American Electric Power Co. v. Public Utility Commission

123 S.W.3d 33, 2003 WL 22024374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 2004
Docket03-02-00636-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 123 S.W.3d 33 (American Electric Power Co. v. Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Electric Power Co. v. Public Utility Commission, 123 S.W.3d 33, 2003 WL 22024374 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN E. POWERS, Justice

(Retired).

American Electric Power Company, Inc., and TXU Electric Company (“appellants”) appeal from a district court judgment affirming a final order of the Public Utility Commission (“the Commission”). 1 We will reverse the agency order and the district court judgment and remand the controversy to the Commission.

*35 THE CONTROVERSY

To secure adequate and continuous service to the public, an electric utility was in the past given a monopolistic franchise with corresponding public duties and an opportunity to earn revenues sufficient to recoup its reasonable and necessary expenses and pay a reasonable return to those who had invested their capital in the enterprise. The Commission for many years regulated the particulars of this arrangement under the ratemaking provisions of the Public Utility Regulatory Act (“PURA”). 2

The Commission calculated an electric utility’s rates under PURA sections 36.051-.064 and fixed its overall revenues at an amount that permitted the utility a reasonable opportunity to recover its “reasonable and necessary operating expenses” together with “a reasonable return on [its] invested capital used and useful in providing service to the public.” PURA § 36.051 (emphasis added). The term “invested capital” is not made the subject of a specific definition in PURA although the term is said to be synonymous with the term “rate base,” see 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.231(c)(2) (2003); and, the “components” of invested capital are described broadly as “property used by and useful to the utility in providing service,” appraised based on original cost less depreciation. PURA § 36.053(a). In fixing an electric utility’s rates, the Commission exercised a statutory authority to separate and allocate “[c]osts of facilities, revenues, expenses, taxes, and reserves” in arriving at rates that were just and reasonable. Id. § 36.055.

By amendments to PURA in 1999, the legislature opened to competition major elements of electric-utility operations previously regulated in the manner indicated. Among other things, the 1999 amendments provided that in the interim before January 1, 2002, an electric utility’s rates, fixed previously by the Commission as described in the preceding paragraph, would remain frozen; and, for each of the calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001, electric utilities were required to file with the Commission an annual report in a format prescribed by the agency. The purpose of the report is to identify any excess (“positive difference”) of “adjusted annual revenues” over and above the utility’s adjusted “annual costs.” See PURA § 39.257(a), (b). The consequences attending any such excess depend upon whether the reporting utility claimed “stranded costs” resulting from previous Commission regulation. “Stranded costs” refers to costs incurred by a utility as a result of investments, made under the previous regulatory regime, that would not be recoverable in the new competitive marketplace. If a utility claims such stranded costs, PURA requires that the excess of “adjusted annual revenues” over and above adjusted “annual costs” be applied against the net book value of the utility’s generation assets; if a utility does not claim stranded costs, PURA requires that the utility refund the excess to its customers or apply it to improve the utility’s transmission and distribution facilities or add pollution-control equipment. See id. §§ 39.254, 39.255.

The 1999 amendments prescribe the calculations required to be included in the annual report in order to identify any excess of annual revenue over annual costs. First, revenues for the calendar year must be adjusted by deducting therefrom revenues derived from certain specified sources; these include sums received by the utility as a result of any Commission *36 adjustment of the reporting utility’s fixed-fuel factor and a subsequent reconciliation as contemplated in PURA section 36.203. See id. § 39.257(b). Second, the 1999 amendments provide for various adjustments of a utility’s calendar-year costs in arriving at its “annual costs.” See id. § 39.258(l)-(8). Among these are costs resulting from such Commission adjustments of the utility’s fixed-fuel cost and a subsequent reconciliation. See id. §§ 39.258(l)(A)(i), (l)(B)(i). And under the rubric “Determination of Annual Costs” the 1999 amendments include a provision for fixing the utility’s return on invested capital. See id. § 39.258(7). Any excess of revenues over costs, resulting from these calculations, constitutes the “positive difference” or excess mentioned in the preceding paragraph, which must be applied in the manner there indicated.

In making the calculations and adjustments laid down in PURA sections 39.257 and 39.258, it profits the utility to maximize its annual costs while minimizing its calendar-year revenues; doing so reduces the amount of any excess that must be applied for the purposes specified in PURA sections 39.254 and 39.255 while enlarging the amount retained by the utility for operating and other costs of service. In the present controversy, the parties’ respective contentions center around what the pertinent statutory provisions require in reporting the utilities’ calendar-year revenues and annual costs associated with the Commission’s expected adjustment of their fixed-fuel factor and an attendant reconciliation under PURA section 36.203.

As indicated above, any revenue attributable to such adjustment and reconciliation must be deducted from the utility’s calendar-year revenues and a corresponding offset is required for any resulting costs. See id. §§ 39.257(b), 39.258(l)(A)(i), 39.258(l)(B)(i). The evident reason for excluding revenues resulting from such adjustment and reconciliation is this: such revenues are not recovered by and through the utility’s frozen rates. Rather, the utility receives such revenues outside those rates and through the Commission’s independent actions in adjusting the utility’s fixed-fuel factor and ordering a reconciliation under PURA section 36.203. The resulting revenues represent the difference between a utility’s actual fuel expenditures and its predicted or hypothetical fuel costs based on the fixed-fuel factor embedded in its frozen rates. See Nucor Steel v. Public Util. Comm’n, 26 S.W.3d 742, 745 (Tex.App.-Austin 2001, pet. denied); City of El Paso v. El Paso Elec. Co., 851 S.W.2d 896, 897-98 (Tex.App.-Austin 1993, writ denied).

. A utility’s fuel expenditures have several accounting consequences bearing on the present controversy. Fluctuating fuel prices may cause the utility to pay more for fuel than it recovers through its fixed-fuel rate. We may say with the parties that the utility “under-recovers” its fuel costs, for the time being, in such cases.

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123 S.W.3d 33, 2003 WL 22024374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-electric-power-co-v-public-utility-commission-texapp-2004.