Opinion by
Porter, J.,This case was one of a number which involved the question of the nature of the jurisdiction to be exercised by this court in appeals from the determination of the Public Service Commission fixing the valuation of the property of a public service company, used and useful for the service of the public, upon which it was entitled to receive a reasonable return, in proceedings to fix the rates which the public service company might lawfully charge. The question of the nature and extent of our jurisdiction to review such determinations of the Public Service Commission had been involved in the case of Ben Avon v. Ohio Valley Water Co., in which the decision of this court had been reversed by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 260 Pa. 289; and in which an appeal was then pending in the Supreme Court of the United States. The decision of this appeal has been delayed in order to await the final determination of the jurisdictional question. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania having now remanded the case of Ben Avon v. *389Ohio Valley Water Co. to this court with direction to determine, upon our own independent judgment as to the law and facts, whether the order of the Public Service Commission is confiscatory, it becomes our duty to dispose of this appeal upon the principles established by that decision.
The appellant having filed a schedule of rates or charges for its service to the public, complaints were filed on behalf of the borough and of a number of private consumers of water. The parties proceeded to hearings before the commission upon the issues raised by the complaints. They concurred in an arrangement to have a board of engineers, one appointed by the appellant, one by the complainants and the third by the Pubic Service Commission, to determine the present value of the property of the appellant used in the service of the public. It was also agreed that the accountants of the commission, an accountant representing the appellant and a third representing the complainants, should examine the boohs of the appellant and make a report, or reports, as to the amount invested by the company in its property devoted to the service of the public, and that such reports should be submitted as evidence. The accountants did not agree in their reports as to the historical cost of the plant, but while there was some disagreement among them as to subsequent expenditures, the vital difference between them was as to the amount which had been invested by the company prior to January 1, 1901. The company was organized in the summer of 1893 and the only book which there is any evidence that it ever kept prior to January 15, 1901, was a minute book, in which seem to have been entered, however, the amounts expended by the company in acquiring its property and rights of way and the construction of its plant. The accountant of the commission found, from the evidence contained in the minute book, that the company had expended in acquiring its property and constructing its plant, prior to January 1, 1901, the sum of $33,202.61. *390The company bad opened regular books of account about January 1, 1901, and those books contained an entry, as of January 15, 1901, stating that tbe amount of tbe investment of tbe company prior to that date bad been $>60,221. Tbe accountants of tbe commission found tbe historical cost of tbe plant, down to date of bearing, to be |51,624.40; tbe accountant representing tbe complainants reported tbe historical cost to be a small amount greater; while tbe accountant of tbe water company reported tbe historical cost to be $82,516.96. We have examined with great care tbe evidence, oral and documentary, as to tbe historical cost of tbe appellant’s plant, and are convinced that tbe estimate of tbe accountant of tbe water company ought not to be given serious consideration. When tbe company opened its regular set of books, in January, 1901, some person may have told tbe bookkeeper, who made tbe entry, that tbe investment of tbe company down to that date was $60,-221, but it is manifest that was a mere guess, and tbe evidence clearly indicates that it was an exaggeration. Tbe total amount of tbe stock of tbe company then outstanding was less than $80,000, but let it be assumed that it bad all been issued. Tbe minute book clearly established that tbe stockholders bad not paid more than ten per cent on their stock and that those who held stock in January, 1897, bad paid an additional assessment of $1 per share; even assuming that it bad all been issued in 1897, tbe amount paid in on tbe stock could not have been more than $4,200, or tbe original ten per cent paid, $3,000, and tbe assessment of $1 upon each share, tbe shares