PENNSYLVANIA PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION, Appellant v. PENNSYLVANIA GAS AND WATER COMPANY, (WATER DIVISION), Appellee. CITY OF SCRANTON et al. v. PENNSYLVANIA GAS AND WATER COMPANY, (WATER DIVISION). PENNSYLVANIA PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION, Appellant, v. PENNSYLVANIA GAS AND WATER COMPANY-WATER DIVISION, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
Feb. 1, 1980.
Rearguments Denied Feb. 18 and 27, 1981.
424 A.2d 1213 | 326 Pa. 326
Office of Consumer Advocate and Pennsylvania Attorney General, Intervenors.
Chas. E. Thomas, D. Mark Thomas, Patricia Armstrong, Harrisburg, W. Boyd Hughes, James J. Ligi, Wm. J. Purcell, Scranton, for appellees.
Before EAGEN, C. J., and O‘BRIEN, ROBERTS, NIX, MANDERINO and LARSEN, JJ.
OPINIÓN
NIX, Justice.
These two appeals present this Court with the troublesome issue of the correct standard to be employed by the Public Utility Commission (PUC) in fulfilling its legislative mandate to “ascertain and fix the fair value of the whole or any part of the property of any public utility.” Act of May
The complex facts surrounding these appeals are fully set forth in the opinions of the Commonwealth Court.2 For our purposes, the following brief factual recitation is sufficient. The appeal at No. 35 May Term 1978 (PG&W I) concerns construction and improvement projects undertaken by the Pennsylvania Department of Highways that were anticipated to affect the water supply of the Pennsylvania Gas & Water Company (PG&W) within its Roaring Brook watershed area. An agreement was entered into between the Department and PG&W to remedy and minimize the adverse effect of this federally funded highway project on the turbidity and purity of the water derived from the watershed. This agreement provided that the Department would contribute to PG&W a sum in excess of $2.7 million toward the construction of a new dam, reservoir, and a 30-inch pipeline. The PUC rejected the attempt by PG&W to include this $2.7 million payment in its base for accounting and rate making purposes.3 The Commonwealth Court reversed the PUC on the ground that the exclusion of the $2.7 million payment from the rate base constituted a violation of the principles enunciated in Keystone Water Co. v. PUC, 19 Pa.Cmwlth. 292, 339 A.2d 873 (1975), affirmed by an equally divided Court, 477 Pa. 594, 385 A.2d 946 (1978). We granted the PUC‘s petition for allocatur.
1. The Appeal at No. 35 May Term, 1978
Before we discuss the legal and historical basis surrounding the “fair value” controversy, we think it proper to set forth the rationale employed by the PUC in support of its Order rejecting PG&W‘s attempt to include the state‘s $2.7 million payment in its base for accounting and rate making purposes:
For public utility accounting and rate making purposes we must reject respondent‘s contention. Property, which is used or useful in rendering a public utility service and which has been a part of a public utility‘s rate base is dedicated to a public use, and is impressed with a public trust. If (or the proceeds or accruals therefrom) is subject to regulation by the properly designated regulatory body and remains subject to that regulation until such time as that regulatory body duly finds it in the public interest to approve its release from public service. Such property must be regulated in the interest of the public no less than in the interest of the utility. Equities must be balanced and justice must be done to all concerned. Accordingly, when a utility suffers extraordinary losses in service value of utility property abandoned or otherwise retired from service, or suffers unforeseen damages to property which damages could not reasonably be anticipated, and where the utility has not otherwise recovered its investment, this
Commission can and, where equities require, does permit the utility to recover from the ratepayers, as a proper and necessary expense of rendering the public service, the necessary amount to make the utility whole. On the other hand, where, as here, the utility recovers an amount or sum as a result of compensation for particular property and the potential consequential injury to the service of the ratepayers for whom that property was dedicated to the public use, the Commission, where the equities dictate, may require that amount received by the utility to be treated, for public utility accounting and rate making purposes, in such manner as will place the utility and the ratepayers in the same position, insofar as reasonably possible, as they were before the extraordinary event or transaction which gave rise to the sum or amount in question. For rate making purposes, we cannot permit respondent to receive all the salutary effects of the agreement and pass them on to the stockholders as a windfall while passing on to the ratepayers only the increased rates that would become necessary had there been no agreement and contribution. Clearly, the payment in question resulted and stemmed from consideration of the property‘s dedication to public use as a water utility, and recognition of the potential injury to the interests and service of the water utility customers. In situations and circumstances such as this, the customers of a utility are in the nature of third party beneficiaries whose interest in the utility service must be protected. The essence of public utility regulation is the protection of the public and the assurance of adequate service to them at reasonable rates on the one hand, and, on the other, a fair opportunity to the utility to secure a reasonable rate and no windfall from such services. To reflect equitably and meaningfully the near restoration of, or equitable substitution for, the pre-agreement status quo, both the utility and its customers must be made whole insofar as reasonably possible.
