Philadelphia Suburban Water Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

427 A.2d 1244, 58 Pa. Commw. 272, 43 P.U.R.4th 133, 1981 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1354
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 6, 1981
DocketAppeal, No. 561 C.D. 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 427 A.2d 1244 (Philadelphia Suburban Water Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Suburban Water Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 427 A.2d 1244, 58 Pa. Commw. 272, 43 P.U.R.4th 133, 1981 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1354 (Pa. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion by

President Judge Crumlish,

Philadelphia Suburban Water Company (PSWC), a regulated Pennsylvania Public Utility and wholly owned subsidiary of Philadelphia Suburban Corpora[274]*274tion (Parent), filed suit in this Court asking us to set aside an order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility commission entered on February 1, 1980, disallowing $2,794,314 of a requested $4,124,940 increase designed to produce annual operating revenues of $36,757,992 for water services. Included in that disallowance is the gain realized from the disposition of two parcels of watershed property. We reverse and remand.

In the late 1920’s, PSWC began the planning and later construction of the Geist Reservoir in Delaware County. The. two parcels of land here in question were part of the watershed area of the reservoir,1 and subsequently were included in rate base calculations which provided a return to shareholders. However, after a determination by PSWC’s management that the parcels were no longer needed to provide service,2 PSWC’s Board of Directors declared a property dividend of the parcels and subsequently conveyed them by deed to the parent company.3

In this case of first impression, we are asked to determine whether the gain received from the sale of non-depreciable watershed property deemed to be no longer used or useful in providing utility service should inure to the benefit of the ratepayer or the shareholder. In essence, we must determine whether [275]*275the $847,500 difference between the appraised value and the original cost and transfer costs,4 should be considered utility income or earned surplus for rate-making purposes. If the gain realized by PSWC’s conveyance to its parent is placed “above the line” into utility income, then revenues will be increased aiid the rate payer will benefit from the corresponding reduced rates. Alternatively, if placed “below the line” into the utility’s earned surplus, the gain will be used to either pay dividends to shareholders or invest in additional assets. Although placing these gains “below the line” will not reduce revenue requirements for ratepayers, we must conclude that the benefit, if any, would belong to the utility’s shareholders.

The Commission maintains that PSWC’s total operating revenue requirements have fairly and properly been determined. By adding $84,700 to PSWC’s annual revenues for ten years, the Commission did not dispute that the gain on this transaction belonged to the shareholders. Rather, the Commission sought to treat the gain on the distribution of property no differently than either the utility’s actual claimed losses or conceptually speaking, proposed extraordinary losses. Within these parameters, the Commission classified the gain derived from the sale of the two parcels as “extraordinary” and ordered PSWC to pass the effects of such extraordinary gains on to the ratepayers.

[276]*276In opposition, PSWC attacks the Commission’s proposed distinction between the legal ownership of gain and its treatment for rate-making purposes as without any substantive meaning. PSWC maintains that the gain from the sale of the non-depreciable asset, watershed land, now out of the rate base should inure to the shareholder. PSWC’s basic argument, however, is that by adjusting operating revenues by the net amount of the property dividend (gain or transfer) the Commission has confiscated PSWC property without due process and without just compensation. We agree with the utility that the gain from the conveyance of the two parcels of land inures to the benefit of PSWC’s shareholder, and the reduction of its operating revenues by the amortized amount of that gain is unlawful.

First, it must be remembered that we are here dealing with two parcels of land, a non-depreciable asset, no longer in the rate base of the utility. They have been conveyed to the parent company in a property dividend transaction. Those parcels of land had been purchased by. PSWC some 50 years before, not by the power of eminent domain but as a normal real estate transaction, and there is no indication the parcels were bought below their market value. They have been taken out of rate base because, as a result of modern purification and sewage techniques, they are no longer needed for watershed purposes.5

In Board of Public Commissioners v. New York Telephone Co., 271 U.S. 23 (1926), the United States Supreme Court held that ratepayers pay only for the use of utility assets properly used to provide public service, while the ownership of utility assets resides in the shareholders of the company. The Court stated:

[277]*277Customers pay for service, not for the property used to render it____By paying bills for service they do not acquire any interest, legal or equitable in the property used for their convenience or in the funds of the company.

Id. at 32.

In this regard, the Commission’s order not only recognizes that the “funds representing the gain on this transaction belong to the shareholder” but that the shareholders would be the recipient of any benefit upon a liquidation of the PSWC entity. The Commission stated further that it was not requiring PSWC to distribute the gain from the watershed parcels to the ratepayer but only devising a “ratemaking treatment which differs from the legal ownership of these funds” and for that rate-making treatment the gain will be amortized to reduce the revenue requirment of the utility. For the Commission to proclaim that this is not a distribution of funds to the ratepayer is a matter of mere semantics. We see no difference between reducing the total amount of revenue by $847,500 or simply giving the ratepayers the same amount. The effect upon the utility and its parent corporation is identical.

Important here is the premise that land is a nondepreciable asset carried at its original cost by a utility in its rate base. As such, the utility gains no advantage as it does from depreciable assets for the non-cash expense of depreciation. Land is neither consumed nor made useless by its use in utility service. By way of analogy, it is much the same as a catalyst in a chemical reaction, necessary but not consumed by the event. The ratepayer, though bearing the cost of taxes, pays only for the use of land, but gains no equitable or legal rights therein. As the ratepayer would not pay [278]*278the loss on any sale of land, neither should he receive the gain.6

While this is a case of first impression in Pennsylvania, the issue has been addressed in a number of cases in other jurisdictions. In Boise Water Corp. v. Idaho Public Utilities Commission, 99 Idaho 158, 578 P.2d 1089 (1978), the Idaho Supreme Court ruled that the class of persons who receive the benefit of a property transfer are those who bore the financial burden and risks of that property. The Court stated further that because “ratepayers do not pay depreciation on [land] ... the customers are not treated as equitable owners of that property.

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Bluebook (online)
427 A.2d 1244, 58 Pa. Commw. 272, 43 P.U.R.4th 133, 1981 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-suburban-water-co-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-1981.