This Court previously held (384 U.S. 176) that the SEC was
warranted in ruling that § 11(b)(1)(A) of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 1935 prohibits a public utility holding
company from retaining an integrated gas utility system in addition
to its integrated electric system unless the gas system could not
be operated separately without a loss of economics causing a
serious impairment of that system. After remand, the Court of
Appeals reviewed the evidence and concluded that the SEC erred in
finding that New England Electric System failed to prove a case for
retention of its integrated gas system.
Held: Since the SEC's determination that divestiture of
the gas system would not entail a loss of economics likely to cause
serious impairment of the system involved the application of expert
judgment which had adequate support in the record, the Court of
Appeals should have affirmed the SEC order and should not have
indulged in an unwarranted incursion into the administrative
domain. Pp.
390 U. S.
211-221.
376 F.2d 107, reversed and remanded.
Page 390 U. S. 208
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent New England Electric System (NEES), a holding company
registered under § 5 of the Public Utility Holding Company Act
of 1935, [
Footnote 1] controls
both an integrated electric utility system and an integrated gas
utility system. [
Footnote 2]
Section 11(b) of the Act requires the Securities and Exchange
Commission to limit the operations of a holding company system to a
single integrated public utility system, except the Commission may
permit the holding company to continue control of any additional
integrated utility system that the Commission determines, among
other things,
"cannot be operated as an independent system without the loss of
substantial economics which can be secured by the retention of
control by such holding company of such system. . . . [
Footnote 3]"
In 1957, the Securities and Exchange
Page 390 U. S. 209
Commission instituted proceedings to determine whether NEES
should be permitted to retain control of both the electric and gas
systems. The Commission initially found that the electric companies
constituted a single integrated electric utility system, 38
S.E.C.193 (1958), and NEES elected to retain those companies as its
principal system. NEES urged, however, that it should also be
permitted to retain the gas system. After extensive hearings, the
Commission refused respondent permission to do so, and ordered the
gas system divested. 41 S.E.C. 888 (1964).
In reaching its conclusion the Commission construed the
statutory phrase "loss of substantial economics" in Clause A of
§ 11(b)(1) to require a showing that the "additional system
cannot be operated under separate ownership without the loss of
economics so important as to cause a serious impairment of that
system." In its first review of the Commission's order, the Court
of Appeals for the First Circuit held that the Commission had
erroneously construed the statute; in the court's view, "loss of
substantial economics" merely "called for a business judgment of
what would be a significant loss. . . ." The court therefore set
aside the Commission's order and remanded for reconsideration in
light of that test. 346 F.2d 399, 406. We reversed, approving the
Commission's construction, and remanded to the Court of Appeals for
review of the challenged order in light of the proper meaning of
the statutory term.
SEC v. New England Electric System,
384 U. S. 176
(
NEES I). On remand, the Court of Appeals again set aside
the Commission's order. 376 F.2d 107. [
Footnote 4] That court, "after a
Page 390 U. S. 210
fresh review of all the evidence," concluded
"that the Commission's opinion does not reveal that application
of both reason and experience to facts which merits endorsement as
the responsible exercise of expertise."
Id. at 111. We granted certiorari. 389 U.S. 816. We
reverse and remand to the Court of Appeals with direction to enter
a judgment affirming the Commission's order.
The question for our decision is whether the Court of Appeals
properly held that, on the record, the Commission erred in finding
that NEES failed to prove a case for retention of the integrated
gas utility system. We address that question against the background
of a congressional objective to protect consumer interests through
the
"elimination of 'restraint of free and independent competition.'
. . . One of the evils that had resulted from control of utilities
by holding companies was the retention in one system of both gas
and electric properties and the favoring of one of these competing
forms of energy over the other."
NEES I, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 183.
[
Footnote 5] Congress therefore
ordained separate ownership -- and divestiture where necessary to
reduce holdings to one system -- as the "
very heart' of the
Act." Id. at 384 U. S. 180.
Although Congress was aware that some economic loss might be
suffered by the parent holding company or the separated integrated
utility, Congress relented only to the extent of authorizing the
Commission to permit retention of an additional integrated utility
if that permission might be granted under the narrow exception
provided by § 11(b)(1). But "retention of an `additional'
integrated system is decidely the exception," and the
Page 390 U. S. 211
burden is on the holding company to satisfy the "stringent test"
set by the statute.
