278 F. 242 | N.D. Ga. | 1922
By legislative act of February 16, 1856 (Laws Ga. 1855-56, p. 420), Atlanta Gaslight Company was granted a perpetual charter, with a franchise to make and sell gas for lighting purposes, in the city of Atlanta, and to lay its pipes and apparatus in the streets, alleys, and public grounds therein. By Act October 14, 1889 (Laws Ga. 1889, p. 1398), the franchise was extended to the furnishing of gas and electricity for all advantageous? uses. No monopoly was granted, but one in fact exists. Many years since, the gas company leased its property and franchises to the Georgia Railway & Power Company, which has since operated them. This company voluntarily established a rate based on $1 per 1,000 feet, which was used until November 1, 1918, when, on application to the Georgia Railroad Commission, which by law has authority to fix maximum rates for gas and other public utility companies, the rate was raised to $1.15. A further raise was granted to a base rate of $1.90 in February, 1921. 'Phis rate was reduced to $1.65, effective June 1, 1921; the reduction being acquiesced in by the companies. After citation to show cause why further reduction should not be made, and after full hearing, an order reducing the rate to $1.55 was made, effective January 1, 1922. A valuation of the property used was made by the commission, aggregating $5,250,000; the value of the franchise being excluded, and likewise no allowance made for cost of financing. Estimation of net income was based largely on operations from July 1st to December 1st, under the $1.65 rate, and the rate fixed as just and reasonable was supposed to yield between 7 and 8 per cent, clear on 1he investment. An injunction against the enforcement of this order is sought now, before any operation under it, on the ground that it is an unconstitutional invasion of the property of the two companies.
“We do not sit as a general appellate board of revision for all rates and taxes. We stop with considering whether it clearly appears that the Constitution of the United States has been infringed, together with such collateral questions as may be incidental to our jurisdiction over that one.” San Diego Co. v. Jasper, 189 U. S. 439, 446, 23 Sup. Ct. 571, 47 L. Ed. 892.
That question depends here on the value of the private property taken for use, and the compensation probably to be afforded by the rate fixed, as compared with the net returns received in the locality by other investments of capital of comparable security and permanency.
As pointed out in Munn v. Illinois, this implication has existed from the earliest times, and did not first arise on the passage of regulatory legislation. The fixing of reasonable rates, where unreasonable ones have been charged, does not take the company’s franchise nor impair it, but permits and requires its use according to its true original terms. If higher rates have been charged, and profits made greater than the investment should naturally and ordinarily earn, so far from the
The absurdity of so regarding it becomes further evident in attempting to value it in rate fixing; for, if it has a value, as is usually stated, because it enables its possessor to earn larger returns than can be attributed to a fair return upon his physical and other intangible property, its value being the capitalization of this excess, a rate could never be reduced. To reduce it would be necessarily to decrease and impair the value of the franchise, because its earning power had been reduced. The owner of a public franchise, for which the grantee paid nothing, except what he invested in the business established under it, is not entitled to have the value of the franchise included in the estimate of his property taken for public use in fixing the reasonable rate to be charged under the franchise. If the franchise were purchased by a payment to the public other than in the investments in tKe business, such payment, of course, would be an additional investment to be regarded. Nor is the fact that the franchise is taxed as property material. Neither the fact nor the amount of taxation is of any consequence to the owner, because the tax paid is allowed as an expense of business and passed on to the customer.
As being to the contrary of this conclusion two cases having authority are cited — Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United States, 148 U. S. 312, 13 Sup. Ct. 622, 37 L. Ed. 463, and Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co., 212 U. S. 19, 29 Sup. Ct. 192, 53 L. Ed. 382. The other cases cited depend upon the former of these, or are a part of the litigation dealt with in the latter. In the Monongahela Case the United States sought to condemn a system of locks and dams of the company, which had been lawfully erected under a franchise to take tolls on the traiisjiortation upon the Monongahela river, without paying anything for the franchise, which was confessedly valuable beyond the value of the physical property. Against the contention that the franchise was not taken, but only the property, the court said (148 U. S. 343, 13 Sup. Ct. 633, 37 L. Ed. 463):
“But this franchise goes with the property, and the navigation company, which owns it. is deprived of it. The government takes it away from the company, whatever use it may make of it; and the question of just compensation is not determined by the value to the government which takes, but the value to the individual from whom the property is taken; and when by the taking of the tangible property the owner is actually deprived of the fran-*246 clrise to collect tolls, just compensation requires payment, not merely of the value of the tangible property itself, but also of that of the franchise of which he is deprived.”
