Wabash Valley Electric Co. v. Young

287 U.S. 488, 53 S. Ct. 234, 77 L. Ed. 447, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 9, 1933
Docket128
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 287 U.S. 488 (Wabash Valley Electric Co. v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Valley Electric Co. v. Young, 287 U.S. 488, 53 S. Ct. 234, 77 L. Ed. 447, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 4 (1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sutherland

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant is one of seven affiliated public utility corporations organized under the laws of Indiana, more than *493 99 per cent, of the combined capital stock and securities of which is owned by the Central Indiana Power Company. The officers and directors of the several corporations are the same, and the operations of the entire group are under a common control, so that in substance the business of all is carried on as though they constituted a single entity. Their lines are interconnected, and the electrical energy distributed by them is drawn from common sources. Appellant owns and operates an interconnected system in a territory comprising thirteen counties of the state, and sells and distributes electric current to approximately fifty cities and towns therein, including the inhabitants of the City of Martinsville, and also to a large number of industrial plants and customers outside the limits of such cities and towns. Appellant’s system consists in the main of general transmission and transformation properties, and local distributing plants. Among other local plants it owns one in the City of Martinsville, which was built by former owners to supply that city and its inhabitants. In the hands of the original owners this was a separate and complete plant, generating electrical energy as well as distributing it.

Nearly all the electric current distributed by appellant is “ purchased ” by it from one of the other affiliated corporations which has had in operation since 1924 an extensive and modern generating plant known as the “ Dresser Plant.” The combined needs of the affiliated corporations have so increased that for the year ending May 31, 1930, the total current used greatly exceeded that supplied by the Dresser Plant; and in order to meet the increased demand the affiliated system was connected with other large generating plants in Indiana and Ohio. In furtherance of the general plans of the affiliated group, appellant some years ago purchased the local electric plant at Martinsville and similar plants in many other *494 cities and towns within the thirteen counties above referred to.

The Martinsville plant now is operated by appellant under an indeterminate permit from the state in virtue of the provisions of the state Public Utility Act. 3 Burns Ann. Ind. Stat., 1926, § 12672, et seq. The current is fed into this plant from outside sources, principally from the Dresser Plant. Section 57 of the Public Utility Act {supra, § 12728) .authorizes, among others, any municipal organization or any ten persons directly interested to make complaint to the Public Service Commission challenging any rates, tolls, etc., as unreasonable or unjustly discriminatory. Under that provision, on March 16, 1927, seventeen citizens of Martinsville, patrons of appellant, filed with the Public Service Commission of Indiana a petition seeking a reduction in electric rates, in which petition the City of Martinsville subsequently joined. At that time, and prior thereto, appellant had on file with the commission a schedule of rates applicable only in that city. After hearings, the commission made an order, effective as of February 1, 1929, reducing the rates for electric service to be charged and collected by appellant in Martinsville.

Appellant, being dissatisfied with these rates and asserting that they were confiscatory, brought suit in the federal district court for the southern district of Indiana to enjoin the commission and others from enforcing the oiUer. The City of Martinsville intervened and filed an answer in support of the rates. The court issued a temporary injunction and referred the case to ,a special master to hear and report the evidence to the court, together with his findings of fact and conclusions of law. The master heard the case and made a report of the evidence and of his findings of fact and conclusions thereon, to which appellant filed a large number of exceptions. The district court, consisting of three judges (§ 266 of the Judicial Code, U. S. C., Title 28, § 380), approved the report of *495 the master and also made findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Equity Rule 70%, and, thereupon, delivered an opinion and entered a decree dissolving the temporary injunction, directing .appellant to refund to its customers all amounts collected from them in excess of those which it would have collected under the schedule of rates complained of, and dismissing the bill for want of equity. 1 F. Supp. 106.

Rate base. The court below held that under the provisions of the state statute and in the light of the facts, not the entire property and system of appellant, but the City of Martinsville alone should be treated as the unit for the purpose of determining the schedule of rates to be charged therein. The commission, as well as the master, had reached the same conclusion. Upon that basis, in fixing the value of the property used and useful for supplying electric current to the city, the court determined the value of the local property, to which it added that proportionate part of the value of the system property which it found to be fairly attributable .to the Martins-ville service.

Appellant’s chief contention is that its entire operating property should be taken as a unit in fixing the rate base, and that the action of the court in failing to do so deprived it of its property without due process of law.

The Martinsville plant, prior to its acquisition by appellant, had produced within itself the whole of the electric current which its owners sold and distributed. That it then was a distinct unit for the purpose of fixing rates, if and when necessary, is, of course, clear. If the former owners had simply abandoned the use of the local generating appliances and purchased electric current from outside sources, the plant, for all purposes of rate making and regulation, would have remained a distinct and separ rate unit. It was this unit which appellant acquired; and if appellant had continued to operate it as it then was *496 being operated, that is to say, as a generating, as well as 'a distributing, plant for the entire electric current supplied to the city, the value of the plant with appropriate allowances for expenses, etc., would have continued to be the lawful rate base. But that method of operation was abandoned; and the question is whether, because the local plant now is interconnected with appellant’s general distributing system and the electric current is drawn from outside sources, the city still may be treated as a separate unit for rate making purposes.

The answer primarily depends upon the meaning and application of the state Public Utility Act. The Supreme Court of Indiana thus far has not dealt with the question; but the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, construing an act of that state essentially the same as the Indiana act, has determined that the , Wisconsin commission was “ required to treat the municipality as a unit and to base its rate upon the cost to the utility of serving the individual municipality rather than the average cost of serving many distinct and scattered municipalities.” Eau Claire v. Wisconsin-Minnesota L. & P. Co., 178 Wis. 207, 220; 189 N. W. 476, 481.

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Bluebook (online)
287 U.S. 488, 53 S. Ct. 234, 77 L. Ed. 447, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-valley-electric-co-v-young-scotus-1933.