Lima Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

98 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1918
DocketNo. 15617
StatusPublished

This text of 98 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110 (Lima Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lima Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 98 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110 (Ohio 1918).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The real purpose of the complaint before the commission was to fix a schedule of rates to be charged by the company, and the values complained of were fixed solely for this purpose. The filing and overruling of the application for a rehearing before the commission is a necessary prerequisite to the maintenance of this proceeding in error, and by the provisions of Section 543, General Code, the company may not rely on any ground not set out in such application. The grounds are set out in the foregoing statement, and it will be [116]*116observed that the questions they make result from the valuation of the property of the company by the commission.

It is contended that the order of the commission is not sustained by the evidence and is contrary to law. In the various hearings, the results of extensive investigations by experts both of the company and of the commission were produced; the inventory filed by the company was examined by the expert of the commission, and the result of his ex-ámination was given in his testimony.

Prior to the commencement of the proceeding the plaintiff in error had been merged with The Central Union Telephone Company by the consent of the commission, and in this proceeding the engineers of the commission made a careful study of the property contained in the merged plant to estimate and determine the used and useful .property, and these results were submitted to the engineer of the company.

The record discloses that in the making of the valuation a great amount of work was done in the field, as well as in the office; and at the hearings, which covered a considerable period of time, a vast amount of testimony was introduced. In its finding the various elements of value were fully and carefully considered by the commission — buildings, overhead distributing system, underground distributing system, underground cable equipment, paving, central office equipment, overheads, and the contentions of the parties with reference to the going-concern value and with reference to the many [117]*117elements that contribute to the making up of the value of property concerned in these several heads.

It is earnestly insisted by the plaintiff in error that the commission really adopted the views and accepted the results arrived at by its engineers, and that it ignored and disregarded the testimony of the experts produced by the company.' Plaintiff in error insists that thereby the commission arrived at a result which fixed the value of the property below its real value.

Section 499-8, General Code, provides that the commission, for the purpose of ascertaining the reasonableness and justice of rates and charges for the service rendered by public utilities or railroads of this state, or for any other purpose authorized by law may investigate and ascertain the value of the property of any public utility or railroad in this state, used and useful for the service and convenience of the public.

Section 499-9, General Code, provides that “Such investigations and report shall show separately the property used and useful to such utility * * *

which said inventories and reports shall be filed in the office of the commission for the information of the governor and the general assembly.” Paragraph E of this section directs: “Depreciation, if any, from the new reproductive cost as of a date certain, for existing mechanical deterioration, for age, for obsolescence, for lack of utility or for any other cause, the percentage and amount of each class of depreciation, if any, to be specifically set forth in detail.” ' Paragraph F provides: “The net value as of a date certain, of all physical prop[118]*118erty other than land owned by such utility or railroad, to be derived by deducting the sum of the amounts of depreciation from the sum of the new reproductive costs.”

The reports, inventories, schedules, and the testimony of experts and other witnesses upon which the commission relied, as well as the detailed finding of the commission, disclose that these requirements of the statute were followed.

In truth, it may be said that the record discloses that the differences between the parties relate to questions of fact. It is apparent that the commission in the weighing of the testimony before it, and in the determination of the value, proceeded upon the lines, plans and principles laid down in the statute which defines its duties and by which it was created, although the company insists that the value fixed by the commission must have been arrived at in disregard of the rules of law which should govern in the ascertainment of values in such a case, and in disregard of the evidence offered by it.

It is well settled that this court will not substitute . its judgment for that of an administrative body as to matters within its province. Before the court will interfere with an order of the Public Utilities Commission it must appear from a consideration of the record that the action was unlawful or unreasonable. Hocking Valley Ry. Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 92 Ohio St., 362.

We have carefully examined the extensive briefs filed by different counsel, which have been of great assistance, not only in the consideration of the [119]*119questions suggested, but by the references made to the voluminous record in the case, and we are not able to say that the order of the commission is unlawful or unreasonable.

The value of the property as shown by the books of the company was $1,012,227.10, and there is a depreciation charged on the books of $113,056.69, leaving $899,170.41 as the book value.

The commission found the present value, as shown in the table given in the statement printed above, to be $677,222.95, which is $221,947.46 less than the book value claimed by the company.

The commission’s table shows a depreciation item of $144,686.58, which is $31,629.89 more than the same item as claimed by the company. This item was fixed upon by the commission upon the testimony as to the actual condition of the property at the time from observation. This is the method prescribed by the statute, Section 499-8 et seq., General Code.

A depreciation account carried on the books of a utility pursuant to a plan laid down in advance, and in obedience to our statute, while a wise and proper procedure in order to provide a fund for replacements, may or may not show the actual depreciation which • the property has undergone. Actual depreciation is not uniform; it varies in different years with the vicissitudes of actual experience. What it has been at a particular time can only be determined by actual observation and study at that time. The commission was justified in giving effect to the testimony of the witnesses touching this subject.

[120]*120The item of not used and useful property was determined' from the testimony to be $109,876.18. This was deducted from the reproduction value, in obedience to the requirements of the statutes, Section 499-8 et seq., General Code. The effect of this statutory provision is to prevent the inclusion in total valuations of public utility companies of property not being used or useful for the public service.

Its evident purpose is to safeguard the public from being compelled to pay a return for long periods of time on the value of property which is not used or useful for the service.

No injustice is done a company in such a case.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ohio St. (N.S.) 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lima-telephone-telegraph-co-v-public-utilities-commission-ohio-1918.