SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience
of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the interests of
brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
In the Matter of Petition of New Jersey American Water Company, Inc., for an Increase in Rates for Water and
Sewer Service and Other Tariff Modifications (A-32-00)
Argued March 13, 2001 -- Decided July 25, 2001
VERNIERO, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
This appeal involves a challenge to the policy of the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) that permits a
utility to include half of its charitable contributions as operating expenses for purposes of calculating its service rates.
New Jersey American Water (American Water) is a water utility engaged in the production, treatment, and
distribution of water, and the collection of sewage within its designated service territory, which includes parts of fifteen
counties. American Water is subject to the jurisdiction of the BPU. It provides water service to about 346,000
customers, and also provides sewer service to about 18,600 customers.
In January 1998, American Water filed a petition with the BPU to increase its rates for water and sewer service.
The matter was transferred to the Office of Administrative Law and assigned to an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ),
who heard testimony from representatives of American Water, from the Ratepayer Advocate (which is administratively
located within the BPU and which represents the financial interests of customers in matters relating to utility rates and
policy), and from several other interested parties. Among its objections, the Ratepayer Advocate argued that American
Water should not be allowed to treat any portion of its charitable contributions as operating expenses.
American Water's charitable contributions amounted to $99,185. Under the BPU's 50/50 sharing policy,
$49,592 of that amount was included in American Water's operating expenses. Inclusion of that figure in American
Water's operating costs would require residential ratepayers to pay an additional eight to ten cents annually on their
water utility bills. During the administrative proceedings, American Water contended that its contributions were an
important element of its responsibility to the communities it serves. The Ratepayer Advocate argued that all of the
charitable contributions should be excluded from operating expenses and thus be borne exclusively by the company's
shareholders.
In January 1999, the ALJ rendered a decision that provided that the inclusion of charitable contributions was a
policy decision that only the BPU could make. While acknowledging the reasonableness of the Ratepayer Advocate's
arguments, the ALJ concluded that legitimate public policy concerns remained, which the BPU addressed by articulating
a sharing policy. In this case, the ALJ found that 50/50 sharing policy to be reasonable, but suggested to the BPU that
the issue was one deserving of further consideration on a generic basis.
In March 1999, the BPU adopted that portion of the ALJ's decision pertaining to the 50/50 sharing policy. The
BPU memorialized its action in an order dated April 6, 1999. In that order, the BPU stated that it continued to believe
that charitable contributions by a public utility benefit ratepayers sufficiently to warrant some degree of rate recognitions
as an expense related to a utility's business operations.
The Ratepayer Advocate challenged the BPU's decision on appeal, arguing that the BPU's ruling was
erroneous because charitable contributions are not germane to a public utility, and that the ruling violated the First
Amendment of the United States Constitutions and Article I, paragraph 6 of the New Jersey Constitution because it
compelled ratepayers indirectly to subsidize charitable activities. The Appellate Division affirmed the BPU's action.
The Supreme Court granted the Ratepayer Advocate's petition for certification.
HELD: The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities' 50/50 sharing policy, which permits a utility to include half of its
charitable contributions as operating expenses for purposes of calculating its service rates, is arbitrary, lacks a sufficient
basis in the record, and thus constitutes unreasonable agency action; no portion of a utility's charitable contributions
may be subsidized by the utility's captive ratepayers.
1. Rate making is a legislative and not a judicial function, and the BPU, to which the Legislature has delegated its rate-
making power, is vested with broad discretion in the exercise of that authority. (p. 8)
2. Although the BPU's rulings are entitled to presumptive validity, they are not immune from judicial review, and may
be set aside when it clearly appears that there was no evidence before the board to support them. Thus, actions by the
BPU or any other administrative agency that are arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, or beyond the agency's delegated
powers will not be sustained. (pp. 8-9)
3. BPU's 50/50 sharing policy is arbitrary and lacks sufficient evidentiary basis in the record. Accordingly, no portion
of American Water's charitable contributions may be subsidized by consumers. To the extent that the holding in New
Jersey Bell Telephone Co. v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners,
12 N.J. 568 (1953), requires a contrary
conclusion, it is disapproved. (pp. 12-13)
4. In determining whether the BPU's sharing policy is reasonable, courts may look to the actions of other states. Such a
review discloses that forty states, either by statute, regulation, or case law, do not permit a utility's charitable
contributions to be treated as an operating expense. (pp. 13-16)
5. In holding that charitable contributions cannot be subsidized by ratepayers, courts in other jurisdictions have focused
on two interrelated considerations. On general fairness grounds, courts have determined that ratepayers should not be
forced to pay additional amounts for charitable purposes at the hand of a regulated monopoly. In addition, courts have
determined that because a utility's charitable contributions are discretionary, they are more appropriately borne by the
entity's shareholders, not its captive ratepayers. (pp. 16-19)
6. Although an agency's administrative action is presumptively valid, that deferential standard is lessened in this case
because the disputed policy does not involve the BPU's area of expertise. (pp. 19-20)
7. The BPU has cited no fact or proof in the record to support its general contention that there is a close nexus between
a utility's contributions and the claimed benefits to actual consumers, and its order is barren of any analysis that might
indicate a connection between the utility's specific contributions and a measurable benefit to its ratepayers. Thus, its
policy is arbitrary and lacks an evidentiary basis both in its general formulation and as applied in this instance. (pp. 20-
21)
8. In the determination of fair and reasonable rates, contributions and donations to charitable organizations are not a
proper charge to operating expenses. (pp. 21-22)
9. Courts should not reach constitutional questions unless necessary to the disposition of the litigation. (p. 22)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED.
