Pittsburgh v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

101 A.2d 761, 174 Pa. Super. 363, 6 P.U.R.3d 468, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 258
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 2, 1954
DocketAppeal, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 101 A.2d 761 (Pittsburgh v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittsburgh v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 101 A.2d 761, 174 Pa. Super. 363, 6 P.U.R.3d 468, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 258 (Pa. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hirt, J.,

The South Pittsburgh Water Company, a private corporate entity, serves twenty-one boroughs and nine townships in the metropolitan area of South Hills lying south of the Monongahela River. In addition, the Company serves all or parts of nine wards of the City of Pittsburgh within that area. In October 1951 the Company filed with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission its tariff Number 11, providing for substantial increases in all of its metered water rates. The effective date of the tariff, by successive orders of the Commission, was extended for a total of nine months to October 1, 1952. On July 1, 1952 the Commission of its own motion initiated an investigation to determine the legality and fairness of the proposed rates. The City of Pittsburgh and an individual resident affected by the tariff, filed complaints against the proposed rates which were consolidated for hearing with the Commission’s investigation. '

The thoroughness with which every phase of the consolidated proceeding was presented is attested by the scope and extent of the testimony and the numerous exhibits in this record. As measures of value at Decern-' ber 31, 1951, the Company’s proofs of value, in each instance less accrued depreciation, compared with the Commission’s findings, may thus be stated:

Commis-

Company sion

Proof Finding

Original Cost $16,909,850 14,694,919

Reproduction Cost — spot prices

Dec. 31, 1951 * 35,764,326 31,489,035

Reproduction Cost — average

prices 1947 thru 1951 31,213,053 27,432,339

Based upon these findings, the Commission adopted $21,000,000 as the fair value of the Company’s prop *367 erty as of December 31, 1951 and from its estimates of total anticipated operating revenues, in relation to operating expenses, the Commission found $1,220,-813 as the net amount of operating income. This estimated net revenue constituted a return of 5.81% on the fair value finding of $21,000,000, which the Commission concluded “was not in excess of any fair rate of return finding justified by this record.” Accordingly 5.81% was approved as the allowable rate of return.

The difference between the Company’s claimed costs reflecting fair value, and the Commission’s findings, is accounted for largely by the elimination by the Commission of $1,441,853, the cost of construction work in progress, none of which was in service on December 31, 1951. Construction overheads entering into the Company’s computations of reproduction cost were also eliminated to the extent of about one and one-half millions of dollars. By judgment figures the Commission in its findings, increased the Company’s estimates of accrued depreciation, resulting in further reductions in the costs of company property reflecting fair value. The endeavor of the City before the Commission was to reduce the rate base still further by higher estimates of accrued depreciation. Accrued depreciation in determining fair value in a rate case must be deducted from computations of original cost and of reproduction cost, as representing the loss in service value which has accrued in the property since the date of its first use. The Commission in computing accrued depreciation, used the compound interest method. The actual calculation of depreciation in the application of this method consists in the determination of the base amount or annuity which when capitalized at an appropriate rate during the life of the plant will return to the Company the entire cost of the property. The charge for *368 the first year is the annuity. The charge for each succeeding year is the annuity plus interest for one year at 4%, the rate adopted by the Commission, on the compound amount of the annuities at the first of the year. In the present appeal the City would have us say as a matter of law that there is error in the Commission’s use of the compound interest method in estimating accrued depreciation. The City contends that accrued depreciation could properly be measured only by the straight line method which spreads the entire cost of the property, to be recouped, in equal annual accruals over the service life of the property.

The determination of accrued depreciation presents an old problem, broad and complex in its many aspects. Cheltenham & Abington S. Co. v. P. S. C., 122 Pa. Superior Ct. 252, 186 A. 149. In the present order the Commission dealt with the problem in the light of historical practice as applied to water companies. The order of the Commission contains this comment: “Water utilities in Pennsylvania, throughout their regulatory life, have generally based their provisions for depreciation of plant on the premise that such plant depreciates very slowly in the early years and very rapidly as it nears retirement. Based on this conception, there developed the practice, recognized by regulatory authority, of making charges on the books annually for depreciation to carry this into effect; of course, there were exceptions. Therefore, the depreciation reserve accumulations proceeded at a relatively slow rate, with the result that at any given date in most situations, the depreciation reserve for a well operated and maintained waterworks system is smaller than if the basic initial conception was that an equal amount of depreciation accrued each year during the total service life. During * the history of rate regulation in Pennsylvania, this Commission has accepted *369 the use of the 4 per cent compound interest method of determining annual and accrued depreciation for water utilities which enabled it to establish reasonable rates without causing violent dislocation of the financial integrity of the regulated utility with all of its economic implications.”

The Commission was supported in the use of the compound interest method, as an aid in determining accrued depreciation, by Nathan B. Jacobs, a qualified engineer who was well acquainted with the Company’s property; in fact the accrued depreciation study was made under his supervision. As his reason for selecting the 4% compound interest method he said: “I think it more nearly represents the declining service value of the property in a water works than any of the other methods of computing depreciation. The straight line method takes an equal amount each year over the whole life of the property. The sinking fund method and the compound interest method start out with a smaller amount in the early years with a very rapidly increasing amount of depreciation towards the end of the life of the property and that is when obsolescence and inadequacy are beginning to show themselves and actually taking place in the property itself and it comes closer, in our experience with the observed method of depreciation whereby you attempt to determine the remaining service value in (a, property considering the condition in which we find the property, the condition of the art under which the property was installed or designed and its adequacy and obsolescence.” The testimony of a second expert witness for the Company may be ignored on this phase of the investigation since the Commission did not accept it as support for the claim “that depreciation progresses according to a geometric curve.” Against the Company’s evidence the City’s expert, Martin T.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A.2d 761, 174 Pa. Super. 363, 6 P.U.R.3d 468, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburgh-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1954.