The distinction between putting the owner of the franchise completely out of the business of using it, and the requiring him by regulation to use it according to its true terms, hardly needs pointing out. This case establishes that a franchise, when taken from the owner, is property that must be compensated for, but does not establish that it is taken when rates are properly regulated.
In the Consolidated Gas Co. Case several companies were consolidated under legislation which expressly recognized as part of the property contributed to the consolidation the value of the several franchises, specifically put at over $7,000,000, and which permitted this value to be represented by capital stock to that amount, which was issued and sold to the public and traded in for 20 years. The public, through its representative, the- Legislature, having thus dealt, under these circumstances it was held that this $7,000,000 of value must be included in the property on which a reasonable return was to be allowed, as otherwise this stock could have no income, a result evidently unjust. The court refused to permit any subsequent increase in the value of the franchise to be allowed, which ruling is equivalent to a declaration that franchise value is ordinarily not to be considered, for all values that are involved, it is well settled, must be allowed as of the time of making the rate. The court (212 U. S. on page 48, 29 Sup. Ct. 198 [53 L. Ed. 382]) was careful to say that the decision of the case was based upon its own peculiar facts, and not to be taken as a precedent in the valuation of franchises generally. The lower court, in further dealing with the case, trenchantly asserted the proposition that under ordinary circumstances franchise value should not be estimated in rate making. Consolidated Gas Co., v. Newton (D. C.) 267 Fed. 231, 240. We conclude that complainants are deprived of no constitutional right because their simple franchise to do business, which is all their charter gives them, even if it be perpetual as claimed, has not been valued as property whose use is taken from them. - .
3. The claim is made that the commission’s allowance of $441,629 over and above physical property values as “going concern value” was insufficient, and that $500,000 ought to be added as cost of original financing. We recognize that the cost of financing a modern enterprise is commonly considered a part of the organization expense and chargeable as a capital investment. It is equally true that, when this company was organized, such outlays were more often treated as expense and retired from profits. What expense was actually incurred here, or whether it was carried as investment or retired by charging rates to cover it as expense, we do not know. We do not think it appears that in refusing to recognize this supposed investment, or in fixing the “going concern value,” which of necessity is at last a matter of opinion, at a less sum than was claimed and sworn to, the commission violated any constitutional right of the complainants. The same is
6. We find on the whole that it does not clearly appear that: a fair return will not be afforded by the rate fixed upon the investment of the complainants. Taking as a basis of reasoning, as did the commission, the experience of the five months, July, August, September, October, and November, during which the $1.65 rate was effective, and excluding June, because its receipts may have been swollen from collections from the $1.90 rate through the prepay meters, we note a regular increase of consumption of about 10,000 M’s feet of gas each month. This was due either to increased consumption because the rate had been lowered, or else to the longer nights and colder weather.
Again, comparing the net profits of the five months, they rise regularly from $34,283.56 in July to $47,697.67 in November. Part of this increase may be due to increased efficiency, consequent on increased production; but most likely it is mostly due to the decreasing price of raw materials and of some labor shown in the record. We might fairly assume that the net profit of the last month is the fair index for the future; but let us, as in the case of consumption, add to the profit shown for the five months a profit equal to that of November as representing December, and we have $251,509.66 for this six months, or $503,019.32 for twelve months. .
This, however, being figured for a $1.65 rate, must have 10 cents per M on the estimated consumption of 1,242,328 M’s of gas, or $124,-232.80 deducted, giving $424,150.52 as the probable income per year under the new rate, with no allowance made for increased consumption or reduced cost of production that seem quite probable. This income yields 8 per cent, on $5,381,818, a value in excess of that found
The preliminary injunction should be refused.