DocketNumber: No. 25,389.
Judges: Martin
Filed Date: 7/1/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Demurrers to each of the four paragraphs of complaint were sustained, and judgment was rendered against the city upon its refusal to plead further. Error is assigned on the ruling upon the several demurrers. The theories of the several paragraphs of complaint are as follows:
Paragraph I. That the right to manage the electric light property and fix the rates to be charged is vested in the city by virtue of its inherent power as an independent body politic or by the right of local self-government, and that such rates cannot be controlled by the Legislature or by any commission appointed by it.
Paragraph II. That the law creating the Public Service Commission of Indiana (The Spencer-Shively Act) ch. 76, Acts 1913, §§ 12672-12802 Burns 1926, does not apply to municipally owned public utilities, and that the commission has no authority there under to fix the rates in question.
Paragraph III. That the rates fixed by the commission are inadequate and confiscatory, and are, therefore, unlawful and unconstitutional (under § 21, Art. I, Constitution, § 73 Burns 1926), in that they will yield only sufficient revenue to pay operating and maintenance charges and that they do not provide, and are not intended to provide, for a reasonable return by the way of interest or earning power upon the investment (i.e., a fair return upon the fair value of its property) the same as if it were a privately owned utility.
Paragraph IV. That the rates are insufficient because they do not yield a sum sufficient to compensate the city for the taxes which the plant would pay if it was privately owned. *Page 529
1. The State has the power to regulate the rates to be charged by municipally owned public utilities.
Appellant, supporting its first paragraph of complaint, relies upon statements made by this court in the cases of State, exrel., v. Denny (1888),
While the doctrine of the right of local self-government as laid down in the cases above cited (or at least a part of it), has been recognized in later cases (see Street v. 1, 2. Varney [1903],
The power of a municipality to own a public utility is generally considered to be neither an inherent nor an indispensable implied power, Western Savings Fund Society 3. v. City of Philadelphia (1858), 31 Pa. St. 175, 72 Am. Dec. 730, and, to enable cities to operate utilities, the Legislature of this state has in numerous instances expressly granted that authority by statute. The right or power to construct, purchase, or lease electric light plants for the purpose of furnishing the inhabitants of the city and its vicinity with the use and convenience of such utility is granted by § 249 et seq., ch. 129, Acts 1905 p. 219, as amended by § 4, ch. 191, Acts 1915 p. 689, § 11129 Burns 1926. (See, also, § 12771 Burns 1926.)
The power of a city to operate an electric-light plant to light the streets for purposes of safety, security and public convenience (like the power to operate a water plant to 4. obtain adequate fire protection or water for the health and sanitation of a city), may well be included in the implied or incidental powers indispensable to the declared objects and delegated powers of a municipal corporation (and, in City ofCrawfordsville v. Braden, supra, it was held that a city had implied or inherent power, not only to light its streets and to establish works to produce the electric current for that purpose, but also, in connection therewith, to furnish its inhabitants with light in their homes and places of business).
A city in the operation of an electric light utility, selling service to the public, acts in its private business *Page 532
capacity and not in its public governmental capacity 5-9. (regardless of whether its power to so act is inherent, implied or is granted by statute). The dual capacity or twofold character possessed by municipal corporations is: (1) governmental, public, or political; and (2) proprietary, private or quasi-private. In its governmental capacity a city or town acts as an agency for the state for the better government of those who reside within its corporate limits, and, in its private or quasi-private capacity, it exercises powers and privileges for its own benefit, Holmes v. City of Fayetteville (1929),
Appellant agrees that, in the operation of the light plant, it does not exercise a political or governmental power, but exercises a private power, and, from that premise, 10. concludes "therefore, the Logansport electric light plant is private property free from state control," citing:City of Huntingburg v. Morgen (1928),
The regulation of rates to be charged by public utilities is properly the function of the legislative department of the state government, under its police power, Pond, Public 11, 12. Utilities (3d ed.) 519-520; Winfield v. Public Service Commission, supra; City of Washington v.Public Service Commission (1921),
Even under the power to exercise self-government or home rule, a city cannot act on matters purely of state concern. 43 C.J. 188; Attorney-General v. City of Detroit (1923), 13, 14.
