Ratemaking is a legislative function, whether exercised by the
legislature or by a subordinate body to which power has been
delegated, such as a municipality.
While courts may refuse to enforce legislation on constitutional
grounds, the power should only be exercised in the clearest
cases.
In ordinary equity suits, findings of the master and the court
below are conclusive here unless unsupported by the evidence or
made under erroneous view of law; but where the constitutionality
of a legislative act is involved, this Court, from the respect due
to legislative authority, will not regard such findings a
conclusive.
In estimating for rate-fixing purposes the value of a plant,
cost of reproduction is not a fair measure of value unless a
substantial allowance is made for depreciation.
Quaere
whether anything can be allowed in the case of the plant of a
public service corporation for "going concern" above the value of
the separate tangible elements.
In valuing for rate-fixing the plant of a public service
corporation, bonds and stocks issued for its purchase and
construction in excess of it cost and by and to parties interested
in and controlling the company afford neither measure nor
guide.
Page 212 U. S. 2
In determining whether a rate affords a fair return, the amount
must be considered as fixed by the ordinance, and not as
voluntarily reduced by the corporation, even if such reduction be
in accordance with custom and for the purpose of obtaining prompt
payment.
In determining whether a rate is confiscatory, the court is not
confined to evidence as to the income of the corporation affected
for the fiscal year during or preceding that in which the rate was
fixed; it may receive evidence as to such income in subsequent
years.
Federal courts should not declare an ordinance fixing rates for
a public service corporation unconstitutional and suspend its
operation before it goes into effect unless the rate is clearly
confiscatory, and unless complainant furnishes substantial evidence
to that effect, the bill should be dismissed without prejudice to a
further application to the courts if the rate after going into
effect is actually confiscatory.
A sufficient amount should be allowed from the earnings of a
public service corporation for making good depreciation of plant
and replacing deteriorated portions thereof, but amounts so
expended cannot be considered as additional to the original cost in
valuing the plant for purposes of ascertaining whether a rate is
confiscatory.
Quaere, and not decided, whether, under the
circumstances of this case, an ordinance fixing a rate yielding a
return of four percent after allowing two percent for depreciation
is confiscatory, and amounts to a deprivation of property without
due process of law or a taking of property without
compensation.
The facts, which involve the constitutional validity of an
ordinance of the City of Knoxville fixing maximum rates to be
charged for water by the defendant water company, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 212 U. S. 6
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal by the City of Knoxville from a decree of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Tennessee. The appellee is a public service corporation chartered
for and engaged in the business of supplying that city and its
inhabitants with water for domestic and other uses. The cause in
which the decree was rendered is a suit in equity which was brought
by the company on December 7, 1901, against the city to restrain
the enforcement of a city ordinance fixing in detail the maximum
rates to be charged by the company. This ordinance was enacted on
March 30, 1901. The bill contained many allegations, which have
become immaterial by the decision of this Court in
Knoxville
Water Co. v. Knoxville, 189 U. S. 434, in
which the validity of the ordinance was sustained except so far as
it might confiscate the property of the company by fixing rates so
law as to have that effect. The latter contention alone was left
open to the company, and to it the remainder of the bill is mainly
directed. The allegations in that regard are that the rates fixed
by the ordinance were so low that they denied to the company a
reasonable return upon the property employed in the business, and
thereby took it for public use without compensation, in violation
of the Fourteenth Amendment to
Page 212 U. S. 7
the Constitution of the United States. After answer by the
respondent and replication by the complainant, the cause was
referred to a special master, whose report was confirmed by the
court. The master found and reported that the value of the plant
and property employed in the business at the date of the passage of
the ordinance was $608,427.95; that the gross income from the
company's business was $88,481.39, and that the operating expenses
were $34,750.91. The figures of income and expense are those of the
fiscal year ending March 31, 1901, and the valuation was made as of
that date. The master found and reported that the diminution of
income which would have resulted from the enforcement of the
ordinance during that fiscal year was $17,623.64, and that the
gross income would have been reduced thereby to $70,857.75, leaving
a net income of $36,106.84. This net income was less than 6 percent
on the valuation. In the opinion of the master, 8 percent, which
included 2 percent to provide for depreciation, was the minimum net
return which the company was entitled to earn. The judge of the
circuit court, in his opinion confirming the master's report,
adopted the master's valuation of the whole plant and property at
$608,427.95 (although he held that it ought to be increased by
about $3,000), and the master's finding that the gross income was
$88,481.39; that the expenses were $34,750.91; that the effect of
the reduction made by the ordinance would be to lessen the gross
income by $17,623.64, and that therefore the net income under the
ordinance would be $36,106.84, or about $400 less than 6 percent on
the valuation. Upon these assumptions of fact as to its effect, the
judge regarded the ordinance as confiscatory, and issued a
permanent injunction against its enforcement.
