Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. Maltbie

300 N.Y. 196 | NY | 1949

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *199 This appeal, taken as of right by the Public Service Commission, requires review of a nonunanimous order of the Appellate Division, Third Department, annulling an order of the commission which fixed temporary rates for electricity supplied by the Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc., within the City of New York. In fixing temporary rates, the commission purported to act under the authority of section 114 of the Public Service Law, and whether or not it acted in conformity with that statute, is the question presented in this article 78 proceeding.

Section 114, added to the Public Service Law in 1934 (L. 1934, ch. 287), reads as follows:

"To facilitate prompt action by the commission in proceedings involving the reasonableness of the rates of any public utility and to avoid delay in any such rate proceeding, the commission is hereby authorized to require any public utility company to establish, provide and maintain continuing property *201 records, including a list or inventory of all of the physical property actually used in the public service, and to require any public utility company to keep its books, accounts and records in such manner as to show currently the original cost of said physical property and the reserves accumulated to provide for the retirement or replacement of said physical property.

"The commission may, in any such proceeding, brought either on its own motion or upon complaint, upon notice and after hearing, if it be of opinion that the public interest so requires, immediately fix, determine and prescribe temporary rates to be charged by said utility company pending the final determination of said rate proceeding. Said temporary rates so fixed, determined and prescribed shall be sufficient to provide a return of not less than five per centum upon the original cost, less accrued depreciation, of the physical property of said public utility company used and useful in the public service, and if the duly verified reports of said utility company to the commission do not show the original cost, less accrued depreciation, of said property, the commission may estimate said cost less depreciation and fix, determine and prescribe rates as hereinbefore provided.

"Temporary rates so fixed, determined and prescribed under this section shall be effective until the rates to be charged, received and collected by said utility company shall finally have been fixed, determined and prescribed. The commission is hereby authorized in any proceeding in which temporary rates are fixed, determined and prescribed under this section, to consider the effect of such rates in fixing, determining and prescribing rates to be thereafter charged and collected by said public utility company on final determination of the rate proceeding."

In May of 1946, the commission, on its own motion, instituted an investigation into all of the rates charged by the Consolidated Edison Company. Hearings begun in June, 1946, continued from time to time over a two and a half year period, until December, 1948. On the last day of the actual hearing, the chairman of the commission, who was presiding, announced that the commission was considering the adoption of a temporary rate order. Over the company's protest, the commission on December 30, 1948, entered the order, here *202 under review, that there be a 10% reduction in the total charges made to every consumer for electric service in specified service classifications. The temporary rates, expressly made effective "until final rates are determined", were calculated to accomplish a gross reduction to customers of $21,500,000, which, after adjustment for reduced taxes, is equivalent to a reduction of $12,427,000 in the company's net income.

On a prior appeal recently before us, we held that, in view of the recoupment provisions of section 114, the alleged failure of the commission to follow the requirements of the statute did not warrant an injunction against the enforcement of its order pending appeal, and we accordingly reversed an order of the Appellate Division that granted a stay. (See Matter ofConsolidated Edison Co. v. Maltbie, 299 N.Y. 172; see, also,Matter of Bronx Gas Elec. Co. v. Maltbie, 271 N.Y. 364.) As a result of that decision, the temporary rates went into operation as of January 10, 1949, and, although the Appellate Division thereafter annulled the commission's order, they continue in effect down to the present through stays of that court's decision pending our review. As indicated, following consideration of the commission's determination on the merits, the Appellate Division concluded that the commission had failed to comply with those requirements of section 114 which prescribe the manner of fixing temporary rates.

The company's threshold contention that, since the hearings on the rate investigation had been closed, the commission wasfunctus officio and, by that token, without power to make a temporary rate order, requires but short answer. (And see Matterof Consolidated Edison Co. v. Maltbie, supra, 299 N.Y. 172.) The legislature made it exceedingly clear that the commission is authorized to fix temporary rates "pending * * * final determination" of a permanent rate proceeding if the commission be "of opinion that the public interest so requires" (§ 114, 2d par.). The time limitation implicit in the statute is that temporary rates can be imposed only after a permanent rate proceeding has been commenced and before its final determination. As the legislature undoubtedly appreciated, the facts which make possible a temporary rate order — or the considerations which point to its propriety — may not be adduced or brought to the commission's attention *203 until the final stages of the proceeding, for such proceedings do not follow any set or prescribed course. And, beyond that, the legislature must also have realized, considerable time, even after the hearings are closed and the record made, may frequently be required for ultimate determination of the very complicated rate problem presented.

