the circumstances we must decline to consider the question of taxes upon this appeal. Nor are we concerned in this case with the matter of going concern value as the amount fixed by the commission for this item is $40,000 less than the amount suggested as proper by appellant’s witness. Another somewhat subsidiary contention of appellant is that the company should be charged with interest at five per cent, “on funds collected through rates for purposes of depreciation and used for capital extensions upon which a rate of return is permitted. ” It is not suggested that the amount of the accumulations in the depreciation reserve should be considered in connection with the rate base, as in the case of City of York v. The Public Service Commission, 85 Pa. Superior Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Pa. Super. 42, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-erie-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1928.