The power to fix rates may be and often has been delegated by the state to municipal corporations, Muncie Nat. Gas Co. v. City of Muncie (1902),
The cases cited in the foregoing paragraphs relate to the regulation of rates to be charged by privately owned public utilities. The same reasons exist for regulation of the 17. rates of municipally owned utilities, and the power to regulate them is likewise in the state. Springfield GasCo. v. Springfield, supra; Kennebunk, etc., Water District v.Town of Wells, supra, P.U.R. 1930A 173, 175; McQuillen, Municipal Corporations (2d ed.) § 554. In Re Niagara, etc.,Power Co. (1930),
The appellant, in attempting to show that state regulation of the rates of municipally owned public utilities interferes with the right of local self-government, says: "The interests 18. to be protected by governmental rate fixing in the case of a municipally owned utility are the interests of the citizens of the municipality," and "the citizens of the State generally are not concerned and their interests are not affected." This argument is one which can be made as well regarding state regulation of the rates of privately owned utilities. While it is true that the regulation of rates of a utility (whether owned privately or by a municipality) usually affects the citizens of a particular municipality more than it does the citizens of the remainder of the state, yet the state, for reasons which the legislative department deemed sufficient, has determined, as it had the right to do, that regulation should be by a central commission, rather than by delegating such regulatory power to the local communities.
In several cases, reviewed in a footnote,2 courts have held that public utility commissions of their states had *Page 537 no power to regulate the rates of municipally owned utilities, but each of these cases is readily distinguished from the case at bar.
Our conclusion upon the question presented by the first paragraph of complaint is that the state has the power to regulate, either directly or through a public service 19. commission, the rates to be charged for utility service by a municipally owned public utility. And this we hold regardless of whether the city possesses its power to operate such plant by legislative grant or as an implied or inherent right, and regardless also of whether the city, in operating the utility, is considered as acting in its governmental or in its private business capacity.
II. The Spencer-Shively Act, creating the Public Service Commission, expressly applies to municipally owned utilities and such commission has authority thereunder to fix the rates to be charged the public by the city of Logansport for electric current. §§ 101 and 102 of the act do not limit its application except in the case of utilities operating under existing franchises which regulate rates. *Page 538
The theory of the second paragraph of complaint is based on appellant's contention that, "nowhere in the Public Service Commission law are found express words granting jurisdiction to the commission to regulate the rates of any public utility except in cases where a utility has surrendered its operating contract and accepted an indeterminate permit from the commission." This contention is erroneous and in direct conflict with the plain and clear provisions of the law. Section 1 of the act (§ 12672 Burns 1926) provides that:
"The term ``public utility,' as used in this act, shall mean and embrace . . . every city or town that now or hereafter may own, operate or control . . . any plant or equipment within the state . . . for the production, transmission, delivery or furnishing of heat, light, . . . or power, either directly or indirectly, to or for the public."
Section 7 of the act (§ 12678 Burns 1926) provides:
"The charge made by any public utility for any service rendered or to be rendered, either directly or in connection therewith, shall be reasonable and just and every unjust or unreasonable charge for such service is prohibited and declared unlawful," etc.
Section 72 of the act (§ 12743 Burns 1926) provides that:
"whenever . . . the commission shall find any rates . . . to be unjust, unreasonable . . . or otherwise in violation of any of the provisions of this act, the commission shall determine and by order fix just and reasonable rates," etc.
Other sections of the act provide:
"for the valuation of all property of every public utility by the commission" (§ 9); that every public utility shall keep and render to the commission prescribed accounts for examination and determination of rates, tolls, etc. (§ 13), shall file schedules showing all rates which shall exceed a certain standard, and that no change of rates shall be made except by approval of the commission (§§ 41, 45). *Page 539 Section 124 of the act (§ 12797 Burns 1926) provides that:
"The commission . . . shall have the power, and it shall be its duty, to enforce the provisions of this act, as well as all other laws relating to public utilities."
