In re Long Island Lighting Co.

160 Misc. 165, 289 N.Y.S. 1092, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 Misc. 165 (In re Long Island Lighting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Long Island Lighting Co., 160 Misc. 165, 289 N.Y.S. 1092, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Schenck, J.

Petitioner applies for a stay pending a review by , certiorari of the order of the Public Service Commission fixing permanent rates to be charged for electric service by petitioner after January 1, 1936. The proceedings before the Commission were brought on as the result of various complaints filed against the petitioner’s rates for electricity.

It appears that the hearings in the proceedings conducted before the Commission occupied 140 days. Upwards of 13,000 pages of testimony were taken and 835 exhibits are included in the record. . Upon completion of the hearings an exhaustive memorandum of some 400 pages was prepared by the Chairman of the Commission, who heard the proceedings, and rate. reductions amounting to. approximately $600,000 were recommended and approved. The order was adopted by unanimous vote of the Commission on December 18, 1935, and prescribed permanent rates to be charged for electric service after January 1, 1936. The effective date of filing the new ordered schedule of rates was thereafter extended by the Commission for a period of one month and during that time petitioner applied for a rehearing, which was denied. An order of certiorari having been granted, petitioner heretofore moved for a stay of the Commission’s order pending a review of the entire proceeding by the Appellate Division. From time to time the effective date of the Commission^ order has been extended pending the decision of this court relative to this application. On this application for a stay petitioner has presented voluminous affidavits and has set forth specific objections to the determination made by the Commission. Affidavits of the Chairman and one of the Commissioners have also been presented to the court.

[167]*167The Public Service Commission is a fact-finding body. It is the rate-making body of this State. After protracted hearings covering a period of about four years it has determined that the electric rates to be charged by petitioner should be reduced and its order of December 18, 1935, sets forth the amount of such reduction and prescribes the final rates which petitioner may charge its consumers. All of the elements which should properly be included in arriving at a rate base were considered by the Commission. A vast amount of evidence was received and the Commission found as a fact that the consumers were entitled to and should receive a reduction in electric rates and made its order accordingly. The Commission also found that the ordered reduction would still allow to the petitioner a rate of return in excess of six per cent upon its property used and useful in the public service.

This court is now called upon to stay the order of the Commission on the theory that there are substantial questions of law which should be reviewed by the Appellate Division, and that great and irreparable injury to the petitioner will result in the event that this court refuses such stay. Granted that an application such as here made does not require this court to determine the merits of the proceeding, it does call for the exercise of sound judicial discretion. Obviously, any substantial reduction in rates will decrease petitioner’s earnings. This would be true of a reduction of rates or charges of any public utility. Likewise it may be assumed that it will be quite impossible for petitioner to recover back from all of its consumers the difference between the amount paid under the reduced rates and the amount which it would be entitled to receive under its old rates in the event that the Appellate Division shall reverse the Commission’s order.

This would result in a money loss to this petitioner or any other public utility. However, if it is the petitioner’s contention that by reason thereof a stay of the Commission’s order should be granted in every case where a reduction in rates has been ordered, then for the purpose of establishing utility rates, the judgment of the court and not that of the Commission must be accepted. If that be the law, the court and not the Commission should fix the amount to be charged. On such theory it must be found that as a rate-making body the Commission has outlived its usefulness. I am unable to subscribe to such proposition. To give such legal construction to the statute is untenable.

In Matter of Upstate Telephone Co. of New York v. Maltbie (154 Misc. 512; affd., 243 App. Div. 848) this court refused a similar application for a stay in a rate case. The order denying the stay was affirmed by the Appellate Division, Third Department. In [168]*168that case the reduction in rates produced a very considerable reduction in revenue and if, upon certiorari, the order of the Commission were annulled upon the merits, the company would have suffered irreparable damage in that it would not be practical to recover from each of its consumers the difference between the rate charged under such annulled order and the rates which would have been charged had the enforcement of the Commission’s order been stayed. Nevertheless, the Appellate Division by a unanimous court sustained the order of the Special Term which denied the stay.

The provisions of subdivision 2 of section 23 of the Public Service Law clearly, set forth the requirements on which the court may base its findings in granting a stay of the Commission’s order pending a review. An application such as here made does not require a determination by the court on the merits, but it does require the exercise of sound judicial discretion and such discretion should be exercised only upon a finding that the petitioner has made a prima facie case and is entitled to interlocutory relief. (Public Service Commission of Wisconsin v. Wisconsin Telephone Co., 289 U. S. 67; Phænix Ry. Co. v. Geary, 239 id. 277.)

The function of the Commission and the function of the court are separate and distinct and neither should invade the other’s sphere of action. It is the function of the Commission to determine whether the petitioner is receiving a fair return upon the property devoted to the public service. (McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., 272 U. S. 400; Matter of Peoples Gas & Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission, 214 App. Div. 108; Niagara Falls Power Co. v. Water Power & Control Commission, 267 N. Y. 265, 278.)

On this application the court is called upon to make a factual determination on the same evidence presented before the Commission, thereby substituting its judgment for that of the State’s rate-making body, It is presumed that the order of the Commission reducing petitioner’s rates was warranted from the evidence. (Des Moines Gas Co. v. Des Moines, 238 U. S, 153; Ex Parte Young, 209 id. 123; Trustees of Saratoga v. Saratoga Gas Co., 122 App. Div. 203.) It is also presumed that the Commission is a fact-finding body possessing technical qualifications as to matters not within the special knowledge of the courts.

In Niagara Falls Power Co. v. Water Power & Control Commission . (supra) Judge Finch, writing for the court, has this to say: “ As there was evidence before the Commission bearing upon the reasonable value or rental value for the use of this water, neither the Appellate Division nor this court has any power to reconsider the question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 Misc. 165, 289 N.Y.S. 1092, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-long-island-lighting-co-nysupct-1936.