100 N.Y.S. 513 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1906
This application for a writ of peremptory mandamus, formerly granted by me, now comes back for a reargument, after certain amendments have been made in the answer. The second defense has been so altered as to obviate the objection on which my former decision was placed, but, in my judgment, it is still insufficient for the purpose of defeating the motion. That defense is short and is as follows: “ The .Consolidated Gas Company of ¡New York owns a large amount of property necessarily invested in its business of manufacturing and supplying gas, upon the reasonable value of which it is entitled to earn an adequate return. If the said company should receive only 80 cents per thousand cubic feet for the gas supplied by it to its customers, which is the rate fixed by the said Act of 1905 referred to in the petition herein, the amount so received would exceed very little, if any, the actual reasonable cost to the said company of manufacturing and distributing such gas, and if the said company should, be compelled to supply gas to its customers at the said 80-eent rate it would receive little, if any, return upon the value of its investment in its said business, and would certainly not receive an adequate return upon the reasonable value of its said property invested in said business, and it would thus be deprived of its property without just compensation and without due process of law, contrary to the provisions of the constitution of the United States and of the State of ¡New York.” On behalf of the petitioner it is claimed that the allegation that the respondent would not receive an adequate return upon the reasonable value of its property invested in the business is a conclusion of law, and that the essential facts on which the conclusion rests are “.(1) the reasonable value of the property necessarily invested in the business; (2) the cost of manufacturing and distributing gas; (3) the amount of gas sold and distributed; (4) the dividend percentage at the dollar rate; (5) the dividend percentage at the 80-cent rate.”
Motion denied.