Long Beach Gas Co. v. Maltbie

264 A.D. 496, 36 N.Y.S.2d 194, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4188
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 264 A.D. 496 (Long Beach Gas Co. v. Maltbie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long Beach Gas Co. v. Maltbie, 264 A.D. 496, 36 N.Y.S.2d 194, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4188 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Foster, J.

Petitioner is a gas corporation as defined by the Public Service Law. On May 28, 1940, and on its own motion, the Public Service Commission ordered an investigation of petitioner’s methods of accounting to determine whether particular outlays and receipts had been entered, charged or credited to proper accounts, and to determine the original cost of property used in the public service and the amount of depreciation accrued thereon. Hearings were conducted, culminating in an order of the Commission, dated March 19, 1941, which directed petitioner to place certain journal entries in its books and accounts to reflect the original cost of its property as of January 1, 1938, and to otherwise correct its accounts in accordance with the findings of the' Commission. Among other things petitioner was directed to eliminate certain items from its capital accounts and to charge the same to surplus. We are asked to review the determination and order of the Commission with respect to these items.

The items involved are these:

(a) The sum of $25,000 paid to one George Macdonald for services alleged to have been rendered in connection with petitioner’s organization;

(b) The sum of $33,532.16 which relates to property no longer in existence and which should have been retired from petitioner’s capital accounts;

(c) The sum of $9,706.31, of which $9,111.81 represents a fee paid to E. L. Phillips & Co. for engineering and construction work, and $594.50 which represents arbitrary overhead costs. •

The organization fee of $25,000 was paid to Macdonald in 1916, and for over twenty years was carried on petitioner’s books as part of its fixed capital in an account entitled Organization.” The only evidence, other than the entry itself, now extant, as to the precise nature of Macdonald’s services is contained in a voucher [498]*498which describes his service as follows:

To services and expenses in connection with promotion and organization of the Long Beach Gas Company including legal expenses; examination of the trust mortgage of the Long Beach Estates; investigation and examination of the legal matters in connection with the incorporation of the Village of Long Beach as to their jurisdiction over streets and highways; preliminary engineering expenses and hiring of engineers for the purpose of ascertaining the amount and character of the gas distribution system laid at Long Beach; character of the soil; preliminary engineering maps in connection therewith; conference with officers of the Estates of Long Beach at Long Beach and New York City; preliminary and tentative contracts drawn up and negotiations for extension and purchase of gas mains; conference with-officers of the Incorporated Village of Long Beach; attendance at hearings at Long Beach in connection with introduction of gas therein; attendance upon hearings, mass meetings of the taxpayers and citizens of the Village of Long Beach regarding gas; expenses in connection with preparing and distributing circulars to interest the citizens, householders, architects, etc., in the introduction of gas; attending conferences and hearings relative to the incorporation of the Long Beach Gas Company and subsequent purchase for the Long Beach Gas Co. of the gas distribution system. All work in connection with above extending from 1912 to 1916.......................... $25,000 00.”

The action of the Commission in eliminating this item from petitioner’s organization is based upon the fact that while the supporting voucher describes some services which are properly classified in the organization account under the accounting system now in vogue, and the system in effect in former years, it also includes services which cannot be properly so classified; and since petitioner is now unable to break down the total figure, so that a correct allocation of the various items thereunder can be made, the whole amount must be eliminated from capital and charged to surplus.

This is a harsh decision to make concerning an account which has been carried for more than twenty years, and concerning which the voucher on its face indicates that all of the items therein but [499]*499one are indisputably items of capital expense. The sole exception is the item of expense incurred in the preparation and distribution of circulars to interest citizens, householders, architects, etc., in the use of gas. Assuming this to have been an operating expense and not a capital charge, as found by the Commission, certainly the reasonable inference is that the amount thereof was insignificant in comparison with the total fee. But it is by no means clear that this item should not be considered as a part of the cost of securing primary gas consumers and treated as an item of capital expenditure. (Los Angeles Gas Corp. v. R. R. Commission, 289 U. S. 287; Matter of Village of Wellsville v. Maltbie, 257 App. Div. 746.) The latter construction is equally as plausible as the former. Moreover, organization expense, as defined in the system of accounts in effect when the fee was paid, and also as defined in the present system, includes expenditures for organizing a corporation or other entity, “ and putting it into readiness to do business.” This definition itself is fairly broad, and when confiscation will otherwise result we think that it should receive a liberal interpretation.

We are not unmindful that there are two other items included in the voucher, viz., expense for preliminary engineering and for the extension and purchase of gas mains, which it may be technically improper to classify in an organization account because other accounts are provided for them. They are nevertheless conceded to be items of capital expense. Again it is by no means clear, that the expense connected with these items was not incurred in putting the corporation in readiness to do business. !

No fraud, no padding, no impropriety of any kind except neglect, is charged in connection with the payment of this fee. Doubtless petitioner should have secured and kept better data to support it in detail. But twenty years is a long time, and during that period there have been several examinations of petitioner’s accounts when permission was sought to issue securities, and yet this fee,' which certainly was not obscure, entirely escaped criticism. There is some force to the argument that if it had been criticized within a reasonable period petitioner would have been able to secure data to adequately support it. We do not hold that the Commission is estopped on account of this, but we do say that this circumstance was and is entitled to some weight in appraising the subject-matter of a supporting voucher after a lapse of twenty years, especially in view of the fact that a direction to charge the whole fee to surplus amounts to confiscation of a part of petitioner’s capital structure.

As we construe the supporting voucher in the light of all the circumstances it is equally plausible to hold that all of the items [500]*500described therein relate to capital expense as it is to say that one of them relates to operating expense, and that two others, while capital expense, cannot be classified in an organization account. We reiterate the view that in such a case, where two constructions are equally plausible, the one that leads to confiscation must be rejected as a matter of justice and principle.

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Bluebook (online)
264 A.D. 496, 36 N.Y.S.2d 194, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-beach-gas-co-v-maltbie-nyappdiv-1942.