At the threshold of the consideration of the case, the attitude
of this Court to the facts found below should be defined. Here are
findings of fact by a master, confirmed by the court. The company
contends that, under these circumstances, the findings are
conclusive in this Court unless they are without support in the
evidence or were made under the influence of erroneous
Page 212 U. S. 8
views of law. We need not stop to consider what the effect of
such findings would be in an ordinary suit in equity. The purpose
of this suit is to arrest the operation of a law on the ground that
it is void and of no effect. It happens that, in this particular
case, it is not an act of the legislature that is attacked, but an
ordinance of a municipality. Nevertheless the function of
ratemaking is purely legislative in its character, and this is true
whether it is exercised directly by the legislature itself or by
some subordinate or administrative body to whom the power of fixing
rates in detail has been delegated. The completed act derives its
authority from the legislature, and must be regarded as an exercise
of the legislative power.
Prentis v. Southern Railway Co.,
211 U. S. 210;
Honolulu Transit Co. v. Hawaii, 211 U.
S. 282. There can be at this day no doubt, on the one
hand, that the courts, on constitutional grounds, may exercise the
power of refusing to enforce legislation, nor, on the other hand,
that that power ought to be exercised only in the clearest cases.
The constitutional invalidity should be manifest, and where that
invalidity rests upon disputed questions of fact, the invalidating
facts must be proved to the satisfaction of the court. In view of
the character of the judicial power invoked in such cases, it is
not tolerable that its exercise should rest securely upon the
findings of a master, even though they be confirmed by the trial
court. The power is best safeguarded against abuse by preserving to
this Court complete freedom in dealing with the facts of each case.
Nothing less than this is demanded by the respect due from the
judicial to the legislative authority. It must not be understood
that the findings of a master, confirmed by the trial court, are
without weight, or that they will not, as a practical question,
sometimes be regarded as conclusive. All that is intended to be
said is that, in cases of this character, this Court will not
fetter its discretion or judgment by any artificial rules as to the
weight of the master's findings, however useful and well settled
these rules may be in ordinary litigation. We approach the
discussion of the facts in this spirit.
Page 212 U. S. 9
The first fact essential to the conclusion of the court below is
the valuation of the property devoted to the public uses, upon
which the company is entitled to earn a return. That valuation
($608,000) must now be considered. It was made up by adding to the
appraisement, in minute detail of all the tangible property, the
sum of $10,000 for "organization, promotion, etc.," and $60,000 for
"going concern." The latter sum we understand to be an expression
of the added value of the plant as a whole over the sum of the
values of its component parts, which is attached to it because it
is in active and successful operation and earning a return. We
express no opinion as to the propriety of including these two items
in the valuation of the plant, for the purpose for which it is
valued in this case, but leave that question to be considered when
it necessarily arises. We assume, without deciding, that these
items were properly added in this case. The value of the tangible
property found by the master is, of course, $608,000 lessened by
$70,000, the value attributed to the intangible property, making
$538,000. This valuation was determined by the master by
ascertaining what it would cost at the date of the ordinance, to
reproduce the existing plant as a new plant. The cost of
reproduction is one way of ascertaining the present value of a
plant like that of a water company, but that test would lead to
obviously incorrect results if the cost of reproduction is not
diminished by the depreciation which has come from age and use. The
company contends that the master, in fixing upon the valuation of
the tangible property, did make an allowance for depreciation, but
we are unable to agree to this. The master nowhere says that he
made allowance for depreciation, and the language of his report is
inconsistent with such a reduction. The figures which he adopts are
those of a "fair contractor's price." The basis of his calculation
was the testimony of an opinion witness called by the company. That
witness submitted a table which avowedly showed the cost of
reproduction without allowance for depreciation. The values
testified to by him were adopted by the master in the
Page 212 U. S. 10
great majority of cases. The witness' valuation of the tangible
property was somewhat reduced by the master, but the reductions
were not based upon the theory of depreciation, but upon a
difference of opinion as to the reproduction cost.
