SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION v. NEW ENGLAND ELECTRIC SYSTEM ET AL.
No. 636
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 23, 1966. - Decided May 16, 1966.
384 U.S. 176
John R. Quarles argued the cause for respondents. With him on the brief were Richard B. Dunn, Richard W. Southgate and John J. Glessner III.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
New England Electric System (NEES) is a holding company registered under § 5 of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.1 Its holdings include both electric and gas utility properties. The electric companies serve retail customers in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The gas companies serve retail customers in Massachusetts alone.2 The Commission, proceeding under § 11 of the Act,3 held that the еlectric utility subsidiaries of NEES constituted an “integrated electric utility system” as defined in
By § 11 (b)(1)6 a holding company system is to be limited in operations by the Commission “to a single integrated public-utility system,”7 provided, however, that it may be permitted to control one or more addi-
On petition for review the Court of Appeals reversed on the ground that the Commission had misinterpreted the statutory phrase “loss of substantial economies.” 346 F. 2d 399. The court held that Clause (A) “called for a business judgment of what would be a significant loss, not for a finding of total loss of economy or efficiency” (346 F. 2d, at 406), and, believing that on this record and with the statute so interpreted there could have been a finding in favor of NEES, remanded the case to the Commission. We granted certiorari, 382 U. S. 953.
We agree with the Commission‘s reading of Clause (A) and remand the cause to the Court of Appeals so that
The requirement in § 11 of a “single integrated” system is the “very heart” of the Act.8 The retention of an “additiоnal” integrated system is decidedly the exception.9 As originally passed by the Senate, § 11 would have limited all registered holding companies to a single “geographically and economically integrated public-utility system.”10 The House version differed in that it permitted the Commission to make exceptions where limitation of the operations of the holding company was not found to be “in the public interest.”11 The version with which we deal emerged from a conference committee. The scope of the exception as it appears in the bill‘s final form was thus explained to the House:
“Section 11 of both bills [i. e., the Housе and Senate versions], therefore, authorizes the Securities and Exchange Commission to require a holding company to limit its control over operating utility companies to one integrated public-utility system.
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“The conference substitute meets the House desire to provide for further flexibility by the statement of additional definite and concrete circumstances under which exception should be made to the form of one integrated system. . . .
“The substitute, therefore, makes provision to meet the situation where a holding company can
show a real economic need on the part of additional integrated systems for permitting the holding company to keep these additional systems . . . .” H. R. Rep. No. 1903, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 70-71 . (Italics supplied.)
Additional light is shed on the purpose of § 11 by the remarks of Senator Wheeler, a member of the conference committee:
“Since both bills accepted the proposition that a holding company should normally be limited to one integrated system, my colleagues and I conceived it to be our task to find what concrete exceptions, if any, could be made to this rule that would satisfy the demand of the House for some greater flexibility. After considerable discussion the Senate conferees concluded that the furthest concession they could make would be to permit the Commission to allow a holding company to control more than one integrated system if [among other tests] the additional systems were in the same region as the principal system and were so small that they were incapable of independent economical operation . . . .” 79 Cong. Rec. 14479. (Italics supplied.)
As the Commission said in 1948:
“The legislative history of Section 11 (b)(1) indicates that it was the intent of Congress to create only a limited exception to the general rule confining holding companies to a single system, and that this exception was created to deal with the situation in which the proven inability of the additional system to stand by itself would result in substantial hardship to investors and consumers were its relationship with the holding company terminated.” Philadelphia Co., 28 S. E. C. 35, 46.
This suggests a much more stringent test than “a business judgment of what would be a significant loss,” to quote the Court of Appeals. 346 F. 2d, at 406. Promotion of “economy of management and operation” and “the integration and coordination of related operating properties” (§ 1 (b)(4),
“Although the NEES Gas Division handles sales and promotional activities and various other matters for the gas subsidiaries separately from the electric companies, final authority on all important matters rests in the top NEES management. The basic competitive position that exists between gas and electric utility service within thе same locality is affected by such vital management decisions as the amount of funds to be raised for or allocated to the expansion or promotion of each type of service.”15
Competitive advantages to be gained by a separation are difficult to forecast. The gains to competition might
The phrase “without the loss of substantial economies” is admittedly not crystal clear. But the Commission‘s construction seems to us to be well within the permissible range given to those who are charged with the task of giving an intricate statutory scheme practical sense and application. Power Reactor Co. v. Electricians, 367 U. S. 396, 408. And see Philadelphia Co. v. SEC, 177 F. 2d 720, 725.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART joins, dissenting.