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA filed a separate dissenting opinion and would affirm the judgment of the Appellate
Division. Justice LaVecchia believed that the Court failed to accord the BPU's policy determination due respect under
the appropriate standard of review, but rather simply reached a different policy choice than the BPU concerning public
utility charitable contributions, and then supplanted the regulatory commission's decision on that issue.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, and ZAZZALI join in JUSTICE
VERNIERO's opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA has filed a separate dissenting opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
32 September Term 2000
IN THE MATTER OF PETITION OF
NEW JERSEY AMERICAN WATER
COMPANY, INC., FOR AN INCREASE
IN RATES FOR WATER AND SEWER
SERVICE AND OTHER TARIFF
MODIFICATIONS
Argued March 13, 2001 -- Decided July 25, 2001
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is
reported at
333 N.J. Super. 398 (2000).
Blossom A. Peretz, Ratepayer Advocate, and
Andrew K. Dembia, Deputy Ratepayer Advocate,
argued the cause for appellant, Division of
the Ratepayer Advocate (Ms. Peretz,
attorney; Mr. Dembia, Robert J. Brabston and
Diane Schulze, Assistant Deputies Ratepayer
Advocate, on the briefs).
William D. Lavery, Jr., argued the cause for
respondent New Jersey American Water
Company, Inc. (Cozen and O'Connor,
attorneys; William D. Hogan, on the brief).
Carla Vivian Bello, Senior Deputy Attorney
General, argued the cause for respondent New
Jersey Board of Public Utilities (John J.
Farmer, Jr., Attorney General of New Jersey,
attorney; Andrea M. Silkowitz, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
VERNIERO, J.
This appeal involves a final decision of the Board of Public
Utilities (BPU) in respect of a rate petition filed by the New
Jersey American Water Company (American Water). Within the
context of that petition, the Division of the Ratepayer Advocate
(Ratepayer Advocate) challenges the policy of the BPU that
permits a utility to include half of its charitable contributions
as operating expenses for purposes of calculating its service
rates. Under that policy, a utility's ratepayers subsidize fifty
percent of the utility's charitable contributions, whereas its
shareholders bear the cost of the other fifty percent.
In reviewing the rate petition, the BPU applied its 50/50
sharing policy and allowed American Water to include half of its
charitable contributions in its operating expenses. The
Ratepayer Advocate objected on statutory and constitutional
grounds. The Appellate Division affirmed the BPU's
determination. We now reverse. We hold that the BPU's 50/50
sharing policy is arbitrary, lacks a sufficient basis in the
record, and thus constitutes unreasonable agency action.
Accordingly, no portion of a utility's charitable contributions
may be subsidized by the utility's captive ratepayers. In view
of that holding, we do not address the constitutional questions
raised by the Ratepayer Advocate.
I.
We begin by summarizing briefly the respective roles of the
parties and the pertinent facts. The BPU consists of three
members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of
the Senate, and is administratively located within the executive
branch.
N.J.S.A. 48:2-1. The BPU is responsible for supervising
and regulating public utilities in the State.
N.J.S.A. 48:2-13.
The Ratepayer Advocate is administratively located within
the BPU and represents the financial interests of customers in
matters relating to utility rates and policy.
In re N.J. Am.
Water Co.,
333 N.J. Super. 398, 410 (App. Div. 2000).
See
generally Executive Reorganization Plan No. 001-1994,
reprinted
in N.J.S.A. 13:1D-1 (outlining function of Ratepayer Advocate and
comparing it to predecessor, Office of Rate Counsel). The
Ratepayer Advocate is empowered to represent, protect, and
advance the interests of all consumers of utility services,
including residential, small business, commercial, and industrial
ratepayers, in an effort to protect and promote the economic
interests of all New Jersey ratepayers.
Ibid.
American Water is a water utility engaged in the production,
treatment, and distribution of water and the collection of sewage
within its designated service territory, which includes parts of
fifteen counties. Subject to the jurisdiction of the BPU,
American Water provides water service to about 346,000 customers,
and also provides sewer service to about 18,600 customers. It
also sells water for resale to municipalities, authorities, and
public utilities.
In January 1998, American Water filed a petition with the
BPU to increase its rates for water and sewer service. The
matter was transferred to the Office of Administrative Law and
assigned to an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who heard
testimony from representatives of American Water, the Ratepayer
Advocate, and several other interested parties. Among its
objections, the Ratepayer Advocate argued that American Water
should not be allowed to treat any portion of its charitable
contributions as operating expenses.
In re N.J. Am. Water Co.,
supra, 333
N.J. Super. at 401.
American Water's disputed charitable contributions amounted
to $99,185. Under the BPU's 50/50 sharing policy, $49,592 of
that amount was included in American Water's operating expenses.
For rate-making purposes, $49,592 constituted .025 percent of the
utility's total revenue requirements. Inclusion of that figure
in American Water's operating costs would require residential
ratepayers to pay an additional eight to ten cents annually on
their water utility bills. During the administrative proceeding,
American Water contended that its charitable donations are an
important element of its responsibility to the communities it
serves. In response, the Ratepayer Advocate argued that all of
the charitable contributions should be excluded from operating
expenses and thus be borne exclusively by the company's
shareholders.
In January 1999, the ALJ rendered a decision that provided
in part that the inclusion of charitable contributions was a
policy decision that only the Board of Public Utilities can
make. Although acknowledging the reasonableness of the
Ratepayer Advocate's arguments, the ALJ concluded that there
remain legitimate public policy concerns which the Board has
heretofore seen fit to address in articulating a sharing policy.
For purposes of this case I find a 50/50 sharing to be
reasonable, but commend to the Board this issue as one deserving
of further consideration on a generic basis[.]
