East Bay Water Co. v. McLaughlin

24 F. Supp. 222, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 899, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1903
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedAugust 21, 1938
Docket19254-S
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 F. Supp. 222 (East Bay Water Co. v. McLaughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Bay Water Co. v. McLaughlin, 24 F. Supp. 222, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 899, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1903 (N.D. Cal. 1938).

Opinion

*223 LINDLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiff sues to recover additional income taxes assessed against it for the year 1928, arising out of the alleged profit made in the sale of its assets that year, the property having been acquired January 1, 1917. The Commissioner fixed the value at that time at the sum of $16,548,541, and, deducting this from the purchase price received, assessed the tax upon the resulting profit. The question here is whether the property was worth, on January 1, 1917, more than the sum found by the Commissioner, and if so, how much; for if the value shall be found to have exceeded that fixed by the Commissioner, then the profit resulting from the sale will be reduced by such excess and a refund become due. The only other question presented is as to the assessment of interest. Obviously the court is concerned primarily with the value of the assets acquired January 1, 1917.

On July 10, 1915, the Railroad Commission of California approved and adopted the opinion and order recommended by one of its members upon the application of plaintiff’s predecessor, Peoples Water Company, for an order authorizing the transfer of its property to a corporation thereafter to be organized and the issuance of stocks and bonds by the latter corporation. It is obvious from the opinion and order that the purpose of the Commission in that proceeding was to determine what securities might with safety be issued as consideration for the taking over of the property of the Peoples Water Company. The Commission ordered that the property might be transferred to a new corporation in consideration of the issuance and delivery by the new corporation of bonds of the face value of $8,-400,000 and capital stock of the par value of $8,640,000, or a total of $17,040,000. Thus the ultimate result of the proceeding was the approval by the Commission of the issuance of securities of the face value of $17,040,000 for the property of the corporation.

The Commissioner who made the recommendation and wrote the opinion concluded that the fair value of the property was $14,-100,000. He added, however, the cautionary suggestion that the value found was one determined for the purposes of that proceeding only, and that it might very well be that a proceeding before the Commission to fix the just compensation which the public should pay for the property upon taking it over would result in a different figure. Later, in 7 Cal.R.C. 787, the Commission said: “The Commission thus clearly stated that the value found was one for the purpose of the present proceeding only. It would be manifestly improper to make a finding in the present proceeding as to the value of the property for the purpose of some entirely different proceeding which has not been brought before the Commission. In a condemnation proceeding it may be necessary to consider certain elements of value which it was not necessary or proper to consider in the present proceeding, but for rate fixing purposes property not used and useful would not be included.”

Included in the value of $14,100,000 was that of the land, $7,558,731.95, accepted by the parties in this proceeding. In determining the worth of the remainder of the property the writer of the opinion considered the plant, rights of way, water rights, going concern value, easements, filling over service pipes, and an added item of cost of wells. Each of these elements was discussed from the point of view of evidence submitted, including cost of reproduction new, the value of water rights and easements and property valuations determined by a capitalization of the earnings.

The Commissioner apparently relied chiefly upon the testimony of three witnesses, Cory, Hawley and Dockweiler, as to reproduction cost of the property, less depreciation.

Cory’s valuation, undepreciated, was $9,843,470, and depreciated, $7,874,776; that of Hawley, undepreciated, $7,860,816, and depreciated, $5,245,168; that of Dockweiler, undepreciated, $8,133,607, and depreciated, $5,539,971. $945,000 of the difference between Cory and Hawley was found due to an allowance by Cory of that amount for paving over mains and surfaces actually done after the water pipes of the Company were laid. To this item the Commissioner refused to give any weight. The depreciation was calculated by Hawley, Cory, and Dockweiler upon the straight line method. Hawley submitted also a calculation of depreciation on the sinking fund basis, which resulted in a depreciation of $1,426,659 instead of $2,615,648. The Commissioner seems to have relied principally upon Hawley’s evidence.

The Water Company there offered evidence as to the value of its water rights, consisting of rights acquired by prescription, through sinking of wells, pumping water therefrom, the building of collecting *224 reservoirs, acquisition of riparian rights and all other elements entering into the right to take, use, and sell water. There was then in production approximately 18,000,000 gallons per day, and the water rights as to these plaintiff insisted were worth $1,800,-000 or $100,000 per million gallons per day. Plaintiff contended also that the water rights represented by the owned but undeveloped resources were worth $50,000 per million gallons daily, and that there were approximately 19,000,000 gallons daily of such, giving a total value of undeveloped water rights of $950,000, and a total for all water rights of $2,750,000. Though the Commissioner stated that plaintiff had submitted a sincere and carefully thought-out basis for determining the value of water rights, which would have been persuasive if he were not dealing with a public utility service, he failed to state how much weight he gave thereto, or how much of the total value was represented by water rights value.

The Commissioner discussed the element of going concern value. Plaintiff was there insisting upon $1,600,000 for this element. The Commissioner did not specify what he considered a reasonable allowance, saying his omission in that respect was due to the absence of reliable data. He asserted, however, that he had given consideration to the fact that the Company was a going concern, with a large number of customers.

It is very difficult to analyze the total valuation then approved by the Commission and to break it up into separate items. The fair conclusion, however, seems to be that in order to determine the value of the plant the Commissioner considered Hawley’s cost new of $7,860,816, and that he probably arrived at the depreciation by averaging the calculation thereof under the straight line method and that under the sinking fund method, resulting in a net depreciation of $2,021,154, leaving a net value of the plant of $5,839,662. To this he added for easements $50,000; for filling over service pipes $60,000; additional cost of wells, $30,000; and for land $7,558,731.95. These items total $13,538,393.95. Inasmuch as the total value was fixed at $14,100,000 and the value of the properties mentioned was $13,538,-393.95, the difference of $551,605.05 apparently represents the allowance of the Commission for intangibles, such as water rights and going concern value.

With the inventory submitted in that proceeding, both parties apparently start in this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Supp. 222, 21 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 899, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-bay-water-co-v-mclaughlin-cand-1938.