Jacksonville Gas Co. v. City of Jacksonville

286 F. 404, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1791
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJanuary 25, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 F. 404 (Jacksonville Gas Co. v. City of Jacksonville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacksonville Gas Co. v. City of Jacksonville, 286 F. 404, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1791 (S.D. Fla. 1923).

Opinion

CLAYTON, District Judge.

Application was heretofore made in this cause for interlocutory injunction which was denied. Jacksonville Gas Co. v. City of Jacksonville et al., 284 Fed. 854. It is now submitted for the same purpose upon the bill as amended and supporting affidavits and the denials of the answer and affidavits in that behalf.

The plaintiff seeks to restrain the enforcement of, and to have declared invalid, the order of the city commission fixing the rates of charges for gas that the plaintiff manufactures and sells to the public. The commission was empowered to do this by the act of the Legislature known as chapter 8974, Laws of Florida, 2 Sp. Acts 1921, p. 1431. It is insisted that this law and the action of the commission thereunder are hostile to the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution, because, as it is alleged, no provision was made for the hearing of the plaintiff, and that, the order being enforced, the plaintiff is and will be deprived of its property without due process of law, and denied equal protection of the laws. We adhere to the opinion that this contention is unsound. It is plain that the commission was duly authorized to fix the rates complained of, and it is equally manifest, if the rales were deemed unfair, that appeal to the Railroad Com[406]*406mission was provided, and that body, being vested with the appropriate power, could, after a hearing, have supervised the action of the city commission and established just rates, if unjust rates had been fixed. When the city commission determined the rate which it was proposed to enforce, then the prescribed notice was given to the plaintiff, and the required publication for 60 days of the order was made, as provided by the act, so as to afford an opportunity to the plaintiff to appear before the Railroad Commission, the ultimate rate-making body, in case the order of the city commission was not acquiesced in, but appealed from.

However, it is insisted that the plaintiff gas company was not present or represented while the city commission was making its investigation in order to determine the rates. The affidavits submitted by the defendant, to say the least, tend to contradict such contention. But, however that may be, the important truth is that, in ascertaining what rates should be put into effect, the city commission had authority to adopt its own method of procedure, and the presence of the plaintiff gas company during the consideration by the commission was not essential to the validity of the order made. The authorizing act provided a hearing for the plaintiff, for it could have had the rates inaugurated by the city commission supervised, and, if need there was, corrected, by the Railroad Commission, as we have said. The plaintiff, however, elected not to appeal to that commission. Therefore it cannot now complain that it was denied" due process of law, for it failed to avail itself of the orderly procedure provided by appeal, and the remedy of correction by the Railroad Commission. So now, in the hearing of the application for injunction pendente l'ite, the rates fixed by the city commission must be regarded, so far as process is concerned, as having been lawfully established by a competent administrative body. Hence no violence has been done to due process, and the case is reduced to the consideration of the allegation that the rates established are so low as to be confiscatory. Thus a judicial question is presented, just as if the Railroad Commission had determined the rates.

The plaintiff contends that the city commission did not make-any finding of fact upon which to base the rate of $1.65, or that such rate established was not based on testimony taken before the commission, or upon evidence filed with it, or upon any reasonable method bearing relation to fixed and operating charges, or upon any standard or rule developed by experience of operation or general use. To follow this contention to its logical end would be to reach the conclusion insisted _upon by the defendants that the exercise of the administrative duty of fixing the rates is still in fieri, or that the administrative duty has not been performed in a final way; and hence the-defendants contend that the bill of complaint is prematurely filed, that the administrative power has not been exhausted or fully exercised, and that, therefore, the plaintiff has no such standing in this court at this time which permits the exercise of the judicial function. The-plaintiff cites Wichita R. & L. Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 43 Sup. Ct. 51, 67 L. Ed. -, decided November 13, 1922, by the Su[407]*407preme Court. We do not think that the view urged by the plaintiff or that insisted upon by the defendants is sound, or that the Wichita Case has any bearing upon the instant case. Therefore, as we have held above, the time in this case is now ripe for the exercise of judicial review of the matter, and for determining whether or not the rates fixed by the city commission are confiscatory.

The plaintiff’s allegations of valuation are rather indefinite. The items which malee up such valuation should have been stated with more particularity. Conceding, however, that they are sufficient, still the bill shows that of this valuation the item of $475,000 as a going concern value is included in the aggregate valuation. If this item be not properly included, or if it must be eliminated for the purposes of this case as now presented, then the plaintiff has failed to show the taking or the threatened taking of its property without just compensation. That going concern value cannot be considered as a part of the base for rate-making purposes seems to us to be no longer in the realm of disputation. In Galveston Electric Co. v. Galveston, 258 U. S. 388, 42 Sup. Ct. 351, 66 L. Ed.-, decided April 10, 1922, it appears to be settled that the going concern value cannot b.e considered in ascertaining just rates. The elimination of the item for going concern value compels a denial of interlocutory injunction.

If we descend somewhat to particulars, it is disclosed by the pleadings and evidence that, in fixing the rate of $1.65 per 1,000 cubic feet of gas, the City Commission allowed a going concern value equal to 10 per cent, of the physical value of the plaintiff’s property, and in addition thereto also made allowance for working capital and overhead expenses. The commission allowed:

A physical value of.......................... .........$2,166^27791
Overhead allowance.......................................... 324,941.69
Total physical property.......................................§2,491,219.60
Working capital.............................................. 200,000.00
Aggregating ................................................ .§2,691,219.60
Going concern value allowed............................----... 269,121.96
Grand total, tangible and intangible property.......----....... .§2,960,341.56

And the proof in the casé shows, or tends to show, that upon this property or investment the plaintiff is allowed to earn 8 per cent, per ' annum, or about that per cent. It follows that the prescribed rate, affording such reasonable return upon the property, is not confiscatory. . Indeed, it was held in Galveston Electric Co. v. Galveston, supra, that a less rate was lawful. So it was likewise determined in Des Moines Gas Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
286 F. 404, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacksonville-gas-co-v-city-of-jacksonville-flsd-1923.