In March 1999, the BPU adopted in part, modified in part,
and rejected in part the ALJ's decision. The BPU adopted that
part of the ALJ's decision pertaining to the 50/50 sharing
policy. (Because this appeal focuses solely on the contributions
policy, we do not summarize or discuss the portions of the ALJ's
and BPU's rulings unrelated to that issue.) The BPU memorialized
its action in an order dated April 6, 1999. In that order the
BPU states that it continues to believe that charitable
contributions by a public utility benefit ratepayers sufficiently
to warrant some degree of rate recognition as an expense related
to a utility's business operations. In support of its 50/50
sharing policy, the BPU explains that the policy recognizes that
a utility's customer benefit[s], either directly or indirectly,
by virtue of contributions made to the community funds,
educational campaigns, and the like. Moreover, the BPU notes
that [c]haritable contributions also enhance a utility's
standing and good will in a community and therefore benefit
shareholders. A 50/50 sharing policy properly balances ratepayer
and stockholder interests.
Before the Appellate Division, the Ratepayer Advocate
challenged the BPU's decision, arguing (1) that the BPU's ruling
was erroneous because charitable contributions are not germane to
a public utility, and (2) that the ruling violated the First
Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I,
paragraph 6 of the New Jersey Constitution because it compelled
ratepayers indirectly to subsidize charitable activities.
In re
N.J. Am. Water Co.,
supra, 333
N.J. Super. at 402. The Appellate
Division affirmed the BPU's action. We granted the Ratepayer
Advocate's petition for certification.
165 N.J. 601 (2000).
II.
Title 48 sets forth the powers and duties of the BPU. The
statute provides that the BPU has general supervision and
regulation of and jurisdiction and control over all public
utilities as defined in this section and their property, property
rights, equipment, facilities and franchises so far as may be
necessary for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this
Title.
N.J.S.A. 48:2-13a. Specifically, the agency is
authorized to require that public utilities furnish safe,
adequate and proper service[.]
N.J.S.A. 48:2-23.
Pertinent to this appeal, the Legislature has entrusted the
BPU with ensuring just and reasonable utility rates.
N.J.S.A.
48:2-21. In that regard,
N.J.S.A. 48:2-21(d) provides:
When any public utility shall increase any
existing individual rates, joint rates,
tolls, charges or schedules thereof, as well
as commutation, mileage and other special
rates, or change or alter any existing
classification,
the board, either upon
written complaint or upon its own initiative,
shall have power after hearing, upon notice,
by order in writing to determine whether the
increase, change or alteration is just and
reasonable. The burden of proof to show that
the increase, change or alteration is just
and reasonable shall be upon the public
utility making the same. The board, pending
such hearing and determination, may order the
suspension of the increase, change or
alteration until the board shall have
approved the same, not exceeding 4 months.
If the hearing and determination shall not
have been concluded within such 4 months the
board may during such hearing and
determination order a further suspension for
an additional period not exceeding [] 4
months.
The board shall approve the
increase, change or alteration upon being
satisfied that the same is just and
reasonable.
[(emphases added).]
To demonstrate that a requested rate increase is just and
reasonable, the utility must prove: (1) the value of its
property or the rate base, (2) the amount of its expenses,
including operations, income taxes, and depreciation, and (3) a
fair rate of return to investors.
In re Petition of Pub. Serv.
Elec. & Gas,
304 N.J. Super. 247, 265 (App. Div.),
certif.
denied,
152 N.J. 12 (1997). In that context, this Court has
stated that rate making is a legislative and not a judicial
function, and that the [BPU], to which the Legislature has
delegated its rate-making power, is vested with broad discretion
in the exercise of that authority.
In re Petition of Pub. Serv.
Coordinated Transp.,
5 N.J. 196, 214 (1950).
Although the BPU's rulings are entitled to presumptive
validity[,]
In re Petition of Jersey Central Power & Light Co.,
85 N.J. 520, 527 (1981), they are not immune from judicial
review. The Legislature has authorized courts expressly to
review any order of the board and to set aside such order in
whole or in part when it clearly appears that there was no
evidence before the board to support the same reasonably or that
the same was without jurisdiction of the board.
N.J.S.A. 48:2-
46. In the same vein, a court will not sustain an action by the
BPU, or that of any other administrative agency, when that action
is found to be arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, or beyond
the agency's delegated powers.
In re Amendment of N.J.A.C.
8:31B-3.31,
119 N.J. 531, 544 (1990).
See generally In re Pub.
Serv. Elec. & Gas Co.'s Rate Unbundling, Stranded Costs &
Restructuring Filings,
167 N.J. 377, 384-85 (2001) (outlining
standard of review governing BPU orders).
New Jersey statutory law is silent on how to treat a
regulated utility's charitable contributions. The seminal case
in which this Court held that a utility's charitable
contributions may be included as operating expenses in a rate
petition is
New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. v. Board of Public
Utility Commissioners,
12 N.J. 568 (1953) (
Bell). Prior to that
case, the BPU's predecessor agency had found that it was
unreasonable to require the consumer to pay for [a utility's
charitable contributions].
Id. at 595. The agency's position
had been that 'in the determination of fair and reasonable
rates, contributions and donations to charitable organizations
are not a proper charge to operating expense.'
Id. at 596
(citation omitted). In
Bell, this Court rejected that position,
directing the agency to permit a utility to include its
charitable contributions as an operating expense where it has an
effect upon the creation of the service or product of the
corporation and therefore may be considered as reasonably
necessary in the rendition of service to the consumer.
Ibid.
In the wake of
Bell, [t]he [BPU] has consistently permitted
reasonable, nondiscriminatory charitable donations to qualify as
operating expenses in a utility rate case.
