New York Telephone Co. v. Prendergast

300 F. 822, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1512
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 26, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 300 F. 822 (New York Telephone Co. v. Prendergast) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Telephone Co. v. Prendergast, 300 F. 822, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1512 (S.D.N.Y. 1924).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

One issue, if not the major issue, raised by the bill of complaint herein, is that the rates established by the orders complained of, not only do not in fact permit a fair return upon the value of plaintiff’s property used in the regulated service, but that said orders “were not intended” to permit such a return. Into the question of intent we need not enter at present, for the motion at bar only requires answer to the query whether the rates establishd by order of the principal defendant, are now yielding and have for a reasonable test period yielded an unfair and confiscatory rate of return upon an even possibly fair and legal rate base.

It is, however, appropriate, and even necessary, briefly to consider the origin of, and the fact findings underlying, the rates against which relief is sought. There was nothing precipitate or hurried about the entry of these orders; the inquiry preceding them extended over more than a year, and produced a record of many thousand pages; decision was filed January 25, 1923, and on the same day two orders based on that decision were entered; one regulating charges in New York City, one doing the same for the rest of the state.

The commission’s decision holds that the rates should be based “upon the reasonable fair value of the property” used in rendering the regulated service, “as it exists at the time of the hearing,” and declares such value to be as follows:

Total fair value in state of New York as of December 31, 1921.. $244,081,730
Additions for 1922 .......................................... 34,900,000
Construction for 1923 (estimated)......-........................ 34,300,000
Fair value for 1923 ...........................................$313,281,730
Working capital .’............................................ 10,497,500
$323,779,230
Deduct accrued depreciation ....•.............................. 77,596,739
Rate base for 1923 .....................................$246,182,491

As to theory of valuation, or how “fair value” should be ascertained, the commission seems to have treated the investigation as if it were a suit, with the telephone company appearing as plaintiff, and divers municipalities, especially the city of New York, as defendants. Thus the decision declares that “the claims of the parties essentially differ as to vvhether valuation should be based on reproduction cost or book cost”; the telephone company (as stated by the commission) contending that “reproduction cost is the one rule that must be followed.”

This contention the commission rejected. Whether it rejected the rule in toto, or gave any weight to the evidence regarding reproduction [824]*824cost, is not revealed; but the result proves that the leading element in reaching the declared rate base was book cost, treated in a manner to which we will refer again.

The “accrued depreciation,” deducted from .“fair value” to reach a rate base, is the aggregate of the depreciation reserve, or of charges made to expense, at monthly or other frequent intervals, of certain percentages of the cost of plaintiff’s property. The percentage varies according to the kind of property, the average being substantially 5 per cent, during the last year. Depreciation must be charged under the uniform system of accounts imposed on public utilities, as well as under any theory of good business.

These accumulated charges are not a separate fund. The total bears no definite relation to the actual condition of the property; for one item may have been and was charged years ago against the cost of an article scrapped long since,, while another was charged yesterday against one just entering upon its life of usefulness. In fact, the depreciation reserve is a piece of bookkeeping, a monthly charge against earnings, to provide means, not only of covering deterioration from use and time, but of minimizing, and only minimizing, future possible losses of any kind, from storm or fire to changes of fashion. The funds or credits thus reserved are, and always have been, expended in strengthening the company’s useful property, but what particular property it is neither possible nor useful to ascertain.

The commission’s rate base next excludes all “going value,” on the ground that the burden of proving the existence of such a thing was on the telephone company, and the proof was “insufficient.” Having established a rate base, the charges authorized were designed to produce 7 per cent, thereon, although — as the commission reported to the Legislature in January, 1924 — “8 per cent, has been generally allowed by courts and commissions.”

The decision filed January 25, 1923, concludes that the rates decreed “are for the future. * * * Actual experience will be the test as to whether further revision is necessary. If such is indicated, it may be made on the rate bases here found, without protracted hearings and delay.” A year later, the commission’s report to the Legislature stated that, according to monthly statements of revenues and expenses furnished as ordered by the telephone company, the new rates had, during ten months of operation, failed to earn 7 per cent, on the rafe base by $2,971,774.

On January 23, 1924, the telephone company, pursuant to section 97, Public Service Commission Law, petitioned for an “immediate temporary reasonable increase of rates.” This application also seems to have been treated by the commission as a litigation between the telephone company and the city.of New York, and, no relief “without protracted hearings and delay” being forthcoming on May 1, 1924, plaintiff began this suit and procured the order to show cause with temporary injunction, under which the present motion was heard.

In our opinion, plaintiff is justified in complaining of this procedure and result on several counts. By a long line of decisions, of which Monroe, etc., Co. v. Michigan (D. C.) 292 Fed. 139, is one of [825]*825the latest, reproduction costs less depreciation is the dominant element in rate base ascertainment. No one element is exclusive of all others, but the decision complained of deliberately lays aside as unimportant, all serious consideration of reproduction cost.

Book cost has plainly been most relied on,1 and in the case of businesses organized under modem systems of record keeping it seems like backing experience against opinion to pursue this course. But just so far as cost is relied on, the question, whose cost is under consideration? becomes the more important. Of course, it is the cost to this plaintiff that must be considered, and it makes no difference whether that cost was high or low, if fact evidence is demanded. Of course, also, a thing may not be worth what it cost; but that only shows the infirmity of the evidence. To seek, as seems to have been attempted, to transform actual cost into a theoretical cost at “normal prices,” deprives the evidence of its attractiveness as being matter of fact, and makes it only opinion evidence of rather a poor kind.

The goal of investigation is present value, and, since all value rests on the appreciation or estimate of users of the thing valued, all value is matter of opinion, and a good opinion is only ripened experience.

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Bluebook (online)
300 F. 822, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-telephone-co-v-prendergast-nysd-1924.