State ex rel. City of Seattle v. Public Service Commission

136 P. 850, 76 Wash. 492, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1846
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
DocketNo. 11347
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 136 P. 850 (State ex rel. City of Seattle v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. City of Seattle v. Public Service Commission, 136 P. 850, 76 Wash. 492, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1846 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The public service commission instituted an inquiry, at the instance 'of the city of Seattle, as to the reasonableness of the Seattle Lighting Company’s proposed increase in its minimum monthly charge from twenty-five cents to fifty cents, made to its gas customers, of which proposed change it gave notice and filed a supplemental tariff sheet with the public service commission, showing the same, in pursuance of the public service commission law. Hearing was had in due course at which evidence was introduced touching the question of the reasonableness of the proposed increase. Thereupon the commission made findings and rendered its decision dismissing the proceeding upon the ground stated therein as follows:

“In presenting its case to the commission, the city authorities contended: ...
“Secondly: That ... a fifty cent minimum is excessive and a twenty-five cent minimum is sufficient.
“At the hearing, neither the complainant nor the defendant produced any convincing evidence tending to show either the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the twenty-five cent or the fifty cent minimum. The commission delegated its own engineer, Mr. H. L. Gray, to make an independent investiga[494]*494tion and from the data obtained by him in an examination into the details of the defendant company’s business, it appears that a reasonable minimum charge to be applied uniformly to all consumers, whether on plain meters or on automatic prepay meters, cannot be less than forty-two and nine-tenths cents per month. In calculating this minimum it was necessary for the engineer to make many assumptions of fact in the absence of a complete valuation of the defendant company’s property. It is • possible that a complete valuation of the plant and a thorough investigation into the revenues and operating expenses of the company might disclose facts sufficient to prove that the minimum could reasonably be somewhat higher or somewhat lower than the amount deduced by the commission’s engineer.
“From the evidence introduced the commission is of the opinion that the complainant has failed to prove the unreasonableness of the minimum charge challenged and that therefore, of necessity, this complaint must be dismissed.”

The city, deeming itself and its citizens aggrieved thereby, caused the proceeding to be removed by a writ of review to the superior court for King county, seeking a reversal of the decision of the commission and such disposition of the case as would result in adjudging the proposed increase to be unreasonable, and the original charge reasonable. Hearing in that court was had upon the record made before the commission, which, so far as we need here notice its language, reads as follows:

“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said order of dismissal in so far as the same relates to a minimum charge, be, and it is hereby vacated, and said matter be, and it is hereby, remanded to the public service commission of Washington with directions to proceed therein and require the Seattle Lighting Company to establish by a preponderance of evidence thát any proposed increased minimum charge in excess of twenty-five cents per meter per month is just and reasonable, which just and reasonable rate shall continue in effect and not be exceeded until such time in the future as said public service commission may of its own motion, or at the instance of said Seattle Lighting Company, or the city of Seattle or some third party in another proceeding, deter[495]*495mine what is a fair, just, reasonable and sufficient rate. In other respects the tariff of said Seattle Lighting Company, made effective by said public service commission as of July 4, 1912, not being in question in these proceedings, is not disturbed.”

From this disposition of the ease in the superior court, it is brought to this court by appeal, where reversal of the judgment of the superior court and affirmance of the decision of the commission is sought.

The argument of learned counsel upon both sides of the controversy seems to be addressed largely to the question of burden of proof in the hearing before the commission. Counsel for the city contend that the burden of proof as to the reasonableness of the proposed change in the minimum monthly rate was upon the lighting company at the hearing before the commission, seeming to assume that its notice and filing of supplemental tariff sheet so showing is, in substance, an application to the commission for permission to make such change, and that when ob j ection was made thereto by the city, such change would not become effective until it had been affirmatively proven that the same is reasonable and a decision rendered by the commission affirmatively so determined. This, apparently, is the view adopted by the trial court.

Counsel for appellants contend, in substance, that the proposed change having been duly noticed and filed as provided by the public service commission law, the new rate automatically takes effect at the expiration of thirty days after the notice and filing thereof, subject only to temporary suspension thereof by the commission pending an inquiry by the commission as to its reasonableness and to a final decision upon such inquiry, affirmatively determining that the proposed new rate is unreasonable; that the burden of showing the reasonableness of the new rate is not upon the lighting company, but the burden of showing its unreasonableness is upon those attacking it; and that, while the inquiry may be instituted by the commission upon its own motion, the commission [496]*496is not, by law, required to take the burden of proof from the complainant and cause proof to be brought before it upon its own motion to any greater extent than its discretion may dictate. As we understand the commission, it assumed substantially this position. While it did delegate its own engineer to make an independent investigation touching the reasonableness of the new rate, and received his testimony upon the result of his investigation, and to that extent, may be said to have treated its inquiry as being upon its own motion, it apparently concluded that further investigation upon its own motion was not called for, and was of the opinion that the evidence produced by the city, which it treated as the complainant, together with that produced upon its own motion, did not show the new rate to be unreasonable. This, it concluded, called for a dismissal of the proceeding, allowing the new rate to automatically become effective.

The decision of the superior court is, in substance, that the commission is, by law, required to affirmatively determine what reasonable rate the lighting company is entitled to charge, and that the commission failed in its duty by merely determining negatively that the proposed new rate is not shown to be unreasonable, even though the evidence before it may not have been sufficient to call for an affirmative finding as to what rate is reasonable; the court’s view apparently being that it was the duty of the commission, upon its own motion, to cause such further evidence to be brought before it to enable it to affirmatively determine such reasonable rate as the lighting company was entitled to charge. The effect of the superior court’s decision is to compel the commission to carry on an inquiry upon its own motion to that point where it can, from the evidence produced before it, affirmatively find the amount of the reasonable rate chargeable by the lighting company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P. 850, 76 Wash. 492, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-seattle-v-public-service-commission-wash-1913.