The public authority is presumed to have acted fairly, and the
burden of proof is on a public utility corporation to show that a
regulating ordinance has the effect to deprive it of an income
equivalent to a fair return upon its property dedicated to public
use. Knoxville v. Water Co.,
212 U. S. 1.
Goodwill, in the sense generally used as indicating that element
of value which inheres in the fixed and favorable consideration of
customers arising from an established and well known and well
conducted business, has no place in the fixing of valuation for the
purpose of ratemaking of public service corporations.
Willcox
v. Consolidated Gas Co., 212 U. S. 19.
There is, in some cases, a "going concern value" which is an
element to be considered in determining valuation on which the
owner is entitled to a fair return although the property is
dedicated to a public use; there is no fixed rule for ascertaining
this, but each case must be controlled by its own
circumstances.
Where, as in this case, the Master, after exhaustive testimony
certifies the value of a long established and successful public
service plant, for ratemaking purposes, upon the basis of a plant
in successful operation and overhead charges have been allowed, the
court will presume that the element of going concern value has been
considered and included in the total value certified.
The Court will not regard the refusal of the lower court to
enjoin a ratemaking ordinance as confiscatory upon the conclusion
that it allowed a return of six percent per annum, on the valuation
of the plant, although the Master expressed the opinion that the
corporation ought to earn eight percent, where, as in this case,
the ordinance was attacked before opportunity to test its results
by actual experience.
Ordinarily, time alone can satisfactorily demonstrate whether a
rate fixed by ordinance is or is not confiscatory so as to amount
to a taking of property without due process of law within the
meaning of the
Page 238 U. S. 154
Fourteenth Amendment, and in this case, there should be an
actual application of the rates.
Following the rule laid don in
Knoxville v. Water Co.,
212 U. S. 1, and
Willcox v. Gas Co., 212 U. S. 19, the
bill seeking to enjoin the putting of the ordinance involved in
this case into effect should be dismissed without prejudice to the
right of complainant to reinstate the case after a reasonable
period for an actual demonstration of the effect of the
ordinance.
199 F. 204 modified and affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity under the impairment of
obligation provision of, and the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to, the federal Constitution of an ordinance
of the City of Des Moines fixing ninety cents as the price of gas
in that city, are stated in the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 157
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was begun in the District Court of the United States
for the Southern District of Iowa by the present appellant,
hereinafter called the Gas Company, against the City of Des Moines
and others, to enjoin the enforcement of the provisions of a
certain ordinance of the city, passed December 27th, 1910, whereby,
from and after the first day of January, 1911, the rate to be
charged and collected for gas in the City of Des Moines was fixed
at ninety cents for each thousand cubic feet. The allegations of
the bill were that to enforce the ordinance would amount
Page 238 U. S. 158
to the taking of the Gas Company's property without just
compensation and operate as confiscation of its property, and
thereby deprive it of the same without due process of law, and
would deny the equal protection of the laws; further, that it would
impair the existing contract between the Gas Company and the city,
and between the Gas Company and the State of Iowa, growing out of
its incorporation under the statutes of the state and of the
ordinances of the city, giving rights to the Gas Company to lay its
mains and supply gas to the residents of the city. A temporary
injunction was allowed, and after issue made, the case was referred
to Robert Sloan, Esquire, as special Master in chancery to report
his findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Master afterwards
filed his report, and the same coming on before the district court
for hearing, upon exceptions, the report of the Master was
confirmed, and the bill dismissed "with prejudice" (199 F. 204).
From that decree, the present appeal is taken.
The Master's report, as court and counsel agree, gives evidence
of very thorough consideration of the subject, and the facts found
are accepted by the appellant. From the report we learn that the
plant belonging to the Gas Company dates back to the year 1864;
that it was owned and operated by the Capital City Gas Light
Company until March 1st, 1906, when the present company was
organized and the property, real and personal, of the Capital City
Company conveyed to it; that the United Gas Improvement Company, of
Philadelphia, became the owner of the entire stock of the Capital
City Company on June 1st, 1886; that the capital stock then
consisted of 3,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, and that
subsequently the capital stock was increased to 6,000 shares of the
same value each; that the growth of the City of Des Moines
increased the demand for gas, and many extensions were added. In
making these improvements
Page 238 U. S. 159
and extensions, the Capital City Gas Light Company became
indebted to the United Gas Improvement Company for cash advanced,
and otherwise to the amount of $105,526.49, and also for gas holder
$103,958, and the United Gas Improvement Company also owned
$400,000 of bonds secured by mortgage on the plant of the Capital
City Company. On March 1st, 1906, the Capital City Company
transferred and conveyed its property to the present Gas Company,
the authorized capital stock of the new company being 22,500 shares
of the par value of $100 each. At the time of this transfer, the
new company executed to the United Gas Improvement Company $800,000
stock contracts bearing 6 percent interest until paid, and also
authorized and executed to the Commercial Trust Company, of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a deed of trust to all property of the
Des Moines Gas Company, transferred to it as aforesaid to secure
the payment of $1,500,000 5 percent gold bonds payable
semiannually, which were to be issued as provided by said mortgage.