N.J. Dep't of the
Pub. Advocate v. N.J. Bd. of Pub. Utils.,
189 N.J. Super. 491,
515 (App. Div. 1983).
See also In re N.J. Bell Tel. Co.,
24 P.U.R.3d 181, 194 (Bd. of Pub. Util. Comm'rs 1958) (We are
required to follow the [S]upreme [C]ourt pronouncement on this
matter in [
Bell.]). The BPU's 50/50 sharing policy replaced an
earlier rule under which ratepayers bore seventy-five percent of
the cost of a utility's charitable contributions. In explaining
the current policy in the context of a previous rate petition,
the BPU itself acknowledged some of the policy's troublesome
aspects:
The [BPU] recognizes that [a utility's]
contributions to charitable organizations
result in direct and indirect benefits to the
[utility's] employees, customers and
communities because donations are made to
community service agencies which are used by
[the utility's] ratepayers. Donations are
also made to universities and colleges
located within or near the [utility's]
service area.
However, the [BPU] also recognizes that
ratepayers have no say as to whether to
contribute, how much to contribute or to what
agencies contributions should be made.
Arguably, these contributions are not
indispensable to providing service to
customers. Moreover, forced ratepayer
participation eliminates the personal tax
deduction benefit that individual ratepayers
could receive if ratepayers contributed
directly to the charity.
The [BPU] will continue to review this issue
in future cases. In the meantime, the [BPU]
is convinced that a 50/50 sharing between
ratepayers and shareholders is a more
appropriate allocation than the prior 75/25
policy.
[
In re Jersey Cent. Power & Light Co. Rate
Application,
94 N.J.A.R 2d (Vol. 8) 49, 53
(Bd. of Regulatory Comm'rs).]
The BPU has not presented written guidelines concerning its
treatment of charitable contributions. In its brief, the BPU
states that it relies on factors similar to those expressed in a
two-page set of guidelines developed by its Rhode Island
counterpart. Those guidelines indicate that contributions must
be modest in amount, productive of good community relations,
and made to tax-exempt, non-profit organizations. In its April
6, 1999, order, the BPU provides no analysis of American Water's
specific contributions (for example, the agency does not
determine whether the contributions satisfy the Rhode Island
criteria), other than to note that the Ratepayer Advocate has
not demonstrated abuse on the part of the Company with respect to
the amount of its charitable contributions.
III.
The Ratepayer Advocate asserts that by failing to provide a
fact-based analysis of its specific contributions, American Water
has not demonstrated a sufficient nexus between the effect of
those contributions and the utility's rendition of service to
the consumer.
Bell,
supra, 12
N.J. at 596. The Ratepayer
Advocate also claims that the court below improperly relieved the
utility of the burden of demonstrating that its charitable
contributions were necessary to serve its customer base. Lastly,
it submits that there is no evidence that reasonably supports the
BPU's action and thus the policy of allowing 50/50 sharing of
charitable contributions must be reversed. In response,
American Water argues that the BPU properly exercised its
discretion in allocating a portion of the utility's charitable
contributions to its operating expenses as permitted by
Bell.
The utility claims that the BPU's sharing policy is sound and
that its application here was permissible.
Likewise, the BPU contends that its 50/50 sharing policy
embodies a sufficient nexus between a utility's charitable giving
and providing of services. The BPU suggests that its treatment
of a utility's contributions is reasonable because such
contributions are instrumental in creating a stable economic and
social environment in a utility's service area. That, in turn,
enhances the utility's ability to furnish sufficient service to
consumers at fair rates. As an example, the BPU claims that
contributions to social and economic support services foster more
consistent bill-paying patterns by customers, which reduces the
utility's bad-debt expenses that otherwise would be reflected in
rates.
We agree with the Ratepayer Advocate that the BPU's 50/50
sharing policy is arbitrary and lacks a sufficient evidentiary
basis in the record. Accordingly, no portion of American Water's
charitable contributions may be subsidized by consumers.
Although we commend American Water for making charitable
contributions, we are convinced that the cost of those
contributions should be borne solely by its shareholders. To the
extent that the holding in
Bell requires a contrary conclusion,
it is disapproved.
As indicated, nearly fifty years ago in
Bell the Court ruled
that the BPU should permit a utility to allocate a portion of its
charitable contributions to operating expenses under limited
circumstances. That ruling was based in part on
Peoples Gas
Light & Coke Co. v. Slattery,
25 N.E.2d 482 (Ill. 1939),
appeal
dismissed,
309 U.S. 634,
60 S. Ct. 724,
84 L. Ed. 991 (1940). In
that case, the Illinois Supreme Court stated that charitable
contributions could be included in operating expenses so long as
it is shown that they will be of some peculiar benefit to the
company or its patrons.
Id. at 498.
The ruling in
Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co. concerning
charitable contributions was effectively overruled by the
Illinois Supreme Court in
Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Illinois
Commerce Commission,
303 N.E.2d 364 (Ill. 1973). There, the
utility argued that its charitable contributions should be
treated as operating expenses under
Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.
Id. at 374. The court disagreed, stating that the allowance of
such contributions as operating expenses for purposes of
ratemaking constitutes an involuntary assessment on the utility's
patrons, and we question the propriety of [the utility's] being
permitted to thus dispense largesse at their expense.
Id. at
375. Thus, the court held that such expenditures are not
operating expenses cognizable for the purposes of ratemaking.
Ibid.
A different court reasoned similarly in
Mississippi, ex rel.
Allain v. Mississippi Public Service Commission,
435 So.2d 608,
617 (Miss. 1983). In that case, the Mississippi regulatory
commission permitted the utility to treat its charitable
contributions as operating expenses. In so doing, the state
commission relied on a previous case in which the Mississippi
Supreme Court had held that reasonable donations could be
considered as operating expenses.