The question before the Court is the meaning of the phrase “loss of substantial economies” as it appears in § 11 (b)(1) of the Public Utility Holding Company Aсt of 1935.1 The Court of Appeals ruled that the phrase
Inquiry naturally begins with the language of the Act, and with our reiterated principle that “the words of statutes . . . should be interpreted where possible in their ordinary, everyday senses.” Crane v. Commissioner, 331 U. S. 1, 6; Malat v. Riddell, 383 U. S. 569, 571. In this instancе plainly the normal meaning of “substantial economies” is a significant amount of money and not that amount, whatever its size, which guarantees corporate survival. The first reading would be given by lawyers and laymen alike automatically while the second could hardly be imagined without the prompting of persuasive legislative evidence. If Congress had intended the Court‘s test to govern, it could easily have said so in
If the natural reading produced some strange or arbitrary result there might be reason to hesitate; but in this case the literal reading makes excellent sense in serving the very rational and desirable end of financial economy. The Congress that passed the Aсt had been importantly concerned with the “intensification of economic power beyond the point of proved economies . . . .”
Legislative history and purpose, heavily relied on by the Court, furnish no reason for departing from the natural reading of the Act. There was very little direct explanation of the “substantial economies” provision in Congress; the majority opinion sets out in full the two important statements, one by the House Conference Committee (ante, pp. 180-181) and the other by Senator Wheeler (ante, p. 181).5 The Committee Report, highly authoritative but unilluminating, says merely that there must be “a real economic need” to justify retention of an additional system. Indisputably, substantial savings can be labeled a real economic need, the more so since Congress was sharply concerned with the lack of economic justification for many utility combinations. That the Committee‘s language is also compatible with the SEC‘s reading of “substantial economies” does no more than make that language a useless guidepost.
Senator Wheeler‘s statement, by contrast, does support, if indeed it is not the source of, thе SEC interpretation, and normally the view of a principal sponsor of
To support its construction of the “substantial economies” provision, the Court also relies on two general policies attributed to the Act as a whole. It is initially emphasized that the Act‘s overriding aim was to confine holding companies to a single integrated system while control of additional systems was to be “decidedly the exception” (ante, p. 180). The mild but misleading inference is that the “exception” is some minor, little noticed addendum, to be strictly construed. In truth, the original, more stringent version of § 11, popularly known as
Far more weight is given by the Court‘s opinion to the Act‘s supposed hostility toward common control of gas and electric utility systems with its danger of stifled competition. First of all, this hostility appears to be an illusion. The House and Senate Committees in identical language expressly stated that common ownership of competing forms of energy was “a field which is essentially a question of State policy“; the present § 8,
Furthermore, a constricted reading of the “substantial economies” provision is a quite unsuitable way of responding to the dangers in common ownership of competing types of utilities. The provision is equally intended to govern common control of two or more gas systems or two or more electric systems and, at least in the abstract, the Court‘s reading will hinder those arrangements as well though its rationale is irrelevant to them. If the SEC is prepared to show that freeing a gas system from control by an electric system will improve earnings by some amount, then this may be a legitimate offset to the losses that can be shown, and there is leeway for rough calculations and for estimates based on studying past separations. See Ritchie, Integration of Public Utility Holding Companies 143-147 (1954). But to dispense with proof and disregard the basic test of “substantial economies” is to undo Congress’ own careful compromise of the various conflicting policy interests.9
To conclude, I think it should be noted that the Court‘s departure from the statute is not just an abstract legal error but does immediate, tangible harm in a most practical sense. The annual losses which respondent has forecast for its gas system because of separation exceed
