State Ex Rel. Capital City Water Co. v. MIssouri Public Service Commission

850 S.W.2d 903, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 291, 1993 WL 50939
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1993
DocketWD 45857
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 850 S.W.2d 903 (State Ex Rel. Capital City Water Co. v. MIssouri Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Capital City Water Co. v. MIssouri Public Service Commission, 850 S.W.2d 903, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 291, 1993 WL 50939 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

BRECKENRIDGE, Judge.

Capital City Water Company (Company) appeals from an order of the circuit court affirming a decision of the Missouri Public Service Commission (Commission) in a water utility rate case. The Company claims that the circuit court erroneously affirmed the Commission’s decision because: (1) the Commission is estopped from finding a contract between the Company and Public Water Supply District No. 2 of Cole County, Missouri, imprudent because of the Commission’s prior approval of said contract and its actions in other rate proceedings based upon said contract; (2) the Commission’s finding that the contract is imprudent is not based upon substantial and competent evidence in the record; (3) the Commission failed to consider evidence of total costs compared to total revenue over the same period of time had the Company in *907 stalled its own storage facilities; and (4) the Commission’s quantification of the cost of the District contract is contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence. The judgment of the circuit court affirming the Report and Order of the Commission is reversed.

In 1977, the Company, because of its need for storage and a backup source of water, entered into a contract with the District. Pursuant to the contract, the Company was permitted to use all of the District’s storage tanks and wells. In exchange for this accommodation, the Company agreed to operate and maintain the tanks and wells; pay $2,000.00 per month to the District; and provide the District with all of the water for its customers. The contract was executed on August 23, 1977, with an effective date of June, 1978. Initially, the term of the contract was twenty years. In March, 1990, an addendum to the contract was signed, extending its term three additional years.

Before the execution of the initial contract, the Company submitted it to the Commission. In a letter from the general counsel of the Commission sent to the Company, dated August 9, 1977, it was stated that, “The proposed lease has been reviewed by this office and we have no objection to its execution.” A second letter from the Commission, dated August 19, 1977, and signed by the Commission’s secretary, reiterated that “[t]he proposed arrangement and lease has been reviewed by the Commission. The Commission has no objection to its execution.”

Over the following twelve years, the Company filed five rate cases, each resulting in an increase in rates for the Company. Each of these rate cases was resolved by a Stipulation and Agreement on a negotiated dollar settlement. The instant case, commencing with the filing of a rate request by the Company on December 15, 1989, was the first in which the Commission reviewed the ratemaking treatment to be given the contract.

Subsequent to the Company’s 1988 rate case, the Commission directed that a docket be opened to investigate the Company’s demand requirements and the capacity available to meet those requirements. In Case No. WO-89-76 of its capacity docket, the Commission found that the Company would be able to provide safe and adequate service pursuant to its plan to increase its capacity through new District wells.

On December 15, 1989, the Company filed a rate request with the Commission requesting $516,477 in additional revenue. The Office of Public Counsel proposed that the request be reduced by $238,544, based upon the Public Counsel’s calculation of the revenue requirement of the Company had the Company built a storage tank in 1977 measured against the revenue requirement resulting from the Company’s contract with the District. 1 In its Report and Order dated November 14, 1990, the Commission adopted the Public Counsel’s suggested reduction, finding the contract to be a “bad bargain.” The Commission further found:

In 1977, the Company needed more water storage facilities and reviewed its only two options: building its own tanks or leasing them from the District. Company experts recommended leasing facilities if the the [sic] lease agreement contained an annual cap of 182.5 million gallons. In August, 1977, the Company entered a lease agreement for the use of three of District’s tanks with a total capacity of 1.3 MG and three adjacent wells. In exchange for the use of these facilities, the Company agreed to: (1) pay the District $2,000 a month rent; (2) pay the District a monthly sum equal to the cost of water sold to the District the previous month; (2) [sic] pay for the variable costs of the water sold to the District (treatment, electricity, etc.); (3) [sic] pay for the operational and maintenance expenses of District’s tanks and wells. The contract is for twenty years (1978 to 1997). It does not contain any cap. The 182.5 MG recommended cap was exceed *908 ed by the District in 1979. Because of the unexpected growth of the District, the Company’s costs under the contract have been rapidly escalating.
* * * * * *
The Commission is greatly concerned with Company’s escalating costs under the contract. This concern is heightened by Company’s failure to decrease its costs under the addendum and its agreement to incur additional costs. Thus, the Commission believes it is appropriate to examine the reasonableness of Company’s rental expense by examining the contract terms which gave rise to the expense. One of the components of Company’s rental expense is the amount of water used by the District. According to the terms of the contract, this is an unlimited amount. The record shows that it is an unlimited amount because Company ignored advice it received to include a 182.5 MG cap as one of the terms of the contract. The Commission finds the Company agreement to the contract without a cap against the recommendation of its own experts is unreasonable.
The contract has terms which exacerbate the absence of a cap because it required the Company to return the District’s water payment. The Company has argued that this exchange of checks is a “wash” and has zero impact on the ratepayer. This Commission has rejected that argument. In the Commission’s opinion, the Company’s return of the District’s water payment is, in effect, the provision of free water. This, combined with the absence of a cap, means Company agreed to provide an unlimited amount of free water in exchange for a fixed amount of storage.
For a fixed amount of storage, the Company agreed to provide unlimited free water and pay a $2000 a month rental fee and pay for the maintenance of the leased facilities. In the Commission’s opinion, this is excessive compensation. That the Company would agree to such unequal and burdensome terms is not the concern of this Commission if its shareholders bear the costs but when the costs of such terms fall upon the ratepayers, it is incumbent upon the Commission to act. The Commission finds it would be totally inappropriate to allow the Company to fully recover the expenses associated with the execution of this contract.

Two members of the Commission filed a dissent to the Commission’s Report and Order, stating that although they believed the Company’s rates needed to be adjusted to reflect the contract with the District, they found the Public Counsel’s analysis of the impact on the revenue requirement questionable and suggested a rehearing to take further evidence on this issue.

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850 S.W.2d 903, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 291, 1993 WL 50939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-capital-city-water-co-v-missouri-public-service-commission-moctapp-1993.