Pittsburgh & West Virginia Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission

132 S.E. 497, 101 W. Va. 63, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 141
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1926
Docket5627
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 497 (Pittsburgh & West Virginia Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittsburgh & West Virginia Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission, 132 S.E. 497, 101 W. Va. 63, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 141 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The Pittsburgh and West Virginia Gas Company, a public utility corporation, complains of an order of the Public Service Commission refusing to complainant a raise in its rates to its industrial and domestic consumers in this state, on the *65 ground that the rates now in effect are confiscatory.

The application for increase in rates was filed in December of 1924. Protests were interposed by individual consumers and by the City of Grafton; evidence was taken on the part of the applicant, and the Commission caused an audit and report of the books and affairs of the utility to be taken and filed. The case was submitted for decision on June 22, 1925; (briefs were filed in July of that year); and the order denying increased rates was entered November 19, 1925. The rate in effect at the time of the application was 40c per thousand cubic feet, less 2c for prompt payment. The increased rates asked for are 53c per thousand for the first 100,000 cu. ft.; 48c for the next 400,000 cu. ft., and 43c for all gas used above this amount, less 3c for prompt payment, and a minimum meter charge of $1.00 per month. The two classes of consumers are “wholesale” consumers who are charged an average rate of 31.9c, and the “domestic and industrial consumers”, the rate being 40c and 38.9c, respectively, to them. The bulk of the wholesale gas sales goes to the Equitable Gas Company, a subsidiary or affiliated company, at the Pennsylvania line, for 32c. (For the year 1925, the Equitable was to pay 37e.) The new rate was to apply to the domestic and industrial consumers in this state.

Complaint is made that the Commission erroneously adopted the rate base of $14,065,421.51 as the value of the property of the utility used and useful in the public service; that the Commission gave no consideration or weight to the utility’s evidence to the effect that its income for the year 1925 would (in strong probability) decrease, while its costs of service to the consumer would increase, nor did the Commission give any consideration or weight to its evidence of its present cost of service to its industrial and domestic consumers in West Virginia. The major emphasis is upon the point that the Commission did not consider or give due weight to complainant’s evidence as to the estimated net earnings for the year 1925; therefore the findings of the Commission were without evidence to support them and were in direct conflict with the uncontradicted evidence of complainant.

Was the Commission in error in ascertaining $14,065,421.51 *66 as tbe rate basis? A witness was introduced by the utility who testified that the reproduction cost of the utility’s plant new, including going concern value and working capital, less depreciation, was $23,988,137. The utility not desiring a revaluation of its property used and useful in the public service, which involved loss of money and time, stated by its counsel that the evidence of reproduction new value was offered as an index to show the book value was much less than the actual value. “But inasmuch as the proposed increase in rates would not produce a fair return upon the book value, therefore, it was unnecessary to go farther into the real value.” The evidence of reproduction value new was put in as persuasive for increased rates on the book value. Neither the applicant nor the Commission then went further to ascertain the actual value, and the case proceeded upon the theory that the book value as claimed by the utility, $14,065,-421.51, was the rate base for the purpose of the application. The Commission accepted the book value contended for, as the rate base, and found in its order, “that the property of the petitioner has the value claimed by it for rate making purposes, that is, $14,065,421.51, and that said valuation must be accepted as the rate base herein.” The utility having presented to the Commission the book value as the rate basis, and' the incomplete evidence of actual value as an “index”, its contention now made in this court that the rate base is not the true one under the evidence and that the Commission was in error in not ascertaining the true basis to be $23,988,137, is not well founded. If it had appeared to the Commission that the utility was contending for a rate base different from the book value, evidence no doubt would have been taken upon the various items of property. Expense and delay would have followed. The utility desired to avoid such delay and expense and by counsel so announced-.

As before stated, the main point of error relied upon is the alleged failure of the Commission to consider and accept the evidence of one of the officers of the utility, to the effect that reduced net earnings for the year 1925 w;ould be at least $1,000,000 less than the net earnings for 1924. This loss of revenue was based on estimates of decreased gas sales *67 and increased expenses for tbe year 1925. The net earnings for 1924 were estimated by this witness, -Hurlburt, to be $1,190,677. This estimate was based on ten months ^actual operation, coupled with an estimate for the remaining months. The report of Williamson who audited the books after the expiration of the year, showed the net income (depreciation allowed) to be $1,443,643.56, a-considerable difference (after adding $94,408.76 net gasoline earnings) between the actual and estimated result. The probative value of estimates is inconsequential when compared with actualities. The Commission had before it a comprehensive history of the utility, its financial operations, purchases, expenses, stock transactions, dividends and depreciations, fluctuations in production and sales, and the like, together with its developed and undeveloped gas territories, all of which could be considered by it in weighing the testimony of decreased sales and increased expenses for the year 1925. These estimates were necessarily speculative. The burden is upon the utility asking for increased rates to prove that they are just and reasonable. Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission, 95 W. Va. 557. It will be observed that when the case was submitted, nearly one-half of the year 1925 had expired, but there was no effort then made to reduce the estimates formerly submitted, .to actual results. The best evidence would have been the decrease in gas Sales and increase in costs of production covering the months then expired. The Commission was entitled to the best evidence available. Past experience may always be considered in resolving future probabilities. We cannot say that the Commission acted without evidence; nor can we say that the estimates of decreased sales and increased ■ expenses founded largely upon conjecture should outweigh the actual facts and figures considered by the Commission. While we do not find in the record a written statement by the Commission of its reason for the entry of the order, as contemplated in section 16, chapter 15-0, of the- Code, the order recites that the case was heard upon the evidence taken, the schedules filed, the audit and report by Williamson, and the proceedings theretofore had. The courts do not attempt to weigh conflicting evidence in rate cases; and will not inter *68 fere with the rates fixed, unless the Commission has acted so arbitrarily and unjustly as to fix rates contrary to evidence or without evidence to support them. Interstate Com. Comm. v. Union Pacific R. R. Co.,

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132 S.E. 497, 101 W. Va. 63, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburgh-west-virginia-gas-co-v-public-service-commission-wva-1926.