In the case of water companies, the advantages which they have secured over the rest of the community have stemmed directly from their status as public corporations. White v. City of Meadville, 177 Pa. 643, 35 A. 695 (1896). For example, at various times, water companies have been vested with eminent domain taking powers which gave them the right to take streams6 and to acquire land to preserve their water supply from contamination.7 So, too, such rights as any water company enjoys to divert water for the purpose of supplying municipalities or other consumers are, because they exceed the common law rights of the riparian
In refusing to include the $2.7 million contribution made by the Commonwealth toward the capital construction costs of the reservoir and pipeline necessitated by the anticipated impact of the federally aided highway construction project in PG&W‘s rate base, the PUC in effect disallowed PG&W an addition to the original cost measure upon which the property in question was valued. In so doing, PG&W contends that the PUC contravened the controlling statutory norm requiring it “to ascertain and fix the fair value of the whole or any part of the property of any public utility.”
In construing the statutory norm of fair valuation, we must, of course, view that standard within the context of
The opinion in support of affirmance in Keystone did not deny the primacy of the “just and reasonable” standard or that it represented a delegation of policy-making powers to the PUC which are basically legislative in nature. That opinion, however, accepted the notion that the term “fair value” was intended to have a fixed meaning incorporating by reference the rule in Smyth v. Ames, as interpreted in Bluefield Water Works v. Public Service Commission,9 with respect to the weight of reproduction cost data in rate making. Keystone, 477 Pa. at 607-08, 385 A.2d at 953-54.
The legislative history of public utility regulation in this Commonwealth does not support this assertion. The 1913 Public Service Company Law which is the grandfather of
In any event, even assuming arguendo that the legislature intended to acquiesce in the “fair value” principle as enunciated in Smyth v. Ames, little comfort is thereby afforded to PG&W. The rule in Smyth v. Ames fixes the very broad constitutional boundaries within which the legislature may exercise or infer discretionary leeway in rate-making. As a leading commentator observed:
It is obvious that the instruction that is the essence of ‘fair value‘—to give the matters for consideration (principally original cost and reproduction cost) such weight as may be just and right—is not operational. It offers no criterion or rule to determine what is ‘just and right’ and, therefore, does not provide a method to ascertain a uniquely determinate value of the weight to be assigned to each of the ‘matters for consideration’ in a finding of
Properly understood, Smyth v. Ames speaks only to the outer boundaries beyond which, on the one hand, a regulator approaches an uncompensated eminent domain taking of investor property by valuing it below its original cost and, on the other hand, a regulator approaches an unlawful taxation of consumers under the guise of rate fixing by valuing the property in excess of its reproduction cost. Between these extremes, the question is one of policy for the regulatory body concerning which the judicial branch is not warranted in interposing economic theories. Unless the PUC‘s decision does not bear a real and substantial relationship to the regulatory objects sought to be obtained by it, that judgment must prevail. Gambone v. Commonwealth, 375 Pa. 547, 101 A.2d 634 (1954); Pennsylvania State Bd. of Pharmacy v. Pastor, 441 Pa. 186, 272 A.2d 487 (1971).