The sum of $240,000 bonds were issued at the date of execution of
the mortgage, one half thereof used in payment of the debt due the
United Gas Improvement Company for the gas holder, and the other
half to pay the amount due on account to that company. On January
first, 1907, there were also issued $400,000 of these bonds to pay
the bonds then due of the Capital City Company. When the transfer
was made, $45,000 was issued to pay for the Valley Junction
property. This is a town adjacent to Des Moines, and something like
six miles from the gas works of the Gas Company, to which the gas
is transmitted by high pressure mains through the city, by a
distribution system therein. There is nothing in the record to show
the value of the Valley Junction property, except that of a high
pressure main, which is also used in distributing gas in the city.
Extensions and improvements have been made to the works and
distribution system since the date of
Page 238 U. S. 160
transfer up to the first day of January, 1911, to the amount of
$412,704.51, and, as provided by the mortgage, bonds have been
issued by the trustee to the amount of $1,097,000, and these bonds
have all been purchased by the United Gas Improvement Company. The
total discount on these bonds is $33,950; $267,000, discounted at
10 percent, and the balance, $145,000 at 5 percent. No dividends
have been declared by the present company upon its stock, but the
interest upon the stock contracts and bonds has been regularly
paid, and $389,000 has been paid on the principal of the stock
contracts, leaving January 1st, 1911, only $411,000 unpaid. These
payments have been made out of the profits derived from the
operation of the plant. The officers of the Gas Company are elected
by the United Gas Improvement Company, who own and control all the
stock, and these officers are also, in the main, the officers of
the United Gas Improvement Company, and the latter controls the Gas
Company and its business.
Various ordinances have been passed regulating the price of gas,
from which the Master finds as follows:
"1. That, for the years 1896 and 7, the price of gas should be
$1.30 per M.C.F. net; for the years 1898 and 9, $1.25 net; for the
years 1900 and 1, $1.20 net; for the years 1902, 3, and 4, $1.15
net, and for the year 1905, $1.10 net, and for the years 1906 to
1910, $1 net with the proviso that it may add 10 cents per M.C.F.
to each of these prices, but shall be required to discount that sum
for the payment by or before the 15th day of the month following
that in which the gas was consumed."
"2. That the city pay for the term of fifteen years for each
street lamp, $18.00 per year, until they should reach 500, when it
should be reduced to $17.00 for each lamp."
"3. That its gas should not be less than 22 candlepower."
There is no question of the authority of the City of
Page 238 U. S. 161
Des Moines, under the laws of the state, to regulate the rates
at which gas shall be furnished to the City of Des Moines and its
inhabitants. After valuing the real estate and various items of
personal property as hereinafter stated, the Master adopted as the
only practical way in his judgment of determining the reasonable
value of the buildings, their contents, the yard structures and the
mains, house and street lamp services and meters, the process of
estimating the cost of reproducing them new, and then estimating
the depreciation which should be deducted, in order to obtain their
present value. Under this method, the Master summed up the value of
the property of the Gas Company as follows:
"The new ordinance deprives the complainant of the right to add
ten cents per M.C.F. to the price of gas, unless paid on or before
the 15th day of the month following that in which the gas was
consumed, and the evidence shows that the average working capital
for the past five years was $120,000, and that, when the ordinance
went into effect, that they were then using $142,000 as working
capital."
