1. The evidence establishes that the local telephone rate fixed
by the appellant city was confiscatory. Pp.
259 U. S.
321-322.
2. In a suit by a local telephone company to restrain
enforcement of an ordinance rate as confiscatory, there was
evidence that the instruments used by the plaintiff were leased by
it from another corporation which owned substantially all of its
stock and also owned a large majority of the stock of a third
corporation from which the plaintiff obtained much of its equipment
and supplies, and that the charges paid by the plaintiff in return
were reasonable, and less than such services and supplies could be
obtained for from other sources.
Held that the plaintiff
was not obliged to prove the profits made by the two other
companies, generally or in the business thus done with the
plaintiff. P.
259 U. S.
323.
3. A telephone company, by acceptance of a city ordinance
approving its purchase of and merger with another company and
containing an agreement on its part to measure its rates by a fair
return upon its capital actually invested in the plant purchased,
is not estopped from insisting that they shall be based upon the
fair value of the property useful and used at the time of inquiry
when the ordinance is void as to the city, under the state
constitution, and therefore lacks mutuality as between the parties.
P.
259 U. S.
324.
4. Whether going concern value should be considered in
determining the base for fixing the rates of a public service
corporation depends on the financial history of the corporation. P.
259 U. S. 325.
Galveston Electric Co. v. Galveston, 258 U.
S. 388.
5. An assignment of error which involves careful study of a
voluminous record will not be considered if the provisions of
Equity Rule 75, that evidence be stated in simple, condensed form,
and of Rule 21 of this Court, that briefs refer to the pages of the
record relied on, have not been properly complied with. P.
259 U. S.
325.
268 F. 878 affirmed.
Page 259 U. S. 319
Appeal and cross-appeal from a decree of the district court
enjoining a city from enforcing a rate fixed by ordinance for a
telephone company.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the court.
These are cross-appeals in a suit to restrain the enforcement of
an ordinance enacted by the City of Houston, Texas (hereinafter
referred to as the City), prescribing rates for telephone service,
based upon the claim that the rates are confiscatory.
The master, to whom the case was referred, found that the rates
were clearly confiscatory, and the district court, while modifying
his findings in some respects, confirmed his report and in its
decree enjoined the enforcement of the ordinance. A federal
constitutional question being involved, a direct appeal brings the
case to this Court for review.
The Constitution of Texas, adopted in 1876, ยง 17, Article I,
provides:
"No irrevocable or uncontrollable grant of special privileges or
immunities shall be made; but all privileges and franchises granted
by the legislature, or created under its authority, shall be
subject to the control thereof."
It has been definitely decided that, while municipal
corporations in Texas, as agencies of the state, may have the power
to prescribe rates for public service corporations, this provision
of the constitution prohibits their making contracts for the future
which may not be modified at any time by appropriate action of the
municipality.
Page 259 U. S. 320
San Antonio Traction Co. v. Altgelt, 200 U.
S. 304;
San Antonio v. San Antonio Public Service
Co., 255 U. S. 547;
Southern Iowa Electric Co. v. Chariton, 255 U.
S. 539.
The ordinance here involved was passed in 1909, and therefore
this state of the law would remove all question of contract from
the case if it were not that, in 1915, the appellee in No. 219, the
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company (hereinafter referred to as the
Company), by purchase and merger, acquired all of the property of a
local corporation, the "Houston Home Telephone Company," and duly
accepted an ordinance by which the City approved the merger. This
ordinance contained the provision that the Company
"agrees that it will not increase rates as at present charged by
it for service in the Houston unless it appears upon a satisfactory
showing . . . that there exists a necessity for an increase of
charges in order that the said company may earn a fair return upon
its capital actually invested in the Houston plant."
It is now contended by the City that the acceptance of this
ordinance estops the Company from asserting that the value of its
plant, as of the date of the inquiry, and not the cost of it -- the
"capital actually invested" -- shall be the basis for ratemaking,
but the Company contends that the quoted provision of the state
constitution rendered the City incapable of contracting by such an
ordinance, and that therefore it is void, and not binding on either
party.