The cost of reproduction is not always a fair measure of the
present value of a plant which has been in use for many years. The
items composing the plant depreciate in value from year to year in
a varying degree. Some pieces of property, like real estate, for
instance, depreciate not at all, and sometimes, on the other hand,
appreciate in value. But the reservoirs, the mains, the service
pipes, structures upon real estate, standpipes, pumps, boilers,
meters, tools, and appliances of every kind begin to depreciate
with more or less rapidity from the moment of their first use. It
is not easy to fix at any given time the amount of depreciation of
a plant whose component parts are of different ages, with different
expectations of life. But it is clear that some substantial
allowance for depreciation ought to have been made in this case.
The officers of the company,
alio intuitu, estimated what
they called "incomplete depreciation" of this plant (which we
understand to be the depreciation of the surviving parts of it
still in use) at $77,000, which is 14 percent of the master's
appraisement of the tangible property. A witness called by the city
placed the reproduction value of the tangible property at $363,000,
and estimated the allowance that should be made for depreciation at
$118,000, or 32 percent. In the view we take of the case, it is not
necessary that we should undertake the difficult task of
determining exactly how much the master's valuation of the tangible
property ought to have been diminished by the depreciation which
that property had undergone. It is enough to say that there should
have been a considerable diminution, sufficient at least, to raise
the net income found by the court above 6 percent upon the whole
valuation thus diminished. If, for instance, the master's valuation
should be diminished by $50,000, allowed for depreciation, the net
earnings found by him would show a return of substantially 6.5
percent.
Page 212 U. S. 11
Counsel for the company urge rather faintly that the
capitalization of the company ought to have some influence in the
case in determining the valuation of the property. It is a
sufficient answer to this contention that the capitalization is
shown to be considerably in excess of any valuation testified to by
any witness, or which can be arrived at by any process of
reasoning. The cause for the large variation between the real value
of the property and the capitalization in bonds and preferred and
common stock is apparent from the testimony. All or substantially
all the preferred and common stock was issued to contractors for
the construction of the plant, and the nominal amount of the stock
issued was greatly in excess of the true value of the property
furnished by the contracts. A single instance taken from the
testimony will illustrate this. At the very start of the
enterprise, a contract was entered into for the construction of a
part of the plant, which was of a value slightly, if at all,
exceeding $125,000. The price paid the contractor was $125,000 in
bonds and $200,000 in common stock. Other contracts for
construction showed a like disproportion between value furnished
and nominal capitalization received for that value. It perhaps is
unnecessary to say that such contracts were made by the company
with persons who at the time, by stock ownership, controlled its
action. Bonds and preferred and common stock issued under such
conditions afford neither measure of nor guide to the value of the
property.
We think that the master and the court erred in another respect
which might affect in an important way the amount which could have
been realized under the operation of the ordinance. This error
consisted in the manner of deducting the reductions necessarily
made by the ordinance. The evidence in the record is not entirely
clear, though, after careful consideration, we think it shows the
following state of facts: the company's schedule prescribed certain
rates, which we may call the book rates, but upon a large part of
them a discount of 5 percent was made if they were promptly paid.
The
Page 212 U. S. 12
consumers very generally availed themselves of this discount.
