220 Va. 559 | Va. | 1979
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Stafford Service Corporation and Stafford Water Corporation (collectively, the Corporations) have appealed the order entered February 5, 1979, by the State Corporation Commission denying their applications for certificates of public convenience and necessity to provide sewerage and water service to a housing development in Stafford County.
On June 15, 1978, the Corporations filed with the Commission applications for approval of contracts for the conveyance to them by Staffordboro Enterprises (Staffordboro), a partnership, of sewerage and water distribution facilities. Thereafter, the Corporations filed their applications for certificates of convenience and necessity, in which they included proposed tariffs showing rates, rules and regulations. The applications were consolidated for public hearing held on January 31, 1979. Thirty-five homeowners in the housing development, represented by counsel, participated in the hearing as protestants, but Stafford County and the Aquia Sanitary District, which had previously intervened as protestants, withdrew their opposition before the hearing was commenced. There is no substantial conflict in the evidence.
Staffordboro initially developed a tract of approximately 400 acres. In conjunction with a corporation which subsequently went into bankruptcy, Staffordboro constructed a townhouse development of 67
B. Calvin Burns, who was one of two partners of Staffordboro, and was also the president and one of three stockholders of the Corporations, testified for the applicants. He conceded that Staffordboro owned only the water and sewerage distribution lines and the water storage tank within the development, and that the Sanitary District supplied service through the Staffordboro lines, but he asserted that if the applications were denied by the Commission, Staffordboro would have no choice but to terminate water and sewerage service by denying the Sanitary District the use of the lines.
N. C. Sharp, County Administrator of Stafford County, testifying as a witness for the Commission, stated that the Sanitary District owned all the necessary sewerage and water facilities except the distribution lines in the subdivision. He conceded that Stafford County was “not prepared financially” at that time to acquire the lines, but he asserted that the County was moving towards ownership of all sewerage and water facilities, and that the Sanitary District was willing to continue service to the development. Efforts to settle the controversy with Staffordboro in respect to service to the subdivision had been unsuccessful.
At the conclusion of Sharp’s testimony, the Commission ruled that the applications must be denied under the provisions of Code § 56-265.3
There is no disagreement as to the applicable legal principles. On appeal, the findings of the Commission are presumed to be just, reasonable, and correct. The Commission is given broad discretionary authority in determining whether a certificate of public convenience and necessity will be approved. Bralley-Willet v. Holtzman Oil, 216 Va. 888, 890-91, 223 S.E.2d 892, 895 (1976). Unless the Commission’s finding of fact is contrary to the evidence or without evidence to support it, we must accept the finding. Campbell County v. Appalachian Power Company, 216 Va. 93, 105, 215 S.E.2d 918, 927 (1975).
The principal contention of the Corporations is that the ruling of the Commission is contrary to the evidence because Staffordboro, rather than the Sanitary District, owns the distribution lines within the development. However, everything else required to provide water and sewerage service for the subdivision is owned by the Sanitary District. The water supply, the reservoir, the filtration plant, the water mains, the sewer mains, and the sewage disposal plant are maintained by the Sanitary District. Water and sewerage service has been provided by the Sanitary District, which has given assurances of its willingness to continue these services. Therefore, we hold that there is evidence to support the Commission’s finding that the Sanitary District was ready and able adequately to provide these services. It follows from this finding of fact that the Commission’s denial of certificates of convenience and necessity was mandated by the provisions of Code § 56-265.3.
Approval of the contracts for sale of the distribution facilities was sought by the Corporations on the theory that Staffordboro was an affiliated entity of the Corporations. Under Code § 56-77 certain contracts, including those for the purchase or sale of property between a public service company and “any affiliated interest”, must be filed with and approved by the Commission. The term “public service company”, however, is defined in Code § 56-76 as “every person, firm, corporation. . . other than a municipal corporation, now or hereafter engaged in business... as a public utility and subject to regulation as to rates and service by the State Corporation CommissionAn “affiliated interest”, within the meaning of the statute, is an entity closely identified, in ownership and control, with a public service company. As the Commission has denied the applications of the Corporations for certificates of convenience and necessity to operate as public utilities subject to Commission regulation and control, Staffordboro is not an “affiliated interest” within the purview of the statute, and the Commission had no jurisdiction over its contracts.
Finding no error in the rulings of the Commission, we will affirm the final order entered on February 5, 1979.
Affirmed.
Code § 56-265.3 provides in pertinent part:
* *
In such cases involving authority to furnish water or sewerage service, after formal hearing upon such notice to the public as the Commission may prescribe and after ascertaining that (1) there is a public need for the service in the area for which the