MATTER OF GEN. TEL. CO. v. Lundy

218 N.E.2d 274, 17 N.Y.2d 373
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 218 N.E.2d 274 (MATTER OF GEN. TEL. CO. v. Lundy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MATTER OF GEN. TEL. CO. v. Lundy, 218 N.E.2d 274, 17 N.Y.2d 373 (N.Y. 1966).

Opinion

17 N.Y.2d 373 (1966)

In the Matter of General Telephone Company of Upstate New York, Inc., Appellant,
v.
James A. Lundy et al., Constituting the Public Service Commission of the State of New York, Respondents.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York.

Argued February 16, 1966.
Decided June 2, 1966.

Everett I. Willis, Edward N. Sherry, William C. Sterling, Jr., John Robert Jones and Edward L. Wilkinson for appellant.

Kent H. Brown and Charles R. Gibson for respondents.

Chief Judge DESMOND and Judges SCILEPPI, BERGAN and KEATING concur with Judge FULD; Judge VAN VOORHIS dissents in an opinion in which Judge BURKE concurs.

*377FULD, J.

The petitioner, a wholly owned subsidiary of General Telephone and Electronics Corporation (GT&E), provides telephone service to 13 counties in upstate New York. In January of 1963, it filed with the Public Service Commission certain proposals for rate increases. Following 12 days of hearings, the commission entered an order approving increases but for amounts considerably less than those sought. Insofar as relevant to the present controversy, the commission found that the petitioner was being overcharged for goods and services supplied by other wholly owned GT&E subsidiaries and that such *378 overcharges should be excluded from the petitioner's rate base and operating expenses.[1] The petitioner brought this article 78 proceeding — which was transferred from Special Term to the Appellate Division (CPLR 7804, subd. [g]) — to set aside the commission's order. The Appellate Division unanimously confirmed the commission's determination and on this appeal, taken as of right on constitutional grounds (16 N Y 2d 617), it is urged that the commission should have credited the full amounts paid by the petitioner to its affiliated suppliers.

There can be no doubt that a regulatory body, such as the Public Service Commission, may review the operating expenses of a utility and thereby prevent unreasonable costs for materials and services from being passed on to rate payers. (See, e.g., Chicago & Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Wellman, 143 U. S. 339.) When such materials and services are obtained through contracts which are the result of arm's-length bargaining in the open market, the contract price is usually accepted as the proper cost. However, when a utility and its suppliers are both owned and controlled by the same holding company, the safeguards provided by arm's-length bargaining are absent, and ever present is the danger that the utility will be charged exorbitant prices which will, by inclusion in its operating costs, become the predicate for excessive rates. Although the regulatory agency may, as indicated, review such charges in a rate proceeding, some state legislatures, as the Supreme Court of California pointed out, have not been satisfied with this indirect control of payments by a utility to its affiliate and have "enacted statutes specifically granting to their commissions power to regulate payments under such contracts" by requiring their submission to the commissions for prior approval (Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Public Utilities Comm., 34 Cal. 2d 822, 826; see, e.g., Ill. Ann. Stat., tit. 111 2/3, § 8a, subd. [3]; Rev. Code Wash. Ann., § 80.16.020; Wis. Stat. Ann. § 196.52, subd. [3].)

The New York Legislature did not go that far. Under our statutes, it is only an agreement between affiliates for "management, construction [or] engineering" services or for the "purchase *379 of electric energy and/or gas" which need be filed by a telephone company for commission approval. (Public Service Law, § 110, subds. 3, 4; see Matter of International Ry. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm., 264 App. Div. 506, affd. 289 N.Y. 830.) In every other instance, the commission is powerless to impair the obligation or otherwise invalidate a utility's contract (see, e.g., Columbus Gas Co. v. Comm., 292 U. S. 398, 400; Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Public Utilities Comm., 34 Cal. 2d 822, 828, 832, supra; New Jersey Bell Tel. Co. v. Board of Pub. Utility Comrs., 12 N. J. 568, 592), and the Legislature has specifically declined, on several occasions, to expand State regulation in this area so as to require that all contracts between utilities and their affiliates be filed for approval by the commission. The petitioner, relying on this legislative history, contends that the commission not only lacked but was purposefully deprived of the requisite statutory authority to investigate the prices charged by its affiliated suppliers.

With that contention we cannot agree. Despite the absence of an express grant of authority, the power to conduct such an inquiry and to ascertain whether the prices were excessive may be fairly implied from the rate-making powers already granted by the Legislature to the commission. In the past, the commission has supervised the accounting procedures used by utilities and directed that overcharges by affiliates be segregated in a special account. When this directive was reviewed and approved by the courts, it was assumed that, in some future rate proceeding, the overcharges would be excluded from the rate bases of the affected utilities. (See Matter of Pavilion Natural Gas Co. v. Maltbie, 295 N.Y. 728, affg. 268 App. Div. 610, 619-620; Matter of Long Beach Gas Co. v. Maltbie, 290 N.Y. 572, affg. 264 App. Div. 496, 504.) Such decisions point the result in the case before us.

The commission has been empowered to determine "just and reasonable" telephone rates (Public Service Law, § 91, subd. 1; § 97, subd. 1) and, as the United States Supreme Court noted many years ago, the rate-making power is not "subservient to the discretion of [a utility] which may, by exorbitant and unreasonable salaries, or in some other improper way, transfer its earnings into what it is pleased to call `operating expenses.'" (Chicago & Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Wellman, 143 U. S. 339, 346, supra.) *380Particularly when those expenses arise out of dealings between affiliates, the commission "not only [has] the right but the duty to scrutinize [such] transactions closely". (Matter of Long Beach Gas Co. v. Maltbie, 264 App. Div. 496, 504, affd. 290 N.Y. 572, supra.) And, in this connection, we find significance in the statutory requirement that the agency be given access to the records of all transactions between telephone companies and their affiliates (Public Service Law, § 110, subd. 2).

So far as rate making is concerned, it is of no consequence that the Legislature has declined to go further and provide for regulation by the commission of the very terms and conditions of all contracts between affiliates. The primary purpose of such regulation is to protect the corporation's treasury and to preserve its financial integrity. The function of the rate-making power, however, is to protect the utility's rate payers. In the proper exercise of that power, the commission does not require the authority to invalidate contracts.

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218 N.E.2d 274, 17 N.Y.2d 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-gen-tel-co-v-lundy-ny-1966.