Arkansas Charcoal Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission

762 S.W.2d 403, 26 Ark. App. 202, 1988 Ark. App. LEXIS 609
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 28, 1988
DocketCA 88-195 and CA 88-395
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 762 S.W.2d 403 (Arkansas Charcoal Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Charcoal Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission, 762 S.W.2d 403, 26 Ark. App. 202, 1988 Ark. App. LEXIS 609 (Ark. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinions

Melvin Mayfield, Judge.

Appellants, Arkansas Charcoal Company (ACC) and TXO Production Corporation (TXO), bring this appeal from orders of the Arkansas Public Service Commission (APSC) entered in APSC Docket Nos. 87-009-U and 88-092-U. By joint motion and stipulation of the parties, the orders appealed from the latter docket were consolidated with those appealed from the first docket. The APSC appears here to defend its actions and is joined as appellee by the Attorney General of Arkansas, who participated below pursuant to statutory authority, and by Arkansas Western Gas Company (AWG), which initiated the proceedings below by petitioning the APSC to investigate the situation giving rise to this appeal. An amicus curiae, Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company, also takes the position that the actions of the APSC should be affirmed.

A clear understanding of the facts giving rise to this controversy is essential to its resolution. Appellee Arkansas Western Gas had for some years been ACC’s sole natural gas supplier and owned the pipeline facilities which served ACC’s plant. At some point, ACC and AWG were unable to reach an agreement which ÁCC found satisfactory for its natural gas requirements, and ACC attempted to reach an arrangement with AWG for transportation of gas from TXO’s wells to ACC’s plant through AWG’s pipeline, but those efforts were unsuccessful. The failure to reach an agreement with AWG resulted in a “Gas Sales Agreement” dated July 2, 1986, entered into between the appellants, ACC and TXO.

Under the terms of this agreement, TXO, a natural gas production company not subject to regulation by the APSC, agreed to construct 14,500 feet of 41/2-inch pipeline and nearly 12,000 feet of 2%-inch pipeline connecting various gas wells to a dehydration station. At the dehydration station, the gas is odorized, metered, and treated prior to delivery to ACC, for use in its charcoal manufacturing plant near Paris, in Logan County, Arkansas. Like TXO, ACC has never been subject to APSC regulation. ACC and TXO contemplated sale of the pipelines and related facilities by TXO to ACC after construction, which transfer was accomplished after the facility became operational in January of 1987. The pipelines traverse the countryside in easements purchased by ACC for that purpose and are designed to accommodate pressures of at least 1,433 pounds per square inch (psi).

On January 21, 1987, AWG filed a complaint with the appellee Arkansas Public Service Commission, and TXO was subsequently ordered by the APSC to appear and show cause why it should not be subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission under the “Utility Facility Environmental and Economic Protection Act,” Ark. Code Ann. Section 23-18-501 et seq. (1987), and why it should not be prohibited from selling natural gas to ACC. AWG also sought permission to abandon its existing pipeline connecting its gas supplies to the ACC plant in the event appellants were allowed to operate their pipeline. ACC intervened in the case to protect its interests in the pipeline and related facilities.

Hearings were commenced in late October of 1987, and in May of 1988, the Commission found by Order No. 38 that the pipeline and equipment constructed and operated by TXO and owned by ACC were a “major utility facility” subject to Commission jurisdiction and that an application for a “certificate of environmental compatibility and public need” should have been filed with the Commission prior to construction of the pipeline. Order No. 38 also directed the appellants to cease and desist operating the pipeline, and a rehearing was sought by appellants in early June of 1988. On June 28,1988, the Commission issued Order No. 39, in which it denied rehearing and ordered compliance with all terms of Order No. 38 and directed that TXO and ACC cease operation of the pipeline within seventy-two hours. We temporarily stayed the Commission’s cease and desist order, and that stay was later made permanent pending resolution of this appeal.

TXO and ACC contend on appeal that the finding that the pipeline was a “major utility facility” as defined by the Arkansas Code is wrong or, alternatively, that, even if the pipeline is considered to fall within the definition of a major utility facility, an “environmental impact statement” is all that must be filed with the Commission. They also claim the Commission lacks authority to order the appellants to cease and desist operation of the pipeline.

A “major utility facility,” so far as a gas transmission line is concerned, is defined by Ark. Code Ann. Section 23-18-503(2)(C) (1987) as:

For the sole purpose of requiring an environmental impact statement hereunder, a gas transmission line and associated facilities designed for, or capable of, transporting gas at pressures in excess of one hundred twenty-five pounds per square inch (125 lbs. psi), extending a distance of more than one (1) mile, excepting, however, those gas pipelines devoted solely to the gathering of gas from gas wells constructed within the limits of any gas field as defined by the Oil and Gas Commission;

Ark. Code Ann. Section 23-18-503(5), (9) and (10) (1987) provide as follows:

(5) “Person” includes any individual, group, firm, partnership, corporation, cooperative association, municipality, government subdivision, government agency, local government, or other organization;
(9) “Public utility” or “utility” means any person engaged in the production, storage, distribution, sale, delivery, or furnishing of electricity or gas, or both, to or for the public, as defined in Section 23-1-101 (4)(A)(i) and (4) (B);
(10) “Applicant” means the utility or other person making application to the commission for a certificate of environmental compatibility and public need.

Arkansas Code Annotated Section 23-1-101 (1987) provides:

As used in this act, unless the context otherwise requires:
(4) (A) “Public utility” includes persons and corporations, or their lessees, trustees, and receivers, owning or operating in this state equipment or facilities for:
(i) Producing, generating, transmitting, delivering, or furnishing gas, electricity, steam, or another agent for the production of light, heat, or power to, or for, the public for compensation;
(C) the term “public utility,” as to any public utility defined in subdivisions (4)(A)(i), and (ii) and (vi) of this section, shall not include any person or corporation, who or which furnishes the service or commodity exclusively to himself or itself, or to his or its employees or tenants, when the service or commodity is not resold to or used by others;

Ark. Code Ann. Section 23-18-510(a) (1987) reads in part as follows:

(a) No person shall commence to construct a major utility facility in the state, except those exempted as provided in subsection (b) of this section, Section 23-18-504(a), and Section 23-18-508, without first having obtained a certificate of environmental compatibility and public need, hereafter called a “certificate,” issued with respect to such facility by the commission.

Ark. Code Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
762 S.W.2d 403, 26 Ark. App. 202, 1988 Ark. App. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-charcoal-co-v-arkansas-public-service-commission-arkctapp-1988.