Id. at
384 U. S. 180,
384 U. S. 182;
cf. United States v. First City Nat. Bank, 386 U.
S. 361,
386 U. S.
366.
Congress committed to the Commission the task of determining
whether a holding company has met the burden of showing that its
situation falls within the narrow exception under § 11(b)(1).
The Clause A determination whether separation entails a loss of
economics likely to cause a serious impairment of the system
involves an element of prediction which necessarily calls for
difficult and expert judgment. That judgment requires the
assessment of many subtle and often intangible factors not easily
expressed in precise or quantifiable terms. This is the very nature
of economic forecasting. The task calls for expertise and is not
simply "an exercise in counting commonplaces."
United States v.
Drum, 368 U. S. 370,
368 U. S. 384;
see NEES I, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S.
184-185. Judicial review of that expert judgment is
necessarily a limited one.
See Gray v. Powell,
314 U. S. 402,
314 U. S.
412-413;
NLRB v. Hearst Publications,
322 U. S. 111,
322 U. S. 131;
Atlantic Ref. Co. v. FTC, 381 U.
S. 357,
381 U. S.
367-368;
United States v. Drum, supra, at
368 U. S.
375-376. Congress expressly provided that "[t]he
findings of the Commission as to the facts, if supported by
substantial evidence, shall be conclusive." 15 U.S.C. §
79x(a);
see Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U.
S. 474;
cf. NLRB v. Erie Resistor Corp.,
373 U. S. 221,
373 U. S. 236.
In our view, the Court of Appeals in this case indulged in an
unwarranted incursion into the administrative domain. [
Footnote 6] The Commission's order has
adequate support in the record and should have been affirmed.
Page 390 U. S. 212
As of 1958, the test year selected for purposes of these
proceedings, [
Footnote 7] NEES'
eight gas subsidiaries provided retail service to some 237,000
customers in a relatively compact 660-square-mile franchise area in
Massachusetts. NEES' electric companies also served 75% of this
area and about 78% of the gas customers were also electric
customers. NEES' gross investment in gas plant and equipment was
about $56,300,000 and gross gas revenues for 1958 were about
$22,700,000. The eight gas companies were organized
administratively as a Gas Division with centralized management,
marketing and supply, operations, and merchandising departments.
[
Footnote 8] The chief
executive of the Gas Division was also president of each gas
company and ultimately responsible to NEES' vice-president in
charge of management; in short, top management rested with
executives having joint control over both electric and gas
operations.
The Commission had before it a "severance study," a cost
analysis and projection prepared for NEES by a professional public
utilities management consulting firm, Ebasco Services, Inc. This
study projected a loss of economics of approximately $1,100,000
annually for the gas system as the result of its separation from
NEES. The Commission dealt with this study in alternative ways. It
analyzed the study and concluded that
"[t]he Ebasco estimate is inadequately supported in a number of
important aspects and leaves considerable doubts
Page 390 U. S. 213
which [NEES has] not satisfactorily overcome in the record."
Then it went on to find that, even if the estimated $1,100,000
in loss of economics were accepted as accurate,
"it would not lead us to conclude that such a loss is so
substantial, when compared with the loss of economics involved in
prior divestment cases and viewed in light of the objectives of the
Act, as to warrant retention of the gas properties. . . ."
41 S.E.C. at 895, 897. Because we conclude that the record
supports the Commission's decision on the latter ground, we have no
occasion to consider whether the Commission's strictures on the
reliability of the Ebasco study are well founded.
The Commission's ultimate finding that the projected $1,100,000
loss of economics annually did not constitute a loss of
"substantial" economics within Clause A of § 11(b)(1) was
reached primarily upon the basis of its subsidiary findings upon
three matters: (1) That NEES' estimated losses were not
significantly out of line with those found insubstantial in
previous cases; (2) that other nonaffiliated Massachusetts gas
companies, [
Footnote 9] all but
one of them smaller than the NEES gas system, are apparently able
to operate successfully without electric utility affiliations; (3)
that NEES did not establish that independent management devoted
solely to promoting gas sales would not result in benefits to
offset some of the projected losses. The Court of Appeals held that
none of the three subsidiary findings was supported by substantial
evidence. We disagree.
