Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. v. Federal Power Commission

209 F.2d 814, 93 U.S. App. D.C. 303, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4085
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1954
Docket11668
StatusPublished

This text of 209 F.2d 814 (Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. v. Federal Power Commission, 209 F.2d 814, 93 U.S. App. D.C. 303, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4085 (D.C. Cir. 1954).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

For many years before and after it became the licensee of Project 16 at Niagara Falls, under the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C.A. § 791a et seq., Niagara Falls Power Company was obligated to furnish to the Aluminum Company of America mechanical power which the latter used in generating direct current electricity to operate an aluminum reduction plant. The obligation arose from a series of five contracts entered into by the two companies or their predecessors, beginning in 1895, under which Alcoa constructed its reduction plant on a nearby non-project site leased from a predecessor of Niagara Falls Power Company. The contractual arrangement, which was increased in 1922 to provide for annual deliveries of 52,000 mechanical horsepower, was to endure until May 1,1967.

Under the contracts, Alcoa paid for the mechanical power at the annual rate of $8.00 per mhp, which is the equivalent of $11.50 per kilowatt per year, or about one and one-third mills per kilowatt hour. As the electric customers of the Power Company were paying three mills per kwh for energy supplied to them, and as their demand was constantly increasing, the Niagara Falls Company desired to escape from its contractual obligation so as to devote to its own purposes the mechanical power being furnished to Alcoa, and thereby to realize greater revenue therefrom.

*815 Negotiations to that end, begun by Niagara Falls Power Company in 1946, culminated in a contract dated March 7, 1947. It was agreed that the existing arrangement should be cancelled as of March 1, 1949, upon payment of the sum of $1,500,000 to Alcoa by the Power Company. When that day arrived, closing contracts were executed and the money was paid in accordance with the agreement. 1

Thereafter, the Power Company attached its own 60 cycle alternating current generators at a cost of about $2,-500,000, and began to supply energy therefrom to its electric customers. These sales produced annual revenue of about $1,059,000 as against $416,000 which had been received from Alcoa for the mechanical power. Thus, through expenditures aggregating about $4,000,-000, the Niagara Falls Power Company obtained an increase of approximately $643,000 in annual revenues.

Before the cancellation agreement became effective, Niagara Falls Power Company submitted the proposed arrangement to the Treasury Department, and on December 9, 1948, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue entered into a “closing agreement” with the Power Company which defined the payment of $1,500,000 to Alcoa as “a capital expenditure which will be subject to deductions for amortization over the unexpired period of the old leases, beginning March 1, 1949.”

After the cancellation had become effective, the Power Company filed with the Public Service Commission of New York, which has regulatory authority over its electric rates, a petition for permission to amortize through operating expense accounts, during the unexpired period of the cancelled contracts, the sum of $1,500,000 which it had paid to Alcoa and which it then held in its Account 146. The Public Service Commission authorized such amortization by an order entered November 14, 1949.

On January 20, 1950, the Niagara Falls Power Company filed a petition with the Federal Power Commission setting forth the facts which we have summarized above, and requesting the Commission to authorize it

“* * * for all accounting requirements subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission under the Federal Power Act to amortize the above-described expenditure of $1,-500,000 over the period March 1, 1949 — May 1, 1967 by ratable monthly charges to operating expenses.”

Hearings were held in March and April, 1951, and the Trial Examiner filed his decision April 10, 1952. He found that Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation 2 3 had failed to show the proposed amortization to be reasonable or appropriate for use in the determination of future additions to amortization reserves established and maintained pursuant to § 10(d) of the Federal Power Act, which is quoted at length hereinafter ; and that it had not proved necessity for the payment to Alcoa. The Trial Examiner concluded the expenditure is not an operating cost applicable to future periods but is a loss voluntarily incurred by Niagara Falls Power Company under the Alcoa contracts; that the proper accounting treatment of the expenditure under the Federal Power Act is the immediate charge-off to Account 271, “Earned Surplus.” He also concluded that the expenditure of $1,-500,000 should not be considered in determining the portion of the licensee’s earnings to be transferred to the amortization reserves required by § 10(d) of the Act.

Niagara Mohawk seeks review of the following order, entered October 3, 1952, by the Federal Power Commission, *816 which adopted the Trial Examiner’s views:

"(A) The application, filed on January 20, 1950, by The Niagara Falls Power Company (Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation, successor licensee) for an order approving the amortization by ratable monthly charges to operating expense of the amount of $1,500,000, which it paid to the Aluminum Company of America with respect to agreements dated March 7, 1947, and March 1, 1949, is hereby denied.
“(B) Petitioner shall charge off the expenditure referred to in Paragraph (A) to Account 271, Earned Surplus.
“(C) The charge to Account 271, Earned Surplus, ordered in Paragraph (B) above shall not be considered in computing the surplus earned in excess of a specified reasonable rate of return for the purpose of establishing and maintaining amortization reserves under the provisions of Section 10(d) of the Federal Power Act.”

Section 301(a) of the Federal Power Act requires every water power licensee and every public utility to make, keep and preserve such accounts, records and memoranda as the Federal Power Commission may by rules and regulations prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the administration of the Act. The section authorizes the Commission to prescribe a system of accounts to be kept by licensees and public utilities, and includes the following:

“* * * The Commission, after notice and opportunity for hearing, may determine by order the accounts in which particular outlays and receipts shall be entered, charged, or credited. The burden of proof to justify every accounting entry questioned by the Commission shall be on the person making, authorizing, or requiring such entry * *

It was therefore the burden of Niagara Mohawk to justify the amortization of the Alcoa payment when it was questioned by the Commission. The justification offered is that, through the questioned expenditure and the installation of its own generators, the petitioner not only largely increased its earnings but also made available for general distribution 53,000,000 kwh per annum — additional energy which was sorely needed. So, Niagara Mohawk contends the Commission’s order is an unwarranted interference with its management of its own business.

But the Commission has not interfered with management.

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Related

Aluminum Co. of America v. Maltbie
45 N.E.2d 908 (New York Court of Appeals, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 F.2d 814, 93 U.S. App. D.C. 303, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niagara-mohawk-power-corp-v-federal-power-commission-cadc-1954.