1. In fixing rates of a public utility for part of the territory
served, conditions may be such as to require or permit that the
property used and useful in serving the smaller area be treated as
the rate base, rather than the entire plant serving the whole
territory. P.
287 U. S.
497.
2. An electrical plant, built and operated as a generating and
distributing plant for a single municipality, became part of a
large system. The new owner ceased to generate current locally and
brought in current over its lines from without. It served many
other towns and cities, and also delivered varying proportions of
the entire current borne by its lines to affiliated companies for
delivery to their customers, including many towns and cities within
their respective territories.
Held:
(1) That, under the Indiana Public Utility Act, the municipality
was properly treated as the unit for determining the rates to be
charged therein, and that this is consistent with due process. Pp.
287 U. S.
495-498.
(2) The property to be valued is that which is used and useful
for supplying current to the municipality, adding thereto the
proportionate part of the value of the general distributing system
fairly attributable to the local service, but disregarding local
plants in other municipalities which are separate and distinct and
bear no relation to the one in question. P.
287 U. S.
499.
Page 287 U. S. 489
(3) The calculation is of necessity more or less approximate,
but must be fair. P.
287 U. S.
499.
(4) No allowance for cost of financing need be made in the
absence of evidence that such a cost was incurred, or that it
necessarily would be incurred in the event of reconstruction. P.
287 U. S.
500.
(5) Rate case expenses of the utility on matters not connected
with the valuation are properly disallowed, and the conclusion of
the state commission, the master, and the court as to the proper
allowance will not be disturbed when not definitely shown to be
erroneous. P.
287 U. S.
500.
3. The fact that an electric power company is in a favorable
financial position through being a subsidiary of a larger one may
be taken into account in determining the rate of return to which it
is entitled. P.
287 U. S.
501.
4. What may be an inadequate percentage of return on capital to
one kind of public utility in its particular circumstances may be
adequate for another kind in different circumstances.
United
Railways v. West, 280 U. S. 234. P.
501.
5. Seven percent rate of return is not shown to be confiscatory
under the facts disclosed in this case. P.
287 U. S. 502.
1 F. Supp.
606 affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court of three judges
dismissing for want of equity a bill to restrain the enforcement of
rates fixed by the defendant Indiana Commission for electric
service in the City of Martinsville.
Page 287 U. S. 492
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
Page 287 U. S. 493
99 percent 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
Page 287 U. S. 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. 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 order. 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
Page 287 U. S. 495
the master and also made findings of fact and conclusions of law
in accordance with Equity Rule 70 1/2, 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 Martinsville 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 ratemaking and
regulation, would have remained a distinct and separate unit. It
was this unit which appellant acquired, and, if appellant had
continued to operate it as it then was
Page 287 U. S. 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 ratemaking 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. This result was deduced by the
Wisconsin court (pp.. 217
et seq.) not from any express
provision of the statute, but from a consideration of many
correlated statutory provisions and in the light of "the history of
commercial, economic, and political development." That court
pointed out that, when the Public Utility Act was enacted, each
municipality was charged with the duty of furnishing public utility
service and endowed with power to perform that duty; that each
municipality had, and dealt with, an individual public utility;
that there was no great development of power by a single utility
serving numerous municipalities scattered far and wide, and hence
that present day developments could not have been within the
contemplation of
Page 287 U. S. 497
the legislature because they did not exist. The court stressed
the fact that, notwithstanding the subsequent large developments of
power which had come about since the passage of the utility law,
there had been no modification of that law which, in the light of
conditions then existing, must have
"regarded the municipality as the entity, on the one hand and
the utility as the entity, on the other, for the purpose of
establishing just and reasonable rates and service."
Upon these considerations and others, the court reached the
conclusion above stated.
Since the Indiana act was patterned after the Wisconsin act,
with a like history and attended by similar circumstances, the
court below felt warranted in following the decision of the
Wisconsin court, and with that view we see no reason to disagree.
Whether the method afforded by the state statute thus construed is
in accordance with sound policy is a question with which we are not
concerned.
See Wabash, St.L. & P. Ry. Co. v. Illinois,
118 U. S. 557,
118 U. S. 577;
The Minnesota Rate Case, 230 U. S. 352,
230 U. S. 416.
The only question we are called upon to consider is whether, under
the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the method is
constitutional.