being of tbe par value of $25 and tbe total number 1,200 shares. Tbe company bad prior to that date issued bonds to tbe amount of $30,000, which according to tbe testimony of Mr. Ahrens, tbe only witness who seemed to know anything about tbe operations of tbe company prior to 1901, bad been sold at from 85 per cent up to pax*, so that there could not have been realized from tbe sale of tbe bonds more than $30,000. Tbe pro*391ceeds of the bonds and the amount paid in on the capital stock aggregated not more than $34,200. Mr. Ahrens testified that at times, when all the bonds had not been sold, during the progress of construction, the company borrowed money from the banks, the parties interested putting their individual names on the notes, with bonds in the amount thereof as collateral, but that the total indebtedness never exceeded the amount of the bonds. Mr. Ahrens testified that when he and those associated with him sold the plant to Mr. Gring, in July, 1906, it had cost approximately $40,000. The books of the company show that during the period between January, 1901, and the date when Ahrens sold the plant the company expended for extensions thereto over $5,500, so that the testimony of the witness is really corroborative of the finding of the accountant of the commission that there had been invested in the plant, prior to January, 1901, only $33,202.61. The amount invested in the plant subsequent to that date was $18,421.79, making the total historical cost of the plant $51,624.40. There was, however, included in this amount $9,911.29 which had been expended in the construction of a reservoir and $1,871.63 which had been expended for drilling wells, neither of which are now or have for many years been used in the public service. The reservoir had either been improperly constructed, or it had been unwisely located upon an underlying stratification permitting the water to escape; it leaked and after a short time was abandoned by the company. There is nothing in the evidence which would sustain a finding that this reservoir is now or ever can be used or useful for the service of the public. The driven wells were abandoned, for the reason that the company was threatened with litigation if it continued to use them, and it thereupon acquired property and constructed a plant for taking water from the Juniata River. The wells are neither used nor useful in enabling the appellant to furnish water to its consumers. Deducting the amount' of these expenditures from the total *392amount of the historical cost we have left the sum of $39,841.48, as the historical cost of the property now used for the service of the public. The historical cost of a plant is not controlling in determining the present value of the property devoted to the service of the public, but it is an element which it is proper to consider, particularly in view of the fact that this appellant complains that the Public Service Commission did not, in determining the value of the property, make any allowance for the fact that it was a “going business.”
The engineers, representing the Public Service Commission and the parties, respectively, agreed in their report that the reproduction cost (new) of all appellant’s used and useful property would be $64,665; they agreed, also, that the parts of the plant which were de-preciable should be charged with depreciation to the amount of $13,127, leaving the present value of the plant $51,538. The engineer representing the water company concurred in the findings as to the value of the property of the company now used in the public service, but contended that the amounts expended for the abandoned reservoir and wells should be included in the valuation of the property upon which appellant was entitled to a reasonable return and, also, a large amount as the cost of developing the water company’s business, its going-concern value. The Public Service Commission found the true value of the plant to be $51,538, saying: “Giving due consideration to all the factors presented, we are of opinion that the fair value of the respondent’s property, used and useful in rendering public service, and considered as a going-concern, is $51,538.” The commission found that the water company should receive a return upon the value of its plant, determined as aforesaid, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, amounting to $3,607.66; that it should be allowed $2,625, yearly, for operating expenses, and that it should be allowed an annual depreciation charge of $800, thus requiring an annual revenue of $7,032.66. The eommis*393sion made an order directing the water company to file a schedule of rates, together with the necessary supporting data which would return that amount of revenue annually.