The discount rates constituted the actual collections, and may be
called the actual rates. For the fiscal year which was examined,
the book rates amounted, in round numbers, to $93,000, while the
actual rates amounted, as the master found, to $88,000. The
percentage of reduction made by the ordinance was computed to be
22.88. This percentage was ascertained either by comparing the book
rates with the ordinance rates or by comparing the actual rates
with the ordinance rates, still further reduced by a 5 percent
discount for prompt payment, which comes to substantially the same
result. The fallacy in the process employed by the master consisted
in substance in assuming that the ordinance rates would be subject
to a discount for prompt payment. The company, it is true, might,
if it chose, allow such a discount from the ordinance rates, but
the ordinance required no discount from the rates established by
it, and the company therefore was bound to offer none. If it stood
upon the letter of the ordinance, as it had the right to do, and
exacted from the consumers the full charges prescribed by the
ordinance, the amount which would have been realized would have
been over $4,000 more than that found by the master, or a net
income of not less than $40,000. Doubtless the abandonment of the
common method of discount for prompt payment would deprive the
company of an efficient aid to the quick collection of its bills,
but, in the case of a prime necessity like water, there are other
methods of enforcing prompt payment, though it is not unlikely that
the elimination of the discount rate would add somewhat to the cost
of collection, and thereby to the operating expenses.
A brief recently filed by the city, to which no reply has been
made, seems to show conclusively that there was still another error
in ascertaining the amount of reduction effected by the ordinance.
What was actually done was to deduct the 22.88 reduction from the
actual water rates (excluding hydrant rentals, which were not
changed); but, of these actual water rates, $10,000 came from
territory outside of the corporate
Page 212 U. S. 13
limits, which was not affected by the ordinance. From this
$10,000, no percentage should have been deducted. The reduction,
therefore, was too large by over $2,000. If this correction should
be made, it would amount to nearly four tenths of one percent on
the capitalization.
We are also of opinion that the master and the court erroneously
excluded evidence which had an important bearing upon the true
earning capacity of the company under the ordinance. A clear
appreciation of this error can be best obtained by a comprehensive
review of the hearing. The company's original case was based upon
an elaborate analysis of the cost of construction. To arrive at the
present value of the plant, large deductions were made on account
of the depreciation. This depreciation was divided into complete
depreciation and incomplete depreciation. The complete depreciation
represented that part of the original plant which, through
destruction or obsolescence, had actually perished as useful
property. The incomplete depreciation represented the impairment in
value of the parts of the plant which remained in existence and
were continued in use. It was urgently contended that, in fixing
upon the value of the plant upon which the company was entitled to
earn a reasonable return, the amounts of complete and incomplete
depreciation should be added to the present value of the surviving
parts. The court refused to approve this method, and we think
properly refused. A water plant, with all its additions, begins to
depreciate in value from the moment of its use. Before coming to
the question of profit at all, the company is entitled to earn a
sufficient sum annually to provide not only for current repairs,
but for making good the depreciation and replacing the parts of the
property when they come to the end of their life. The company is
not bound to see its property gradually waste, without making
provision out of earnings for its replacement. It is entitled to
see that from earnings the value of the property invested is kept
unimpaired, so that, at the end of any given term of years, the
original investment remains as it was at the
Page 212 U. S. 14
beginning. It is not only the right of the company to make such
a provision, but it is its duty to its bond and stockholders, and,
in the case of a public service corporation, at least, its plain
duty to the public. If a different course were pursued, the only
method of providing for replacement of property which has ceased to
be useful would be the investment of new capital and the issue of
new bonds or stocks. This course would lead to a constantly
increasing variance between present value and bond and stock
capitalization -- a tendency which would inevitably lead to
disaster either to the stockholders or to the public, or both. If,
however, a company fails to perform this plain duty and to exact
sufficient returns to keep the investment unimpaired, whether this
is the result of unwarranted dividends upon over-issues of
securities or of omission to exact proper prices for the output,
the fault is its own. When, therefore, a public regulation of its
prices comes under question, the true value of the property then
employed for the purpose of earning a return cannot be enhanced by
a consideration of the errors in management which have been
committed in the past.
