Southwestern Public Service Co. v. State

1981 OK 136, 637 P.2d 92, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 299, 1981 WL 610455
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 10, 1981
Docket54667
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1981 OK 136 (Southwestern Public Service Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Public Service Co. v. State, 1981 OK 136, 637 P.2d 92, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 299, 1981 WL 610455 (Okla. 1981).

Opinions

LAVENDER, Justice:

Southwestern Public Service Company (Southwestern) is an electric power utility serving Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Kansas. It is the primary source of generated electricity of the Oklahoma panhandle, and serves a number of municipalities, industries and one electric cooperative.

On October 19, 1978, Southwestern filed an application (Cause No. 26469) with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission (Commission) for a general rate increase in which it sought an increase in revenues derived from its retail rates and charges for electric service within the State of Oklahoma in the amount of $1,357,409. On December 1, 1978, Southwestern filed for approval of its fuel adjustment clause (Cause No. 26225). The two causes were consolidated by the Commission. After hearing and on December 17, 1979, the Commission entered Order No. 161495 in which the Commission:

Denied Southwestern’s application for a general rate increase in the amount of $1,357,409, but granted a general rate increase in the amount of $379,838; and

Required Southwestern to refund to its Oklahoma customers the sum of $64,030 purportedly resulting from an excess return from Tuco, Inc. which was then a wholly owned subsidiary of Southwestern, which refund was to be affected through Southwestern’s fuel adjustment clause.

Southwestern alleges that the order of the Commission violates its rights under the United States Constitution, Amendments V and XIV, and under the Oklahoma Constitution, Art. II, §§ 2, 7, 23 and 24. In weighing the constitutional challenge thus presented, this court will exercise its own independent judgment as to both the law and the facts.1

[96]*96The reasonableness or unreasonableness of rates prescribed by the Commission for a public utility engaged in both interstate and intrastate business must be determined with reference only to the intrastate business done within the State of Oklahoma and the profits derived from the intrastate business. It is by dividing the capital invested in the business in Oklahoma in proportion to the earnings from both interstate and intrastate that the amount of capital invested in intrastate business is found, and upon which the company is entitled to a fair return. And it is by dividing the total expense of conducting both its interstate and intrastate business on the same basis that the expense of conducting each is found. If the net profits derived from the intrastate business, as adjusted by the order of the Commission, fails to yield a reasonable return on the investment, the order is unreasonable and unjust, and will be reversed by this court.2

The constitutional safeguard afforded to a utility is summarized in Alabama Public Service Com. v. South Cent. Bell Tel. Co.,3 as follows: “The just compensation safeguarded to a utility by the 14th Am. to the U.S. Const, is a reasonable return on the value of the property used at the time that is being used for the public service, and rates not sufficient to yield that return are confiscatory. The determination of a fair rate of return is governed by the following legal principles: (1) it cannot be developed by a rule of thumb calculation, but must be determined in the exercise of a fair, enlightened and independent judgment in light of all relevant facts; (2) it must be equal to that generally being earned by others in the same general locality in business undertakings attended by corresponding risks, and uncertainties; (3) it must be sufficient to insure the investor’s confidence in the financial soundness of the utility enterprise and enough to maintain and support its credit so that it will be able to raise the money necessary to improve and expand its service to the discharge of all its public duties; (4) in determining the reasonableness of its rates it is necessary to consider effect of the rates imposed in the light of the utility’s present situation and in light of its requirements and opportunities.”4

The burden of proving the rates fixed by the Commission to be confiscatory is upon the party complaining.5

In presenting its case before the Commission, Southwestern used its operations for the calendar year 1977 as the “test year,” that is a twelve-month period which has already occurred and in which the actual revenues and expenses of the utility may be closely examined by the utility and the reg[97]*97ulators.6 This was done without objection by the opponents of the rate increase. In its attempts to establish the rate base, Southwestern sought unsuccessfully to add to the test year basis a new generating plant, construction work in progress, water purchase options, and working capital including ad valorem taxes. Southwestern also sought to avoid passing through the benefits of its investment tax credit to its rate payers, and sought to charge its rate payers for gas bought from Tuco, Inc., its wholly owned subsidiary. From the adverse rulings and findings of the Commission, Southwestern has lodged this appeal.

In determining whether a rate is reasonable and just, or whether it is confiscatory when constitutionally challenged on that ground, this court is not bound to adhere to a single formula or a combination of formulae, nor is it inextricably committed to a particular point in time or “base year” in establishing a rate base.7

As we said in Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. State, supra, “It is not theory but the impact of the rate order which counts. If the total effect of the rate order cannot be said to be unjust and unreasonable, judicial inquiry under the Act is at an end.”8

There are, however, as we shall point out, certain requirements of consistency and balance which must be met where deviations from the base year are sought to be interjected.

In the case of Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. Corporation Commission,9 this court said: “In determining whether the rate is reasonable, it is necessary to ascertain the fair value of the property of the appellant used and useful in its public service business at the time the inquiry was made, (citations omitted), for appellant is entitled to a rate which will yield a fair return upon the reasonable value of the property at the time it is being used for the public;” [emphasis added]. In the much later case of Arkansas Gas Co. v. Sun Oil Co. of Pa., Okl., 554 P.2d 14 (1976)10 we said: “New conditions, such as future gas supplies and new facilities not in service at time of this application, might be basis for future adjustments of rates. Such items are not controlling here. Neither is the overall profit of the company from its conglomerate operations and properties that are not a proper consideration in [98]*98Arkla’s rate based value for furnishing gas utilities to its Oklahoma customers.”

A test year is a mirror view of the past suspended within a limited but definite time frame through which we prophesy its duplication in the future. To alter the image is to risk the distortion for the future. Only the cost of those capital assets which are in actual use during the test year, or whose use is so imminent and certain that they may be said, at least by analogy, to have the quality of working capital may be added to the rate base established by the test year in any event;11

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Southwestern Public Service Co. v. State
1981 OK 136 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
1981 OK 136, 637 P.2d 92, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 299, 1981 WL 610455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-public-service-co-v-state-okla-1981.