Section 101 of the act, as amended by § 1, ch. 93, Acts 1921 p. 197 (being § 12774 Burns 1926), upon which appellant relies to support its contention (under the second paragraph of complaint), provides that: "any public utility operating under an existing license, permit or franchise from any county, city or town" . . . shall, upon filing (within a given time) a declaration surrendering its franchise "receive by operation of law in lieu thereof an indeterminate permit." Section 102 of the act (§ 12775 Burns 1926) provides that, by the acceptance of such an indeterminate permit, any public utility is "deemed to have consented to a future purchase of its property by the municipality in which the major part of it is situate" and to have waived its rights relative to condemnation and "to have consented to the revocation of its license, permit or franchise by the commission for cause."
Manifestly, the utility here involved does not belong to the class of utilities mentioned in the foregoing sections (§§ 101 and 102). It could not surrender a franchise, for the very 20. good reason that it is not operated under a franchise, but is operated by, and it is, the city itself. The question then to be decided under this paragraph of the complaint is whether the Spencer-Shively Act (and its amendments) applies to any public utilities other than those which were operating under existing franchises, surrendered those franchises and accepted indeterminate permits? We have already pointed out that, by the plain terms of the act, it applies to all "public utilities" which it defines, and there remains for consideration only the question as *Page 540 to whether §§ 101 and 102 limit the application of the law in the manner contended for by appellant.
In Greensburg Water Co. v. Lewis (1920),
Sections 101 and 102 of the act do not serve to exempt from the operation of the Public Service Commission Law, utilities operating under existing county, city or town franchises, 22. except in so far as the terms of those franchises may conflict with provisions of the law. Thus, where a franchise from a city under which a public utility is operating does not regulate the rates to be charged by such utility, the Public Service Commission has recently exercised authority to regulate its rates, regardless of the fact that the utility has never surrendered its city franchise and accepted an indeterminate *Page 541 permit, Re Home Telephone Co. of Portland (No. 9716-1929) P.U.R. 1930A 332.
We conclude that the Spencer-Shively Act creating the Public Service Commission expressly applies to municipally owned utilities and that such commission has authority 23. thereunder to fix the rates to be charged the public by the city of Logansport for electric current.
III. A municipally owned utility is entitled to receive a fair return by way of interest upon the investment the same as a privately owned utility and the matter of earning such return or not is one of policy for the municipal authorities.
In deciding adversely to appellant the question which is presented by its third paragraph of complaint, the lower court thereby upheld the order of the Public Service 24-26. Commission. This order, which we believe to be erroneous, directly contravenes the rulings in several cases theretofore decided by the Indiana commission, as well as the holdings in many cases decided by other commissions and courts. Every public utility, whether municipally or privately owned, is justly entitled to a fair return upon the reasonable value of its property devoted to public use, over and above operating expenses, taxes and depreciation, Re Hammond WaterWorks, P.U.R. 1919A 183, and we approve the following language used by the Public Service Commission, in speaking of the return to be earned by a municipally owned plant in Re Bluffton, P.U.R. 1921B 716:
"The law contemplates that adequate service be rendered to the public by this, as well as all other public utilities, and that the utility be permitted a rate that will yield revenue sufficient to meet its operating expenses, including taxes and proper allowance for depreciation and, in addition, a fair return upon the value of the property used, and useful, for the convenience of the public. The respondents *Page 542 contend that a municipal utility should not be permitted to earn any return above its actual operating expense, including depreciation. The Commission believes that the matter of earning a return or not earning a return is one of policy to be decided by the municipal authorities. In any case there should be some surplus to take care of emergencies over and above the operating expenses. The Commission believes that a municipal utility, like any other public utility, is entitled to earn a reasonable return on the value of its property, if it so desires." (Our italics.)
