South Cent. Bell Tel. v. La. Public Service

373 So. 2d 478, 1979 WL 405508
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 25, 1979
Docket63828
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 373 So. 2d 478 (South Cent. Bell Tel. v. La. Public Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Cent. Bell Tel. v. La. Public Service, 373 So. 2d 478, 1979 WL 405508 (La. 1979).

Opinion

373 So.2d 478 (1979)

SOUTH CENTRAL BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
v.
LOUISIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION.

No. 63828.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

June 25, 1979.
Rehearing Denied July 27, 1979.

*479 Marshall B. Brinkley, General Counsel, L.P.S.C., Baton Rouge, Michael R. Fontham, Stone, Pigman, Walther, Wittmann & Hutchinson, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.

*480 Norman C. Frost, Birmingham, M. Robert Sutherland, J. Robert Fitzgerald, Ronald W. Tweedel, New Orleans, Victor A. Sachse, III, Breazeale, Sachse & Wilson, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellee, South Central Bell Telephone Co.

DIXON, Justice.

South Central Bell Telephone Company is a Delaware corporation, authorized to conduct business as a public utility in Louisiana. South Central Bell is one of twenty-three operating companies included in the Bell System of American Telephone and Telegraph Company (A. T. & T.), and is a totally owned subsidiary of A. T. & T. In addition to the operating companies, the Bell System includes Western Electric Company and Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc. Western Electric manufactures, purchases, repairs and distributes apparatus and equipment as well as installs central office equipment for the System; Bell Labs engage in research, development and design work. Bell Labs also provide services for the operating companies and the long lines department of A. T. & T. South Central Bell provides both intrastate and interstate rates to customers in Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.

South Central Bell Telephone Company filed an application with the Louisiana Public Service Commission on April 12, 1977 to seek an increase of about $105,500,000 in intrastate rates. Before hearings were held, this court rendered its decision in South Central Bell Telephone Co. v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, 352 So.2d 964 (La.1977). On the basis of this decision, the Commission ordered a rate reduction, Ex parte South Central Bell Telephone Company, Order No. U-12785-B (Louisiana P.S.C. 1978); South Central Bell in turn increased the amount of its rate request to approximately $120,500,000. After numerous hearings, the Commission issued Order No. U-13388 which permitted an increase in gross annual revenues of $39,045,315, about one-third of the requested amount.

South Central Bell appealed this order to the district court on the basis of the record complied before the Commission. The district court on November 28, 1978 affirmed the order of the Commission except insofar as the Commission had departed from the actual capital structure of the Bell System in calculating a rate of return and had substituted a hypothetical capital structure containing less equity. The court therefore ordered an increase in gross annual revenues of $43,431,375, about $4,400,000 more than the Commission had authorized. The Commission then implemented the district court's decision but reserved its right to appeal this issue and to order refunds if it prevailed. In its answer to the Commission's appeal, the company sought review of three additional issues: the cost of equity capital set by the Commission; the amount of the attrition allowance set by the Commission; and the disallowance of certain legal expenses in antitrust litigation from the company's operating expenses.

The Capital Structure

The principal purpose of rate-making is to establish rates at a level which gives the regulated industry adequate revenues to pay its legitimate expenses and to provide a return on investment which is sufficient both to compensate present investors and to attract new capital when it becomes needed. Jones, Judicial Determination of Public Utility Rates; A Critique, 54 B.U.L.Rev. 873, 875 (1975). The utility's revenues produce a fair rate of return when this level is achieved. South Central Bell Telephone Co. v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, supra (1977). Regulation takes the place of competition in fixing rates for utilities. Utilities compete for capital, and are compensated for their product when they recover the entire cost of capital.[1]

*481 To establish whether an existing rate structure is producing adequate revenues, the agency regulating the utility first calculates the utility's revenues, expenses and investments during a test period. The total amount of the utility's investments in providing its service, including both investment in physical properties and an allowance for working capital, constitutes the utility's rate base. The utility's revenues minus its expenses, exclusive of interest, constitutes its earnings, or the return which is available for distribution to its stockholders and creditor investors. The regulating agency then determines whether the ratio of return to rate base is fair, inadequate, or excessive. 1 A. Priest, Principles of Public Utility Regulation, 45-226 (1969). The relationship may be expressed in the following formula:

rate of return = revenues minus expenses total investment

The generally accepted method of computing a fair rate of return is the "cost of capital" approach, in which the rate of return is determined by the utility's over-all cost for all types of capital. If this method is used to establish the fair rate of return, the utility's capital structure becomes relevant because different types of capital have different costs; a utility which employs, to a large extent, a relatively cheaper form of capital will require a lower rate of return than a company which extensively relies on a relatively more expensive form. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, 232 La. 446, 94 So.2d 431 (1957). The following figures, based on a presumed cost of debt at 7%, preferred stock at 9%, and common stock at 11%, demonstrates this interrelationship:

     COMPANY A:
     Debt       50%   at   7%    .0350
     Preferred  10%   at   9%    .0090
     Common     40%   at  11%    .0440
                                 _____
                                 .0880
     A fair rate of return would be 8.8%
     COMPANY B:
     Debt       35%  at   7%    .0245
     Preferred  10%  at   9%    .0090
     Common     55%  at  11%    .0605
                                _____
                                .0940
     A fair rate of return would be 9.4%
     COMPANY C:
     Debt       20%   at   7%    .0140
     Preferred  10%   at   9%    .0090
     Common     70%   at  11%    .0770
                                 _____
                                 .1000
     A fair rate of return would be 10%

*482 In Docket U-12785, the Commission determined that the capital structure for the unconsolidated Bell System should be used in calculating a fair rate of return rather than the actual capital structure of South Central Bell. In that case the Commission used the actual capital structure of the Bell System which at the time was composed of 49.5% debt, 4.4% preferred stock, and 46.1% common equity. The Commission's decision to calculate the rate of return on this basis was upheld by this court. South Central Bell Telephone Co. v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, supra (1977).

Since then the Bell System has significantly increased the equity portion of its capital structure to a projected 50% by the end of 1978. As a result debt has decreased to about 46.7% and preferred stock to about 3.3% of the capital structure. Moreover, counsel for the Bell System stated at the hearings that the company intended to increase its equity ratio to 55%.

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