Ibid. Reconsidering that
issue during this age of soaring costs[,] the court concluded
that this item can no longer be justified as a proper operating
expense of a utility.
Ibid. Moreover, the court noted that
[w]e are cognizant of the importance of such contributions to
the donees and the public relation benefits that result to the
utility from such but[] nevertheless think in the present economy
future customers should not be burdened with this cost, however
small.
Ibid.
That the legal foundation of
Bell's ruling has been eroded
or repudiated during the past five decades is one factor that
compels our disposition. We are also persuaded by the fact that
forty states, either by statute, regulation, or case law, do not
permit a utility's charitable contributions to be treated as an
operating expense. Although we are not bound by those outside
authorities, they inform our analysis of whether the BPU's
current rule is reasonable. For example, in
Alabama Power Co. v.
Alabama Public Service Commission,
359 So.2d 776, 780 (Ala.
1978), the Alabama Supreme Court held that charitable
contributions are not a proper operating expense for a utility.
The Alabama Supreme Court explained that
[w]hile the charitable contributions are
commendable, we are not aware of any reason
why the consumer should make the contribution
as opposed to the investor. Logic tells us
that charitable contributions are not an
operating expense. The [utility], being a
monopoly, can operate without deducting
charitable donations as an operating expense.
[Id. at 779-80.]
The rationale expressed by the Alabama Supreme Court has
been echoed by courts in other jurisdictions that have held that
charitable contributions cannot be subsidized by ratepayers. In
so holding, those courts have highlighted two interrelated
themes. First, on general fairness grounds, ratepayers should
not be forced to pay additional amounts for charitable purposes
at the hand of a regulated monopoly.
See, e.g.,
Pac. Tel. & Tel.
Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n of Cal.,
401 P.2d 353, 374 (Cal. 1965)
(viewing inclusion of charitable contributions in operating
expenses as involuntary levy on ratepayers who, because of
monopolistic nature of utility service, are prevented from
avoiding levy);
Wash. Gas Light Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n of D.C.,
450 A.2d 1187, 1231 (D.C. 1982) (affirming ruling that 'the
ratepayers may not be required to make forced contributions')
(citation omitted);
Ill. Bell Tel. Co.,
supra, 303
N.E.
2d at 375
(observing that allowance of such contributions as operating
expenses for purposes of ratemaking constitutes an involuntary
assessment on the utility's patrons);
Chesapeake & Potomac Tel.
Co. of Md. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n of Md.,
187 A.2d 475, 485 (Md.
1963) (declaring that [i]f charitable contributions are allowed
as an operating expense of a monopoly, [it] amounts to an
involuntary levy on the rate payers);
Cleveland Elec.
Illuminating Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n of Ohio,
431 N.E.2d 683,
686 (Ohio 1982) (stating that '[r]atepayers should not be made
involuntary donors to charitable and educational institutions
through the payment of [] rates') (citations omitted).
Second, because a utility's charitable contributions are
discretionary, they are more appropriately borne by the entity's
shareholders, not its captive ratepayers.
See, e.g.,
Pac. Tel. &
Tel. Co.,
supra, 401
P.
2d at 374 (declaring that utility's
attempt to charge all of its own contributions as an operating
expense to be borne by ratepayers is plainly unwarranted);
S.
Cent. Bell Tel. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n,
702 S.W.2d 447, 452
(Ky. Ct. App. 1985) (finding no error in determination that
charitable contributions are unnecessary expenses in providing
utility services and that while the utility is free to make such
contributions, the expense should be borne by the stockholders,
not the ratepayers);
Cent. Me. Power Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n,
136 A.2d 726, 731 (Me. 1957) (stating that utility is not
compelled to give its money to charities, no matter how
deserving);
Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. Co. of Md.,
supra, 187
A.
2d at 485 (noting that utilities should bear the burden and
not [] pass it on to the subscribers);
Cleveland Elec.
Illuminating Co.,
supra, 431
N.E.
2d at 685-86 (reasoning that
[t]he decision to make charitable contributions, in terms of
amounts and the recipients, is a matter of personal choice [and
thus when] the utility makes this decision, the ratepayer has no
choice) (footnote omitted);
Carey v. Corp. Comm'n of Okla.,
33 P.2d 788, 794 (Okla. 1934) (explaining that if utility desires
to take part of its earnings, just as would an individual, and
contribute them to a worthy public cause, it may do so; but we do
not feel that it should be allowed to increase its earnings to
take care thereof).
American Water stresses that the contributions are
relatively small and thus an insignificant burden to ratepayers.
However, the impact of the BPU's policy is not confined to this
one petition. Under the BPU's policy, other utilities making
charitable contributions are permitted to include one-half of
their cost in operating expenses and in so doing, pass that cost
on to the consumer. Thus, the average ratepayer may be forced to
pay an additional amount for charitable contributions in other
settings.
In the last analysis, this case implicates equitable
principles far more significant to ratepayers than the extra
cents reflected on their water bills. Beyond those mere monetary
amounts, the Court also must consider the inherent unfairness to
the rate-paying public that results from treating a utility's
charitable contributions as an operating expense. As recognized
by other courts that have set aside such characterizations,
forcing captive ratepayers to finance a utility's charitable
contributions is inequitable because those costs are more
appropriately borne by shareholders. Shareholders have the
option of selling their shares if they are unhappy with the
utility's charitable contributions or if they disapprove of the
recipients of the money.
In contrast, ratepayers have little recourse if they
disagree with the beneficiaries of a utility's largesse.