The commission has allowed, upon the fair value of such property, a return of six per cent, In re Goshen (No. 4354, Jan. 11, 1919); seven per cent, In re Hammond Water Works, supra, and seven and one-half per cent, In re Linton, P.U.R. 1921E 295. See, also, Re Connersville, P.U.R. 1922C 482; Ross v.Frankfort, P.U.R. 1919B 525.3 (These citations are made, not to the point that any particular percentage of return is reasonable and fair for a municipally owned utility to earn, that being a matter that may vary under different conditions, but to the point that the Public Service Commission has in previous cases determined and allowed that which it believed to be a fair and reasonable return to municipally owned utilities.) *Page 543
It is uniformly held in other jurisdictions that a city is entitled, if it so desires or elects, to earn a return upon its investment commensurate (Skogmo v. River Falls, infra;Cavanaugh v. Whitefish Mun. Water Utility, infra; Knowlton v.Farmington Village, infra; Re Kenosha, Wis. Ry. Com. P.U.R. 1918D 751; Consolidated Ice Co. v. Pittsburgh [1922],
"Ordinarily, of course, a municipality is satisfied to do with a less return than would be fair to a private concern under similar circumstances, due both to its usual ability to procure money at a smaller rate of interest, and its willingness to forego the profit that is the actuating motive for private investment, in order to benefit its citizens. Indeed, the willingness to sacrifice profit, or in other words, to avoid the tribute to private capital, is almost invariably the inducement (and always a persuasive argument) for municipal ownership. But after a plant has been installed, the city, representing its *Page 544 inhabitants, may determine that it is best to operate on a profit-making basis, and it is entitled, if it so desires, to earn a return upon the investment commensurate with what would be reasonable in the case of a private corporation."
The Indiana Public Service Commission in Re Hillis, supra, and the lower court in the case at bar, have apparently adopted some of the (unhappily chosen) language used in Bonzer v.Electric Light Comm. P.U.R. 1920F 183, which has been misinterpreted and which has led to error. In Bonzer v.Electric Light Comm. the Maine Public Utilities Commission said:
"The people as a whole own this property and are operating it for the benefit of all. . . . It is not expected that there will be any profit. . . . It is our idea that if the town desires to render this service to its own people, or to some of its own people, it shall do so without profit,"
but qualified its definition of "cost" or "of doing business without profit" by holding that the utility should be allowed to earn enough, not only to pay operating expenses and to care for depreciation, but also to provide a sinking fund to pay off the bonded indebtedness standing against the plant. In Knowlton v.Farmington Village Corporation, P.U.R. 1918E 884, the same commission held that a municipality operating a water plant may divert the receipts therefrom to the payment of its general corporate obligations, if it so desires, provided its charges to the consumers are reasonable; that the municipality, if it so elects, may earn more than enough to pay operating expenses and "current interest charges" (but that such sexces is justifiable only as a provision for the payment of the indebtedness for the plant and that, when the indebtedness is paid, the rates should be reduced).
It does not follow from a premise that service is to be *Page 545 rendered at cost, that a reasonable interest on the investment does not constitute a part of that cost. Even in the case of privately owned utilities, it was said in Re Hammond W. E.C.Ry. Co. (Ind. Pub. Ser. Comm.) P.U.R. 1920E 517, 522, that:
"Under present day circumstances and under the theory of the Public Service Commission Act, public utilities are required to render service at cost, that is to say, the cost of operation, including taxes and depreciation and the cost of money necessarily invested." (Our italics.)
It is argued by appellees that no return should be allowed as interest on the investment because the purpose of municipal ownership is to "serve the public and not to produce 27. revenue" and that "local taxes should not be gathered in the guise of utility rates." It appears to us that the purpose of municipalities which have decided to own utilities may have been to reduce the cost of the service to their users and at the same time to secure a reasonable return on the investments for the cities which otherwise would go to private corporations. The taxpayer who is not an electric light consumer has his money tied up in a municipal light plant the same as the taxpayer who is also a consumer. It is unfair that the money obtained from the former by taxation should be allowed to work only for the benefit of others. It should earn a reasonable amount which should go to the general fund of the city and thereby reduce his taxes. Local taxes should not be gathered in the guise of utility rates, but rates which provide for no more than a reasonable interest return on the investment are not local taxes in disguise. The following language used in Cavanaugh v. Whitefish, etc., Utility,supra, is particularly applicable to the subject under discussion: *Page 546
"The utility should pay the city as an investor a reasonable amount for interest on the city's investment recruiting the interest, equitably, through rates charged all consumers including the city as a consumer. If the plant has been built out of the general funds of the city, the city is an investor in the utility and is entitled to a reasonable rate of interest on the investment. The money in this case, being furnished out of the general funds of the city, was derived from local taxes. The investment of these funds in other lines would bring a return to the city in the form of interest and would consequently decrease the amount of taxes required to be levied by the amount of this interest. Where funds are borrowed for plant investment, the interest cost is plain. Interest is always one of the elements in the cost of furnishing service. Unless the city is paid a reasonable amount for interest, the rates for private users will be lower than the actual cost of serving them, and taxes will eventually have to be increased to make up the deficit. This would result in discrimination against taxpayers in favor of private consumers. Ordinarily the rate of interest allowed corresponds with the rate being paid on the bonded indebtedness or what would have to be paid were the plant bonded. The plant should render not only actual interest requirements, decreasing in dollars as the indebtedness is amortized, but the going interest rate on its value. For instance, if the water rates should produce only enough to pay the actual interest where bonds were amortized to a figure under plant value, there would be no inducement to retire bonds, because as they are retired and the interest payments become smaller, the demand would come for rates yielding less revenue. On the other hand, if interest is allowed on the investment, it would be to the city's interest to retire the bonds as rapidly as possible and earn the interest itself, holding it in reserve for proper purposes."
