Hamm v. South Carolina Public Service Commission

364 S.E.2d 455, 294 S.C. 320, 1988 S.C. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 11, 1988
Docket22820
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 364 S.E.2d 455 (Hamm v. South Carolina Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamm v. South Carolina Public Service Commission, 364 S.E.2d 455, 294 S.C. 320, 1988 S.C. LEXIS 5 (S.C. 1988).

Opinion

Ness, Chief Justice:

This is an appeal by the Consumer Advocate of an Order issued by the South Carolina Public Service Commission (SCPSC) which granted South Carolina Electric and Gas Company (SCE & G) an increase in its retail electrical rates. The issues presented question the PSC’s statutory authority and the manner by which these rates were determined. We affirm.

In September, 1983 SCE & G applied for a change in its rate structure to accommodate the addition of the V.C. Summer Nuclear Station into SCE & G’s rate base. The Consumer Advocate was granted leave to intervene. The Commission, on March 2,1984, issued its Order approving an increase as well as an overall return of 11.74% for electric operations and a 14.25% return on equity. The circuit court affirmed the Commission’s order and findings.

The Consumer Advocate first challenges the method used by the Commission in valuing the additional and excess capacity which resulted system-wide from the addition of the Summer Station.

The Consumer Advocate argues that the PSC wrongfully determined the rate base by considering not only the value of the new construction at the Summer Nuclear Station, but also by revaluing the Company’s property system-wide. SCE & G asserts there was no revaluation of existing facilities, but rather that the valuation of the Company’s additional and resulting excess capacity was determined on a system- *322 wide basis and not just based on the cost at the newly added Summer Station. 1

The PSC’s authority to determine rate base is set forth in Section 58-27-180, S.C. Code Ann. (1976) which provides:

The Commission may after hearing ascertain and fix the value of the whole or any part of the property of any electrical utility insofar as the same is material to the exercise of the jurisdiction of the Commission and may make revaluations from time to time and ascertain the value of all new construction, extensions and additions to the property of every electrical utility.

The plain meaning of this section gives the PSC the authority, after the hearing and if it is material to the exercise of the Commission’s jurisdiction, the power to:

(1) fix the value of the whole or any part of an electric utility’s property;
(2) revalue such property; and
(3) value new construction, extensions and additions of such property.

If a revaluation occurred here, it is permitted by Section 58-27-180. However, we are not persuaded that any revaluation of property occurred.

In rate cases, “[t]he Public Service Commission is recognized as the ‘expert’ designated by the legislature to make policy determinations regarding utility rates.” 2 In its capacity as ratemaker,

[T]he Commission sits as the trier of the facts, akin to a jury of experts. Findings of the Commission are presumptively correct under the statute quoted above. This *323 Court has neither the expertise nor the authority to fix the rate of return to which a public utility is entitled. Even if we might have found a different rate of return to be fair and reasonable, such does not allow us to substitute our judgment for that of the Commission. Our scope of review of findings of the Commission is accordingly limited. We may not set aside an order of the Commission except on a convincing showing that it is without evidentiary support or that it is arbitrary or capricious as a matter of law. 3

This Court is without authority to set aside an agency’s judgment on a factual issue where there is evidence of record to support the agency’s decision. Lark v. Bi-Lo, Inc., 276 S.C. 130, 276 S.E. (2d) 304, 307 (1981). The Consumer Advocate, at oral argument on this matter, challenged this Court three times to find any evidence to support the Commission’s action here. We accept Mr. Hamm’s challenge and find ample evidence including that of his own witness to support the system-wide valuation of the excess capacity.

The evidence indicates that SCE & G had, system-wide, 400 MW (megawatts) of excess capacity following the addition of the V.C. Summer Nuclear Plant. 4 The value of this excess capacity was determined by the cost per megawatt as determined on a system-wide cost of production basis rather than on the cost of production at the Summer Station alone. The Consumer Advocate’s own witness testified:

You cannot ascribe the surplus [excess capacity] to any one particular plant. You simply have a surplus in total----The company has a surplus in its total. I’m not saying it is any one plant that is in surplus. There is simply more capacity than the company needs to use. It would be wrong to ascribe the surplus to any one particular plant.

Tr. 224-225.

*324 Moreover, there was extensive testimony on what the difference in costs were between the system-wide valuation and valuation of the V.C. Summer Plant alone. Tr. 201-210; Tr. 192-198.

Next, the Consumer Advocate argues that SCE & G should not be allowed to recover depreciation expenses on all of its plant investments because this figure includes the investment that produces the 400 MW excess capacity which was deducted from the rate base. SCE & G asserts that even though a system-wide 400 MW excess capacity resulted from the addition of the Summer Station, it should be allowed depreciation on the entire system becatfSA'every plant in the systenTis in service and is, in fact, depreciating; or, stated another way, the system that produces the 400 MW'excess is the same system that is, in fact, presently producing the electricity being used by SCE & G customers. 5 Tr. 224-225, 229.

It should be noted that the PSC adopted the present rate base plan to “phase-in” the cost of the new V.C. Summer Nuclear Station. The term “phase-in” refers to the bringing into consumer rates over a period of time, the investment cost of a new generating plant to avoid a single, huge rate increase or “rate shock.” Obviously, the operational capacity of a new plant cannot be “phased-in,” and thus, one method to lessen the blow to the customers is to “phase-in” the cost. The"'objective of rate base “phase-in” plans is to prevent “rate shock” to a utility customer when a new plant is brought on line. Scotto “Post-Operational Phase-in of Utility Plant: Prolonging the Inevitable,” 112 Public Utility Fortnightly 28, September 1, 1983. Under the “phase-in” plan, presently before this Court, there is no dispute that all of SCE & G’s generating facilities are, in fact, in service and depreciating; therefore, an allowance for this depreciation has a sound basis under the facts of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
364 S.E.2d 455, 294 S.C. 320, 1988 S.C. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamm-v-south-carolina-public-service-commission-sc-1988.