Thus, “fair value” as understood in Smyth v. Ames does not compel reversal of the PUC‘s determination either as a matter of statutory or constitutional law. In the instant case, the PUC duly considered the evidence proffered by PG&W as to the reproduction cost of the watershed properties but concluded that, under the circumstances of the particular case, the allowance of any addition to original cost figures for rate making purposes was not just and reasonable and that the 2.7 million dollar payment should be more appropriately treated as a “contribution,” as it was designated by the agreement between PG&W and the Department of Highways, rather than as an additional investment of capital. As we observed in an earlier case:
The ascertainment of the fair value of the property, for rate making purposes, is not a matter of formulas, but it is a matter which calls for the exercise of a sound and reasonable judgment upon a proper consideration of all relevant facts. The commission is not bound to adopt any
The error which the Commonwealth Court and the opinion in affirmance in Keystone fell into was the assumption of a constitutionally mandated nexus between the “fair value” standard and cost of reproduction figures. The unsoundness of this assumption is manifested in the fact that this Court denies that reproduction cost figures have any probative value for real property tax assessment purposes because of their hypothetical and speculative nature. Buhl Foundation v. Bd. of Property Assessment, 407 Pa. 567, 180 A.2d 900 (1962); U. S. Steel Corp. v. Bd. of Assessment & Rev. of Taxes, 422 Pa. 463, 223 A.2d 92 (1966). Reproduction cost figures are clearly admissible in PUC proceedings but we see nothing in the “fair value” rule that requires, either as a statutory or constitutional mandate, that they must be accepted in whole or in part for valuation purposes. We, therefore, repudiate any intimations in these decisions or in prior case law that has the effect of suggesting a constitu-
To follow the Commonwealth Court and the opinion in affirmance in Keystone down the path of attempting to apply a constitutional taking analysis to valuations of property by the PUC which do not go beyond original cost, is unsound both in principal and as a matter of judicial policy.
In the former respect, it commits the judicial branch to a constitutionally grounded review of all rate requests in which the PUC has on an item by item basis failed to go beyond original cost valuation. In the case at bar, PG&W sought to include a replacement cost figure in toto in the rate base because of the fortuity that the property in question was subject to taking for eminent domain purposes. But if PG&W‘s entitlement is constitutionally founded, then it must be accorded revaluation at reproduction cost as to every item on its property concerning which it requests revaluation since the maturing of its constitutional rights cannot turn on the mere happenstance of a public taking. It is no answer to say that the PUC‘s accounting rules do not permit such a result since the accounting rules as creatures of statute cannot prevail against a constitutionally grounded right.
In the latter respect, the opinions commit us without either statutory or constitutional warrant to a slippery slope of judicial intervention into rate making whose limit we cannot now foresee. We can, call upon the experience of the United States Supreme Court with respect to judicial intervention in these matters as a guide. As Justice Stone warned in his dissenting opinion in West v. Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co., 295 U.S. 662, 689, 55 S.Ct. 894, 905, 79 L.Ed. 1640 (1935), “In assuming the task of determining judicially the present fair replacement value of the vast properties of public utilities, courts have been projected into the most speculative undertaking imposed upon them in the entire history of English jurisprudence.” It is a task which this Court refused to undertake in Ben Avon Boro, supra
A careful examination of the record in this case has led us to the conclusion that in the items wherein the Commonwealth Court differed from the PUC upon the questions presented to it, there was merely the substitution of the court‘s judgment for that of the Commission, rather than a determination that the order of the latter was unlawful.
Accordingly, we reverse the order of the Commonwealth Court below, and reinstate the order of the Public Utility Commission.
2. The Appeal at No. 278 January Term, 1978
As the preceding discussion has totally undercut the legal foundation for the Commonwealth Court‘s decision in this case, we reverse that court‘s order entered below. Based on our analysis of the arguments presented to this Court on the merits of the rate increase, we find that the order of the PUC is supported in law and by sufficient facts. Accordingly, we reinstate the order of the PUC entered below.
The orders of the Commonwealth Court are reversed and the orders of the Public Utility Commission are reinstated.
MANDERINO, J., did not participate in the decision of this case.
ROBERTS, J., joins the majority and filed a concurring opinion.
LARSEN, J., joins the majority and filed a concurring opinion.
The PUC is statutorily and constitutionally obliged to set “just and reasonable” rates and may, but is not required to, use cost of reproduction in the rate base. See Keystone Water Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 477 Pa. 594, 615-26, 385 A.2d 946, 957-63 (1978) (Opinion of Roberts, J., in Support of Reversal, joined by Eagen, C. J. & Nix, J.). I join the majority opinion which is in accord with the views expressed in the Opinion in Support of Reversal in Keystone Water, and I agree with the majority that the orders of the Commonwealth Court should be reversed and the orders of the PUC reinstated.
LARSEN, Justice, concurring.
I join in the majority opinion. Additionally, I would add that under no circumstances can a “windfall” or gift to a utility be included in a rate base.