The master, treating the merger ordinance as void, determined
the value of the property, used and useful in the operations of the
Company, on the basis of its value at the time of the taking of the
testimony in 1919, to be $6,000,000; that the Company's total
revenues for 1919, computed on the ordinance rates, amounted to
$908,258, and that its total expenses were $1,214,462, thus
showing
Page 259 U. S. 321
a net loss to the Company for the year of $306,204 without
making any allowance for interest upon the investment.
Upon exceptions to the report of the master, the district court
decided that the Company was bound by the merger ordinance of 1915
to accept the cost of its plant, as distinguished from its value at
the time of the inquiry, as the basis for ratemaking, and thereupon
reduced the valuation of the Company's property to $4,571,567. The
court also reduced the allowance of "reserve for annual
depreciation," as found by the master from $348,150 to $289,380.
After making these and some other deductions, the court
nevertheless found that the operating expenses of the Company, not
making any allowance for return on the investment, exceeded the
income during 1919 by the sum of $247,434. We fully agree with the
district court that there is a clear preponderance of the evidence
in favor of the conclusion that the ordinance rate was
confiscatory, and the decree of the court will therefore be
affirmed.
The decree enjoining the City from enforcing the rate ordinance
provides that the City shall have the right to apply for a
modification of it whenever it shall be made to appear that, by
reason of change of circumstances or conditions, the rates
prescribed by the ordinance (of 1909) are sufficient to yield a
fair return upon the capital of the Company actually invested, and
also that the decree is without prejudice to the rights of the City
to exercise its ratemaking power within constitutional limits. This
form of decree and the change in business conditions since it was
entered render it so probable that there will be further
controversy as to what are reasonable rates for telephone service
in the City, in which it will be important to determine what the
legal basis is for determining the value of the Company's property,
that we think it proper to consider several of the assignments of
error presented
Page 259 U. S. 322
by the appeal and cross-appeal, although our conclusions with
respect to them will not modify the result we have stated of this
review.
While the City's assignments of error are numerous, in the brief
they are frankly limited to three:
First: that the division of receipts derived by the Company from
long distance tolls, approved by the court, was not a fair or
adequate one.
The Company not only operated the Houston local exchange, but it
owned and operated long distance toll lines, connecting the local
exchange with various towns and cities in Texas and several other
states. The property used in the long distance service, which was
not also used in the local service, was not included in valuing the
investment for determining local rates, but, as the local lines
were used to the extent of permitting a subscriber to connect from
his home or office station with the long distance lines through the
long distance station, the Company, in practice, and for the
purposes of this suit, credited the local exchange with 25% of the
long distance toll revenues received from calls originating in
Houston as compensation for the use made of the local plant in
rendering long distance service. The City contends that this
allowance is not enough, but that it should be at least 60%. Both
the court and the master found that the proportion so credited from
long distance tolls was greater than that allowed to any one of
eight independent exchanges in the State of Texas by independent
long distance toll lines with which they were connected; that the
amount is larger than that paid by the Company to over 300
independent exchanges with which it has like connections, and that
the allowance is one customarily approved by state commissions
throughout the country. Compared with the formidable and very
convincing evidence on which these conclusions rest, the testimony
introduced by the City is meager and unsatisfactory, and we
agree
Page 259 U. S. 323
with the district court that, upon the record before us, the
allowance was reasonably sufficient.
