New Eng. Tel. Co. v. State

57 A.2d 267, 95 N.H. 58, 1948 N.H. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedFebruary 12, 1948
DocketNo. 3728.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 A.2d 267 (New Eng. Tel. Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Eng. Tel. Co. v. State, 57 A.2d 267, 95 N.H. 58, 1948 N.H. LEXIS 180 (N.H. 1948).

Opinions

Branch, C. J.

The finding of the commission that no emergency exists cannot be sustained and must be vacated.

After twenty years of operation under rates fixed by the commission in 1926, the company found itself confronted in 1946 with a company-wide loss of $369,000 which was more than accounted for by a loss of $769,000 on its New Hampshire operations. There has been no catastrophe or change in business methods or procedures to account for such losses, and the company contends that the above losses have been due to the widespread fundamental changes in economic conditions which have taken place since the present rates were fixed in 1926, and especially since the end of World War II. This cause for the company’s difficulties was given at least partial recognition by the commission by its finding upon the company’s petition next referred to that “primarily its financial trouble at the present time flows from increases in wages granted to its employees. . . . No claim, however, has been advanced that the company has been over generous *60 to its employees. ... No clear pattern is discernible in the evidence before us except that the telephone company is caught, in the pattern of wage increases sweeping the country.” These losses were continued in 1947 and for the first ten months of that year showed a company-wide loss of $644,000 and a loss on New Hampshire operations of $745,000.

In view of the then existing situation, the company filed, upon December 3, 1946, a new schedule of rates estimated to produce a revenue of $1,068,000 for the calendar year of 1947. In December 1946, the commission suspended the effective date of the proposed rates pending a commission investigation and decision thereon, and on July 28,1947, granted a temporary increase of 10% in rates, which has proved wholly inadequate. 29 N. H. P. S. C. 163. The investigation is still in progress and no date for its conclusion has, or can be, set. At present the company shows a continuing operating loss of more than $40,000 per month, and it is claimed that such losses have impaired the credit of the company to such an extent" that it can no longer sell its stock at par and it cannot legally sell it for less. Accordingly the company has been forced to raise money for improvements and extensions of its services by the sale of debenture bonds in the sum of $40,000,000. It now requests approval of a rate schedule to yield additional revenue of $1,680,000.

Under these circumstances we do not think that the present situation of the company can be regarded as anything but an emergency of the precise kind contemplated by the statute, which calls for prompt emergency relief. The present situation of the company is fully as acute as that recognized by the commission in Case D-T 2690, Re: Intrastate Railroad Rates, 29 N. H. P. S. C. 271, where the commission said that the evidence before it indicated that “a financial emergency exists, due to a substantial increase in costs of railroad service through recent non-operating labor awards and costs of materials including fuel,” and further, that “said interim increase is required to permit the railroads operating in this state to provide adequate and efficient transportation service, and to maintain their financial condition upon a reasonably sound basis.” The difficult position of the company was indicated by the Supreme Court of Virginia in Arlington County v. Commonwealth, 45 S. E. (2d) 145, 148, 149, as follows: “ ‘A publicly regulated monopoly is helpless in times of rapidly mounting costs unless it is given relief by the regulating authority. . . . The manufacturer and the merchant, when the prices for raw materials, or supplies, or rent, go up, simply charges *61 his customer a larger amount. He can do nothing else. The utility cannot do this without the consent of the Commonwealth through its constitutionally appointed agent, the State Corporation Commission.’ ”

In its petition to the commission, the company expressed its willingness “to accept as a condition of being authorized to make effective the requested emergency rates, a requirement to furnish a bond conditioned on the repayment to New Hampshire customers of the difference, if any, between the amounts paid under said rates and the amounts which would have been paid under the rates as finally determined, and hereby formally offers to furnish such a bond in an amount and with a surety acceptable to this commission.” In support of its conclusion “that we do not deem it advisable to grant authority to make emergency rates effective immediately, under bond,” the commission gave two reasons as follows: “This conclusion is based, first, upon the absence of any statutory authority to promulgate rates under bond, and, second, on the fact that under Docket No. D-R 2610, this Commission is pursuing an investigation to determine the answers to questions arising out of that proceeding, having to do with the proper and reasonable rates to be charged by the petitioner.” We do not consider “the absence of any statutory authority to promulgate rates under bond” an adequate reason for the denial of any emergency relief under the present circumstances. It is argued by the company that since the commission has undoubted authority to approve the proposed rates unconditionally, it necessarily has authority to approve them upon a condition. It is not necessary to decide, however, whether the commission has authority to require a bond as a condition of the approval of requested rates. The question is largely academic in view of the company’s willingness to furnish such a bond, the only remaining question being the willingness of the commission to accept the proffered bond. We are of the opinion that there is nothing in the statute which precludes the acceptance of such a bond when voluntarily offered and that it should be accepted if that appears to be a reasonable way of protecting the public against the payment of rates which are subsequently adjudged to be unreasonable.

The second reason given by the majority of the commission for denying the petition for emergency relief was that “The investigation currently under way is for the purpose of ascertaining the propriety of the Company’s methods and practices, ... in order that we may be able to set rates that will on one hand, be no higher than the public *62 should pay, and, on the other hand, will insure to the Company sufficient revenue to furnish adequate service. Having in mind that the conclusions to be drawn from this investigation may result in either higher or lower rates, we are of the opinion that the present rate level should be maintained until the investigation is completed.” The argument of the Attorney General in opposition to the present petition consisted chiefly of an elaboration of this position of the commission. In other words, it was argued that there can be no emergency relief in the present case until the investigation of the commission into the methods and practices of the company is complete. This investigation has now consumed over a year, and it is, therefore, evident that prompt emergency relief such as the situation requires has been denied to the company and will continue to be so denied if it must await the result of the commission’s investigation. It is evident that such a procedure constitutes a practical repeal of R. L., c. 292, s. 10.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 A.2d 267, 95 N.H. 58, 1948 N.H. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-eng-tel-co-v-state-nh-1948.