I
The Commission, consistent with its practice in prior cases,
[
Footnote 10] weighed NEES'
estimated $1,100,000 losses in
Page 390 U. S. 214
relative, rather than absolute, terms, calculating the losses as
a percentage of NEES' 1958 revenues, expenses, and income.
[
Footnote 11] It found these
loss ratios to be
"lower or not significantly higher than corresponding ratios of
gas systems whose divestment we have required on the ground that
the estimated loss of economics was not substantial within the
meaning of clause A."
41 S.E.C. at 898. The cases with which these particular
comparisons were made involved companies outside Massachusetts.
[
Footnote 12] The Court of
Appeals held that the comparisons with the loss ratios of companies
involved in prior cases were "largely irrelevant" because
". . . these ratios are significant only as they affect the
investment structure of the companies in the particular case, and
different companies may be compared only on the assumption that
both operate at the same level."
376 F.2d at 113, 115. The court's ultimate conclusion was that
only close analysis of NEES' own "particular circumstances" was
relevant to the Commission's inquiry.
It is significant, however, that the Court of Appeals' criticism
of the Commission's use of ratios relied heavily on the court's
reading of the statistical data in evidence as showing that the
projected loss of economics "would decrease [NEES'] rate of return
from 6.4 percent in 1959 to 4.1 percent on the projected basis," or
some 30% below, "an average rate of 5.9 percent for the
nonaffiliated
Page 390 U. S. 215
Massachusetts gas companies. . . ." 376 F.2d at 114. But, as the
Commission has noted, the court's computation that the separated
companies would realize a return of only 4.1% contained a serious
error, for it overlooked the allowance to be made for income tax
deductions generated by the projected losses. The actual rate of
return taking such deductions into account would be a significantly
higher 5.2%. [
Footnote
13]
In any event, we may agree that the ratios of losses of
revenues, expenses, and income are necessarily affected
Page 390 U. S. 216
by differences in capital structure, management, market
position, and other factors. But it by no means follows that the
Commission's comparisons are for that reason irrelevant to the
determination whether a projected loss of economics is so important
as to cause a serious impairment of the separated system. It was
well within the range of the Commission's administrative discretion
to use the loss ratios, as it did, "as a guide in adjudicating the
pending case."
Phildelphia Co., 28 S.E.C. 35, 50, n. 24.
The Commission, in its expert judgment, may so employ evaluative
factors it considers relevant. [
Footnote 14]
Indeed, NEES apparently recognized that its burden to establish
that its situation comes within Clause A included the burden of
showing that the projected loss of economics would be more serious
for its separated system than the comparable level of losses in the
other cases already decided by the Commission. Respondent attempted
to prove that the gas system's distance from sources of supply
gives it only a very narrow competitive advantage over oil as a
fuel, and, further, that the system's growth potential is more
limited by a lack of new housing expansion in the area serviced by
the gas companies. As we shall see below, the Commission found that
NEES had not made a case in either respect insofar as those matters
bore on whether the projected loss of economics threatened serious
impairment of the separated system.
II
The Commission's resort to data concerning the operations of the
nonaffiliated Massachusetts gas companies was a response to NEES'
argument, supported by the
Page 390 U. S. 217
Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities, that the projected
loss of economics from separation of the gas system would require
the gas companies to seek rate increases which might seriously
impair or destroy any hope of a successful operation. Natural gas
in 1959 enjoyed in New England the smallest price advantage over
oil of any section of the country. The annual differential was $7
over oil for a typical New England house, compared with $27 to $118
in favor of gas in the rest of the country. [
Footnote 15] NEES contended that the predicted
rate increase would substantially or entirely eliminate the gas
system's already narrow price advantage over oil competitors. The
Commission's answer was to inquire about the economic health of the
already nonaffiliated Massachusetts gas companies. The Commission
found that these companies were apparently able to earn a fair
return although not enjoying the supposed advantages of affiliation
with electric utilities, and it could find no evidence that they
did not face the same competitive conditions as NEES. [
Footnote 16] The Commission found
further that, despite NEES' insistence that its market conditions
differed from the nonaffiliated companies because of relatively
stagnant franchise areas offering less sales growtb, [
Footnote 17] there was no evidence
that this would prevent
Page 390 U. S. 218
the separated gas system -- which would emerge as the second
largest independent in the State -- from competing as effectively
as the smaller independents who had long held their own. Finally,
the Commission noted that, after severance, the gas system's
operating ratio would be more favorable or only slightly higher
than the ratios of nine independents, and therefore concluded that
it "would be entering the realm of speculation at this time to
assume that rate increases would ensue from severance." 41 S.E.C.
at 899. [
Footnote 18]
The Court of Appeals rejected the comparison of these operating
ratios, again on the ground that such ratios fail to take account
of special characteristics of individual companies. The court
observed that, since all New England gas companies operated on
a
"small cushion . . . ,
Page 390 U. S. 219
[t]he significance of this is not negated by observing that
non-NEES companies in Massachusetts seem to be surviving, for the
focus must be on the specific characteristics of the NEES
companies, the only ones affected by the Commission's order."