Moreover, a charitable contribution involves numerous personal
choices, namely, whether to make it in the first instance and, if
so, to whom and in what amount. Requiring ratepayers to
subsidize such contributions under those circumstances is
unreasonable. We also agree with those courts that have
concluded that charitable giving itself is unrelated to a
utility's core function.
As noted, an agency's administrative action is presumptively
valid.
In re Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co.'s Rate Unbundling,
supra, 167
N.J. at 384-85. That deferential standard, however,
is lessened in this case because the disputed policy does not
involve the BPU's area of expertise. See
Close v. Kordulak
Bros.,
44 N.J. 589, 599 (1965) (stating that courts give due
regard [] to the agency's expertise where such expertise is a
pertinent factor). We find nothing in the text of Title 48 to
indicate that the Legislature contemplated that the BPU would
evaluate the appropriateness of a utility's charitable giving in
the course of determining just and reasonable rates.
We acknowledge that a number of worthy beneficiaries,
i.e.,
fire departments, schools, churches, and medical organizations,
have received money from American Water. We do not doubt the
salutary purposes of those entities, but we are not persuaded
that a contribution to those donees enables the utility to
furnish safe, adequate and proper service[.]
N.J.S.A. 48:2-23.
As noted, the BPU conceded in 1993 when it adopted the 50/50
sharing policy that [a]rguably, these contributions are not
indispensable to providing service to customers.
In re Jersey
Cent. Power & Light Co. Rate Application,
supra,
94 N.J.A.R 2d
(Vol. 8) at 53. The BPU also admitted that ratepayers have no
say as to whether to contribute, how much to contribute or to
what agencies contributions should be made.
Ibid.
Nor does the deferential standard of review require the
Court to ignore the lack of evidence supporting the BPU's
decision. The BPU's April 6, 1999, order is barren of any
analysis that might indicate a connection between the utility's
specific contributions and a measurable benefit to its
ratepayers. We are satisfied that the effects of a utility's
charitable gifts as asserted by the BPU, for example, better bill
paying by ratepayers, are too abstract and attenuated to justify
continued application of its 50/50 sharing policy. Similarly,
the BPU has cited no fact or proof in the record to support its
general contention that there is a close nexus between a
utility's contributions and the claimed benefits to actual
consumers. Accordingly, the BPU's policy is arbitrary and lacks
an evidentiary basis both in its general formulation and as
applied in this instance. See
In re Petition of Pub. Serv.
Coordinated Transp.,
supra, 5
N.J. at 225 (overturning agency's
fare increase for public utility because it was unsupported by
the evidence and [], therefore, unreasonable and unlawful).
In sum, the BPU's 50/50 sharing policy as reflected in its
April 6, 1999, order is arbitrary, without foundation in the
record, and thus unreasonable. We agree with the position
espoused by BPU's predecessor agency prior to
Bell that 'in the
determination of fair and reasonable rates, contributions and
donations to charitable organizations are not a proper charge to
operating expense.'
Bell,
supra, 12
N.J. at 596 (citation
omitted). The Court does not doubt American Water's generosity
or the value of that generosity to its donees. We find, however,
an insufficient nexus between its contributions and the claimed
benefits to ratepayers to justify their inclusion in the
utility's rate petition. We agree also with those courts
throughout the country that have ruled that such contributions
are appropriately borne by shareholders, not ratepayers. Our
holding neither prevents utilities from making charitable
contributions nor is intended to discourage such charitable
giving. Rather, we conclude simply that the mandate of Title 48
for just and reasonable rates precludes the captive ratepayer
from subsidizing those costs.
In view of our disposition, we need not address the
Ratepayer Advocate's constitutional objections to the
contributions policy. We adhere to the principle that courts
should not reach constitutional questions unless necessary to the
disposition of the litigation.
O'Keefe v. Passaic Valley Water
Comm'n,
132 N.J. 234, 240 (1993);
see also Donadio v. Cunningham,
58 N.J. 309, 325-26 (1971) (emphasizing that a court should not
reach and determine a constitutional issue unless absolutely
imperative in the disposition of the litigation);
Green Township
Educ. Ass'n v. Rowe,
328 N.J. Super. 525, 531 (App. Div. 2000)
(stating that courts abhor deciding questions in advance of
constitutional necessity).
IV.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, and
ZAZZALI join in JUSTICE VERNIERO's opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
filed a separate dissenting opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
32 September Term 2000
IN THE MATTER OF PETITION OF
NEW JERSEY AMERICAN WATER
COMPANY, INC., FOR AN
INCREASE IN RATES FOR WATER
AND SEWER SERVICE AND OTHER
TARIFF MODIFICATIONS
____________________________
LaVECCHIA, J., dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division
substantially for the reasons expressed in the thorough and
thoughtful opinion of Judge Skillman. In re Petition of New
Jersey-American Water Co.,
333 N.J. Super. 398 (2000). The panel
correctly analyzed First Amendment jurisprudence and rejected the
Ratepayer Advocate's broad claim that charitable giving by public
utilities constitutes an impermissible compelled contribution to
expressive activity. Id. at 409.
In reversing the Appellate Division's judgment, the majority
does not reach the First Amendment issue raised by the Ratepayer
Advocate. Instead, the majority reverses exclusively on the
basis that the Board of Public Utility's (BPU) policy that
permits a utility to include half of its charitable
contributions as operating expenses for purposes of calculating
its service rates, ante at ___ (slip op. at 2), is arbitrary,
capricious, and unreasonable. Because the Court fails to accord
the BPU's policy determination due respect under the appropriate
standard of review, I respectfully dissent. I add only the
following to the Appellate Division's sound opinion.
I.
The Legislature has broadly delegated ratemaking authority
to the BPU, authorizing the agency to approve rates so long as
they are just and reasonable.
