Appeal of Concord Steam Corp.

543 A.2d 905, 130 N.H. 422, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 6, 1988
DocketNo. 87-075
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 543 A.2d 905 (Appeal of Concord Steam Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Concord Steam Corp., 543 A.2d 905, 130 N.H. 422, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 41 (N.H. 1988).

Opinion

Brock, C.J.

Concord Steam Corporation (hereinafter CSC or the company) appeals pursuant to RSA 541:6 from three orders of the public utilities commission (hereinafter PUC) in its docket DR 85-304. In the course of granting part of the company’s requested rate increase to cover non-fuel costs, the PUC ruled on matters other than those relating to non-fuel costs. For the reasons that follow, we set aside all PUC findings on the propriety of certain fuel costs charged to ratepayers, and vacate, in part, the orders relating thereto.

CSC’s PUC-approved meter rate consists of a base rate for recovery of non-fuel costs, and an energy cost adjustment (hereinafter EC A) rate for recovery of fuel costs. Pursuant to a 1983 agreement, the company moved to reopen an earlier rate-setting proceeding so that the PUC might consider the company’s request for an increase in the base rate, for recovery of non-fuel costs, and an attendant increase in the meter rate to $9.05 per thousand pounds of steam. In its request, CSC did not seek any adjustment of the ECA rate.

After the PUC granted CSC’s request for temporary rates at the $9.05 level, CSC requested a further base rate increase, and attendant meter rate increase to $10.00 per thousand pounds of [424]*424steam. The PUC set a temporary meter rate of $9.38 per thousand pounds of steam, and held hearings on the proposed permanent rate on June 3, 4 and 16, 1986.

Prior to the hearings, in mid-May, Daniel Lanning, the PUC’s Assistant Finance Director, filed written testimony with the PUC and provided a copy to the CSC. In his prefiled testimony, which presented the PUC staff’s recommendation on the company’s permanent rates, Lanning expressed concern that, through the EC A component of its meter rate, the company had charged ratepayers improperly for certain fuel-related expenses. The basis for Lanning’s concern was CSC’s two agreements with Wood Fuel Production Company (hereinafter WFP).

On April 2, 1981, CSC had entered into an agreement with WFP for the purchase of wood. fuel. WFP, which became operational on the same day, was a limited partnership whose aim was to set up a fuel processing center that would serve primarily CSC. CSC’s president and sole shareholder, Roger Bloomfield, was a general partner in WFP with a ten percent interest that was subject to unilateral conversion to a limited partnership interest by the other general partner, a corporation. The corporate general partner, KIC Fuel Company, and the fourteen limited partners were associated with Lazard Freres & Co., the investment banker for CSC in the expansion of its steam system.

When WFP was unable to procure, at prices acceptable to CSC, the wood material necessary for producing wood fuel, CSC sought to terminate the purchase agreement. CSC and WFP executed an agreement, dated September 10, 1981, that terminated the purchase agreement and assigned to CSC WFP’s interest in a contract for wood material that WFP had executed in August 1981 with Connecticut Valley Chipping Co., Inc. (hereinafter ConVal). In the termination agreement the company agreed to pay to WFP, during a five-year period; the larger of “an annual royalty on all wood or wood products used as fuel by Concord Steam from any source whatever,” or “a royalty based on a deemed annual consumption of 72,000 green tons of wood or wood products, whether or not wood or wood products are in fact used as fuel.” CSC itself has acknowledged that the royalties were designed to reimburse WFP for the unrecovered portion of its investment in the fuel processing plant.

Lanning’s prefiled statement first expressed the PUC staff’s belief that under RSA 366:3, which requires a utility to file with the PUC a copy of any agreement with an “affiliate,” CSC should have obtained the PUC’s approval of the purchase agreement with [425]*425WFP. Lanning noted that despite the apparently “interlocking directorates,” the company had failed to notify the PUC of the contract.

Lanning next addressed CSC’s payment to WFP of $73,440 for wood delivered during the test year ending December 1985. Because ConYal, and not WFP, was supplying the wood, the PUC staff considered CSC’s payments to both WFP and ConVal to be duplicate payments for the same wood. The staff therefore recommended that CSC be required to refund to its ratepayers the $73,440 representing test-year royalty expenses recovered through the ECA rate.

During the subsequent hearings, CSC’s agreements with WFP were not the subject of extended discussion. In his oral testimony, Lanning explained that the recommended disallowance of test-year royalty expenses would reduce slightly the figure for CSC’s cash operating capital, and thereby affect the PUC’s calculation of CSC’s authorized base rate. Bloomfield testified briefly about the purchase and termination agreements, although the purchase agreement itself was not introduced into evidence.

In its brief filed with the PUC after the hearings, however, CSC addressed the WFP-related issues that Lanning had raised in his prefiled statement. The company provided a history of WFP and WFP’s agreements with the company to illustrate, first, that WFP was not an “affiliate” of CSC and could not be deemed an affiliate simply because Bloomfield himself was an “affiliate,” and, second, that the test-year royalties paid to WFP were not duplicate payments subject to refund but, rather, were a return of otherwise unrecovered investment. New Hampshire Hospital, a major CSC ratepayer, filed a brief in which it countered CSC’s arguments and agreed with the PUC staff’s recommendations.

In November 1986, the PUC issued an order that (1) rejected the CSC’s requested meter rate of $10.00 per thousand pounds of steam; (2) approved a rate of $9.08 per thousand pounds of steam; and (3) directed the company to calculate and devise a means of refunding the excess revenue collected from ratepayers under the previously approved temporary rates. The accompanying report indicated that the PUC had omitted the test-year WFP royalty expenses in calculating the base rate and $9.08 meter rate. The report was not limited, however, to matters affecting the base-rate determination, but also contained findings on the company’s agreements with WFP, and the resulting royalty payment expenses, thus implicating the ECA rate mechanism through which the company had recovered the royalty expenses.

[426]*426In addressing the WFP agreements, the PUC first found that Bloomfield individually was an “affiliate” of CSC, but that the company had failed, contrary to RSA 366:3, to inform the PUC of the purchase agreement, and the PUC therefore had no occasion to become concerned about CSC’s royalty payments until testimony in June revealed their purpose to reimburse WFP investors for net losses of some $400,000. While the PUC noted that the company’s failure to file the purchase agreement, without more, would be a sufficient statutory basis for the PUC’s disallowance of the estimated $400,000 in royalty expenses that the company would incur over five years, the PUC found that Bloomfield’s imprudence in executing the purchase and partnership agreements provided an additional basis for disallowance. On the issue of Bloomfield’s imprudence, the PUC found that (1) the purchase agreement omitted specifications for the fuel that WFP was to provide CSC, and (2), as a consequence of the carefully structured partnership agreement, Bloomfield lacked management control of WFP and, therefore, the ability to protect his and CSC’s interests if the arrangement faltered.

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Bluebook (online)
543 A.2d 905, 130 N.H. 422, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-concord-steam-corp-nh-1988.