Normally, the unit for ratemaking purposes, we may assume, would
be the entire interconnected operating property of a utility used
and useful for the convenience of the public in the territory
served, without regard to particular groups of consumers or local
subdivisions. But conditions may be such as to require or permit
the fixing of a smaller unit.
Compare United Fuel Gas Co. v.
Railroad Commission, 278 U. S. 300;
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n, 278 U.
S. 322;
The Minnesota Rate case, supra at pp.
230 U. S.
434-436;
Smith v. Illinois Bell Tel. Co.,
282 U. S. 133,
282 U. S. 148,
et seq.; Houston v. Southwestern Bell. Tel. Co.,
259 U. S. 318,
259 U. S.
322.
The three cases last cited recognize that, where the business of
a carrier or utility is both interstate and intrastate,
Page 287 U. S. 498
the state rates for intrastate transportation or business must
be determined by a separate consideration of the value of the
property employed in the intrastate business. It is true that
there, such a separation is made necessary because a different
government exercises the ratemaking power in each of the two fields
of regulation, and that situation is wanting here. Nevertheless,
the cases furnish a helpful illustration in support of the
application of a similar rule in the case now under review.
Compare United Fuel Gas Co. v. Railroad
Commission, 13 F.2d
510, 522;
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service
Commission, 14 F.2d
209, 223;
Idaho Power Co. v. Thompson, 19 F.2d
547, 571,
and see International Ry. Co. v.
Prendergast, 1 F. Supp.
623, 626.
In addition to what already has been said, it should be noted
that appellant not only furnishes electric current to the fifty
separate and unrelated towns and cities, in none of which the plant
is used or useful for the rendition of service to any other town or
city, but appellant also carries over its lines and delivers to
others of the affiliated companies, as intercorporate transactions,
varying portions of the entire current borne by its lines for
subsequent distribution by the affiliated companies to their
customers, including many towns and cities within their respective
territories. This intermingling of the business and distributing
activities of the several companies results in such elements of
uncertainty in respect of the proper evaluation of appellant's
participation therein that, standing alone, it would go far in the
direction of justifying the rejection of the contention that the
due process clause requires that appellant's entire distributing
system should be included in the basic unit. In the light of all
the facts and circumstances, we hold that an adjustment of rates
for the municipality here served by appellant in accordance with
the method adopted below is consonant with state law, and immune
from constitutional attack.
Page 287 U. S. 499
Valuation and Expense Allowances. Appellant further
contends that, assuming this method to be free from constitutional
objection, the valuation put upon the property is so low as to
result in confiscation. To meet this objection, it is only
necessary that there shall be brought into the rate base the value
of all property of appellant which is in fact used and useful for
supplying the electric current to the city. Manifestly, the local
plants in other towns and cities bear no such relation to the
Martinsville plant. As already shown, these various plants are
separate and distinct from one another, and they were properly left
out of the calculation.
See Hardin-Wyandot Lighting Co. v.
Public Utilities Comm'n, 118 Ohio St. 592, 601, 162 N.E. 262.
The property values fixed by the Commission and those fixed by the
master and approved by the court differ to some degree, but not so
materially as to affect the result. Upon the basis adopted -- that
is, first to value the local property and then add that
proportionate part of the value of the general distributing system
found to be fairly attributable to the Martinsville service -- the
figures finally arrived at by the master and the court were
$102,947 for the local plant, and $101,191 for the proportionate
value of the other property, or a total of $204,138. In arriving at
the second figure, a proportionate part of the total value of the
general system was allocated to Martinsville
"on the basis of the ratio of actual sales of Kw. H. to
Martinsville and its consumers to the total sales of Kw. H. by
plaintiff during the year 1929, that being the last calendar year
before the date of the hearing."
This ratio was arrived at and supported by a variety of
calculations, the results differing slightly, and, upon these
various calculations, the court fixed 3.3 percent as the fair ratio
of the value to be allocated to Martinsville.
We deem it unnecessary to repeat the details which led to the
court's conclusion. The findings of the court and
Page 287 U. S. 500
of the master are full and convincing, and give evidence of
careful and thorough consideration. The deductions from the
evidence and the calculations are, of necessity, more or less
approximate (
Utah Power & L. Co. v. Pfost,
286 U. S. 165,
286 U. S.
190), but we find nothing in the record which casts a
substantial doubt upon their essential fairness.