N.J.S.A. 48:2-21(d). Nearly
fifty years ago, this Court in
New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. v.
Board of Public Utility Commissioners,
12 N.J. 568, 596-97
(1953), directed the BPU in the exercise of that authority by
holding that the BPU must allow a public utility to include some
charitable contributions in its operating expenses used to
determine rates charged to customers. Since then, the BPU has
applied a long-standing policy of allowing public utilities to
apportion part of their charitable contributions to operating
expenses borne by ratepayers. That agency policy choice,
allowing utilities to include some charitable contributions as
operating expenses, has remained steadfast. Traditional
principles of administrative law counsel that that reasonable
policy choice receive deference.
In re Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas
Co.'s Rate Unbundling, Stranded Costs & Restructuring Filings,
167 N.J. 377, 384-85 (2001);
In re Petition of Jersey Cent. Power
& Light Co.,
85 N.J. 520, 527 (1982).
The Court is apparently persuaded by the fact that forty
states, either by statute, regulation, or case law, do not permit
a utility's charitable contributions to be treated as an
operating expense.
Ante at ___ (slip op. at 15). By
indiscriminately grouping together statutory, regulatory, and
judicial disallowances of public utility charitable
contributions, the majority overlooks a fundamental distinction
relating to the respective institutional roles that were involved
in those determinations. As the Appellate Division stated:
Although a majority of other states do not
allow public utilities to treat charitable
contributions as operating expenses, a
minority do allow public utilities to include
at least a portion of their charitable
contributions in operating expenses.
Furthermore, the states that prohibit public
utilities from claiming charitable
contributions as operating expenses generally
consider the issue to be within the
discretionary authority of the state's public
utility commission. Thus, the case law
relied upon by the Ratepayer Advocate simply
shows that other state public utility
commissions have made a different policy
choice than the BPU concerning this issue.
[
In re Petition of New Jersey-American Water
Co.,
supra, 333
N.J. Super. at 404 (citations
omitted).]
In nine of the ten cases from other jurisdictions that the Court
cites,
ante at ___ (slip op. at 14-18), the reviewing courts
upheld the regulatory commission's decision, ruling that the
commission reasonably exercised agency discretion in excluding
such contributions from a utility's cost of service.
Ala. Power
Co. v. Ala. Pub. Servs. Comm'rs,
359 So.2d 776, 780 (Ala. 1978);
Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n of Cal.,
401 P.2d 353,
374 (Cal. 1965);
Wash. Gas Light Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n of
D.C.,
450 A.2d 1187, 1231 (D.C. 1982);
Ill. Bell Tel. Co. v. Ill.
Commerce Comm'n,
303 N.E.2d 364, 375 (Ill. 1973);
S. Cent. Bell
Tel. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n,
702 S.W.2d 447, 452 (Ky. Ct. App.
1985);
Cent. Me. Power Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n,
136 A.2d 726,
731 (Me. 1957);
Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. Co. of Md. v. Pub.
Serv. Comm'n of Md.,
187 A.2d 475, 485 (Md. 1963);
Cleveland
Elec. Illuminating Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm'n of Ohio,
431 N.E.2d 683, 686 (Ohio 1982);
Carey v. Corp. Comm'n of Okla.,
33 P.2d 788, 794 (Okla. 1934). Thus, the majority largely relies on
cases that respect the policy-making authority of a public-
utility commission to support the majority's determination here
to overturn the BPU's policy concerning inclusion of fifty
percent of American Water's charitable contributions in its
operating expenses.
The Court simply reaches a different policy choice than the
BPU concerning public utility charitable contributions, and then
supplants the regulatory commission's decision on that issue. In
my view, the agency determination easily satisfies the arbitrary,
capricious, and unreasonable standard that applies in this
setting. The BPU's order makes clear that the agency carefully
considered and established the reasonableness of including a
portion of a utility's charitable expenses through a series of
rate cases spanning many years. Hardly arbitrary, the BPU's
policy preference was fully articulated in its order below:
In
JCP&L Rates, the Board found that JCP&L's
contributions to charitable organizations
resulted in direct and indirect benefits to
the Company's employees, customers, and
communities in that such donations supported
community service agencies used by JCP&L
ratepayers and also universities and colleges
located within or near the Company's service
area. While acknowledging ratepayer
benefits, the Board also recognized that
ratepayers have no say as to whether to
contribute, how much to contribute or to what
agencies contributions should be made. (
Id.)
To balance these competing concerns the Board
adopted a 50/50 sharing of charitable
contributions in the JCP&L proceeding.
(
Id.).
This Board continues to believe that
charitable contributions by a public utility
benefit ratepayers sufficiently to warrant
some degree of rate recognition as an expense
related to a utility's business operations.
Indeed, a 50/50 sharing recognizes that a
utility's customer benefit, either directly
or indirectly, by virtue of contributions
made to community funds, educational
campaigns, and the like. Charitable
contributions also enhance a utility's
standing and good will in a community and
therefore benefit shareholders. A 50/50
sharing policy properly balances ratepayer
and stockholder interests.
Like the Appellate Division, I find the BPU decision to be
well within the discretionary authority of the agency. The
majority, on the other hand, finds an insufficient nexus between
[American Water's] contributions and the claimed benefits to
ratepayers to justify their inclusion in the utility's rate
petition.
Ante at __ (slip op. at 21-22). A better conception
of the necessary nexus between charitable contributions and
corporate benefit can be gleaned from this Court's landmark
decision in
A.P. Smith Manufacturing Co. v. Barlow,
13 N.J. 145
(1953), concluding that corporations are empowered legally to
make charitable contributions. In that decision, the Court re-
defined the concept of legitimate corporate benefit in connection
with charitable contributions. Kenneth J. Yerkes, Note,
Corporate Charitable Contributions: Expanding the Judicial
Analysis in a Post-Economic Recovery Act World,
58
Ind. L.J. 161,
175 n.101 (1982).
