3 Pa. Commw. 184 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1971
Opinion by
This is an appeal from an order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) dated November 23, 1970, dismissing a complaint filed by the appellant, the Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Company (PST) against the Philadelphia Electric Company (PE), intervening appellee, alleging discrimination and preferential electric rates among customers to the detriment of PST. The complaint, as later twice amended, requested the PUC to fix, determine
Because both PTC and PST, in 1968 and 1970 respectively, had all of their assets acquired by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Association (SEPTA), a mass transit municipal authority, the practical intent of the owners of the stock (or what remains of the assets) of PST is to claim refunds for those electric rate sums of money which PST alleges were overcharged to it by virtue of the alleged discrimination and preferential treatment. To understand what the PUC (which becomes the appellee on appeal) determined in its adjudication dismissing the complaint of PST, it will be necessary to set forth certain pertinent factual background and a description of the various rate schedules involved.
PTC was a mass transit railway public utility. On October 1,1929, PE and PTC (formerly known as Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company) entered into an agreement whereby PTC agreed to cease generating its own electricity and to purchase its entire electric requirements from PE. Under the contract, PTC’s electric generating facilities were leased to PE. In return for PE investing in, and providing facilities to supply the entire requirements of PTC, the railway company
The three parts in the design of Former Rate T were: (1) The capacity charge was intended to recover the fixed costs on PE’s investment in facilities to serve any customers taking electric service under Former Rate T. It contained a minimum billing demand provision under a formula which required PTC to pay the capacity charge (expressed in money) based upon 64,880.4 kilowatts regardless of its actual demands during the month. (2) The energy charge was designed to recover PE’s operating costs at a designated sum of money per kilowatt hour for serving the electric energy to the customers taking service under Former Rate T. (3) The third part was a transmission and distribution investment charge (T & D charge), which was designed to recover for PE, on an annual basis, an amount equal to 13% per cent of all of the investments which PE made in facilities. required exclusively for service to PTC. Although written in terms of availability to anyone, there can be no question that Former Rate T was intended for only one customer, namely, PTC.
In 1936, PST was organized and became a customer of PE. PST was also a mass transit railway public utility. Its requirements for electric service were only one-tenth that of PTC. Although sendee to both PTC and PST was to be used for the same kind of customer with similar load factors and peak requirements, PST, because of its requirements, was not able to qualify for
During the years involved, all of the rate schedules mentioned in this opinion were properly filed, approved by the PUC, and made a matter of public record. After about 29 years of service under Rate Schedule HT, PST filed (on March 11, 1965) the original complaint against PE alleging that PE had improperly and arbitrarily excluded PST from the use of Former Rate T. In the complaint, PST demanded to be permitted to utilize Former Rate T. The record indicates that PE thereafter offered to charge PST for electric service under Former Rate T, but by virtue of the calculations made in applying PST’s receipt of energy to the Former Rate T formula (described above) PST realized that its monthly bill for electricity would be higher than had been charged under Rate Schedule HT. Therefore, on May 11, 1965, PST amended its complaint in which it alleged that the high billing demand, which was appropriate for PTC, made Former Rate T unavailable to PST and that therefore the rate schedule was discriminatory. Later, PE filed a supplement to its Rate T which became effective June 16, 1966, in which the rate schedule was changed from a three-part rate to a two-part rate. This Current Rate T had blocked capacity and energy charges and completely eliminated the T & D charge found in Former Rate T.
In its adjudication the PUC found that the separate classification of PTC under Former Rate T was proper, that the provisions of Rate T were appropriate for the special requirements of PTC, and that Rate HT as applied to PST yielded no more than a lawful return. It found further that PST was not in competition with PTC, that PST did not qualify under terms and conditions of the Former Rate T, and that PST paid no more than a reasonable rate of return for the service rendered to it under Rate HT. The PUC in its adjudication concluded that the service rendered to PTC and PST under the various rate schedules was not discriminatory nor was it preferential and that consequently PST was not entitled to any refund.
In a recent opinion of this Court in the case of York v. Pennsylvania PUC, 3 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 270, this Court set forth its scope of review in appeals from adjudications of the PUC. We said there:
“Section 1107 of the Public Utility Law, Act of May 28, 1937, P. L. 1053, as amended, 66 P.S. 1437, provides: 1 . . The order of the Commission shall not be vacated or set aside either in whole or in part, except
“Our authority to overrule an order of the Commission is limited. We may not disturb such an order except for errors of law, lack of evidence to support a finding, determination or order of the Commission, or a violation of constitutional rights. Clemmer v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 207 Pa. Superior Court, 388, 217 A. 2d 800 (1966). Likewise, we may not exercise our independent judgment on the record or resolve conflicting evidence. Pittsburgh Railways Company v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 198 Pa. Superior Court, 415, 182 A. 2d 80 (1962). Our inquiry is directed to whether there is substantial evidence to support the Commission’s action. Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad Company v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 170 Pa. Superior Court, 411, 85 A. 2d 646 (1952). Substantial evidence means such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. Pennsylvania State Board of Medical Education and Licensure v. Schireson, 360 Pa. 129, 61 A. 2d 343 (1948). Substantial evidence has also been said to mean evidence affording a substantial basis of fact from which a fact in issue can reasonably be inferred. Substantial evidence is synonymous with competent and relevant evidence having a rational probative force. In Philadelphia Suburban Water Company v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 425 Pa. 501, 229 A. 2d 748 (1967), it was held that in view of Section 1107 of the Public
The relevant provisions of the Public Utility Law, supra, with respect to rates and rate making are to be found in Article III of the Act. They are Section 301 (66 P.S. 1141) which provides that every rate shall be just and reasonable; Section 304 (66 P.S. 1144) which prohibits unreasonable preferences, while permitting reasonable classification; Sections 309 and 310 (66 P.S. 1149 and 1150) which permit the Commission to fix permanent or temporary rates if it finds that existing rates are unjust or unreasonable or unlawful; and Section 313 (66 P.S. 1153) which authorizes the Commission to order a refund to a complainant if it finds that the rates paid by the complainant Avere unjust or unreasonable or in violation of the Commission’s orders or rules, or if it finds that the rate paid by the complainant was in excess of the applicable rate contained in an existing and effective tariff.