376 F.2d at 113. The court further held
"irrelevant the comparison of operating ratios, since a business
may operate relatively efficiently, yet at a level too low to
attract investors."
376 F.2d at 114, n. 6. For the reasons already stated for our
disagreement with the Court of Appeals' view of the Commission's
use of other ratios, we disagree that this comparison was either
irrelevant or outside the limits of the Commission's administrative
discretion. The dissection and evaluation of an economic projection
is a function Congress committed to the Commission, not the courts.
A court may believe it would have done the job differently and
better; but judicial inquiry must be addressed to whether what the
Commission did is fatal to its ultimate conclusion that the holding
company failed to carry its burden of showing a loss of
"substantial" economics within the meaning of Clause A. In
assessing NEES' forecast of the need for rate increases because of
the projected loss of economics, it was proper for the Commission
to consider the performance of other Massachusetts gas companies
which were already operating independently. NEES was afforded every
opportunity to sustain its burden of showing that the separated gas
system would wither into critical health despite the contrary
inferences suggested by the comparison made by the Commission. It
cannot be a basis for finding error that the Commission found the
attempt unpersuasive, given the gas system's size, [
Footnote 19] and the
Page 390 U. S. 220
prognosis of efficiencies comparable to those achieved by the
independents. [
Footnote
20]
III
.
The Commission conceived that the projected loss of economics
would in some measure be offset by advantages realized by the
separated system under the direction of "a management solely
interested in and devoted to the gas operations. . . ." 41 S.E.C.
at 901. NEES, again supported by the Massachusetts Department of
Public Utilities, took the position that its operation of the
companies had already achieved all possible benefits of
interservice competition. The Commission found the argument
unpersuasive, relying again on a comparison with the nonaffiliated
Massachusetts gas companies. This was a comparison of the sales
performance of the gas companies under NEES management with the
sales performances of the independents. All seven of the comparable
independents showed substantially higher gas sales and revenues per
customer and lower costs to customers. [
Footnote 21] The Commission found unpersuasive
Page 390 U. S. 221
NEES' explanation that this was accounted for by the greater
residential growth potential of the areas serviced by the
independents. [
Footnote
22]
The Court of Appeals held that the test of "serious impairment"
under Clause A already took account of offsetting benefits to be
realized from separation, and therefore, "that done, the general
judgment has no independent significance in an individual case."
376 F.2d at 115-116. Whatever the merit of the general premise,
see NEES I, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S.
184-185, we understand the Commission's finding to have
been simply that the projected $1,100,000 loss of economics did
not, in fact, take into account any offsetting benefits on the
assumption that joint operation had already achieved the advantages
of independence.
See 41 S.E.C. at 900-901. The
Commission's conclusion that NEES' assumption was not proved has
support in the record, and the Court of Appeals was not justified
in rejecting it.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded to that court with direction to enter a judgment
affirming the Commission's order.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE Douglas and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case
[
Footnote 1]
49 Stat. 812, 15 U.S.C. § 79e.
[
Footnote 2]
At the time of this proceeding, the integrated electric utility
system consisted of seven electric utility companies serving parts
of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The
integrated gas utility system consisted of eight Massachusetts gas
companies. NEES also controlled a service company which provided
services for the whole NEES operation.
[
Footnote 3]
Section 11(b) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935,
49 Stat. 820, 15 U.S.C. § 79k(b), provides in pertinent
part:
"It shall be the duty of the Commission, as soon as practicable
after January 1, 1938: "
"(1) To require by order, after notice and opportunity for
hearing, that each registered holding company, and each subsidiary
company thereof, shall take such action as the Commission shall
find necessary to limit the operations of the holding company
system of which such company is a part to a single integrated
public-utility system . . . :
Provided, however, That the
Commission shall permit a registered holding company to continue to
control one or more additional integrated public-utility systems,
if, after notice and opportunity for hearing, it finds that --
"
"(A) Each of such additional systems cannot be operated as an
independent system without the loss of substantial economics which
can be secured by the retention of control by such holding company
of such system. . . ."