"Without the means of enforcing prompt payment, and without any
inducement so to do, on the part of their customers, in my
judgment, the working capital should not be diminished, and
the"
Amount allowed is . . . . . . . . . . $ 140,000
To this add real estate . . . . . . . 150,000
To organization expenses. . . . . . . 6,923
To meters in stock. . . . . . . . . . 6,603
Present value of physical properties
aside from above items. . . . . . . 1,937,402
-----------
Total physical value. . . . . . . . $2,240,928
What is called in this summary "the present value of physical
property" the report shows was arrived at by the Master in the
manner following: he first found what he thought was the base value
of the property,
i.e., "what
Page 238 U. S. 162
it would cost to produce it at the present time new, without
adding thereto any overhead charges." This figure he fixed at
$1,975,026. To this he added overhead charges, fifteen percent --
$296,254. From this he deducted depreciation, $333,878, leaving as
the value of the property thus ascertained $1,937,402.
As appears from the opinion of the court and the arguments of
counsel in this case, exceptions to the Master's report so far as
the Gas Company is concerned pertain principally to two questions:
one as to his manner of dealing with what is termed the "going
value" of the concern, and the other as to the addition of the sum
of $140,000 to the valuation, because appellant insists, upon the
plan of valuation by cost of reproduction less depreciation, it
would cost that sum to take up and replace pavements not laid when
the mains were put in, but necessary to be removed and replaced in
the reproduction thereof.
Before considering the correctness of the rulings of the Master
and their confirmation by the district court, it is proper to
notice that there is considerable difference between counsel as to
what the Master actually found, as to whether he included the sum
of $300,000 which he was disposed to allow for going value in the
$2,240,000 valuation found by him, or whether it was added to the
estimate of the value of the property already made by him.
We think the Master intended to value the property at $2,240,000
exclusive of the $300,000 which, as we have said, he was at first
disposed to allow for going value, and also that he deducted, in
reaching the $2,100,000, the $140,000 claimed by the Gas Company as
a proper allowance because of the cost of removing and replacing
pavements, as above stated. We think, too, that it was the Master's
conclusion that, if the $300,000, which he was at first disposed to
allow, as stated, or the $140,000 for paving, were included, the
valuation of the plant would be such that a fair return could not
be made upon the value
Page 238 U. S. 163
of the property, and therefore the company would be entitled to
a decree in its favor. It therefore follows that the determination
of the correctness of the decree below, confirming the Master's
report, depends upon and requires a consideration of these two
items.
We may premise that the public authority is presumed to have
acted fairly, and that the burden of proof is upon the Gas Company
to show that the regulating ordinance has the effect to deprive it
of an income equivalent to a fair return upon its property
dedicated to public use.
Knoxville v. Knoxville Water Co.,
212 U. S. 1.
As we have said, the Master was at first disposed to allow
$300,000 as a separate item covering the going value of the
concern. After stating that he fixed the going value at the sum of
$300,000 he says:
"It may be asked upon what basis this amount is determined. The
evidence, followed strictly, might require me to make it higher,
could my mind rest satisfied that the 'going value' of this concern
is worth more, but I cannot feel satisfied that such is the case,
and regard $300,000 as ever dollar it is worth over and as every
dollar it is worth over and it is worth that much more than a plant
would be that had to develop its business. But that would be much
more rapid, in my judgment, than is estimated. I think a purchaser
would be willing to add this amount for its developed business, and
that a seller would not be willing to sell unless he got that much
more than its physical value, but I could not give the mental
process by which this conclusion is reached any more than a jury
could do so, under like circumstances, but it is nevertheless my
judgment under all the evidence in the case."
"The element of 'goodwill,' as applied to the ordinary merchant
or manufacturer dealing with the public generally, is not
considered in estimating the 'going value' of complainant's plant.
It cannot be considered in a
Page 238 U. S. 164
public utility like the one in question in this case, because
the complainant has a monopoly of the business in which it is
engaged in the City of Des Moines, and those who desire to use its
product must buy of it. They have no choice in the matter. But
there is a great difference even in a monopoly which has a business
already developed and one that must develop it. The plant of
complainant has all its parts working in harmony, performing their
several functions in producing and conveying the gas to its
customers. These several parts are not only in place, but have been
brought to a harmonious operation throughout. Even the employees of
the concern are familiar with their duties and experienced in
performing them. But, without business, no matter how perfect it
may be, it would be unprofitable. It is ready, however, for
business, and has the business to transact. It was a small concern
at the start in 1864, but its books show that it has had a steady
growth for many years in the past, and everything indicates that it
will continue in the future. There is great difference between such
a plant and one whose business must be developed. All a purchaser
of such a plant would have to do would be to take charge of the
plant, 'touch the button,' and he is making money from the start.
There is no element of uncertainty connected with it."
