State Ex Rel. City of Harrisonville v. Public Service Commission

236 S.W. 852, 291 Mo. 432
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 852 (State Ex Rel. City of Harrisonville v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. City of Harrisonville v. Public Service Commission, 236 S.W. 852, 291 Mo. 432 (Mo. 1922).

Opinions

ELDER, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Henry County upon a writ *440 of certiorari directed to tlie Public Service Commission, which judgment reversed and set aside the finding’s and orders of the Commission in increasing’ rates for electricity furnished by the Green Light & Power Company, in so far as such findings and orders affected rates for electric service rendered in the city of Harrisonville. Prom such judgment the Public Service Commission has appealed. The Green Light & Power Company having intervened in the cause, an appeal was likewise taken by it. The two appeals were consolidated and argued as one in this court. We shall accordingly treat of them together. Por convenience the city of Harrisonville will be referred to as the “city,” the Public Service Commission as the “Commission,” and the Green Light & Power Company as the “Company.”

The facts involved are substantially as follows:

Prior to August, 1918, the city was the owner of an electric light plant, consisting of equipment for the generation of current and of a distribution system, which plant was operated by the city for the purpose of lighting its streets and furnishing light and power to its citizens. In the fall of 1916 the firm of Green & Sons purchased the electric light plant at the city of Pleasant Hill and, in 1917, began the construction of a new electric power plant at that city, equipped with two 354-horse-power boilers with automatic stokers, two turbogenera-tors, feed, pumps, heaters, piping, transformers and other machinery for. producing current. In November, 1917, the company was organized, taking- over the property formerly owned by Green & Sons. After the construction of the new power plant at Pleasant Hill, additional transmission lines were built and distribution systems added by the company until fourteen other cities and towns in Jackson, Cass, Johnson, Lafayette and Bates counties were being served. In June, 1918, the company made a proposition to the city to lease its light plant. An ordinance passed by the board of aider-men, setting forth the terms of the proposed lease, was *441 duly submitted'to tbe people of the city at au election held August 16, 1918, and the same was ratified by a majority vote of the citizens voting. Pursuant to such ordinance a lease was duly entered into between’the city and the company, under date of August 26, 1918, by which the city leased to the company, for a period of ten years, the light plant theretofore operated by it.

By the terms of the lease the company took over the plant at an appraised valuation, subsequently fixed at $11,315.28, with the right to remove, use or sell the engines, generators, dynamos, switchboards, boilers and other fittings, accounting to the city at the appraised value thereof. This right the company exercised, leaving and using that part of the plant devoted to distribution of current. The company was required to pay to the city seventy-five dollars per month during the term of the lease, and to maintain and furnish, free of all charges to the city, all street lights, the city, however, to maintain the “White Way” posts and cable. The lease also provided that upon its expiration the property should be again appraised, and, if the ascertained value should be less than the first appraisal, the company should pay the difference to the city, and if found to be greater, the city should pay the company the amount of the excess of value so found. It also contained a schedule of rates to be charged by the company, the maximum for residence use of lights being ten cents per kilowatt-hour, the maximum for business house being ten cents per kilowatt-hour for the first twenty-five kilowatts per month, and a sliding scale for succeeding kilowatts, and the maximum for power being eight cents per kilowatt-hour for the first twenty-five kilowatts per month, and a sliding scale for succeeding kilowatts.

After the plant of the city was leased, the company connected up the distributing system at the city with its central plant at Pleasant Hill and served the city, Pleasant Hill, Lee’s Summit and Holden, the principal cities in the territory, through its main transmission lines. The other smaller towns were served through spur or sub *442 sidiary transmission lines. This arrangement constituted a system operated as an entirety.

On November 21, 1919, the company filed with the Commission a schedule of rates and charges which, it iproposed to pnt into effect in all the municipalities served, the proposed rates for consumers at the city ■being higher than those specified in the lease to the company. A protest being filed by the city, the Commission ¡suspended the operation of the proposed new rates from ! J anuary 1, 1920, to April 29,1920, pending an investigation by the Commission as to the reasonableness ..and lawfulness of the same. Pursuant to notice duly given, a partial hearing was had at the city before Commissioner Blair, on February 13,1920, but owing to lack of sufficient data the hearing was continued to a future date to be set by the Commission. Thereafter, on April 27, 1920, the company asked leave to withdraw the schedules theretofore filed, and requested that the Commission establish 'rates in each of the towns served, which would produce an adequate return on the capital invested. The Com-i mission ordered a further suspension of the new rates proposed, from April 29, 1920, to October 29, 1920, and proceeded at a hearing, held July 14, 1920, at the city, before a special examiner, to take testimony to determine the rates which should be allowed, Much of the testimony adduced was irrelevant to the issue presented and we shall not endeavor to reproduce it.

Mr. L. K. Creen, president of the company, testified, in part, that the investment in the entire plant of the company, as shown by an audit made by accountants, was approximately $450,000; that the population of the various towns supplied with electricity was approximately 15,500; that the net return on the investment had been about 4.3 per cent; that in 1919 he received a salary as president and general superintendent of $200 per month, and in 1920 of $300, that in 1919 his two sons, who looked after the transmission lines, received salaries of $150 per month each, and in 1920 of $200 per month each; that Mr. Cobiet, secretary of the company, who kept the *443 books, received $125 per month in 1919, and $200 per month in 1920; that coal which formerly cost $1.95 per ton was at the time of the hearing costing $4.35 per ton; that oil was from twenty-five to fifty per cent higher than formerly; that all electrical supplies used in connection with the operation of the power house were one hundred per cent higher; that the wages of engineers had increased from $60 and $75 per month to $100 and $150; that pole-handlers, formerly hired for $1.75 per day were then being paid $4 a day; that it cost $462.74 per month to do business in the city, exclusive of the cost of producing the current. Asked if 'it would be possible to determine a fixed and stable portion of the total expense of production of electric current at the Pleasant Hill plant to be charged to the various towns served, the witness answered:

“No.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 852, 291 Mo. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-harrisonville-v-public-service-commission-mo-1922.