Second and Third: the American Telegraph & Telephone Company
owns substantially all of the stock of the Company and a large
majority of the stock of the Western Electric Company. From the
American Telegraph & Telephone Company the Company leases its
instruments and secures their maintenance and renewal, and from the
Western Electric Company it obtains the greater part of its
equipment and supplies used in operating its local exchange. It is
contended by the City that no fair disclosure was made of the
profits made by the furnishing companies on the instruments and on
the material and supplies so furnished, and that, for this unique
reason, the Company should not be heard in a court of equity, and
the case should be dismissed. It is true that the Company did not
introduce proof to show what the profits of the two companies were,
either upon the business done with it or on their entire business,
but it did introduce much evidence tending to show that the charge
made and allowed for the services rendered and supplies furnished
by them was reasonable, and less than the same could be obtained
for from other sources. Under the circumstances disclosed in the
evidence, the fact that the American Telegraph & Telephone
Company controlled the Company and the Western Electric Company by
stock ownership is not important beyond requiring close scrutiny of
their dealings to prevent imposition upon the community served by
the Company, but the court recognized and applied this rule. Here
again, the evidence introduced by the City was meager and
indefinite, while that of the Company was exceptionally full and
complete, and both contentions must be denied.
In its cross-appeal, the Company assigns as error, the holding
of the district court that the merger ordinance of
Page 259 U. S. 324
1915 obliges the Company to accept the cost of its physical
plant as the basis for ratemaking, instead of the usual basis, the
value at the time of the inquiry, of the property used and useful
in operating the plant.
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co.,
212 U. S. 19;
Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U. S. 352;
City & County of Denver v. Denver Union Water Co.,
246 U. S. 178. The
asserted reason for this contention is that the merger ordinance of
1915 and the acceptance of it by the Company did not constitute a
contract binding upon either the City or the Company, but that,
though contractual in form, it was void under the provisions of the
state constitution and the decisions cited
supra. In its
answer, the City avers that it did not and could not, by that
ordinance or otherwise, limit its ratemaking power for the future.
But, notwithstanding this agreement of the parties that the merger
ordinance was void, the court held that the Company, having
accepted and acted upon it, was estopped to claim that it was not
bound by its terms. Misrepresentation not being involved, mutuality
was necessary to any estoppel growing out of this transaction, and,
while thus asserting that the ordinance is void as to itself, the
City may not successfully assert that its adversary is bound by the
acceptance of it. We think that neither party was bound by the
ordinance and the acceptance of it, that the district court fell
into error, and that the proper base for ratemaking in the case is
the fair value of the property, useful and used by the Company at
the time of the inquiry.
The master recognized "going concern value" as an element to be
taken into consideration in determining the value of the Company's
property, and for this allowed $765,000, which was included in the
value which he fixed upon the plant. The court, however, changing
the base from the value of the property to the cost of it,
concluded that, under the agreement in the merger ordinance, no
such allowance should be made, but stated incidentally in
Page 259 U. S. 325
its opinion that, if it had made such an allowance, it would not
have been in excess of one-half the amount allowed by the master.
To thus reject going concern value is assigned as error by the
Company.
Whether going concern value should be considered and allowed at
all in determining the base for ratemaking, and, if allowed, what
the amount of it should be, depends upon the financial history of
the Company (
Galveston Electric Co. v. Galveston,
258 U. S. 388),
and it is impossible for us to determine whether the requisite
history for deciding this question is to be found in the three
large volumes of the transcript of the record of the case,
containing 1,664 pages, without reading the whole of it.
Equity Rule No. 75 provides that evidence to be included in the
record shall not be set forth in full, but shall be stated in a
simple and condensed form, and Rule 21 of this Court provides that
briefs of the argument shall be filed in each case, with references
to the pages of the record and the authorities relied upon in
support of each point. The first of these rules has been wholly
ignored in the printing of this record, and the second has been so
neglected in the preparation of the briefs that it is impossible
for the Court to consider this question except by itself reading
and briefing the voluminous record. This we cannot consent to do,
and, for the reason that the record and briefs are not prepared in
conformity with the rules prescribed by this Court, we decline to
consider this assignment of error.
The other questions argued in the briefs must necessarily be
presented so differently on any further hearing of the issues
involved that discussion of them here would be profitless. The
decree of the district court must be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.