A.P. Smith did not remove either the language
of, or the need for, some corporate benefit in the contribution,
although clearly the term was given a profoundly new meaning.
Id. at 168.
The Court determined that more and more [corporations] have
come to realize that their salvation rests upon sound economic
and social environment[.]
A.P. Smith,
supra, 13
N.J. at 154.
Contributions to schools, churches, hospitals, and civic
improvement funds, for examples,
id. at 151, may be readily
justified as being for the benefit of the corporation; indeed, if
need be the matter may be viewed strictly in terms of actual
survival of the corporation in a free enterprise system.
Id. at
154. Accordingly, farsighted corporations have sought through
various types of contributions to insure and strengthen the
society which gives them existence and the means of aiding
themselves and their fellows citizens.
Id. at 161. Corporate
charitable contributions manifest enlightened self-interest in
that
corporate executives now take a long-term view of their
companies' relationships with the rest of society. . .
. [The corporate] benefit need not be immediate,
direct, and tangible, and there need not be any
explicit quid pro quo involved in corporate gifts. All
that is necessary is an identifiable corporate benefit,
be it deferred, indirect, and/or intangible.
[Hayden W. Smith, If Not Corporate Philanthropy, Then
What?, 41 N.Y. L. Sch. L. Rev. 757, 763 (1997).]
Understanding the nature of corporate enlightened self-
interest, the BPU's judgment appropriately recognized that the
benefits of a public utility's charitable contributions inure to
both ratepayer and shareholder. See Peter M. Sikora, Note,
Charitable Contributions of Public Utilities: Who Should Bear the
Cost?, 30 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 357, 373 (1980) (commenting that
shared allocation of charitable contributions to both ratepayers
and shareholders is necessary for equitable treatment of those
expenses because any approach which places the burden on one
group to the exclusion of the other ignores the only persuasive
rationale for allocating such burdens -- those who benefit should
bear the burden). The allocation of charitable costs to both
ratepayers and shareholders reflects an equitable distribution of
cost to benefit:
If the ratepayers benefit from the
contributions in the form of a better place
in which to live and work, so too must the
corporation and its shareholders benefit. It
is quite probable that a community in which
efforts succeed in making it more stable and
attractive is likely to retain current
residents and attract new ones _ all of whom
represent potential new subscribers to the
utility's products and services. A growing
customer base is generally a boon to any
corporation and helps assure the continued
value of the shareholders' investment.
Similarly, other benefits, such as lower
finance costs and decreased vandalism, would
accrue to ratepayers, shareholders, and the
company alike. While ratepayers can expect
lower costs, shareholders and the company can
expect a more valuable and more easily
transferable investment.
[Ibid.]
That corporations, such as American Water here, prefer local
charities almost exclusively, confirms the notion that they seek
a nexus between the contributions and strategic benefits to the
organization. In requiring empirical-like proof of a close nexus
between the charitable gift and ratepayer service, the majority
misapprehends the nature of corporate giving generally and
ignores the strategic benefits inherent in charitable
contributions. The BPU policy choice is not only reasonable, but
in my view it is preferable.
III.
Accordingly, I would affirm the Appellate Division's
judgment in this matter. The agency's policy choice did not
constitute an abuse of discretion. Moreover, concerning the
First Amendment challenge brought by the Ratepayer Advocate, I
rely on the decision below with one additional comment.
A misinterpretation by the Ratepayer Advocate should be
corrected. The Appellate Division assume[d] that the BPU also
would prohibit a public utility from making contributions to
charities with ideological missions that are likely to be
offensive to a significant segment of the utility's ratepayers.
333
N.J. Super. at 412. The Ratepayer Advocate mistakenly
contends that the court twists the constitutional concept of
content neutrality into one of content acceptability and appoints
the BPU as the arbiter of acceptability.
The Appellate Division's comment must be read in light of
the clarity and correctness of the statements throughout its
opinion concerning applicable First Amendment law. The court
simply was restating the principle recognized earlier in its
opinion - that compelled contributions to certain organizations
violate First Amendment rights only when the funds are used to
subsidize political or ideological activities.
Id. at 409.
That standard, established by the United States Supreme Court,
requires a content-based test insofar as activities having
political or ideological content are distinguished from those
activities that do not have such content. The Appellate Division
opinion cannot fairly be read as suggesting that the BPU could
make a content-based distinction
within the category of
ideological activities on the basis of offensiveness. That the
Appellate Division contemplated no differentiation among
ideological activities is confirmed by the court's succeeding
statement: However, the mere specter that the management of some
utility could make contributions to inappropriate charitable
recipients should not foreclose the BPU from allowing utilities
to treat a portion of their contributions to non-ideological
charitable organizations that perform vital public services as
operating expenses.
Id. at 412.
I would affirm the Appellate Division. Therefore, I
respectfully dissent from the judgment of the Court.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-32 SEPTEMBER TERM 2000
ON APPEAL FROM
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
IN THE MATTER OF PETITION OF
NEW JERSEY AMERICAN WATER
COMPANY, INC., FOR AN
INCREASE IN RATES FOR WATER
AND SEWER SERVICE AND OTHER
TARIFF MODIFICATIONS
DECIDED July 25, 2001
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Verniero
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY Justice LaVecchia
CHECKLIST
REVERSE
AFFIRM
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE STEIN
X
JUSTICE COLEMAN
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE VERNIERO
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
TOTALS
6
1