STATE, EX REL. ALLAIN v. Miss. Pub. Serv. Com'n

435 So. 2d 608
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1983
Docket53709
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 435 So. 2d 608 (STATE, EX REL. ALLAIN v. Miss. Pub. Serv. Com'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE, EX REL. ALLAIN v. Miss. Pub. Serv. Com'n, 435 So. 2d 608 (Mich. 1983).

Opinion

435 So.2d 608 (1983)

STATE of Mississippi, ex rel. Bill Allain, Attorney General, for the Use and Benefit of the State of Mississippi and the Electrical Consumers of the State of Mississippi, Mississippi Legal Services Coalition and Others, Mississippi Power & Light Company, City of Jackson, Mississippi
v.
MISSISSIPPI PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION.

No. 53709.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

March 9, 1983.

*610 Bill Allain, Atty. Gen., Frank Spencer and Larry J. Stroud, Sp. Asst. Attys. Gen., Gay Dawn Horne, Tim Hancock, Wise, Carter, Child & Caraway, James K. Child, Jr., Henderson S. Hall, Jr., Cupit & Maxey, John L. Maxey, II, Jackson, Stanley Taylor, Jr., Biloxi, for appellants.

Bennett E. Smith, Jackson, Walter Brown, Natchez, for appellees.

Before PATTERSON, C.J., and ROY NOBLE LEE and PRATHER, JJ.

PATTERSON, Chief Justice, for the Court:

On May 28, 1980, Mississippi Power & Light Company (hereinafter MP&L) filed its Notice of Intention to Change Rates with the Mississippi Public Service Commission (hereinafter Commission), for services on or after July 1, 1980. The proposed rates were designed to produce $68,786,000 in additional gross annual operating revenues for the projected test year ending on June 30, 1981. The Commission suspended *611 the effective dates for the change in rates and set times for public hearings. MP&L filed a refunding bond, pursuant to statute, which authorized it to place the proposed rates into effect. After extensive public hearings[1] the Commission on November 24, 1980, authorized new rates designed to produce additional gross operating revenues of $48,277,442 to MP & L.

On December 23, 1980, the Mississippi Legal Services Coalition (hereinafter Legal Services), the Attorney General on behalf of the State of Mississippi and on behalf of the electrical customers within the affected area, filed separate appeals in the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County. The appeals were consolidated for consideration and adjudication.

The Attorney General, the Cities of Jackson, Cleveland and Ruleville, the Town of Merigold and Hinds County, each filed petitions to intervene. Although the chancery court, in its capacity as an intermediate appellate court, permitted the Attorney General to participate in the appeal it nevertheless rescinded this order prior to final judgment, reasoning that the Attorney General was not a proper party. The court permitted the City of Cleveland to withdraw its petition to intervene and allowed the City of Jackson, the City of Ruleville, Town of Merigold and Hinds County to intervene as parties.

The chancery court affirmed the rate increase granted by the Commission to MP & L, with the exception of a customer charge of $3.25, which was found to be not supported by substantial evidence, and remanded that issue to the Commission for further consideration. Presently, there is no appeal from that action.

The Attorney General appealed the chancellor's denial of his motion to intervene. We held in State v. Miss. Pub. Serv. Com'n., 418 So.2d 779 (Miss. 1982), that when an Attorney General has common-law powers, as in this state, he has the inherent right to intervene in all suits affecting the public interest when he has no personal interest therein. Accordingly, the motion of MP & L to strike the Attorney General's assignments of error with respect to the merits of the rate case was overruled. The Attorney General, Legal Services and the City of Jackson have appealed from the final judgment of the chancery court. They assign as error the Court's affirmance of the Commission's:

1. Use of a projected test year as sponsored by MP & L for the determination of the company's rate base and operating expenses in order to establish new electrical rate schedules in that it was not supported by substantial evidence, was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and also constituted an error of law;

2. Denial of accelerated amortization of the excess accumulated federal tax reserve was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and constituted an error of law;

3. Allowing MP & L to reclassify charitable donations as operating expenses for rate making purposes was not supported by substantial evidence and constituted an error of law;

4. Not excluding consolidated tax savings from MP & L's company's operating expenses for rate making purposes;

5. Granting MP & L comprehensive inter-period tax allocations constituted an error of law;

6. Inclusion of customer deposits and advances and MP & L's rate base constituted an error of law;

7. Allowance of the entire amount of MP & L's investment tax credits to be added to the company's rate base was not supported by substantial evidence, was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and constituted an error of law;

8. Allowance of plant held for future use to be included in MP & L's rate base was not supported by substantial evidence, was in excess of the statutory authority of the commission and also constituted an error of law;

*612 9. Inclusion of long term debt interest and preferred stock dividends as funds available to offset cash working capital requirements of MP & L was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and constituted an error of law;

10. Not rejecting the biased testimony of MP & L's witness in favor of the unbiased testimony of the Commission's expert witness;

11. Approving the acquisition adjustment of the purchase of Capital Electric Power Association by MP & L was not supported by substantial evidence, contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and also an error of law;

12. Denial of accelerated amortization of excess depreciation reserve of MP & L constituted an error of law;

13. Permitted the amortization of the DeSoto County Plant Site Environmental Impact Study in arriving at the net utility operating income figure of $23,095,000 for the projected test year.

Legal Services urges two additional assignments of error:

1. The Court's adoption of the approved rate increase by the Commission was unjust, unreasonable, and unreasonably discriminatory in the face of the overwhelming weight of the evidence and was not based on substantial evidence, in that it resulted in the disproportionate impact on impoverished ratepayers of MP & L;

2. The court's approving the adoption by the Commission of the classification of residential consumers, which created regular residential, electric water heating and total electric classes, was unjust, unreasonable and unreasonably discriminatory.

MP & L supports and defends the Commission's order insofar as it approved and allowed new rates and charges to produce $48,277,442 in additional gross annual operating revenues for the projected test year ending June 30, 1981. MP & L, however, argues the Commission erred in:

1. Not including construction work in progress (CWIP) in the rate base; and

2. Not finding MP & L had a cost of equity of 18%.

We consider MP & L as an appellee, except as to the above two assignments of error which we shall discuss at the conclusion of this opinion.

The decision of the Commission although affirmed by the chancery court on appeal was not unanimous. Commissioners Johnson and Snyder were of the opinion that a $48,277,442 rate increase was proper for a fair rate of return to MP & L and not unreasonable to its electrical consumers in the affected area.

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435 So. 2d 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-allain-v-miss-pub-serv-comn-miss-1983.