These consolidated cases involve the validity of rates established for two public utilities by the Illinois Commerce Commission. The primary issue concerns the elements used by the Commerce Commission in establishing the rate base of each utility. The order of the Commission in each case rejected the “fair value” concept as the appropriate method of determining the rate base
Section 30 of the Public Utilities Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1975, ch. 111 2/3, par. 30) grants to the Commission the power “to ascertain the value of the property” of a public utility. Sеction 32 of the Act requires that all the rates received by the utility “shall be just and reasonable.” Section 36 of the Act provides that the utility is entitled to a “reasonable return on the value of the property of said public utility as found by the Commission.” This court, in a series of cases beginning almost 60 years ago, has consistently interpreted “value” in the statute to mean “fair value” and not “original cost.”
In State Public Utilities Com. ex rel. City of Springfield v. Springfield Gas & Electric Co. (1919),
“The basis of all calculations as to the reasonableness of rates to be charged by a corporation maintaining a public utility under legislative sanction must be the fair value of the property being used by it for the convenience of the public, and in order to ascertain that value the original cost of construction, the amount expended in permanent improvements, the present cost of construction, the probable earning capacity of the property under the particular rates prescribed by statute, and the sum required to meet operating expenses, are all matters for сonsideration and are to be given such weight as may be just and right in each case.” (State PublicUtilities Com. ex rel. City of Springfield v. Springfield Gas & Electric Co. (1919), 291 Ill. 209 , 219.)
In Springfield Gas the contention was that value for rate-making purposes should be determined by the cost of reproduction new, less depreciation. This court rejected that contention and adopted the fair-value test, stating:
“Therefore it cannot be laid down as a rule without qualifications that cost of reproduction new, less depreciation, is the only basis of valuation for rate-making purposes. It is equally true that the original cost of construction, less depreciation, cannot be held to be the only proper basis for determination of valuation for rate-making purposes. *** [E] very element having any bearing on the situation must be considered in the investigation and then sound business judgment applied to the determination of a valuation that is fair and just to the consumer and the utility.” State Public Utilities Com. ex rel. City of Springfield v. Springfield Gas & Electric Co. (1919),291 Ill. 209 , 222.
Smyth v. Ames (1898),
Though the Illinois court decided Springfield Gas well before the onset of the criticism of Smyth v. Ames in the cases cited above, and before Mr. Justice Brandéis suggested the prudent-capital-investment concept in his concurrence in Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., this court has adhered to the fair-value approach despite the demise of Smyth v. Ames in the Federal courts. In Peoples Gas
In Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1953),
In City of Chicago v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1954),
“[T]he city’s [city of Chicago] argument consists, for the most part, in an attack upon the portion of our former opinion which adhered to the rule that the rates of this utility must earn a return upon the present value rather than on the original cost of its property.” (City of Chicago v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1954),4 Ill. 2d 554 , 557-58.)
The city relied upon Utah Power & Light Co. v. Public Service Com. (1944),
“It will suffice to say that the law of the State of Utah as expounded in that opinion does not comport with the law of the State of Illinois as shown by the opinions of this court. The Supreme Court of Utah held in substance, in that case, that all previous decisions of that court and of the Public Service Commission of Utah applying the present value rule in utility rate cases had been based wholly upon a construction of the due process clause of the Federal constitution, and not in any degree upon an interpretation of the statute of Utah creating the commission. It is not so in Illinois. For many years, this court has ruled that it is thе duty of the Illinois Commerce Commission and its predecessor commissions, under the Public Utilities Act of this State, to allow a proper return upon the present fair value of utility property. In the previous opinion in this case [Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1953),414 Ill. 275 ], we referred tothe leading case of Public Utilities Com. v. Springfield Gas and Electric Co. 291 Ill. 209 , and said (414 Ill. at pp. 288-289): ‘In construing the statute this court held that the Commission must use a rate base which represents the present fair value of the utility property ***.’ ” (Emphasis was added in City of Chicago v. Illinois Commerce Com.) (City of Chicago v. Illinois Commerсe Com. (1954),4 Ill. 2d 554 , 558.)
This court continued, stating:
“Though some jurisdictions have tended to vacillate on the question of the meaning of the Federal constitution as applied to public utility rates, a like vacillation on the part of this court is not reflected in its construction of the Public Utilities Act of this State.” City of Chicago v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1954),4 Ill. 2d 554 , 558-59.
In City of Alton v. Commerce Com. (1960),
“It is well established in Illinois that the utility is entitled to a reasonable overall return on the fair value of its property, not the original cost. This provides a flexible rate-making standard which is equally applicable in periods of rising and falling price levels. [Citation.] It would be inconsistent to judge the overall return on the basis of fair value but judge the return accruing to common shareholders on the basis of a par value which isessentially original cost. The significant figure is the rate of return on common stock valued at fair value.” City of Alton v. Commerce Com. (1960), 19 Ill. 2d 76 , 86-87.