The first question which the appellant asserts to be involved in this case is: “In the valuation for rate-making was the commission justified in deducting from a cost-new or cost-of-reproduction, an accrued depreciation which had never been earned, without making an equitable or other proper disposition of it?” The appellant does not contend that the amount of the depreciation, $13,127, was not ascertained by scientific methods now well established. The complaint is that it is unjust to charge off: the depreciation without making some equitable provision for it, either by adding it to the amount upon which the company would be entitled to receive a return, or by providing for the amortization of it, by permitting the company to exact rates which would return a given percentage on it, say five, thus reimbursing the company for this depreciation of its property, during a period of twenty years. The complaint is founded on the assertion that the earnings of this company had not been sufficient to enable it to establish a reserve to take care of this depreciation. In dealing with a question of this character it was said by the Supreme Court of the United States: “The company is not bound to see its property gradually waste without making provision out of the earnings for its replacement. It. is entitled to see that from earnings the value of the property invested is kept unimpaired, so that at the end of any given term of years the original investment remains as it was at the beginning.If, however, a company fails to perform this plain duty and to exact sufficient returns to keep the investment unimpaired, whether this is the result of unwarranted dividends upon over-issues of securities or of omission to exact proper prices for the output, the fault is its own. When, therefore, a public regulation of its prices comes under ques*394tion, the true value of the property then employed for the purpose of earning a return cannot be enhanced by a consideration of the errors in management which have been committed in the past”: Knoxville v. Knoxville Water Co., 212 U. S. 14. This appellant had failed to make any provision out of its earnings for the replacement of the depreciation of its property. Consideration of all the testimony leads us to the conclusion that the earnings of the company were sufficient to provide an ample reserve for depreciation, if those earnings had been properly applied. The company, in July, 1906, voted to increase its bonded indebtedness from $80,000 to $80,000, a portion of the new bond was used for the purpose of retiring the old bonds then outstanding, and $44,000 of that issue of bonds were delivered to D. Gring, who was then the president of the company, and out of the proceeds of those bonds he expended only $5,324.65 for the purposes of the company. It thus appears that this company has, since 1906, been paying to its president interest, at the rate of five per cent, on over $38,-000. The amount of the earnings thus misapplied would have not only been sufficient to provide an ample fund to meet depreciation but to pay in addition, a dividend on the entire issue of the capital stock of the company. This fact alone seems to be sufficient answer to the contention of the appellant upon this branch of the case. It seems to be indeed fortunate for this company that after this strain upon its resources and notwithstanding the fact that the reservoir and wells in which it invested $11,782.92, proved useless, the present value of its plant, after all deductions for depreciation, as found by the commission, is still practically equal to the total historical cost of the plant.
The contention of the appellant that the Public Service Commission, in fixing the present valuation of the plant, erred in failing to allow for the cost of establishing the business, the going-concern value, as distinguished from the value of the physical property, is equal*395ly without merit. We have already said that tbe boobs of tbe company during tbe period when its business was established and developed, failed to disclose either tbe gross or net revenues and tbe operating expenses. Different methods may be used in computing or attempting to compute and determine tbe losses in early years during tbe development period of tbe business of a public service company, for purposes of capitalization, and as an aid to judgment in deciding whether or not such early losses should be capitalized. Whatever method is adopted, however, it is necessary, in order to arrive at any satisfactory conclusion, that there must be some evidence as to the operating expenses and gross revenues of the company during the years of the development of its business. The engineers, in the present case, being without any evidence as to the essential facts, attempted to make a guess at what those facts might have been, and then based a computation upon the facts assumed. The difficulty is that the facts assumed are not in harmony with certain collateral facts, clearly established by the records of the company, and the testimony of Howard E. Ahrens. Mr. Ahrens testified that he built the original plant and that the construction was completed in from four to six months. He testified that the plant earned the interest on its bonds down until the time the original owners sold the property to Mr. Gring and his associates, and at the time they sold it it was paying six per cent on the stock. The records of the company show that Mr. Gring and his associates assumed direction of the affairs of the company on July 5,. 1906, Mr. Gring then owning 1,197 shares, out of a total capitalization of 1,200 shares. Prior to that date the whole amount paid in, as capital, by the stockholders had been $4,200 and there had been paid out in dividends $5,047.98, or $847.98 more than the total amount paid in by the stockholders. When the new stockholders assumed charge the policy of the company seems to have been changed, no dividends having been declared on the stock during the sue-*396ceeding period of seven years, but, instead of receiving dividends, Mr. Gring, wbo owned nearly all tbe capital stock, bad received from tbe company, in 1906, over |38,000 in bonds of tbe company, as above stated, without having paid any consideration, and upon those bonds tbe company has regularly paid tbe interest. There is in tbe case no evidence upon which to found a confident assertion that tbe business of this company was not profitable from tbe beginning; nothing to warrant a finding that tbe company is entitled to an allowance, as capital, for any loss sustained by it during tbe period of tbe development of its business. We find nothing in tbe record to warrant us in bolding tbe order of tbe commission to be confiscatory.
Tbe determination of tbe Public Service Commission is affirmed and tbe appeal dismissed at cost of tbe appellant.