[
Footnote 4]
On remand, the Court of Appeals interpreted the "serious
impairment" standard as requiring proof only of "a condition
allowing survival but not on a sound or
healthful continuing'
basis," rather than proof that severance "will result in imminent
bankruptcy. . . ." 376 F.2d at 109. The Commission has not
contested this interpretation in this Court.
[
Footnote 5]
"By fostering competition between gas and electric utility
companies, the Act promotes what has been described as 'variegated
competition.'"
NEES I, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 184,
n. 15.
[
Footnote 6]
The following passage is from the court's opinion on remand:
"Even without the burden of proving likely demise, [NEES']
burden is, as the Court said, to meet 'a much more stringent test'
than that of a probable significant loss. But, if the standard to
be applied to [NEES] is stringent, so is the level of analysis and
expertise to be exercised by the Commission. We have, only after a
fresh review of all the evidence in the light of this most
stringent practical standard, concluded that the Commission's
opinion does not reveal that application of both reason and
experience to facts which merits endorsement as the responsible
exercise of expertise."
376 F.2d at 111.
[
Footnote 7]
This was the latest year for which audited financial statements
were available at the time of the hearing before the Commission. 41
S.E.C. at 889, n. 3.
[
Footnote 8]
All but one of the eight companies are located within 48 miles
of the division headquarters; one is 80 miles away.
[
Footnote 9]
"Nonaffiliated" or "independent" refers to gas companies not
having any electric affiliations and gas companies not jointly
operated with electric companies serving the same franchise
area.
[
Footnote 10]
Philadelphia Co., 28 S.E.C. 35, 50-52 (1948);
General Pub. Util. Corp., 32 S.E.C. 807, 837 (1951).
[
Footnote 11]
The losses would amount to: 4.8% of operating revenues; 6.0% of
operating revenue deductions (excluding federal income taxes);
23.3% of gross income (before federal income taxes); 29.9% of net
income (before taxes).
[
Footnote 12]
See Engineers Pub. Service Co., 12 S.E.C. 41, 55-61,
78-81 (1942);
North Amer. Co., 18 S.E.C. 611 (1945);
Philadelphia Co., 28 S.E.C. 35, 45-53 (1948);
General
Pub. Util. Corp., 32 S.E.C. 807, 814-815, 823-839 (1951);
Middle So. Util., Inc., 35 S.E.C. 1 (1953), 36 S.E.C. 383
(1955). The relevant financial data for each case are summarized in
an appendix to the Commission's opinion. 41 S.E.C. at 905.
[
Footnote 13]
Rate of return is the percentage of net operating income to the
rate base, which is fixed by a formula tied generally to the value
of capital assets. The source of the 4.1% figure appears to have
been the Court of Appeals. The 4.1% was apparently derived as
follows:
(a) $ 3,050,988 (1959 net oper. income after taxes)
----------- =64% rate
$47,723,162 (rate base) of return
(b) $ 3,050,988
-1,098,600 (projected losses)
-----------
$ 1,952,388 (est. net oper. income)
(c) $ 1,952,388
----------- = 4.1% rate of return
$47,723,162
However, the $1,100,000 projected loss would generate income tax
deductions of roughly 50%, increasing the numerator of fraction (c)
from $1,952,388 to $2,501,688, and the rate of return to 5.2%. The
NEES brief relies on the 4.1% figure, but NEES has not challenged
the Commission's recalculation.
The 1959 rates of return for the comparable nonaffiliated
Massachusetts companies were as follows:
Percent
Berkshire Gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2
Brockton-Taunton Gas. . . . . . . . . . 6.1
Fall River Gas. . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.2
Haverhill Gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.8
Lowell Gas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.9
Springfield Gas . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.4
Worcester Gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.5
(Resp. Ex. 117; R. 1436.)
[
Footnote 14]
Although the parties are in dispute as to the validity of some
of the data drawn from the previous cases, we do not consider it
necessary to become involved in that controversy. Suffice it to say
that we do not think the Commission, in looking to the data for
guidance, exceeded the bounds of reason or administrative
discretion.