"He can retain its experienced employees as a rule, should he so
desire, at the same wages. There is no question that such a plant
has a 'going value,' because it is a money maker from the
start."
"The only difficulty is to determine how much its 'going value'
is worth. No interest during its construction is allowed, nor
anything that is included in the 'overhead charges,' which are part
of the physical value. But simply the fact that it has a developed
business that will make money for its owner, with reasonable rates
allowed for the product which it manufactures and sells."
That "goodwill," in the sense in which that term is
Page 238 U. S. 165
generally used as indicating that element of value which inheres
in the fixed and favorable consideration of customers, arising from
an established and well known and well conducted business, has no
place in the fixing of valuation for the purpose of ratemaking of
public service corporations of this character, was established in
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co., 212 U. S.
19,
212 U. S. 52.
"Going value," or "going concern value" --
i.e., the value
which inheres in a plant where its business is established, as
distinguished from one which has yet to establish its business, has
been the subject of much discussion in ratemaking cases before the
courts and commissions. Many of those cases are collected in
Whitten on "Valuation of Public Service Corporations," §§
550-569, and the supplement to the same work, §§
1350-1385. That there is an element of value in an assembled and
established plant, doing business and earning money, over one not
thus advanced, is self-evident. This element of value is a property
right, and should be considered in determining the value of the
property, upon which the owner has a right to make a fair return
when the same is privately owned although dedicated to public use.
Each case must be controlled by its own circumstances, and the
actual question here is: in view of the facts found, and the method
of valuation used by him, did the Master sufficiently include this
element in determining the value of the property of this company
for ratemaking purposes?
Included in going value as usually reckoned is the investment
necessary to organizing and establishing the business which is not
embraced in the value of its actual physical property. In this
case, what may be called the inception cost of the enterprise
entering into the establishing of a going concern had long since
been incurred. The present company and its predecessors had long
carried on business in the City of Des Moines under other
ordinances and at higher rates than the ordinance in question
established.
Page 238 U. S. 166
For aught that appears in this record, these expenses may have
been already compensated in rates charged and collected under
former ordinances. As we have said, every presumption is in favor
of the legitimate exercise of the ratemaking power, and it is not
to be presumed, without proof, that a company is under the
necessity of making up losses and expenditures incidental to the
experimental stage of its business.
These items of expense in development are often called overhead
charges, for which, as we have already seen, the Master allowed 15
percent upon the base value (exclusive of real estate) or $296,254,
in addition to his allowance of $6,923 for organization expenses.
Of these charges, the Master said:
"In reaching the physical value of the plant in question by the
process of reproduction, it is necessary to bear in mind that the
present value thereof represents much more than the machinery
therein, the labor of installing and constructing them, and putting
them in place to perform their various functions, ready for the
manufacture and distribution of gas to its customers. Were the City
of Des Moines without such a plant, and such a one as the
complainant now owns was proposed, it would be found that much more
than the mere cost of labor and material would be expended. Such
expenditures are termed overhead charges, and are as follows:"
"1. Time and money expended in the promotion of the enterprise,
in the organization of the company and interesting capital therein,
including, also, legal expenses, obtaining the necessary franchise,
as well as the costs of incorporating the company."
"2. Then a competent engineer must be employed to prepare the
plans and specifications for the plant, and make the necessary
surveys, and when the work began, to superintend the construction
thereof, and see that it is done properly and according to plans
and specifications.
Page 238 U. S. 167
The successful operation of the plant depends largely upon its
proper construction."
"3. Then losses arising from accidents and injuries to workmen
as well as the material during its construction, which is such an
amount as the cost of insuring against such losses, which is
between 1 and 2 percent"
"4. Contingencies are such expenditures as arise from the lack
of foresight and care preparing the plans and specifications. No
matter how careful the engineer may prepare them, such expenditures
invariably arise. Mr. Alvord testified that his allowance therefor
would depend very much upon his knowledge of the engineer who
prepared them, but that no matter who prepared them, they would
invariably occur, and an allowance should be made therefor. The
careful and thorough inventory in this case reduces very greatly
the allowance therefor."
"5. The cost of administration, which includes the time and
money expended by the parties who are engaged in the enterprise,
purchasing the material, procuring the money for their payment as
needed, and generally superintending the entire enterprise during
the construction of the plant."
"6. It is estimated that it would take three years to complete
the plant in question, and that at least one-half the time and
money invested therein would give no return, and that a loss of
interest would result therefrom, and that such loss would be
included in the overhead charges."
