Skip to main content

Search the Special Collections and Archives Portal

upr000342 62

Image

File
Download upr000342-062.tif (image/tiff; 26.68 MB)

Information

Digital ID

upr000342-062
    Details

    Rights

    This material is made available to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. It may be protected by copyright, trademark, privacy, publicity rights, or other interests not owned by UNLV. Users are responsible for determining whether permissions are necessary from rights owners for any intended use and for obtaining all required permissions. Acknowledgement of the UNLV University Libraries is requested. For more information, please see the UNLV Special Collections policies on reproduction and use (https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/research_and_services/reproductions) or contact us at special.collections@unlv.edu.

    Digital Provenance

    Digitized materials: physical originals can be viewed in Special Collections and Archives reading room

    Publisher

    University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Libraries

    Public Utility Property Views of Commission Counsel as to Valuation by Everett C. McKeage • of the California Bar (San Francisco) ? The problem of valu ation o f a public utility’s property fo r the purposes of rate­m aking is one that has troubled courts an d state commissions for m any years. In a field w here the "glorious uncertainty of the la w " reigns, M r. M cK eag e presents an historical analysis of the various tests and rules ap p lied by the Supreme Court from M unn v. /Ilinois to the H o p e Natural G as C om pany case. ? The subject of valuation in the regulatory field probably has engen­dered more disagreement and contra­riety of opinion, and has strained more friendships, than any other subject with the possible exceptions of religion, politics and the keen dispute over the authorship of the works attributed to William Shake­speare. One might say, with the full support of regulatory history, that valuation comes close to what might be truly characterized or described as institutionalized uncertainty. If the future may be forecast with exactitude, then valuation under the permissible rules laid down by the courts may be determined with exac­titude. Both arc forecasts and specu­lations, and one is as reliable or unreliable as the other. The courts say that figures representing valua­tion are judgment figures. That be­ing true, such figures are little more than dignified guesses. Here we have the glorious uncertainty of the law in abundance and with a vengeance, achieved by judicial rules governing the subject of valuation in rate-fix­ing. After a careful reading of those rules, announced from time to time since 1898 by the Supreme Court of the United States, I now fully under­stand what Mark Twain meant when he said, “The more you explain it, the more I don’t understand it.” In this article, no attempt will be made to treat exhaustively the sub­ject discussed. Observations will be confined to the legalistic aspects of valuation. S um m ary o f E arlier S u p rem e C ourt Cases as to U tility V a lu a tio n In 1877, Munn v. Illinois, 94 U.S. 113, 133-134, 24 L. ed. 77, 87, and Peik v. Chicago ir Northwestern R. Co., 94 U. S. 164, 176, 24 L. ed. 97, 98, were decided by the Supreme Court; anti thus there was catapulted into the forum of legal controversy the question of legislative versus ju­dicial control in the prescription of rates of public utilities. In the Munn case, the Court held in effect that rate-fixing was a species of price-fixing and that fixing of a reasonable rate was a legislative prerogative stemming from the police power ex erted by a state. The contention that the determination of a reason­able rate lay with the courts was expressly rejected by the Supreme Court in that case. Mr. Justice Field rendered a vigorous dissenting opin­ion, which was concurred in by Mr. Justice Strong. Nine years after the decision in Munn v. Illinois, the Supreme Court decided in 1886 Stone v. Farmers Loan and Trust Company, 116 U. S. 307, 29 L. ed. 636. The cases in­cluded in this decision arc generally known as the Railroad Commission cases. I'his decision would seem to have diluted to some degree the forthright holding in the Munn case with regard to the plenary authority and power of the legislature over rates of a public utility. A reading of this decision indicates some de­parture from the position of the Court in the Munn case and a lean­ing to some degree toward the view of judicial control over reasonable­ness of public utility rates. I he pre­vailing opinion was written by Mr. Chief Justice Waite, who had also written the prevailing opinion in the Munn case. Mr. Justice Field dis­sented as he did in the Munn case, joined this time by Mr. Justice Harlan. Four years later the Supreme Court executed a complete about-face on the question of judicial ver­sus legislative control of the reason­ableness of public utility rates, in Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul 1096 American Bar Association Journal