45 A.D.2d 409 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1974
Petitioner, the Chenango and Unadilla Telephone Corporation (hereafter C & Ü), challenges the propriety of
' In 1968 petitioner was acquired by the Continental Telephone Company, a holding company, but continued as an active operating concern providing telephone service to some 36,000 customers in central up-State New York. In October of 1972 it filed a revised rate schedule with respondent designed to produce additional annual revenues of some $1,448,000. The commission suspended operation of the new rate schedule pending a hearing and determination concerning the reasonableness of the proposed increase and, thereafter, extended the suspension period to the full 10-month term authorized by law (Public Service Law, § 92, subd. 2). During the suspension period C & U unsuccessfully applied for a temporary rate increase. Although the hearing was completed in March of 1973, the commission did not render its decision on the matter, until September 13, 1973, shortly before the September 25, 1973 date upon which C & IPs proposed rates would otherwise have gone into effect by operation of law. By that decision respondent permitted C &. U to increase its rates so as to generate additional annual revenue of some $798,400 and obtain an allowed 8.7% over-all rate of return. C & U began collecting the new rate on October 25, 1973. By further order dated January 3, 1974, respondent directed cancellation of the increase previously granted and, after February 11, 1974 following interim stays, ■ petitioner reverted to charging its old rates. Respondent has not ordered C & U to make any refunds for the period in which it charged the increased rate.
C & U claims that the permitted increase of $798,400 was erroneously determined and inadequate because it was based, in part, on an arbitrary imputation of additional interest deductions. In excess of the actual amount claimed by petitioner, this sum was derived by allocating to C & U a higher portion of the system-wide debt expense of Continental Telephone Company and its affiliated operating companies. Petitioner maintains that this process has the effect of artificially understating the amount of Federal income taxes it will have to pay and correspondingly underestimates the revenue it will actually need to meet that liability. More importantly, C & U assails the cancellation of its initially permitted rate increase as beyond the power of the commission. Under the particular factual sequence presented, we agree.
The parties go to great lengths to characterize the September order increasing petitioner’s rates. Basically, C & TJ maintains that it was a final determination of its rates which could be reduced thereafter only upon a new and full hearing by the commission. On the other hand, the commission argues that its September order permitted nothing more than a temporary rate increase amenable to later modifications. At best, it would only permit petitioner to present material on the theory or application of the calculated additional intrastate toll's to its originally requested increase. In our opinion, the distinctions urged are more illusory than real. The issue presented actually reduces itself- to consideration of whether the commission may grant a partial rate increase upon a condition subsequent and, if so, whether the condition so imposed is unduly restrictive.
Subdivision 1 of section 97 of the Public Service Law clearly permits the commission, after a hearing on its own motion or complaint, to determine and fix reasonable and just maximum charges and rates for telephone service and, “ Any such change in [the pre-existing] rate * * * shall be upon such terms, conditions or safeguards as the commission may prescribe.” Therefore, it seems clear that respondent may validly condition
We turn then to an examination of the condition imposed in this proceeding. Since the parties expected C & IJ’s revenues to be enhanced by some undeterminable amount at the conclusion of related cases and since determination of those matters was reasonably anticipated within the foreseeable future, we cannot say that the commission acted arbitrarily in conditioning its grant of an increased rate in an amount to be later redetermined. It would have been folly to ignore the impact of those matters in this proceeding. Accordingly, the condition itself was inoffensive.
However, we further conclude that the commission’s action in canceling the entire increase by summary procedure was unwarranted. Although it might effect a rate decrease after a hearing (cf. Public Service Law, § 97, subd. 1; § 114), it cannot be ignored that in so doing the commission is bound to consider relevant financial data which is as current as feasible (cf. New York Tel. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm, of State of N. Y.,
Finally, we recognize the authority and responsibility of the commission to consider the tax consequences of an. affiliate’s interrelated dealings with its parent company (cf. Matter of General Tel. Co. v. Lundy, 17 N Y 2d 373; New York Tel. Co. v. Public Serv. Comm, of State of N. Y., supra). Yet in this proceeding we search the record in vain to find any evidence that C & U, in fact, received any benefit from manipulations of its capital structure by the parent concern. The difficulty lies not with the commission’s theory of consolidation, but with' its absence of proof to demonstrate that C & U was actually and inequitably advantaged by its relation with Continental Telephone Corporation. Accordingly, the determination that petitioner not be allowed its claimed tax deduction is without evidentiary support and cannot be permitted to stand.
The determinations should be annulled, and the matter remitted to the Public Service Commission for further proceed- ■ ings not inconsistent herewith, without costs.
Staley, Jr., J. P., Cooke, Sweeney and Reynolds, JJ., concur.
Determinations annulled, and matter remitted to the Public Service Commission for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith, without costs.