"7. Taxes during the construction."
"The latter is regarded by me as very questionable. It is in a
certain sense making taxes an asset, rather than a liability, and
the amount is so vague and uncertain that it has been given very
little consideration and weight in fixing the overhead charges.
Either the money or the property should pay taxes."
"It must be borne in mind that these expenditures are all made
during the promotion and construction of the
Page 238 U. S. 168
plant, and are necessarily a part of the cost thereof. No
overhead charges that do not inhere in and add to the cost thereof
should be allowed as a part of its physical value. It is not a
question of what was actually expended therefor in the plant in
question, but what would it cost to reproduce a similar plant at
the present time. It is through this method we reach the present
value of this plant new, and then when it is properly depreciated,
according to the condition, life, and age of its various parts, we
reach the present value of the plant in its present condition. It
is not a perfect method, but it is the best method therefor, and
results as nearly as possible in giving the present value of the
plant. No other method known has proved so satisfactory."
The matter of going value was alluded to in
Knoxville v.
Knoxville Water Co., 212 U. S. 1. In that
case, $10,000 was allowed for organization, promotion, etc., and
$60,000 for "going concern." Of the latter item, this Court said
(page
212 U. S. 9):
"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 question was presented in
Cedar Rapids Gaslight Co. v.
Cedar Rapids, 223 U. S. 655.
That case was a writ of error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of
Iowa, holding valid a certain ordinance regulating the price of gas
in Cedar Rapids (144 Ia. 426), and the judgment of the Iowa court
was affirmed. Dealing with the question of "going value," the Iowa
Supreme Court said:
"Also, the sum of $100,000 was included by these witnesses
Page 238 U. S. 169
as enhancement of value by reason of being a 'going concern.' As
previously intimated, the value of the plant is to be estimated in
its entirety, rather than by the addition of estimates on its
component parts, though the latter course will materially aid in
determining the value. Advantages have accrued through the sagacity
of its management as contended by appellant. So, too, there are the
inevitable mistakes which would not be likely in the construction
of a new plant; but to put a new plant in profitable operation,
time would be required, and, aside from the intangible element of
goodwill, the fact that the plant is in successful operation
constitutes an element of value."
"As said, the value of the system as completed, earning a
present income, is the criterion. Insofar as influenced by income,
however, the computation necessarily must be made on the basis of
reasonable charges, for whatever is exacted for a public service in
excess of this is to be regarded as unlawful."
"Save as above indicated, the element of value designated a
'going concern' is but another name for 'goodwill,' which is not to
be taken into account in a case like this, where the company is
granted a monopoly.
Cedar Rapids Water Co. v. Cedar
Rapids, 118 Ia. 234;
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co.,
212 U. S.
19. The witnesses for plaintiff took into account
'goodwill' in giving their opinion of the enhancement in value
because of being a going concern, and we have no means of
separating these so as to ascertain their estimate of the separate
advantage of completion so as to earn a present income."
Dealing with the assignment of error which attacked the
correctness of the ruling of the Iowa court upon this point, this
Court said (page
223 U. S.
669):
"Then again, although it is argued that the court excluded going
value, the court expressly took into account the fact that the
plant was in successful operation. What
Page 238 U. S. 170
it excluded was the goodwill or advantage incident to the
possession of a monopoly, so far as that might be supposed to give
the plaintiff the power to charge more than a reasonable price.
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co., 212 U. S.
19,
212 U. S. 52. An adjustment of
this sort under a power to regulate rates has to steer between
Scylla and Charybdis. On the one side, if the franchise is taken to
mean that the most profitable return that could be got, free from
competition, is protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, then the
power to regulate is null. On the other hand, if the power to
regulate withdraws the protection of the Amendment altogether, then
the property is nought. This is not a matter of economic theory,
but of fair interpretation of a bargain. Neither extreme can have
been meant. A midway between them must be hit."
As we have already said, the Master, while at first disposed to
allow the additional sum of $300,000 for "going value" as a
separate item, after the decision of this Court in the
Cedar
Rapids case seems to have reached a different conclusion, for
he said of that case:
". . . it also renders it extremely doubtful that 'going value'
will be included in the valuation of such a plant as the basis of
return, beyond the fact that it is in 'successful operation.' That
would exclude the sum of $300,000 estimated in this case, on the
grounds that, when the ordinance was enacted, it already possessed
a well developed and paying business."
