Virginia-American Water Co. v. State Corp. Commission

260 S.E.2d 219, 220 Va. 541, 1979 Va. LEXIS 294
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1979
DocketRecord No. 790603
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 260 S.E.2d 219 (Virginia-American Water Co. v. State Corp. Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia-American Water Co. v. State Corp. Commission, 260 S.E.2d 219, 220 Va. 541, 1979 Va. LEXIS 294 (Va. 1979).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Virginia-American Water Company noted an appeal of right from a final order of the State Corporation Commission fixing 8.35% as a fair and reasonable rate of return to be earned by the company. It alleges that the Commission erred in using as the basis for its decision the consolidated capital structure and cost of money of the American Water Works Company, Inc., which owns the common stock of Virginia-American. The Commission contends that the sole question to be resolved is whether the 8.35% rate of return allowed Virginia-American is a fair and reasonable rate or is shown to be confiscatory or unreasonable and unjust.

On August 21, 1978, Virginia-American filed with the Commission revised tariffs designed to increase the gross annual revenues from its Alexandria Water District by the sum of $1,216,859, and from its Prince William Water District by the sum of $429,188. The Commission, employing the consolidated capital structure of American, found a fair rate of return on Virginia-American’s rate base to be 8.35 % and determined 13.5% to be its cost of common equity, a rate which it says reflects the financial risk of the consolidated system of American. By its final order Virginia-American was authorized annual increases in revenue amounting to $318,503 in the Alexandria District, and $ 181,424 in the Prince William District.

[543]*543American Water Works Company, Inc., has forty-two operating companies, consisting of 109 operating units, or water districts, which principally furnish water supply services to 557 communities in twenty states. The executive functions of the forty-two operating companies are divided among eight employees of another wholly-owned subsidiary of American, American Water Works Service Company, Inc. Each of these eight executive employees of Service Company serves as president of the operating companies within his or her respective geographical division. Virginia-American is located in the southern division of Service Company. The system company president of this division is also president of Virginia-American. All the outstanding shares of conimon stock of Virginia-American are owned by American. Its preferred stock and bonds are publicly held.

Virginia-American’s principal witness and expert was Loren D. Mellendorf, Treasurer and Coordinator of System Finance for the American system, who is employed by Service Company. Mellendorf testified Ihat he has direct supervision for placement of securities for all American subsidiaries, including Virginia-American. He pointed out that various factors in the water utility business prevent a growth in revenue sufficent to offset the increase in operating expenses, and sufficient to provide the means of adequately servicing the capital which has been invested in the past and which must be presently invested to furnish the service required by customers. He stated that common equity investors in\ water companies assume an overall risk which is greater than investors in other utilities.

Although in Mellendorf’s opinion a proper cost rate to be assigned the common equity portion of Virginia-American’s capital structure should be from 15.3% to 17.7%, his final determination for common equity rate cost was 14%. In arriving at this conclusion, he said that he made a study of a composite of twenty-four electric utilities and fourteen water utilities. He testified that his study showed that an appropriate return for water companies, before an allowance for market pressure, provision for market price to exceed book value by a reasonable ratio,'and attrition, ranged from 12.375% to 13.5%. Mellendorf then proposed for Virginia-American, for rate making purposes, a capital structure based on three pro forma adjustments.1 His [544]*544most significant adjustment was eliminating therefrom the company’s investment of $7,773,200 in Kentucky-American, a wholly-owned subsidiary. He testified that as of March 31, 1978, Virginia-American’s capital structure and weighted cost of capital consisted of notes payable, 13.36%; long term debt, 41.56%; preferred stock, 14.23%; and common equity, 27.21%.2 Virginia-American urged that the-Commission use this capital structure and an allowance of a rate of return of 9.59%, which would equate to a 14% return on common equity.

During the course of his testimony Mellendorf said that “the Commission might well consider that it would want to take into account a more appropriate capital structure in its rate of return determination.” He said that a typical capital structure of a normal water utility would be 60% long range debt, 10% preferred stock, and 30% common equity.

Dr. Carl G. K. Weaver, Director of the Division of Economic Research and Development for the Commission, testified as an expert witness. For reasons not unlike those advanced by witnesses for the Commission in Central Tel. Co. of Va. v. Corp. Comm., 219 Va. 863, 252 S.E.2d 575 (1979), and Gen. Tel. Co. Southeast v. Corp. Comm., 220 Va. 480, 259 S.E.2d 824 (1979), this day decided, Dr. Weaver recommended that the Commission adopt the consolidated structure of American for rate making purposes. He assigned three reasons: (1) common equity holders look to the consolidated system of American rather than to any particular division or subsidiary for their return; (2) Virginia-American’s capital structure is discretionary with and controlled by the parent company; and (3) adoption of the consolidated structure eliminates the effect of transactions occurring be[545]*545tween subsidiaries of the consolidated system that may alter their respective capital structures without any significant effect on the consolidated structure.

In determining the cost of equity capital, Dr. Weaver testified that he used the discounted cash flow approach, supplementing it with the earnings-price ratio analysis, and comparable earnings approach. In his analysis the witness used data from nine water companies with common stock publicly traded on major stock exchanges, assigning the reason that such data reflected the investor’s opportunity cost. He also measured the risk differential between water utilities and the thirty industrials in the Dow Jones Industrial Index. His final common equity range was 12.5%-13.5%, and his final overall return range recommended for Virginia-American was 8.12%-8.35%.

The Commission approved the upper end of Weaver’s ranges— 8.35% for rate and 13.5% for common equity. It adopted American’s consolidated capital structure for purposes of rate of return determination. The practical effect of this was to find that the use of American’s long term debt ratio of 60.8% was more appropriate than Virginia-American’s 41.56%; that the use of American’s common equity ratio of 21.9% was more appropriate than Virginia-American’s 27.21%; and that the use of American’s preferred stock ratio of 11.5% was more appropriate than Virginia-American’s 14.23%.3 Significantly, these ratios of American are well within the range that Mr. Mellendorf said the Commission “might well consider.”

We find it unnecessary to repeat again or to discuss here the well established principles which govern a review by this court of an order of the State Corporation Commission fixing rates and charges for a public utility.

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260 S.E.2d 219, 220 Va. 541, 1979 Va. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-american-water-co-v-state-corp-commission-va-1979.