Fall River Gas Works Co. v. Board of Gas & Electric Light Commissioners

102 N.E. 475, 214 Mass. 529, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1280
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 23, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 475 (Fall River Gas Works Co. v. Board of Gas & Electric Light Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fall River Gas Works Co. v. Board of Gas & Electric Light Commissioners, 102 N.E. 475, 214 Mass. 529, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1280 (Mass. 1913).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

The petitioner alleges in substance that the respondent board, hereinafter called the board, acting under R. L. c. 109, § 24, upon the application of the petitioner, hereinafter called the company, to the board for its approval of a proposed issue of additional stock, dismissed the application, being moved thereto by an erroneous view of the law; and prays that a writ of certiorari may issue to the end that the error may be corrected and the board directed to act upon the application in accordance with law. The board filed an answer in which was a return setting forth the record of its proceedings. By a reservation all questions of law arising upon the pleadings are before us, such entry to be made as law and justice may require.

There is little, if any, dispute about the facts. They are set forth in the return as follows:

[530]*530“This is an application by the Fall River Gas Works Company-for the approval of an issue of eleven hundred and fifty (1,150) shares of additional capital stock, of the par value of one hundred, dollars each, at a price of two hundred and twenty-five dollars a share, as determined by the directors, for the payment of the company’s obligations already incurred for construction and for future additions to plant.
“On December 31, 1911, the company had outstanding promissory notes amounting to $200,000, and it is to the payment of these notes and to proposed subsequent expenditures of about $40,000 for new plant that the proceeds of the new stock named in the company’s petition are to be applied. Between June 30, 1904, and December 31, 1911, the company’s total expenditures for additions to plant were $409,045.16. Of this amount, $154, 192.27 was expended prior to June 30, 1906. In August of that year, upon the application of the company for the approval of an issue of 1,150 shares of new stock to meet the cost of additions to its plant which had been completed and was included in its promissory notes on June 30, the board approved of the issue of 550 shares at the price of $185 per share and required the proceeds, amounting to $101,750, to be applied to the payment and cancellation of an equal amount of the notes. The board stated, as its reason for imposing this limitation on the number of shares then to be issued, that there were ‘available funds for the payment of a large portion of this debt.’ The notes outstanding on June 30, 1906, amounted to $217,000. The new stock was issued in October and November, 1906.
“Dining the period covered by the plant expenditures stated above, the operating profits amounted to $1,085,763.06. The regular dividends, at the rate of 10 per cent prior to June 30, 1908, and 12 per cent annually thereafter, required $552,050, leaving for net earnings above such dividends $533,713.06. These net earnings exceeded by $226,417.90 the cost of the additions to plant after applying thereto the proceeds of the stock approved in 1906. Interest payments during the same time amounted to $32,038.51 and other minor charges to $27,467.45. During this period the company, in addition to the dividends above referred to, declared two extra dividends, one of 20 per cent in July, 1907, and one of 15 per cent in December, 1910, requiring for [531]*531this distribution the sum of $241,500. The notes payable at the close of the year 191.1 were within about $40,000 of the amount required for the extra dividends described, and the conclusion seems irresistible that, but for the declaration and payment of these extra dividends, these notes would not now exist.”

Shortly stated, the facts in substance are that the company after paying dividends at the rate of ten or twelve per cent per annum, had remaining as profits an amount exceeding the outstanding obligations incurred in making the addition to the plant, and that instead of applying these profits to the discharge of these obligations it distributed them among its stockholders in the form of two extra dividends of fifteen and twenty per cent respectively.

Upon this showing the board dismissed the petition, stating the reason for its action in the following language:

“Section 20 of chapter 109 of the Revised Laws provides that no gas light company 'shall declare any stock or script dividend or divide the proceeds of the sale of stock or script among its stockholders/ If the outstanding notes were issued for the express purpose of providing for these dividends, to issue stock for their payment would be a plain violation of this provision. Where net earnings are of such volume that they may readily supply the funds for all needed additions to plant, but the company, rather than so apply them, divides all these earnings among its stockholders and provides for additions by outstanding loans to be thereafter capitalized, the prohibition of the statute, if strictly construed, may perhaps be avoided. But by the persistent pursuit of such methods it is obvious that through a maintenance of prices necessary to produce such earnings, a company not only may compel the public to contribute all the additional investment required for the business, but also may have this contribution permanently represented by capital stock. Such a course, in the judgment of the board, is not only contrary to the public interest, but, even if it be not an actual evasion of the law cited, is a clear violation- of its spirit and of the policy it is intended to declare.
“At the close of the year 1911 the company’s accounts receivable amounted to nearly $50,000 and it had on hand upwards of $30,000 of supplies and $87,000 in cash. There is every reason [532]*532to believe that the company’s income will afford ample provision, in addition to its regular dividends, for the plant additions proposed subsequent to December 31, 1911, and render a new issue of stock unnecessary for that purpose.
“Whenever, because of increased costs not now apparent or of future reductions in the price of gas, profits shall appear inadequate for the reasonably necessary purposes of the corporation, the question of a new stock issue will be entitled to further consideration.”

It nowhere appears that the board' questioned the propriety or reasonable necessity of the additions to the plant made or to be made, or that the amount expended and to be expended therefor represents their cost and real value; and the fair construction of the answer and return is that, making no question as to these matters, the board dismissed the petition solely upon the grounds set forth in the return. And the question is whether there was error of law in dismissing the petition on those grounds.

R. L. c.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fitchburg Gas & Electric Light Co. v. Department of Public Utilities
483 N.E.2d 76 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1985)
First National Bank of White River JCT. v. Reed
306 F.2d 481 (Second Circuit, 1962)
New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Department of Public Utilities
97 N.E.2d 509 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1951)
Lowell Gas Co. v. Department of Public Utilities
84 N.E.2d 811 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1949)
Attorney General v. Trustees of Boston Elevated Railway Co.
67 N.E.2d 676 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1946)
Lowell Gas Light Co. v. Department of Public Utilities
64 N.E.2d 640 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1946)
Hope Natural Gas Co. v. Federal Power Commission
134 F.2d 287 (Fourth Circuit, 1943)
Wisconsin Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission
287 N.W. 167 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1939)
Alabama Public Service Commission v. Mobile Gas Co.
104 So. 538 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1925)
Grafton County Electric Light & Power Co. v. State
94 A. 193 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1915)
Bulkeley v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad
103 N.E. 1033 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 475, 214 Mass. 529, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fall-river-gas-works-co-v-board-of-gas-electric-light-commissioners-mass-1913.