"In my judgment, after considering the able and thorough
arguments of counsel, that it is decisive of the question, and
holds that 'going value' should not be considered in determining
the basis upon which the complainant is entitled to have its return
reckoned, and feel that it is my duty to so state."
"The physical value as hereinbefore determined is reckoned upon
the fact that the plant was in 'successful operation' when the
ordinance was enacted; otherwise its
Page 238 U. S. 171
value would be much less. The 'going value' is that enhancement
which results from a well developed and paying business. This would
result in reducing the estimated deficit for each year $24,000, and
yield a return to the complainant of at least 6 percent on
$2,100,000."
"While this case is close to the borderline, I cannot say on the
whole case that the evidence beyond any just and fair doubt
satisfies me that the rates will prove confiscatory should the
ordinance be put into effect and an actual test thereof be
made."
While there is a difference between court and counsel as to what
the Master meant by this, we think it is apparent that he meant to
say that, applying the rule of the
Cedar Rapids case, he
had already valued the property in the estimate of what he called
its physical value, upon the basis of a plant in actual and
successful operation, for he said that otherwise its value would be
much less.
As pointed out in the
Cedar Rapids case, if return is
to be regarded beyond that compensation which a public service
corporation is entitled to earn upon the fair value of its
property, the right to regulate is of no moment, and income to
which the corporation is not entitled would become the basis of
valuation in determining the rights of the public. When, as here, a
long established and successful plant of this character is valued
for ratemaking purposes, and the value of the property fixed as the
Master certifies upon the basis of a plant in successful operation,
and overhead charges have been allowed for the items and in the
sums already stated, it cannot be said, in view of the facts in
this case, that the element of going value has not been given the
consideration it deserves, and the appellant's contention in this
behalf is not sustained.
As to the item of $140,000 which, it is contended, should be
added to the valuation, because of the fact that the Master valued
the property on the basis of the cost of reproduction new, less
depreciation, and it would be
Page 238 U. S. 172
necessary in such reproduction to take up and replace pavements
on streets which were unpaved when the gas mains were laid on order
to replace the mains, we are of opinion that the court below
correctly disposed of this question. These pavements were already
in place. It may be conceded that they would require removal at the
time when it became necessary to reproduce the plant in this
respect. The Master reached the conclusion that the life of the
mains would not be enhanced by the necessity of removing the
pavements, and that the company had no right of property in the
pavements thus dealt with, and that there was neither justice nor
equity in requiring the people who had been at the expense of
paving the streets to pay an additional sum for gas because the
plant, when put in, would have to be at the expense of taking up
and replacing the pavements in building the same. He held that such
added value was wholly theoretical, when no benefit was derived
therefrom. We find no error in this disposition of the
question.
Nor do we think there was error in refusing an injunction upon
the conclusion reached that a return of 6 percent per annum on the
valuation would not be confiscatory. This is especially true in
view of the fact that the ordinance was attacked before there was
opportunity to test its results by actual experience. It is true
the Master reported that, in his opinion, the company ought to earn
8 percent, but he also found that, in his judgment, gas could be
produced for 60 cents per thousand, and the actual effect of the
90-cent rate on an economically managed plant had not had the test
of experience.
The decree of the court below is peculiar in that it directs the
dismissal of the bill "with prejudice," and adds:
"At any time on and after three years from this date,
complainant, its successor, or assigns may, on motion, reinstate
this case with all the pleadings and evidence now on file, with the
same and like effect as though filed for such subsequent
Page 238 U. S. 173
hearing. And each party may then file such additional pleadings
and take and file such additional evidence as to each party may be
deemed advisable."
While we agree with the court below that it was right to confirm
the Master's report and dismiss the bill, we think, in view of the
fact that the attack upon the rates was made before the ordinance
went into effect, and before actual application of the rates could
demonstrate whether they were remunerative or not, that the court
should have followed the recommendation of the Master and dismissed
the bill without prejudice. We think this is particularly so in
view of the fact that ordinarily time alone can satisfactorily
demonstrate in a case like this whether or not the rates
established will prove so unremunerative as to be confiscatory in
the sense in which that term has been defined in ratemaking cases.
The Master's suggestion has the support of the judgment of this
Court in
Knoxville v. Knoxville Water Co. and
Willcox
v. Consolidated Gas Co., supra.
With the modification that the bill be dismissed without
prejudice, instead of, as the court below directed, with prejudice,
the decree is affirmed, with costs.
Affirmed.