City of Miami v. Florida Public Service Commission

208 So. 2d 249, 1968 WL 163771
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 27, 1968
Docket35978, 35994
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 208 So. 2d 249 (City of Miami v. Florida Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Miami v. Florida Public Service Commission, 208 So. 2d 249, 1968 WL 163771 (Fla. 1968).

Opinion

208 So.2d 249 (1968)

The CITY OF MIAMI, Florida, Petitioner,
v.
FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, and Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, Respondents.
The CITY OF MIAMI, Florida, Petitioner,
v.
FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, and Florida Power & Light Company, Respondents.

Nos. 35978, 35994.

Supreme Court of Florida.

January 15, 1968.
As Revised on Denial of Rehearing March 27, 1968.

*250 Jack R. Rice, Jr., City Atty., and Sam Daniels, Miami, Special Counsel for City of Miami, petitioner.

William C. Steel, Phillip Goldman, Scott, McCarthy, Steel, Hector & Davis, Miami, James H. Sweeny, Jr., DeLand, and Sidney Hoehl, Coral Gables, for Florida Power & Light Co.

Harold B. Wahl, Loftin & Wahl, Jacksonville, William C. Lantaff, John H. Wahl, Jr., Walton, Lantaff, Schroeder, Carson & Wahl, Miami, Nathan H. Wilson, Jacksonville, Jefferson Davis, and Drury B. Thompson, Atlanta, Ga., for Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co.

Lewis W. Petteway, Tallahassee, for Florida Public Service Commission.

ERVIN, Justice.

Petitioner, the City of Miami, Florida, seeks judicial review by certiorari of Orders 4076 and 4078 of the Florida Public Service Commission relating to the rates, charges and earnings of, respectively, Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company and Florida Power & Light Company. Upon certiorari granted, the two cases were consolidated for oral argument pursuant to motion of the Petitioner. Due to the fact that the basic issues in both cases involve common questions of law, we have consolidated them for purposes of review and decision.

General Services Administration, a protestant with Petitioner in the original hearings, did not petition us for review.

Some background facts involved in the instant consolidated cases are related as follows:

On November 30, 1964 the Florida Public Service Commission issued an order fixing January 18, 1965 as the date for commencement of hearings on the justness and reasonableness of the rates and charges of Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company for intrastate service in the State of Florida. The Commission on December 4, 1964 issued an order fixing January 28, 1965 as the date for commencement of similar hearings regarding the justness and reasonableness of rates and charges of Florida Power & Light Company. The purpose and reason for each of the orders was to hear

"* * * all interested parties who desire an opportunity to testify concerning the rates, charges, and earnings * * * as well as the rate-making practices, policies, *251 and philosophies under which said public utility operates and prices its services, so that the Commission may be fully advised in the premises and, on the basis of all the testimony in this proceeding, establish a proper rate base, depreciation rates, and rate of return for said utility and make whatever rate adjustment, if any, may be appropriate and in the public interest."

After a number of public hearings were held in each case, producing more than 5,000 pages of testimony and in excess of 400 documentary exhibits, the cases were submitted to the Commission, which determined as follows:

Regarding Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, on October 26, 1966 the Commission issued Order No. 4076, the basic import of which is as follows:

"* * * we specifically find that the rates and charges of Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company are unreasonably high to the extent that annual gross revenues for the test year, on an annual basis at the end of said period, resulted in earnings in excess of 6.80% when applied to the adjusted year-end net investment rate base which we have found to be $478,530,895; that said excess earnings, restated on a gross revenue basis, amount to the sum of $3,741,885 after having deducted $1,192,000 for income tax savings previously passed on to the Company's rate payers; and that the Company's gross revenues for the test period, adjusted to the year-end basis, should be reduced by said amount of $3,741,885."

Regarding Florida Power & Light Company — on November 2, 1966 the Commission entered Order No. 4078, the basic import of said order being:

"* * * we specifically find that the rates and charges of Florida Power and Light Company are excessive and unreasonably high to the extent that annual gross revenues for the test year, on an annual basis, resulted in earnings in excess of 6.95% when applied to the adjusted year-end net investment rate base which we have found to be $637,826,667; that said excess earnings, restated on a gross revenue basis, amount to the sum of $7,973,000; and that the Company's gross revenues for the test year should be reduced by said amount of $7,073,000."

Petitioner contends that in both cases the Commission should and would have ordered a much greater reduction in rates if due consideration had been given the applicable law and admitted facts. Specifically, Petitioner contends that in both orders the Commission departed from essential requirements of law by doing or allowing the following:

A. Computing rate base at the end of the test year rather than on the average investment during the twelve-month period.

B. Making only a 20% deduction for federal income tax accruals.

C. Allowing the companies concerned to make charitable contributions with consumer monies.

D. Allowing each company to retain its excessive charges rather than making the reduction orders retroactive.

E. Erred in the determination as to the fair rate of return on invested capital of each company.

We preface our discussion of the aforementioned points with the following general proposition regarding judicial review of utility rates:

"* * * When a case arises in which it becomes necessary to determine whether a properly established rate is a reasonable or constitutional one, either to protect the public against excessive or unreasonable charges or to protect a public utility against the infringement of its constitutional rights and rates which are so low as to amount to confiscation or deprivation of its property, the courts may determine the reasonableness of such *252 rates and may enjoin the enforcement of an unjust, unreasonable, or confiscatory rate ...
"* * * However, the duty of courts with respect to rate making is merely to inquire concerning results; and where the issue is whether rates prescribed by public authority are confiscatory, the court is not bound to accept the findings of the rate-making authority, though they are supported by substantial evidence, but may exercise its independent judgment upon the facts." 43 Am.Jur., Public Utilities and Services § 185, pp. 693-695.

REGARDING POINT A:

In both cases Petitioner contends that while it has no quarrel with the test period adopted by the Commission, it does most vigorously take exception to the computations of rate base at the end of the test year selected by the Commission which extended from October 1, 1963 to September 30, 1964, rather than on the average investments during the twelve-month period. Petitioner argues that the soundest and most reliable method of computing a utility's earned rate of return is to relate the average rate base during the test year to the actual earnings produced by that rate base.

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208 So. 2d 249, 1968 WL 163771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-miami-v-florida-public-service-commission-fla-1968.