The principal contention advanced by the company is that the commission violated the mandate of the statute that the temporary rates be fixed and determined so as to yield a return of not less than 5% "upon the original cost, less accrued depreciation, of the physical property of said public utility company used and useful in the public service" (§ 114, 2d par.).

There is no question that the commission attempted to fix the rates in just the way described and, if the commission's method in ascertaining the amount of accrued depreciation be correct, there is also no question that the result complies with the requirements of the statute. In arriving at its result, the commission found the original cost of the property, as shown on the company's books, to be $813,000,000, from which it deducted $255,000,000, as representing accrued depreciation. This latter sum was made up of $160,000,000, which was the amount carried on the company's books as reserve for depreciation plus an additional sum of $95,000,000, which, an engineer employed by the commission testified, was the amount of the deficiency in that reserve. The inclusion of this additional sum is justified by the commission upon the ground that the books of the company "do not show" the amount of accrued depreciation and that, by reason thereof, the commission was authorized by the second paragraph of section 114 to proceed to make its own "estimate" of the accrued depreciation.

The Appellate Division held that the expression, "accrued depreciation", used in that second paragraph of section 114, refers "to the same thing" as the expression, "the reserves accumulated to provide for the retirement or replacement of said physical property", contained in the first paragraph; that the latter phrase relates to the amount actually carried by the company on its books for the purposes specified; and that, since the books did "show currently" the amount of such accumulated reserves — namely, $160,000,000 — the commission was *204 required to use that figure as the amount of "accrued depreciation" and could not undertake to make its own estimate.

In the literature of accounting, including public utility accounting, the term, "accrued depreciation", is by no means synonymous with the term, "reserves accumulated to provide for the retirement or replacement of * * * property." Phrased somewhat differently, the retirement reserve was — under the accounting practice followed generally by electric utility companies until recent years — designed primarily as a reserve for the equalization of retirements as required from time to time and was not intended to reflect or represent accrued depreciation. (See, e.g., Matter of New York Edison Co. v.Maltbie, 244 App. Div. 685, 691, affd. 271 N.Y. 103; see, also, National Association of Railroad and Utility Commissioners,Report of Committee on Depreciation [1943], pp. 4-7.) Certainly, in fixing permanent rates, the amount of accrued depreciation would have to be ascertained, and the reserves shown on the books, no matter how denominated, would not be controlling. (See, e.g., People ex rel. Consolidated Water Co. v. Maltbie, 275 N.Y. 357, 368-369, affg. 245 App. Div. 866;Matter of Long Island Lighting Co. v. Maltbie, 249 App. Div. 918; cf. Federal Power Comm. v. Hope Natural Gas Co.,320 U.S. 591, 597-598, 606-607.)

It is strongly urged, however, that whatever these terms — accrued depreciation and reserves accumulated for retirement or replacement of property — may mean in other contexts, to draw a distinction between them in the present context would be to distort the legislative design. In making a temporary rate order, expedition and promptness and the ready availability of factual information are prime requisites. In other words, the argument runs, the legislature determined that, in computing temporary rates, reliance should be placed only upon the facts and figures readily disclosed by the company's books, since they had at least the virtue of definiteness in contrast to the uncertainty that would stem from the traditional use of speculative and varying expert opinion. (See Matter of Bronx Gas Elec. Co. v.Maltbie, supra, 271 N.Y. 364, 372-373.)

These considerations are indeed weighty and may not be minimized. They would, in our view, be conclusive if the commission had the authority to require that the reserves *205 accumulated and shown on the books reflect correctly the accrued depreciation of the property. But we look in vain for such authorization. On the contrary, the commission has twice endeavored to prescribe the method of setting up depreciation reserves and twice have those attempts been held to be beyond the powers conferred upon the commission. (See Matter of New YorkEdison Co. v. Maltbie, supra, 271 N.Y. 103, affg. 244 App. Div. 685; People ex rel. New York Rys. Co. v. Public ServiceComm., 223 N.Y. 373; see, also, 1 Report of Commission on Revision of Public Service Commissions Law [1930], p. 128; cf.Matter of Rochester Gas Elec. Corp. v. Maltbie, 298 N.Y. 867. ) It is true that this court, in affirming the determination in the New York Edison Company case, pointed out that the commission could have elicited from the companies there involved the information sought "by directions of the Commission that would have been open to none of the objections to its present orders" (271 N.Y., at p. 112). The very objection that was there urged by the companies and upheld as valid by the court, however, was that the commission could not compel the companies to set up their reserves on the basis of such information.