In Village of Milford v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1960),
“While we do not approve so-called ‘original cost’ rate base, the commission properly gave it consideration in connection with ‘reproduction cost’ in determining fair value. There was evidence that the present cost would, for all practical purposes, be substantially the same as original cost because the plant was newly built аt current prices and only a small per cent of the original plant, with perhaps a higher reproduction cost, was retained.” Village of Milford v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1960),20 Ill. 2d 556 , 562.
Finally, in City of Chicago v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1966),
The legislature has not voiced disapproval of this court’s interpretation of the Act. In 1921 the Public Utilities Act of 1913 was repealed by the Public Utilities Act of 1921, which reenactеd the general regulatory provisions of the former act in substantially the same form. The 1921 act has been amended on numerous occasions. (See J. Mueller, Origin and Development of Public Utility Regulation in Illinois, Ill. Ann. Stat., ch. 111 2/3, at xii-xiii 8c n.25 (principal amendments listed).) As noted by this court in Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1953),
Those who urge the approval of the Commission’s orders in these consolidated cases argue that we should not be concerned with the methodology but only with the end result. In other words, they argue that if the method used by the Commission produces the statutory requirement of a reasonable return, the court cannot be concerned with the method adopted by the Commission to achieve that result. They say that whether it followed the fair-value method or the original-cost method of establishing the rate base is a matter of discretion vested in the Commission. The proponents of the Commission orders, in support of this argument, rely upon Federal Power Com. v. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. and Federal Power Com. v. Hope Natural Gas Co. This court rejected a similar argument in City of Alton v. Illinois Commerce Com., where it stated:
“The Commission objects particularly to setting aside its order because of purported errors in computing reproduction value less depreciation when the final fair value determination is not challenged as unreasonable. It argues that if the final determination is reasonable the courts should not inquire into the separate elements of value which are considered in reaching that finding. This position ignores the right of the parties and the public not just to a reasonable determination but rather to a determination which arises from sound and lawful analysis of the problems presented. Without power to review the intermediate steps in the administrative decision-making process, effective judicial review would be extremely difficult if not impossible. Neither the statute nor this court’s decisions inthe rate regulation field indicate that such a result is intended. This court has not confined its review to the Commission’s final order but rather, when called upon to do so and with rеspect for the Commission’s expert judgment, it has reviewed the elements of value considered by the Commission in computing present fair value.” City of Alton v. Commerce Com. (1960), 19 Ill. 2d 76 , 80-81.
The proponents of the Commission’s orders have presented two totally inconsistent arguments. The first argues that the Commission complied with a fair-value standard. The later argument urges this court to abandon its previous adoption of the fair-value method and to accept the original-cost method of determining rate base.
The first argument contends that in these cases the Commission, in fixing the rate base, complied with the previous holdings of this court which have held that the fair value and not original cost was the proper rate-base method. They argue that the Commission did, in fact, consider evidence of reproduction costs as required by our cases and rejected it, finding that the evidence of original cost was more reliable in fixing the fair-value rate base. This argument is not sound. The concept of fair value holds that it is the value of the utility’s property devoted to public service upon which the reasonable rate must be returned. It is a value concept and not a cost concept. Stating it briefly, a cost rate base reflects the amount of invested capital, whereas a value rate basis reflects the value of assets which the utility has devoted to serving the public. (See J. Bonbright, Principles of Public Utility Rates 161, 224 (1961).) One is a property approach; the other is a fund approach. (See Webb, Utility Rate Base Valuation In An Inflationary Economy, 28 Baylor L. Rev. 823, 840 (1976).) This is the distinction which Mr. Justice Brandéis made in his concurring opinion in Southwestern Bell
“Fair value” is a highly technical term of art. It is not diametrically opposed to original cost. In determining fair value, original cost and reproduction cost are but two of the several elements that must be considered. Neither alone constitutes the measure of fair value. Just as this court has rejected original cost, less depreciation, as determinative of fair value, it has also rejected as the measure of fair value reproduction cost new, less depreciation. (See the opinions of the court cited above.) Thus, the contention of the Commission and the intervenors that in fixing the rate base the Commission complied with the previous holdings of this court by “considering” the reproduction-cost evidence and rejecting it, and computing the fair-value rate base on original cost is unsound in fact and in theory. It has not set a fair-value rate base. It has instead set an original-cost rate base. It is not the reproduction-cost evidence which the Commission rejected. It is the fair-value method of determining the rate base which was rejected in favor of the original cost.
