Guilford-Chester Water Co. v. Loughlin

113 A.2d 608, 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 355, 19 Conn. Supp. 355, 1955 Conn. Super. LEXIS 86
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1955
DocketFile 100401
StatusPublished

This text of 113 A.2d 608 (Guilford-Chester Water Co. v. Loughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guilford-Chester Water Co. v. Loughlin, 113 A.2d 608, 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 355, 19 Conn. Supp. 355, 1955 Conn. Super. LEXIS 86 (Colo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Alcorn, J.

On March 24, 1954, the plaintiff, a public service water company, filed with the defendant public utilities commission a proposal to increase its rates and charges for water service designed to provide additional annual revenue of approximately $57,000, effective as of July 1, 1954. The commission, after an investigation and hearing, found the proposed rates to be more than just and reasonable but did approve the filing of a revised *357 schedule of rates to provide additional revenue approximating 40 per cent of that proposed by the company. Thereafter the company took this appeal but, at the same time, secured proper authorization to operate under the rates to the extent approved by the commission, and has, since September 1,1954, been operating under those rates.

The commission has, pursuant to the statute, filed a duly certified record of the case before it pertinent to the appeal. The function of the court is to “review, upon the record so certified, the proceedings of the commission and examine the question of the legality of the order, authorization or decision appealed from and the propriety and expediency of such order, authorization or decision so far as said court shall have cognizance of such subject and shall proceed thereon in the same manner as upon complaints for equitable relief.” General Statutes, § 5427.

From the finding of the commission these facts appear: The company proposes to make substantial improvements in its water supply system at a total estimated cost of $800,000. This program is necessary in order to give adequate service to the company’s customers. The largest item of this program is the extension of the company’s system into the Cornfield Point, Knollwood, and Fernwood areas of Old Savbrook at a cost of approximately $312,000. The company has a contract with the town of Old Saybrook under which the latter guaranteed a revenue equal to 15 per cent of the cost of the extension. This guarantee, based upon the estimated cost of $31.2,000, will produce an annual revenue of $46,800. The company estimates revenues of $309,350 and operating expenses, depreciation and taxes of $226,-827 for the year 1954, leaving an estimated operating income for that year of $82,523, based upon present rates. In arriving at the estimated revenue *358 of $309,350, the company included $37,350 referable to the Saybrook contract for a nine-month period. This should be adjusted to include the full twelvemonth period, for which the revenue would be $46,800. After making that adjustment, $318,704 is a substantially accurate estimate of revenues based on present rates. Griving effect to other minor factors, this adjustment would indicate an operating ineome approximating $87,970 for 1954. In order to complete the construction and improvement program, the company proposes to issue and sell 11,000 shares of common stock. This is a proper method of financing the undertaking. It already has 25,000 shares of common stock outstanding on which the annual dividend payment totals $44,000. The operating income yielded by the present rates will be insufficient to meet all charges against ineome and dividend payments at the current rate on the outstanding stock and the new shares to be issued. It would be difficult to attract the needed new capital at the present earnings and therefore the present rate schedule is less than just and reasonable. The schedule of rates and charges proposed by the company would yield operating income of $115,700, which is more than necessary to preserve the company’s integrity. A schedule which would yield operating revenues of $342,000 would produce operating income of $99,000 and this would be just and reasonable. Such a return would permit the company to maintain its dividend rate on its outstanding stock and on the 11,000 new shares to be issued. Any greater return would unnecessarily burden the company’s customers and disproportionately compensate the owners of the company.

The question presented to the court by this appeal is whether, upon the record, the commission “has acted illegally or has exceeded or abused its power or acted arbitrarily or without notice and a reason *359 able opportunity to be heard.” Kram v. Public Utilities Commission, 126 Conn. 543, 550. No claim is made that the commission acted improperly in undertaking investigation of the proposed rates filed by the company and in holding hearings, nor could such claim validly be made. New Haven v. New Haven Water Co., 132 Conn. 496, 511.

Upon the investigation undertaken, the question before the commission was to determine whether the proposed rates were “unreasonably discriminatory or more or less than just, reasonable and adequate to enable [the] company to provide properly for the public convenience, necessity and welfare,” and to “determine and prescribe .. . just and reasonable maximum rates and charges to be made by [the] company.” General Statutes, § 5409. This presented primarily a question of fact depending largely on the circumstances of the ease and to be decided with due regard to the effect upon both the company and the public so that the ultimate conclusion should produce a rate not so low as to be confiscatory nor so high as to exceed the value of the service to the customer. New Haven v. New Haven Water Co., 118 Conn. 389, 402. If the rate is not made high enough to cover the cost of service, the carrying charges, a reasonable sum for depreciation, and a fair return on the investment, it unduly deprives the company of its property without just compensation and is not reasonable. Turner v. Connecticut Co., 91 Conn. 692, 699. The fixing of such a confiscatory rate would be illegal action upon the part of the commission. The burden of showing that such a result follows in this case rests upon the plaintiff company. Kram v. Public Utilities Commission, supra, 548.

The company complains that the commission failed to consider its evidence that it was entitled to utility operating income sufficient to maintain its present *360 dividend rate of 6.77 per cent without using for the purpose more than 84 per cent of its net earnings before dividends so that the balance might be carried to surplus. The company argues further that the commission arrived at a figure no more than sufficient to pay dividends and without maldng allowance for any amount to be carried to surplus. Finally it is asserted that this result came about largely as a result of making the adjustment for the full year’s earnings on the contract with the town of Old Saybrook without, at the same time, making a corresponding adjustment for expenditures.

These claims reduce to the proposition that in taking the 1954 estimates as a working basis and adjusting the income without a corresponding adjustment for depreciation and expense the commission has arrived at rates which will not produce a reasonable balance to surplus after dividend payments.

The record discloses the following facts: With slight modification, the commission accepted the company’s own figures as to income and expense.

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Related

City of New Haven v. New Haven Water Co.
45 A.2d 831 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1946)
City of New Haven v. New Haven Water Co.
172 A. 767 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1934)
Turner v. Connecticut Co.
101 A. 88 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1917)
Kram v. Public Utilities Commission
12 A.2d 775 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
113 A.2d 608, 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 355, 19 Conn. Supp. 355, 1955 Conn. Super. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilford-chester-water-co-v-loughlin-connsuperct-1955.