[
Footnote 15]
Gas to New England was piped all the way from Texas, whereas oil
was shipped in by tanker. NEES estimated the average home heating
cost to be $166 for gas, $173 for oil, and it was in residential
space heating that NEES found its chief market.
[
Footnote 16]
NEES calculated the composite rate of return for its gas system
at 6.6% for 1958 and 6.4% for 1959. (Resp. Ex. 114; R. 1431.) The
average for seven comparable independents was 6.3% in 1958 and 5.9%
in 1959. (Resp. Ex. 117; R. 1436.)
[
Footnote 17]
NEES cites as prime evidence in this regard the testimony of
Robert Cahal, an Ebasco marketing consultant who had to some extent
analyzed the marketing conditions NEES faced. The substance of his
testimony was that (a) gas and oil are highly competitive in the
State, with oil being well entrenched in many areas, so that the
major source of growth has to be in new residence construction; (b)
in Massachusetts, growth is in the suburbs, with towns proper being
relatively stagnant; (c) gas companies are limited by their
franchise area, prisoners of the characteristics of their
particular communities; (d) the independents are not necessarily
comparable with NEES, because they may be in areas of higher
growth; (e) independents having such areas are Haverhill, Lowell,
Springfield, Worcester, Brockton-Taunton; all of them having growth
greater (but unspecified as to degree) than any NEES gas company
except Norwood.
The Commission noted, without comment, that the population
increase in NEES' franchise areas between 1950 and 1960 was only
11%, as compared with 18% in the areas of seven independents. 41
S.E.C. at 899, n. 23.
[
Footnote 18]
The operating ratio is
"the percentage of total operating revenue deductions (other
than depreciation, amortization of conversion costs, and Federal
income taxes) to total operating revenues."
41 S.E.C. at 899, n. 25. The ratio
"affords a measure for determining the efficiency with which the
enterprise is conducted, and, while its value is greater in
comparing the year to year trend, it has a limited use in comparing
very similar enterprises."
Moody's Public Utility Manual ix (1967). NEES' ratio was fixed
at 76.41% and compared with the composite ratio of nine
independents of 79.14%, as well as their median and mean ratios of
74.87% and 76.35%, respectively. Individual ratios are cited at 41
S.E.C. at 899, n. 26.
[
Footnote 19]
The Commission may properly regard size of operation to be a
relevant factor. One of Congress' concerns in providing the
exception involved here was to protect small companies likely to
fail if separated from the parent holding company.
Cf. NEES
I, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 181;
North Amer. Co. v. SEC, 327 U. S. 686,
327 U. S. 697.
See also H.R.Rep. No.1903, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 68-71;
S.Doc. No. 92, 70th Cong., 1st Sess., Pt. 72-A, at 831, 835. And
NEES' size, especially given its relatively compact franchise area,
is some indication of its competitive position.
[
Footnote 20]
See n 18,
supra, and accompanying text.
[
Footnote 21]
The breakdown was as follows:
1958 -- NEES Indep.
Sales, mcf/cust. . . . . . . . . . . . . 44.2 78.8
Revenues, cust . . . . . . . . . . . . . $95.44 $135.19
Cost to customers, mcf . . . . . . . . . $2.16 $1.72
1959 --
Sales, mcf/cust. . . . . . . . . . . . . 51.5 83.7
Revenues, cust. . . . . . . . . . . . . $104.49 $142.10
Cost to customers, mcf . . . . . . . . . $2.03 $1.70
Equivalent data for the Norwood Gas Company, the NEES subsidiary
asserted to have growth potential comparable to the independents,
see n 17,
supra, were as follows (1958 and 1959 figures): Sales --
51.8 and 60.4 mcf/customer; Revenues -- $112.59 and
$125.66/customer; Cost to customers -- $2.17 and $2.08/mcf. 41
S.E.C. at 901, nn. 29-30.
See R. 1446-1447, 1449-1450.
[
Footnote 22]
"[N]o specific demonstration of the existence or extent of such
a causal relation was presented." 41 S.E.C. at 901.
See
also n 21,
supra.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART Jolns,
concurring.
Given the earlier decision of the Court in this case,
SEC v.
New England Electric System, 384 U. S. 176,
which I continue to believe wrongly construed the statute but by
which I consider myself bound, I join today's opinion of the
Court.