State Ex Rel. North Carolina Utilities Commission v. Municipal Corporations

90 S.E.2d 519, 243 N.C. 193, 11 P.U.R.3d 450, 1955 N.C. LEXIS 586
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 14, 1955
Docket234
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 90 S.E.2d 519 (State Ex Rel. North Carolina Utilities Commission v. Municipal Corporations) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. North Carolina Utilities Commission v. Municipal Corporations, 90 S.E.2d 519, 243 N.C. 193, 11 P.U.R.3d 450, 1955 N.C. LEXIS 586 (N.C. 1955).

Opinion

DeNNY, J.

This appeal presents the following questions for determination:

1. Was the action of the Commission erroneous when it refused to establish rates for sales to municipalities for resale identical with rates for sales to rural electric cooperatives, although conditions of the sales differed and no sales to cooperatives were in fact being made?

2. Was the action of the Commission erroneous when it refused to require service to a municipality for resale (with relatively low *196 load factor and relatively high peak loads at the time of the company’s system peak load) at a rate designed for service exclusively to industrial customers (with relatively high load factor, and, in general, no relatively high peak loads) ?

3. Was the action of the Commission erroneous when it refused to accept evidence of the rates of other utilities where no evidence of relative cost conditions was offered?

4. Was the action of the Commission erroneous in permitting the company to withdraw special schedules providing rates-for sales to municipalities for resale when the company proposed and the Commission permitted the continuance of sales to such municipalities at general rates open to any customer?

5. When, at the request of the Commission, representatives of a utility met after the hearing with the Commission, in the absence of representatives of the protestants, to work out the language of a rate schedule rider favorable to protestants, may the protestants whose rights were not in fact prejudiced and who refused to acquiesce in the withdrawal of the rider successfully assert that the order approving that schedule be reversed?

6. Does “Rider G” purport to fix the rate at which the protestants would be required to sell electricity-to industrial corporations in violation of G.S. 62-30 (3) ?

7. Did the Commission err in receiving evidence as to the profits of the protesting municipal corporations from the resale of electricity purchased from Yepco?

The appellants have taken no exception to those parts of the order of the Commission or of the judgment of the Superior Court in which it is found or concluded that (a) the total revenues to be derived under the proposed new rates as approved by the Commission are not excessive, and (b) that the permitted rate of return allowed by the Commission is not excessive. . Therefore, the entire controversy on this appeal with respect to rates is based on the contention of the appellants that the schedules of rates made applicable to the protesting municipalities are unreasonable, excessive and unlawfully discriminatory as between them and the schedule in effect for REA Cooperatives and the new schedule of rates for large industrial users purchasing a minimum of 5,000 kw monthly.

Consequently, it will be unnecessary for us to incorporate in our opinion the evidence bearing on the necessity for the requested increase in order that Vepco may earn a fair and just return on its investment. The Commission has found as a fact that Vepco is entitled to the increase of $235,000 per year and that such increase will give Vepco an *197 annual rate of return on its North Carolina properties of only 3.96 per cent, and that such return is “not more than a fair return.” Such a finding, upon appeal to the Superior Court, “shall be prima facie just and reasonable.” G.S. 62-26.10; Utilities Commission v. Ray, 236 N.C. 692, 73 S.E. 2d 870; Utilities Commission v. Coach Co., 224 N.C. 390, 30 S.E. 2d 328. Likewise, any rates or charges established by the Commission “shall be deemed just and reasonable.” G.S. 62-123; In re Utilities Co., 179 N.C. 151, 101 S.E. 619.

Vepco is a Virginia corporation with its principal office in Richmond. It provides electric service for 19 counties in North Carolina; 67 in Virginia, and five in West Virginia. The company serves more than 600,000 electric customers in an area of approximately 32,000 square miles. The company began its service in North Carolina in 1926 when it purchased the Roanoke Rapids Power Company at Roanoke Rapids, and the Roanoke River Development Company at Weldon. At the end of 1926 it had only 1,718 customers in this State. By September 1953 it had slightly over 36,000 customers in North Carolina, not including the customers in the towns which purchased current wholesale from the company.

The company offered evidence tending to show that the value of its system was fixed at $14,500,000 by the Virginia Commission in 1921, and that its net investment as of 30 September, 1953, had increased to approximately $324,790,000; and that $26,313,000, or eight per cent thereof, represented the net investment allocated to North Carolina, and about two per cent represented the net investment allocated to West Virginia, leaving approximately ninety per cent allocated to the State of Virginia.

Prior to the filing of its request for the increase of rates in North Carolina, the company had in effect in North Carolina 23 schedules and nine riders. Certain of these schedules were obsolete, no energy being sold under them, while others contained no fuel clause, that is, no provision resulting in automatic increase or decrease in rates as the cost of fuel rises or falls. On the other hand, schedules under which the larger users purchased electric current contained fuel clauses. Hence, the customers purchasing electricity under these latter schedules, by reason of the increase in the price of coal, had already had the cost of current increased substantially before the present application for an increase was filed. Those customers, under schedules that contained no fuel clause, have been obtaining current at rates approved by the Commission when the cost of coal was approximately $4.00 per ton, or less than one-half the current price.

The effect of a fuel clause may be demonstrated by a comparison of the rates at which the towns of Edenton and Scotland Neck have been *198 purchasing electric current under the old schedules. Edenton has had a contract under Schedule 9, which had a fuel clause, and had to pay an average cost per kwh of 1.13c for the test period; while Scotland Neck had a contract under Schedule 18, which had no fuel clause, and was obtaining its electricity at an average cost of 1.03c per kwh. As a result of this disparity, Edenton, which had a much better load factor and a higher electric energy consumption, was paying more for its electricity per kwh than Scotland Neck. Likewise, Elizabeth City, according to the evidence, had a fuel clause in its contract and while it used approximately five times the amount of electricity Scotland Neck used, and had a higher load factor, paid an average of 1.05c per kwh. Six of the eight protestants had been obtaining electricity under schedules without a fuel clause. Elizabeth City and Edenton have been obtaining their electricity under schedules containing fuel clauses. Therefore, it is apparent that the six protesting municipalities which have been receiving electricity under schedules not containing a fuel clause have been paying rates which were discriminatory in their favor against towns served under a schedule with the fuel clause.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E.2d 519, 243 N.C. 193, 11 P.U.R.3d 450, 1955 N.C. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-north-carolina-utilities-commission-v-municipal-corporations-nc-1955.