People ex rel. Pennsylvania Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission

204 A.D. 73, 198 N.Y.S. 193, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9420
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 10, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 A.D. 73 (People ex rel. Pennsylvania Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Pennsylvania Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission, 204 A.D. 73, 198 N.Y.S. 193, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9420 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

H. T. Kellogg, J.:

The relator is a public service corporation which supplies natural gas to consumers in the city of Jamestown, N. Y., as well as to consumers in various cities in the State of Pennsylvania. The gas is drained from extensive gas fields owned or leased by the relator in the State of Pennsylvania. It is piped from wells upon [75]*75such fields to a pumping station at Eoystone, Penn. From this station it is pumped through a main pipe line into the city of Jamestown, N. Y., and there piped to consumers. Gas is also pumped from the Eoystone station into the houses of consumers in various Pennsylvania cities. Of the natural gas furnished to all customers the New York State consumers use twenty-six and eight-tenths per cent while the consumers in Pennsylvania use seventy-three and two-tenths per cent. In order to obtain a rate base for fixing rates for natural gas sold by the relator in Jamestown, N. Y., the Public Service Commission separately considered and valued three classes of properties belonging to it. The classes are as follows: (1) Properties used exclusively in the New York service, including the main pipe line leading from Eoystone, Penn., to Jamestown, N. Y. (2) Properties, excepting gas fields and wells, but including the Eoystone station and pipe lines leading thereto from the Pennsylvania gas fields, commonly used in supplying New York and Pennsylvania consumers. (3) Gas fields and wells employed to supply the Eoystone station with gas for consumers in both States. The Commission determined that such proportion of the properties of the second and third classes as the volume of gas sold in New York bore to the entire volume of gas sold, or twenty-six and eight-tenths per cent, should be allocated to New York. It determined that the value of the properties in the first class was $1,000,000. To this valuation it added $311,088 for working capital, overheads, etc., making a total value of $1,311,088. It determined that the value of the properties in the second class, allocated to New York, together with overheads, etc., was $1,500,000. It determined that the fair value of the properties in the third class was $12,000,000, and after deducting therefrom the sum of $8,707,869, for reasons hereinafter given, it allocated to New York twenty-six and eight-tenths per cent of the difference between these sums or $882,291.11. It thus found that the capital which the relator employed in its New York business was $3,693,379.11, and employed that sum as the base for determining the rates to be charged in Jamestown, N: Y.

In valuing the relator’s properties in classes 1 and 2 the Commission considered cost of reproduction rather than original investment. It made deductions from such cost figures of an estimated difference between the value of such properties new and their value as depreciated. The evidence showed that the cost of reproducing the properties in class 1 was $1,401,542, and that the cost of reproducing that portion of the properties in class 2 which was allocated to New York was $2,113,576. In reaching the result that the value of the property in the first class was [76]*76$1,000,000 and that the value of the New York portion of the properties in the second class was $1,500,000 the Commission in the first instance deducted for depreciation $401,542, and in the second instance $613,576, or in each class approximately twenty-nine per cent of the cost of reproduction. Testimony was given that the maximum depreciation of these properties was ten per cent of the value of similar properties new. On the other hand, there was in evidence a report made by the relator to the New York State-Tax Department for the year 1917 in which the relator made statement, under oath, that the properties in question had suffered depreciation from original value of .397000337. It is obvious that opinions given as to the extent of plant depreciation must in all. cases consist of approximate estimates only. In view of the fact that the relator itself had in 1918 estimated that the property in question had depreciated approximately forty per cent, we do not feel that the decision of the Commission made shortly thereafter, that the property had depreciated approximately thirty per cent was unwarranted by the proof. We conclude, therefore, that the Commission made no error in its valuation of these properties.

The Commission determined, as stated, that the present fair value of the relator’s gas wells, gas fields and gas rights was $12,000,000. Concerning this valuation the Commission said: “ The value of twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) which is claimed in the brief of its counsel for its developed gas properties in Pennsylvania is sustained by the evidence.” It said further: “ The very small amount invested by the company in the property originally, or even the amount at which it is carried upon its books, cannot, I think, be used in lieu of the actual value of the property as reasonably established by many disinterested witnesses.” It found that the relator had from the year 1891 to 1917, inclusive, carried upon its books certain amounts totaling $9,863,889 in depreciation account. It found that of this sum $1,156,020 was traceable into free investments made by the relator. It made deduction of this latter sum and determined that the difference, or $8,707,869, should be deducted from $12,000,000, the present value of the relator’s gas fields, leaving $3,292,131, the figure to be used for the capital of relator invested in such fields, twenty-six and eight-tenths per cent of which should be credited to the New York business.

The deduction from $12,000,000, the value fixed for relator’s gas fields and rights, of $8,707,869 found in depreciation account, was not made upon the theory, that the relator, having by its book figures admitted depreciation in the amount named, should be held to such figures. No such theory was tenable for the reason that [77]*77the Commission was not dealing with a problem of book valuations in the solution of which it might have been permissible to have deducted book figures of depreciation from book figures of investment. The Commission had already found that the present day actual fair value of the gas fields and rights was $12,000,000. There was necessarily involved in the making of this finding all proper deductions for depletion or depreciation. No further deductions for actual depreciation, therefore, could consistently have been made. The Commission made.the deduction upon a wholly different theory. After stating the value of the gas rights to be $12,000,000, it said: “ There is, however, in this connection a very important element to be considered. This company for years very properly set aside from its revenues, as an operating expense, a substantial sum annually to make good the depletion of its capital by reason of the consumption of the natural gas and the constant diminution of the amount of that commodity which it owned, by sale and consumption." It stated that the relator had from time to time collected from consumers the sum of $9,863,889; that this sum was collected from the customers of this company to make good the depletion of capital consequent upon its operations; ” that it “ was a quasi trust fund for that purpose." It said that this sum “ was invested very largely, and properly so, in the assets of the company, and to the extent of such investments this trust fund in a sense belongs to the consumers and they cannot properly be required to pay a return upon their own property." It further said:

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Related

In re the Estate of Tremain
169 Misc. 549 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1938)
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120 S.E. 398 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
204 A.D. 73, 198 N.Y.S. 193, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-pennsylvania-gas-co-v-public-service-commission-nyappdiv-1923.