Complaint is made that, in determining the value of the
Martinsville property, no allowance was made for cost of financing.
As the court below, however, pointed out, there was no evidence
that such cost was incurred, or that it necessarily would be
incurred in the event of reconstruction. This is also in accordance
with the findings of the master. We see no reason to interfere.
See Vincennes Water Supply Co. v. Public Service Comm'n,
34 F.2d 5, 9.
The Commission, the master, and the court below all rejected as
exorbitant the claim of appellant for an allowance of $60,000 rate
case expenses, and allowed the sum of $4,000 to be amortized as an
operating charge over a period of ten years. This action, it is
contended, was arbitrary and without basis in the evidence. While
there is evidence in the record that appellant expended the amount
claimed, there is further evidence justifying the conclusion that a
large part of the expenditure was made for the additional purpose
of securing data relating to a merger proceeding with which the
Martinsville rates are in no way connected. There is also evidence
that the appraisal covered the local property in the other
municipalities, which, as we have seen, are without relation to the
Martinsville distribution. From a consideration of all the
evidence, it seems clear that the refusal to allow, as against the
Martinsville plant, the entire $60,000, was well founded. That
being so, it became necessary to fix that part of the sum
reasonably chargeable as an expense of the Martinsville rate case.
The Commission and the master, who heard the evidence and were
familiar with all the details,
Page 287 U. S. 501
reached the same conclusion as to the amount. While it may be
true that, even upon the view taken, a larger sum than $4,000 might
well have been allowed, we find nothing sufficiently definite in
the record to require us so to determine, or to call for a
disturbance of the amount fixed.
Rate of Return. The court below found that a rate of
return of 7 percent was adequate. The evidence is conflicting.
Witnesses for appellees estimated that 7 percent was sufficient.
The testimony for appellant was to the effect that, to take care of
bonds, debt discounts, borrowed money, and stock dividends, a
return of 7 percent was sufficient; but that, in order to
accumulate a surplus and make it easier to finance the company, the
rate of return should be not less than 8 percent. Appellant's
balance sheets show that, on January 1, 1929, it had an accumulated
surplus of $1,074,739.71, and, at the end of that year, a surplus
of $1,257,884.64, as compared with a total stock and funded debt
liability of about $4,500,000. The record, as already stated, also
shows that appellant is a subsidiary of the Central Indiana Power
Company, by which it is owned and financed; its securities having
been taken directly by that company without any intervening agency.
The power company also owns and finances the other affiliated
corporations in the same way. It is reasonable to conclude that
appellant is in a more favorable financial condition than if it
were a disconnected enterprise.
It is true, as appellant points out, that, in
United
Railways v. West, 280 U. S. 234,
280 U. S.
251-252, this Court held that a rate of return for a
street railway of less than 7.44 percent was confiscatory, saying
that sound business management required that, after paying all
expenses of operation, etc., "there should still remain something
to be passed to the surplus account," and that a rate of return
which did not admit of that being done was not sufficient to enable
a utility to maintain its credit and raise money
Page 287 U. S. 502
for the proper discharge of its public duties. Many cases were
cited tending to show that a return of 7 1/2 percent or even 8
percent might be necessary, but it was said (pp.
280 U. S.
249-250) that no rule could be laid down which would
apply uniformly to all sorts of utilities. "What may be a fair
return for one may be inadequate for another, depending upon
circumstances, locality, and risk." A street railway company,
compelled to meet the growing competition of private automobiles,
public omnibuses, and other motor carriers well might sustain such
losses of revenue, because of the decreased number of passengers
carried, as to require a larger rate of return than would be
required by an electric utility company like appellant, which not
only enjoys a practical monopoly in the field where its services
are rendered, but whose financial structure, it fairly may be
assumed, is greatly strengthened by its affiliations and by the
interested support of the parent company to which it belongs. On
the whole, we are unable to conclude that a 7 percent rate of
return, under the facts here disclosed, is so low as to be
confiscatory.
See Smith v. Illinois Bell Tel. Co., supra
at pp.
282 U. S.
160-161.
Moreover it appears, as the master and the lower court found,
that, if the rates complained of had been in force during the
period beginning January 1, 1929, and ending May 31, 1930, the
return would have been much in excess of 7 percent on the value
fixed.
Decree affirmed.