116 Misc. 595 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1921
The defendant is a wafer company organized in 1893 under the Transportation Corporations Law, and supplying water to the inhabitants of certain sections of Queens and an adjoining county. In
I do not think the motion should be granted. Plaintiff contends: First, that the increased rates are illegal and void because they have never been permitted or approved by the commissioner of water supply, gas and electricity. Such approval, he claims, is required by section 472 of the charter. Second, that such rates are illegal and void because they would permit an excessive and unreasonable return upon defendant’s investment; and, Third, that said increased rates are in excess of the reasonable value of the service rendered by the defendant to its consumers.
It has been decided in this court that section 472 of the charter, in so far as it authorized the commissioner arbitrarily to determine the rates to be charged by the defendant, is unconstitutional because violative of the due process of law provision of the Constitution. See City of New York v. Citizens Water Supply Company, N. Y. L. J. Aug. 19, 1921. This section does not provide for a hearing upon notice, with opportunity to offer proof. Counsel for the plaintiff suggests that possibly such provision may' be implied for the purpose of giving the section constitutional validity, but it seems to me that provisions of this character, intended to secure to the individual due process of law, should find positive expression in any act which purports to divest the individual of rights ordinarily incident to private ownership. I do not think that the right of the individual to such procedure as will secure him in his constitutional rights should exist in inference and implication only, or be laboriously spelled from meager, uncertain and. .inadequate phraseology. A broad discretion in details of procedure may well be vested in the admin
Plaintiff presents tables of statistics relating to the capital investment of defendant, the annual revenues received from all sources for preceding years and showing the increase per year over each preceding year both in amount and per cent. The purpose of these figures is to show that the increased rate would produce an “ excessive and' unreasonable ” return upon defendant’s actual investment. Defendant denies this and gives figures tending to show that its probable return for the ensuing year at the increased rates will not yield an excessive or unreasonable profit upon its investment. Of course this question cannot be decided upon affidavits but the various phases of it should be left to the trial.
In paragraph 11 of the complaint, plaintiff alleges that the increased charges are beyond the reasonable
Motion denied.