Section 304, supra, states: “No public utility shall, as to rates, make or grant any unreasonable preference or advamtage to any person, corporation, or municipal corporation, or subject any person, corporation or municipal corporation to any unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage. No public utility shall establish or maintain any unreasonable difference as to rates, either as between localities or as between classes of service. Unless specially authorized by the commission, no public utility shall make, demand, or receive any greater rate in the aggregate for the transportation of passengers or property of the same class, or for the transmission
“This section of the statute [Section 304] like its predecessor, does not forbid reasonable classification of service or rates, and what is reasonable under the circumstances is primarily an administrative question for the Commission to decide. . . .
“The question of the reasonableness of rates and the difference between rates in their respective classes is an administrative or factual question wherein the findings of the Commission, if supported by competent evidence, will not be disturbed. . . .
“The function of this court on appeal is to determine whether there is error of law or lack of evidence to support the finding, determination, or order of the Commission. [Citing cases] On this record the Commission could properly find that the complainants had not sustained their burden of proof to show that the rates attacked were unreasonable or discriminatory. We may not substitute our judgment for that of the Commission on the reasonableness of the rate prescribed.” (Emphasis added)
In this case, the regulatory agency had, from the inception of the agreement between PTC and PE in 1929, approved the Former Rate T schedule as a proper cus
It is of no import that PST could not avail itself of Former Rate T, because it could not meet the minimum billing demand. As described hereinbefore, the minimum billing demand was designed for the purpose of permitting PE to recover certain of its fixed costs required to serve PTC. It would have been improper for the PUC to have reduced the minimum billing demand or eliminated it for the purpose of permitting PST to then take advantage of the lower energy charge, for that would have relieved PTC from its responsibility of paying for certain of the fixed costs incurred by PE for PTC and in all probability would have placed such unrecovered costs upon all other customers. The record clearly shows that PTC, on occasion, did not take sufficient quantities of electric energy to meet the
“The Public Utility Law provides that every rate made, demanded or received by any public utility shall be just and reasonable, and that there may be no unreasonable preference or prejudice to any customer. However, there can be no question but that a public utility company may establish reasonable customer groupings or classifications for rates. Section 301 of the Public Utility Law, Act of 1937, P. L. 1053, as amended (66 P.S. §1143) expressly provides: 1 . . Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to prohibit the establishment of reasonable zones or group systems or classifications of rates. . . .’
“There is no requirement that rates for different classes of service must be either uniform or equal or that they must be equally profitable. Differences in rates between classes of customers based on such cri
PST attempts to make a point that there was preferential treatment to PTC by virtue of the fact that the PUC permitted PE to combine the meter readings of the twenty-five different PTC delivery points throughout its system, which permitted PTC thereby to take advantage of the minimum monthly billing demand. It is interesting to note that PST does not find fault with combined billing, per se, for the obvious reason that PST found it advantageous to have combined billing for its three delivery points. In all of the cases cited by PST on this point, there are distinguishing facts. The cases say that where a utility permits combined billing to a customer for separate buildings or separate
PST also attempted to show a preferential treatment by virtue of the fact that some of the energy received by PTC was at a 25-cycle service, whereas all other service by PE’s customers was received at a 60-cycle service. Nowhere in the record did PST prove that this differential in cost of rendering 25-cycle service was not included in Former Rate T schedule. It is also interesting to note that PST’s expert witness admitted that certain of the facilities and service received by PST were more expensive to PE than its service to PTC. For instance, PST’s expert witness pointed out that some of the service to PTC was supplied without any transformation, which would tend to make such deliveries less expensive than deliveries to PST.
To carry PST’s argument to its logical conclusion, any customer, even a residential customer, whose load factor and peak periods would be comparable to PST’s, could make out a case for a separate rate schedule thereby eliminating the blocked capacity charges of the HT Rate schedule under which PST takes its electric service, and thereby attempt to prove that its electric bills are excessive and discriminatory. This would create utter chaos in the utility rate-making process.
Although it is of no controlling effect in this case, the Commission noted, and we likewise take notice, that
We hold that there is more than adequate substantial evidence in the record of this case to conclude that the PTIC did not abuse its discretion or commit an error of law. In view of this holding, it is not necessary for us to rule on the question of refunds. The Order of the PUC is hereby affirmed.
Although this opinion was applicable to a former statute regulating public utilities, the principles of law remain the same.
The record sets forth the Rate of Return on Net Plant and Working Capital for both PST and PTC under the rate schedules under which they took service for the years 1960 through 1964 as follows:
PST PTC
1960 4.10 2.72
1961 4.58 2.76
1962 4.89 3.29
1963 4.29 3.21
1964 5.36 3.82