State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Morgan

179 S.E.2d 419, 278 N.C. 235, 1971 N.C. LEXIS 962
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 10, 1971
Docket91
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 179 S.E.2d 419 (State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Morgan) 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. Utilities Commission v. Morgan, 179 S.E.2d 419, 278 N.C. 235, 1971 N.C. LEXIS 962 (N.C. 1971).

Opinion

LAKE, Justice.

In our opinion heretofore filed in this matter, 277 N.C. 255, 177 S.E. 2d 405, we held that it was error for the Commission to include in the rate base of a public utility the value of plant under construction at the end of the test period and that it was also error for the Commission to add to the company’s operating revenue for the test period interest charged to construction during the test period, these being approximately offsetting errors in the process of fixing rates to be charged for service in the future.

The basic, underlying theory of using the company’s operating experience in a test period, recently ended, in fixing rates to be charged by it for its service in the near future is this: Rates for service, in effect throughout the test period, will, in the near future, produce the same rate of return on the company’s property, used in rendering such service, as was produced by them on such property in the test period, adjusted for known changes in conditions.

During such test period, the previously established rates for the company’s service produced X dollars in gross revenue. *237 During the test period, which is usually twelve months, certain changes in conditions have taken place, such as, for example, an increase in the number of telephones in operation or other increase in the volume of revenue. Pro forma adjustments to revenue are, therefore, made to reflect what the revenues would have been in the test period had these present conditions prevailed throughout that period. When these adjustments are made, the result shows what revenues will be produced in twelve months by application of the previously established rates for service to conditions existing at the end of the test period; i.e., at the date, nearest the present, for which data are available.

Similarly, when operating revenue deductions (operating expenses, depreciation, taxes and all other proper deductions from revenue) for expenditures actually made in the test period are likewise adjusted, pro forma, for changes in conditions during the test period, such as an increase in the wage rate, the result reflects what would have been the total of such deductions had the conditions, prevailing at the end of the test period, prevailed throughout it. When this is done, revenue deductions to be anticipated in a period of twelve months have also been computed on the basis of conditions prevailing at the most recent date for which data are available.

The next step is to substract the revenue deductions, so computed, from the revenues so computed, the difference being the company’s net operating income. This having been done, it has been determined what net operating income this company may anticipate under the previously established rates, in a period of twelve months, during which all presently known conditions prevail. Such net operating income, divided by the rate base, gives the rate of return which the company may anticipate, on its properties used in rendering its service, under the previously established rates for service, in a period of twelve months, throughout which all presently known conditions prevail.

Obviously, conditions do not remain static. As the company enlarges its plant, and thereby serves more telephones, or otherwise increases its volume of service, its revenues, under the previously established rates, will increase. Its operating expenses, allowance for depreciation, taxes and other revenue deductions will also increase and its rate base will increase. If, however, the only change in condition is an enlargement of plant to increase the number of units of service, the previously estab *238 lished rates, when applied also to those new units, will produce, in a period of twelve months, the same revenue, per unit, from the new units as was produced from the old units during the test period, adjusted pro forma. Likewise, the additional revenue deductions, on account of the new units, will be approximately the same, per unit, as those applicable to the old units, adjusted pro forma. Similarly, the rate base, per unit, of service will remain approximately the same as in the test period, adjusted pro forma, and so the rate of return will not be changed appreciably.

Consequently, if the rate of return derived from the previously established rates during the test period, adjusted pro forma, was less than a fair rate of return, the statute, G.S. 62-133 (b), requires the Commission to raise the company’s rates for service, assuming for present purposes that the quality of service is adequate. Conversely, if the rate of return derived from the previously established rates for service during the test period, adjusted pro forma, was in excess of a fair rate of return, the statute requires the Commission to reduce the rates for service. If the rate of return derived from the previously established rates for service during the test period, adjusted pro forma, was fair, no change in the rates for service is justified. In this State the test of a fair rate of return is that laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in the Bluefield Water Company case, 262 U.S. 679, 43 S.Ct. 675, 67 L. Ed 1176; that is, if the company continues to earn such a rate of return, will it be able to attract on reasonable terms the capital it needs for the expansion of its service to the public? See, G.S. 62-133(b)(4).

In recent years the process of inflation has pushed upward the cost of plant additions. As a result, it is a fair generalization to say that units of service, such as telephones, added to plant, now require a greater investment in plant, per unit, than did the older units previously put in service. In consequence, continued application of the established rates for service, assuming no other change of condition, results in a gradual erosion of the rate of return from the plant as a whole. An accepted method of taking this circumstance into account in rate making is to fix rates for service sufficient, presently, to bring to the company a rate of return, on its present rate base, slightly in excess of that which is necessary to meet the foregoing test of *239 reasonableness. As new plant additions gradually erode this rate of return, it will sink to the reasonable level and then to a point slightly below reasonable. By thus averaging the rate of return at the reasonable figure over a period of years, the Commission can set rates for service at a level which will not require readjustment too frequently.

Assuming that the foregoing process has been followed with reasonable accuracy, the rates for service, so established, will, as a general proposition, produce, from investments by the company in additions to its plant, the same rate of return so found by the Commission to be fair. This is so because the new addition will put into service new units producing revenue and necessitating expenses, just as the old units produced revenue and necessitated expenses. Of course, this is not precisely correct with reference to every single addition to plant. For example, the construction of an office building does not, directly, add to revenues.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.E.2d 419, 278 N.C. 235, 1971 N.C. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-utilities-commission-v-morgan-nc-1971.