MISSISSIPPI PUB. SERV. COM'N v. Miss. Valley Gas Co.

358 So. 2d 418, 1978 WL 391808
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1978
Docket50254
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 358 So. 2d 418 (MISSISSIPPI PUB. SERV. COM'N v. Miss. Valley Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MISSISSIPPI PUB. SERV. COM'N v. Miss. Valley Gas Co., 358 So. 2d 418, 1978 WL 391808 (Mich. 1978).

Opinion

358 So.2d 418 (1978)

MISSISSIPPI PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, Appellant-Cross Appellee,
v.
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY GAS COMPANY, Appellee-Cross Appellant,
Greenwood Utilities Commission, City of Clarksdale, and Yazoo City Public Service Commission, Appellees.

No. 50254.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 10, 1978.

Bennett E. Smith, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, Hall, Callender & Dantin, Maurice Dantin, Columbia, for Miss. Public Service Comm.

Overstreet & Kuykendall, John M. Kuykendall, Jr., Carson M. Hughes, Jackson, for Miss. Valley Gas Co.

*419 Lott, Sanders & Gwin, Hardy Lott, Greenwood, Sullivan, Smith, Hunt & Vickery, David R. Hunt, Clarksdale, Campbell & Campbell, T.H. Campbell, Jr., Yazoo City, William Thomas Miller, Washington, D.C., for Greenwood Utilities, City of Clarksdale and Yazoo City Public Service Comm.

Before ROBERTSON, LEE and BOWLING, JJ.

ROBERTSON, Presiding Justice, for the Court:

Mississippi Public Service Commission has appealed from that portion of a final decree entered by the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, Mississippi, on April 12, 1977:

1. Reversing the May 6, 1976, Order of the Commission which fixed the rate of return for Mississippi Valley Gas Company at 8.83%; and

2. Remanding the case to the Commission for further hearing after the Commission has furnished certain information to the Company. Specifically the information required was the data fed into, the questions asked, and the tasks assigned to, a giant computer at the University of Chicago, which computer produced the CRISPE tapes, the tapes used by Dr. James L. Bicksler, the Commission's only witness, as the sole basis for his expert opinion as to what constituted a fair and reasonable rate of return to the Company.

The Company has cross-appealed from that portion of the final decree affirming the Commission's order, which:

1. Required the Company to file a revised rate schedule "for municipal generating facilities Rate Schedule # 110 in order that it conform with the lowest block (of charges) of Schedule # 108";

2. Eliminated the $300 monthly facility charge made against the Greenwood Utilities Commission, the City of Clarksdale, Mississippi, and the Yazoo City Public Service Commission; and

3. Provided that "Rate Schedule # 111 shall hereafter be the same as Rate Schedule # 110, ...".

This appeal presents three major issues for determination by this Court:

(1) The discovery issue;
(2) The rate of return issue; and
(3) The municipal electric generating rate issue.

On November 25, 1975, Mississippi Valley Gas Company filed with the Commission its schedule of proposed gas rate changes, a statement of the necessity for the proposed changes, and detailed supporting data, as required by Mississippi Code Annotated section 77-3-37 (1972). As provided in Section 77-3-39, the Company posted a refunding bond and placed the new rates into effect on December 26, 1975. Later the Company filed a petition to change to systemwide rates and a systemwide purchase gas adjustment provision. The Company also proposed a $300 per month facility charge, and increased gas rates for municipal electric generating plants operated by the Cities of Greenwood, Clarksdale and Yazoo City.

Greenwood, Clarksdale and Yazoo City intervened and were successful before the Commission, and that portion of the Commission's Order affecting these three municipalities was affirmed by the Chancery Court.

This Court is of the opinion, as was the chancery court that the Order of the Commission (a) requiring that the rate level of Rate Schedule 110 (Revised) and Rate Schedule 111 "conform with the lowest block of Rate Schedule # 108"; (b) eliminating the monthly facilities charge of $300.00 from Rate Schedule 110 (Revised); and (c) requiring the Company to keep the Commission apprised of gas available for Category 6 customers and when such gas is available, to furnish it "immediately to municipal generating facilities under rates as hereinabove set forth," is supported by substantial evidence and should be affirmed.

On the rate issue, the Company's witnesses were its president and chief executive officer, Taylor G. Holland, Jr.; James W. Welch, Jr., senior vice-president and treasurer; E.R. Butler, senior vice-president of *420 operations; Richard S. Johnson, vice-president of Stone & Webster Management Consultants, Inc., of New York; W.C. Randolph, the Company's director of rates and pipeline supply; Wayne D. Monteau, manager of Financial Analytical Services for Stone & Webster; William A. Whitney, senior vice-president and trust officer for Deposit Guaranty National Bank; and John H. Geary, vice-president of Paine-Webber.

The Company's officers testified at length and supplied detailed charts and tables as to the assets, facilities, income and increased expenses of the Company. They testified in detail as to the necessity for increased rates in these times of inflation.

The Commission offered one witness, Dr. James L. Bicksler, Professor of Finance and Director of Research at Rutgers University Graduate School of Business.

Professor Bicksler was employed by the Commission:

"(a) To develop and present written testimony on all essential evidence on rate of return.
"(b) To assist Commission staff in the cross-examination of Mississippi Valley Gas Company's witnesses.
"(c) To assist the staff in the preparation of the Commission's final order and to be available for consultation with the Commission staff as requested."

Bicksler's testimony and his opinion as an expert on public utility matters was based entirely on the CRISPE tapes which were produced by a giant computer at the Center for Research and Security Prices at the University of Chicago. It was admitted that no data concerning Mississippi Valley Gas Company was submitted to the computer. Professor Bicksler, in discussing the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), which was used in the CRISPE tapes, testified:

"Q Would you briefly describe the underlying economic rationale of the capital asset pricing model (CAPM)?
A The basic assumptions underlying the two-parameter capital asset pricing model (CAPM) are:
1. All investors are risk-average and choose portfolios in a manner consistent with maximizing expected utility of single-period terminal wealth.
2. Portfolio investment opportunities can be described solely in terms of means and variances (or standard deviations) of the distribution of expected one-period portfolio returns.
3. Investors have homogeneous expectations regarding means, variances, and covariances of returns for all securities in the investment opportunity set and, in addition, all investors have identical investment opportunity sets.
4. Capital markets are efficient in the sense that borrowing and lending rates are equal. There are no restrictions to short sales, no taxes, no transactions costs, and capital assets are perfectly divisible, etc.
5. The supply of all capital assets is given.
Under these assumptions and other less restrictive conditions, equilibrium relationships for risky capital have been derived.

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Related

South Hinds Water Co. v. MISS. PUBLIC SERV.
422 So. 2d 275 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1982)
Mississippi Public Service Commission v. Mississippi Power Co.
366 So. 2d 656 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
358 So. 2d 418, 1978 WL 391808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-pub-serv-comn-v-miss-valley-gas-co-miss-1978.