After the company had closed its case, the city undertook to
determine the present value of the company's property by the plain
method of ascertaining the cost of reproduction, diminished by
depreciation. In its case in rebuttal, the company followed the
same method, though the results differed largely, and, as we have
seen, no proper allowance for depreciation was made. In the course
of presenting its case, the city offered evidence of the net income
of some years subsequent to the passage of the ordinance. The case
is peculiar. The company has never observed the ordinance. The suit
was begun nine months after its enactment, and tried considerably
later. In the meantime, the company's gross income had largely
increased. But the decision in the court below was based solely on
the operations of the fiscal year ending March 31, 1901, and the
amount of net income ascertained, namely, $36,000, was obtained by
applying the reductions made by the
Page 212 U. S. 15
ordinance to the operations of that fiscal year. We think it was
error to confine the investigation to, and base the judgment upon,
that year alone. The precise subject of inquiry was what would be
the effect of the ordinance in the future. The operations of the
preceding fiscal year, or of any other past fiscal year, were
valueless if the year was abnormal, and were only of significance
so far as they foretold the future. If, as in this case, sufficient
time has passed, so that certainty, instead of prophecy, can be
obtained, the certainty would be preferable to the prophecy. In
this case, there could be no absolute certainty, because the
ordinance had never been put in operation. But evidence of the
operations of the years succeeding to the ordinance is relevant and
of great importance, and by a consideration of such evidence a much
greater degree of certainty could be obtained. Suppose, by way of
illustration, that, before bringing suit, the company had put the
ordinance into effect and had observed it for a number of years,
and the result showed that a sufficient net income had been
realized -- is it possible that a suit then could be brought and
the evidence confined to a period prior to the ordinance, and, by a
process of speculation, the conclusion reached that the ordinance
would be confiscatory? Some evidence regarding the income of the
company after the passage of the ordinance is in the record, but it
subsequently was excluded from consideration. It showed an increase
of gross and net earnings, but also an increase in the property
devoted to the public use. We are unable to say what the effect of
the evidence excluded would be; all we can say is that the inquiry
was unduly limited by the exclusion of the evidence of the
operation of subsequent years.
It follows from what has been said that the judgment of the
court below cannot stand. There was error in the appraisement of
the present value of the plant, in the deduction of the reductions
made by the ordinance, and in the exclusion of evidence relating to
the operations of the company after the enactment of the
ordinance.
Page 212 U. S. 16
In ordinary cases, full justice would be done by reversing the
decree and remanding the cause for further proceedings in the court
below, there to undergo a new and doubtless prolonged
investigation. It is more than seven years since the enactment of
the ordinance, and it has never been observed in any respect. This
litigation ought now to be ended, if it is possible to end it with
due regard to the rights of the contending parties. Disregarding
for the moment all the errors which were committed in the court
below, the decision of this cause may be rested upon a broader
ground, which is clearly indicated by the previous judgments of
this Court. The jurisdiction which is invoked here ought, as has
been said, to be exercised only in the clearest cases. If a company
of this kind chooses to decline to observe an ordinance of this
nature, and prefers rather to go into court with the claim that the
ordinance is unconstitutional, it must be prepared to show to the
satisfaction of the court that the ordinance would necessarily be
so confiscatory in its effect as to violate the Constitution of the
United States. In
Ex Parte Young, 209 U.
S. 123, the last word of caution by this Court was said
(p.
209 U. S.
166):
"Finally, it is objected that the necessary result of upholding
this suit in the circuit court will be to draw to the lower federal
courts a great flood of litigation of this character, where one
federal judge would have it in his power to enjoin proceedings by
state officials to enforce the legislative acts of the state,
either by criminal or civil actions. To this it may be answered, in
the first place, that no injunction ought to be granted unless in a
case reasonably free from doubt. We think such rule is, and will
be, followed by all the judges of the federal courts."
The same thought, in effect, was expressed in
San Diego Land
& Town Co. v. National City, 174 U.
S. 739,
174 U. S.
754:
"Judicial interference should never occur unless the case
presents, clearly and beyond all doubt, such a flagrant attack upon
the rights of property under the guise of regulations as to compel
the court to say that the rates prescribed will necessarily have
the effect to deny just compensation for private property
Page 212 U. S. 17
taken for the public use."