The result, therefore, is that, although the commission is empowered to obtain the information as to the amount of accrued depreciation and to require that such information be preserved somewhere in the books and records of the company, the commission lacks the power to require the company to accumulate reserves in any amount other than as the company's own judgment dictates. The reserves accumulated, as "shown currently" on the books, pursuant to the first paragraph of section 114, would consequently continue to be the amount decided upon by the company in the exercise of its own unfettered judgment and not subject to correction by the commission.

It challenges reason to suppose that the legislature purposefully required that the commission accept willy-nilly the company's figures on depreciation regardless of how incorrect or inaccurate they might be. "If that were so", as Presiding Justice FOSTER stated in the course of his dissenting opinion below, "a utility company could put any figures on its report to indicate accrued depreciation and the commission would be obliged to accept them. Obviously, this cannot have been the *206 legislative intent". (275 App. Div. 475, 483.) While it may be impossible "completely to fathom the legislative mind" (Peopleex rel. New York Central H.R.R.R. Co. v. Public ServiceComm., 227 N.Y. 248, 257), it is safe to venture that the legislature could not have intended that the commission be treated merely as a clerk making purely mathematical computations. (Cf. United States v. Morgan, 313 U.S. 409,415.)

There is certainly nothing in either the express language or the general design of the statute which compels such a result. On the contrary, recognition can be given to the fact that the expressions in the two paragraphs — reserves accumulated and accrued depreciation — are obviously related without forcibly substituting the one for the other. Indeed, such substitution produces illogical and unintended consequences. For example, if the term, "accrued depreciation", were substituted for the phrase in the first paragraph of section 114, "reserves accumulated to provide for the retirement or replacement" of property, the paragraph would authorize the commission to require utility companies to show currently on their books the accrued depreciation of their property, contrary to the decision in theNew York Edison Company case (244 App. Div. 685, affd. 271 N.Y. 103). Similar consequences would follow if the phrase in the first paragraph were substituted for the term "accrued depreciation", contained in the second paragraph. The relationship between the two terms is given effect if it be presumed, as would ordinarily be the case, that, for the purposes of a temporary rate order, the reserves accumulated for retirement or replacement, as shown on the books, represent the accrued depreciation specified in the second paragraph — for such reserves unquestionably constitute some evidence of accrued depreciation. But this presumption is not made conclusive.

In a case such as the present, where a witness for the commission has testified that the figure for accrued depreciation is $95,000,000 more than the reserve accumulated by the company on its books, and a witness for the company itself has indicated that the actual depreciation exceeded the book reserve by some $40,000,000, the commission need not blind itself to the fact that the reserve so accumulated upon the company's books does not — as reasonable men would use the word — "show" the accrued depreciation. The commission was authorized, therefore, *207 to make an estimate of that item. In the light of the evidence adduced, it may not be said that its figure of $255,000,000 was without support. While other and variant figures were in the record, the courts will not and cannot assume that the commission failed to consider them in reaching its estimate, which concededly was not a final determination.

The construction which we have placed upon the statute impresses us as being more in accord with the legislative design, more reasonable and fair, than alternative interpretations. It gives full play to all of the statutory prescriptions and is consistent with all of its objectives. Expedition and promptness will be achieved, for reliance will continue to be placed upon the amount accumulated by the company rather than upon an estimate by the commission, except where the former is known to be misleading. In the latter case, substitution of a more accurate figure would seem to be demanded if meaning is to be given to the statutory direction that "the effect" of temporary rates is an element to be weighed and considered in determining permanent rates. (Public Service Law, § 114, 3d par.; see Matterof Bronx Gas Elec Co. v. Maltbie, supra, 271 N.Y. 364, 375.) The value of experience under temporary rates is naturally increased in proportion to the correspondence between the rate base for such temporary rates and the base for permanent rates. And, finally, if a temporary rate order is made within the framework of section 114 — as it here was — the recoupment provisions of that section apply to prevent any injustice or prejudice to the company even if the temporary rate fixed is later found to have been placed at too low an amount. (SeeMatter of Consolidated Edison Co. v. Maltbie, supra, 299 N.Y. 172; Matter of Bronx Gas Elec. Co. v. Maltbie, supra,271 N.Y. 364.)

The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the determination of the Public Service Commission confirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.

LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., LEWIS, DESMOND and BROMLEY, JJ., concur with FULD, J.; CONWAY and DYE, JJ., dissent and vote to affirm on the opinion of Justice SANTRY at the Appellate Division.

Order reversed, etc. [See 300 N.Y. 645.] *208

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