State Ex Rel. Empire District Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission

100 S.W.2d 509, 339 Mo. 1188, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 451
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 509 (State Ex Rel. Empire District Electric Co. 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. Empire District Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission, 100 S.W.2d 509, 339 Mo. 1188, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 451 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

*1191 FRANK, J.

This is an appeal by the Empire District Electric Company, a Kansas corporation, from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cole County affirming an order of the Public Service .Commission. For brevity we will refer to relator as the company and to respondents as the commission.

This cause was instituted by the commission on its own motion against the company to determine the fair value of the company’s property. The commission made an appraisal of the company’s properties and an audit of its books and accounts. Thereafter hearings were had before the commission as to the value of the company’s property and as to the audit of its books and accounts as made by the commission. At.such hearing evidence pro and eon was heard as to the cost of reproduction less depreciation of the company’s used and useful property.

It was further shown at said hearing* that the company in the year 1915 voluntarily began the accumulation out of earnings of a depreciation reserve which, by the year 1923 reached the sum of approximately $1,000,000; that in that year the company’s board of directors adopted a resolution 'to the effect that there was an over accrual in the depreciation reserve amounting to $400,000, and said sum of $400,000 was by authority of said board transferred from depreciation reserve to surplus, leaving in the depreciation reserve approximately $864,000; that in the year 1926 another sum of $400,000 was so transferred, leaving in the ’ depreciation reserve at that time the sum of $1,760,000. Again in 1929 the sum of $800,000 was transferred from depreciation reserve to an account called ‘ ‘ Special Surplus Eeserve ’ ’ where it still remains, leaving in the depreciation reserve in the year 1930 the sum of $1,226,000; that the $800,000 which was transferred from depreciation reserve to surplus was disbursed in the payment of dividends to the stockholders before the institution of the present proceedings; that each year from 1915 to and including the year 1935, the company made annual reports to the commission which showed the transfer of funds as above indicated.

Other necessary facts will be stated in course of the opinion.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the commission on August 6, 1935, ordered that the $1,600,000 which had been transferred from the depreciation reserve fund be replaced in that fund. The legality of that order is the only question presented for decision, on this appeal.

There is no statute requiring the company to carry a depreciation reserve account. However, there is a statute, Section 5200, Eevised Statutes 1929, which gives the commission power, after hearing, to *1192 require the company to carry such an account, subject to the control of the commission. That section of the statute reads as follows:

“The commission shall have power, after hearing, to require any or all gas corporations, electrical corporations and water corporations to carry a proper and adequate depreciation account in accordance with such rules, regulations and forms of account as the commission may prescribe. The commission may, from time to time, ascertain and determine and by order fix the proper and adequate rates of depreciation of the several classes of property of such corporation, person or public utility. Each gas corporation, electrical corporation and water corporation shall conform its depreciation accounts to the rates so ascertained, determined and fixed, and shall set aside the moneys so provided for out of earnings and carry the same in a depreciation fund and expend such fund only for such purposes and under such rules and regulations, both as to original expenditure and subsequent replacement, as the commission may prescribe. The income from investments of moneys in such fund shall likewise be carried in such fund.” (Italics ours.)

The facts show that the commission, at no time, made any order requiring the company to set up or carry a depreciation reserve. The silence of the commission on that subject from 1915 to the date of the present hearing in 1935, necessarily left the question of a depreciation reserve and the upkeep of the property to the judgment of the board of directors of the company. The power of the commission to make orders relative to the depreciation reserve of the company is conferred by statute. We must, therefore, look to the statute to determine whether'the commission had authority to make the order in question. It has been well said that “when a particular power is exercised by the commission, or is claimed for it, that power should have its basis in the language of the statute, or should be necessarily implied therefrom.” [People ex rel. Railways Co. v. Public Service Commission, 223 N. Y. 373, 119 N. E. 848; Havre de Grace & Perryville Bridge Co. v. Towers, 132 Md. 16, 103 Atl. 319.] Turning to the statute we find that it gives the commission power, after hearing, to make an order requiring the company to carry a depreciation reserve account in an amount fixed by the commission, subject to the regulatory control of the commission. Such an order, if made, would operate prospectively and give the commission regulatory control of the depreciation reserve created by its order. But that is not the situation in this case. Here the commission stood by through the years without making any order requiring the company to set' up or carry a depreciation reserve, and hy its silence and tacit consent permitted the company to voluntarily accumulate a reserve and use it for such purposes as. in the judgment of the board of directors of the company, was proper. Some years after this was done the commission then made a retroactive *1193 order, the effect of which was to look back through the years and nullify orders made by the company’s board of directors relative to the depreciation reserve, when there was no statute or order of the commission which prohibited the making of such orders at the time they were made. This retroactive order was illegal and void because the commission had no authority to make it.

Aside from the want of statutory authority to make the order, it is wrong in principle. A depreciation reserve whether accumulated voluntarily or pursuant to an order of the commission, comes from revenues which the customers pay for service and for that reason it belongs to the company. The only purpose of a depreciation reserve, so far as the public is concerned, is to guarantee that the company’s property will be kept in proper condition so that efficient service may be rendered. When that purpose is accomplished, the balance remaining in the depreciation reserve belongs to the company, and the company cannot be forced to give it up for the benefit of future customers. Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States support this conclusion. In Board of Public Utility Comrs. v. New York Telephone Company, 271 U. S. 23, 70 L. Ed. 808, that court, among other things said:

‘ ‘ It may be assumed, as found by the Board, that in prior years the company charged excessive amounts to depreciation expense and so created in the reserve account balances greater than required adequately to maintain the property.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 509, 339 Mo. 1188, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-empire-district-electric-co-v-public-service-commission-mo-1936.