And in
San Diego Land & Town Co. v. Jasper,
189 U. S. 439,
after repeating with approval this language, it was said (p.
189 U. S.
441):
"In a case like this we do not feel bound to reexamine and weigh
all the evidence, although we have done so, or to proceed according
to our independent opinion as to what were proper rates. It is
enough if we cannot say that it was impossible for a fair-minded
board to come to the result which was reached."
It cannot be doubted that, in a clear case of confiscation, it
is the right and duty of the court to annul the law. Thus, in
Reagan v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Company, 154 U.
S. 362, where the property was worth more than its
capitalization, and, upon the admitted facts, the rates prescribed
would not pay one-half the interest on the bonded debt; in
Covington &c. Turnpike Co. v. Sandford, 164 U.
S. 578, where the rates prescribed would not even pay
operating expenses; in
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U.
S. 466, where the rates prescribed left substantially
nothing over operating expenses and cost of service, and in
Ex
Parte Young, supra, where, on the aspect of the case which was
before the Court, it was not disputed that the rates prescribed
were in fact confiscatory, injunctions were severally sustained.
But the case before us is not a case of this kind. Upon any aspect
of the evidence, the company is certain to obtain a substantial net
revenue under the operation of the ordinance. The net income, in
any event, would be substantially 6 percent, or 4 percent after an
allowance of 2 percent for depreciation.
See Stanislaus County
v. San Joaquin Company, 192 U. S. 201. We
cannot know clearly that the revenue would not much exceed that
return. We do not feel called upon to determine whether a
demonstrated reduction of income to that point would or would not
amount to confiscation. Where the case rests, as it does here, not
upon observation of the actual operation under the ordinance, but
upon speculations as to its effect, based upon the operations of a
prior fiscal year, we will not guess whether the substantial return
certain to be earned would lack something of the return which
would
Page 212 U. S. 18
save the effect of the ordinance from confiscation. It is enough
that the whole case leaves us in grave doubt. The valuation of the
property was an estimate, and is greatly disputed. The expense
account was not agreed upon. The ordinance had not actually been
put into operation; the inferences were based upon the operations
of the preceding year, and the conclusion of the court below rested
upon that most unsatisfactory evidence, the testimony of expert
witnesses employed by the parties. The city authorities acted in
good faith, and they tried, without success, to obtain from the
company a statement of its property, capitalization, and
earnings.
The courts, in clear cases, ought not to hesitate to arrest the
operation of a confiscatory law, but they ought to refrain from
interfering in cases of any other kind. Regulation of public
service corporations, which perform their duties under conditions
of necessary monopoly, will occur with greater and greater
frequency as time goes on. It is a delicate and dangerous function,
and ought to be exercised with a keen sense of justice on the part
of the regulating body, met by a frank disclosure on the part of
the company to be regulated. The courts ought not to bear the whole
burden of saving property from confiscation, though they will not
be found wanting where the proof is clear. The legislatures and
subordinate bodies, to whom the legislative power has been
delegated, ought to do their part. Our social system rests largely
upon the sanctity of private property, and that state or community
which seeks to invade it will soon discover the error in the
disaster which follows. The slight gain to the consumer which he
would obtain from a reduction in the rates charged by public
service corporations is as nothing compared with his share in the
ruin which would be brought about by denying to private property
its just reward, thus unsettling values and destroying confidence.
On the other hand, the companies to be regulated will find it to
their lasting interest to furnish freely the information upon which
a just regulation can be based.
If hereafter it shall appear, under the actual operation of
the
Page 212 U. S. 19
ordinance, that the returns allowed by it operate as a
confiscation of property, nothing in this judgment will prevent
another application to the courts of the United States or to the
courts of the State of Tennessee. But, as the case now stands,
there is no such certainty that the rates prescribed will
necessarily have the effect of denying to the company such a return
as would avoid confiscation. For these reasons,
The decree is reversed and the case remanded to the court
below with directions to dismiss the bill without
prejudice.