IV. A municipally owned utility is not entitled, in addition to a reasonable return upon its investment, to charge rates to yield a sum sufficient to compensate *Page 547 the city for the taxes which would be paid upon the plant if it were privately owned.
Appellant's contention in its fourth paragraph of complaint that the rate is insufficient because it does not yield a sum sufficient to compensate the city for the taxes which 28-30. would be paid upon the plant if it were privately owned, was, by the sustaining of the demurrer, correctly denied. "The property of any county, city, town or township" which is exempted from taxation by clause 2, § 14037 Burns 1926, includes the electric-light plant here involved. Where a city purchases and operates a public utility the effect, so far as taxation is concerned, is to withdraw from the tax duplicate the amount for which such property was assessed. The additional tax burden thus created must be borne by the taxpayers generally unless an amount at least equal to these taxes can be earned by the utility and placed in the general fund of the city. The Wisconsin Railroad Commission has, in a number of cases, held that municipally owned utilities which are exempt from taxation (Re Board Water Commissioners, P.U.R. 1918F 79), may include as a part of the operating expenses local taxes, excluding state and county taxes (Re Milwaukee, P.U.R. 1927B 229), on the theory that they would be collected and placed in the general fund of the city if the plant were privately owned and operated (ReMukwanagok P.U.R. 1922B 109), in order that justice may be done between the consumers and general taxpayers (Re Hartford, P.U.R. 1919F 216), and to maintain an equitable relationship between them (In re Fennimore, P.U.R. 1916A 848; Re LaCrosse, P.U.R. 1924A 586; Re Kankanna, P.U.R. 1922C 839). By our decision on the question presented by appellant's third paragraph of complaint to the effect that a municipally owned utility is entitled to operate at a reasonable profit, we believe that this manifest unfairness to the taxpayers *Page 548 is avoided, and this court is unwilling to go further and hold that, in addition to a reasonable profit, such utility is entitled also to increase its rate to cover the amount of taxes which it does not pay. A city, by its citizens and taxpayers, in deciding to operate a utility, must have in mind, not only the advantages gained thereby, such as the elimination of official salaries, the power to finance its project at advantageous interest rates, etc., but also the provision of the law which exempts the property of a city from taxation. Taxes not being actually levied and paid, they should not be included as a cost of service. Cavanaugh v. Whitefish Mun. Water Utility, supra (Mont. Pub. Ser. Comm.) P.U.R. 1922E 198, 216.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the third paragraph of the complaint.
Myers and Travis, JJ., dissent.
"The schedule of rates herein authorized will yield sufficient revenue to meet the operating costs including depreciation, and also the interest on the electric light and power department bonds now outstanding and to be issued and to provide a sinking fund for the amortization of such bonds. The rates herein authorized will yield approximately 7 per cent on the value of the property and it is believed that the rates will yield sufficient revenue and no more than sufficient revenue to meet the proper and legal requirements of the department. There is no good reason for permitting the department to earn more than its needs and in no case should the taxpayers be required to make up a deficit." In re Logansport (No. 6265, Nov. 25, 1921), P.U.R. 1922B 669.
(In the present controversy, the commission found the value of the property to be $933,750. It does not appear what per cent on this valuation its earnings now amount to. The appellant alleges in its complaint in this proceeding that the value of the property is $1,300,000.)
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