In 1973 the Illinois Commerce Commission, in a rate case entitled In re Central Illinois Public Service Company, No. 57300 (Illinois Commerce Commission 1973), Util. L. Rep., State (C.C.H.) par. 21900 (1973), acknowledged that Illinois is a State that still uses the “fair value” method of valuing property of utilities in the determinination of the rate base upon which a reasonable return is to be computed. The Commission concluded, however, that in its judgment the “original cost” method best accomplishes the obligations of the Commission. It therefore rejected the “fair value” method and adopted the “original cost” method. In both of the cases now before this court
The secоnd argument advanced by the Commission’s proponents urges us to abandon the fair-value rate-base method and to adopt the original-cost rate-base method. The superiority of the latter method has been argued at length. We have also been reminded in the briefs and in oral argument that 38 other jurisdictions now follow the original-cost method.
The dispute concerning the fair-value method as against the original-cost method has been described as the “ ‘most widely disputed legal issue in the history of American public utility regulation’.” (1 A. Priest, Principles of Public Utility Regulation 166 (1969).) Although it is apparent that a majority of the jurisdictions use the original-cost method, Professor Priest has observed that the States still following the fair-value method “are, in the aggregate, probably more significant commercially than their original cost sisters.” 1 A. Priest, Principles of Public Utility Regulation 166 (1969).
We need not in this opinion enter into this rate controversy and present the relative merits of the two methods; nor need we speculate which of the two methods we would accept were we writing on a clean slate. The previous decisions of this court, which we have set out at length above, dеmonstrate that our statute has been consistently construed as requiring that the reasonable return to the utility be based on the fair value of its property. Springfield Gas placed this construction on our 1913 act. The act of 1921 repealed the 1913 act but reenacted a substantial portion of its regulatory provisions.
It is well established that the reenactment of a statute which has been judicially construed is in effect an adoption of that construction by the legislature unless a contrary intent appears. (Stryker v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. (1978),
Although it has been argued that mere inaction by the legislature following a judicial construction does not of itself indicate acquiescence (see R. Dickerson, The Interpretation and Application of Statutes 255 (1975)), the repeated restatement -by this court of the statutory interpretation over an extended period of time strengthens the presumption of acquiescence in the face of inaсtion by the legislature. (See, e.g., Schaefer, Precedent and Policy, 34 U. Chi. L. Rev. 3, 11 (1966).) When we also consider the reenactment of the Act and the several amendments to it without a suggestion of disagreement with this construction, inaction by the legislature strongly suggests agreement. Under these facts it would appear to be an
As conclusive as we feel stare decisis is in the determination of this case, we do not view the rule as being absolute and without exception in all cases where statutes have been construed by the courts. The United States Supreme Court has delineated several areas where prior judicial statutory constructions should not be controlling. (See Monell v. Department of Social Services (1978),
Union Electric Company is a utility engaged in the business of generating and supplying electric energy in Missouri, Illinois and Iowa. Approximately 90% of its customers are in Missouri and approximately 10% in Illinois, with only a small number being in Iowa. In 1975 the utility filed in both Illinois and Missouri proposals for general rate increases. Throughout the year of 1975 hearings were held before the Illinois Commerce Commission. Briefs were filed on behalf of all parties by December 10, 1975, and oral argument was held before the Commission December 16, 1975. The Missouri Commission entered its order on the utility’s proposed rate increase in that State on December 22, 1975. The rates filed by Union Electric in compliance with the Missouri order were filed by the Illinois Commerce Commission’s engineering staff in this proceeding, and the schedule was admitted into evidence by the Commission as a “late-filed exhibit.”The order entered by the Illinois Commerce Commission directed that Union Electric file rate schedules containing the rates set out in an appendix to the order. These rates coincided with those filed pursuant to the Missouri order. In its order the Illinois Commerce Commission stated:
“Under traditional rate-making procedures, this Commission would approve rates and tariffs which would yield an acceptable rate of return on the value of the utilities property used and useful in serving Illinois rate payers. The peculiar circumstances of this utility’s operations in Illinois and Missouri, however, render such consideration impossible in this instance without imposing unjust and unreasonable discriminationatory rates on Illinois rate payers.”
Section 36 of the Public Utilities Act requires that the rates set or approved by the Commission be such as to provide a reasonable rate of return on the value of the property of the utility as found by the Commission. There is no authority given to the Commission to defer to the judgment of a commission of another State which may have established or approved rates for users of a utility in that State lower than those proposed by the same utility for its service in Illinois. The sole power of the Commission stems from the statute, and it has power and jurisdiction only to determine facts and make orders concerning the matters specified in the statute. (Lowden v. Illinois Commerce Com. (1941),
For the reasons stated herein, the judgments of the appellate court are reversed, the judgments of the circuit courts are affirmed, and the causes are remanded to the Illinois Commerce Commission for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Appellate court reversed; circuit courts affirmed; cause remanded, with directions.
