At & T v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

737 A.2d 201, 558 Pa. 290, 1999 Pa. LEXIS 2517
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 24, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 737 A.2d 201 (At & T v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
At & T v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 737 A.2d 201, 558 Pa. 290, 1999 Pa. LEXIS 2517 (Pa. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

SAYLOR, Justice.

At issue in these consolidated appeals is the manner in which the Public Utility Commission allocates costs of alterations to rail-highway crossings between a transportation public utility and affected parties.

The cases arise from the relocation of telecommunications facilities of Appellees AT & T and Sprint Communications Company L.P. (“Sprint”), consisting of fiber optic cables and *295 associated equipment, due to alterations to three rail-highway crossings in the City of Scranton, as well as to a 3,600-foot railroad tunnel running beneath a state highway and a Nicholson Township road (the “Nicholson Tunnel”). The alterations were performed in connection with 1992 legislative enactments encouraging and subsidizing changes to the railway that would permit carriers to stack container cars traveling between New York and Philadelphia by increasing vertical and horizontal clearances along the line.

Appellant The Delaware and Hudson Railway Company, Inc. (“Delaware”) is the current owner of the relevant railway segments. Prior to 1991, the railway was owned by Delaware and Hudson Railway Company (“DHRC”), a subsidiary of Guilford Transportation Industries, Inc. (“Guilford”), both of which are unrelated to Delaware despite the name association. In 1986, Sprint, then known as U.S. Telecom, Inc., and Guilford entered into an easement agreement which permitted Sprint to install fiber optic cables along the railway. The easement agreement provided that, if Sprint’s facilities were required to be relocated because of the operations or activities of DHRC, Guilford would pay the relocation costs. The agreement also provided that its terms were binding upon the parties’ respective successors and assigns. Sprint, however, did not receive or record a deed of easement as contemplated by the agreement.

In 1990, pursuant to an easement agreement between AT & T and a bankruptcy trustee for DHRC, 1 AT & T installed its own fiber optic cables along Delaware’s line. The easement agreement provided that AT & T would bear the cost of moving its facilities if relocation were required by the operations or activities of the railway.

In January of 1991, Delaware acquired substantially all of DHRC’s assets from DHRC’s bankruptcy estate. In connection with the sale, the AT & T easement agreement was assigned to Delaware; however, Delaware claims not to have *296 acquired the SprinVGuilford fiber optic agreement, nor assumed Guilford’s obligations in the DHRC sale agreement.

On application by Delaware, 2 the Public Utility Commission (the “PUC” or the “Commission”) approved the alterations of the rail-highway crossings and that portion of the Nicholson Tunnel running beneath the two public highways. In connection with the approval, the PUC. directed Delaware, AT & T and Sprint to proceed to relocate their facilities at the crossings at their own expense, until such time as a formal hearing could be held to determine final cost allocations. With respect to the Nicholson Tunnel, the PUC also “establishe[d] its jurisdictional limits at the crossings as the area within the confines of the railroad right-of-way and highway right-of-way.”

Sprint relocated its cables at a cost of $27,499.27 for affected crossings in Scranton, and $205,854.54 for temporary relocation of its facilities in the Nicholson Tunnel. AT & T relocated its cables for $20,000 and $116,451, respectively. AT & T and Sprint also expressed an intent to share an expected cost of $1,654,217.25 to permanently relocate certain cables in a shared common facility in the Nicholson Tunnel. Delaware’s overall costs were subsidized, in part, by the Commonwealth and by Conrail, another major Pennsylvania freight carrier, pursuant to an agreement by which the Commonwealth agreed to reimburse Delaware and Conrail for up to thirty percent of their costs, with an aggregate reimbursement cap of $1,260,000.

At hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), AT & T and Sprint initially took the position that the PUC lacked jurisdiction to allocate costs. Alternatively, they sought reimbursement from Delaware of their actual and anticipated relocation costs pursuant to Section 2704(a) of the Public Utility Code, 66 Pa.C.S. § 2704(a), which authorizes the PUC to allocate costs between public utilities, municipal corporations, and certain other entities, or the Commonwealth, and *297 affected parties at rail-highway crossings “in such proper proportions as the commission may, after due notice and hearing, determine, unless such proportions are mutually agreed upon and paid by the interested parties.” 66 Pa.C.S. § 2704(a)(emphasis added). 3 AT & T and Sprint argued that they were forced to relocate their cables without reciprocal benefit, and that the PUC had previously reimbursed costs to other utilities in similar situations. Sprint further cited to the cost allocation provisions of its easement agreement with Guilford, claiming that Delaware should be bound by such terms.

On April 14, 1996, the ALJ issued a recommended opinion. The ALJ first considered whether the PUC possessed subject matter jurisdiction to allocate costs pursuant to Section 2704(a). Initially, the ALJ found that Section 2704(a) provided for jurisdiction in the PUC to make discretionary cost allocation determinations associated with the relocation of utility facilities at rail-highway crossings. The ALJ expressly rejected the argument that the “mutually agreed upon and paid” term of Section 2704(a) constrained the PUC’s jurisdiction under the facts of this case, because no costs had been *298 paid in conformity with the easement agreements prior to the assertion of PUC jurisdiction. With respect to the Nicholson Tunnel, the ALJ found, based upon the Commission’s initial order approving the alterations, that the PUC’s jurisdiction under Section 2704(a) should be limited to those portions of the tunnel located beneath the highways.

In allocating costs, the ALJ considered various relevant factors, including the following: AT & T’s and Sprint’s failure to obtain PUC approval to install their facilities in the rail-highway crossings; the “private” character of the rights-of-way at issue; partial improvements to the facilities made by AT & T and Sprint and the benefit of increased protection received in connection with the relocation; the fact that no public funding for the relocation of AT & T and Sprint’s facilities was available; the parties’ awareness of the risk of relocation in placing their facilities in the crossings; and the equities involved in the case.

In connection with her analysis of the equities, the ALJ discussed the cost allocation provisions of the easement agreements. With respect to the AT & T agreement, the ALJ noted that it “clearly imposes on AT & T the responsibility of paying its own costs for relocating its facilities in a Railway right-of-way,” 4

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Bluebook (online)
737 A.2d 201, 558 Pa. 290, 1999 Pa. LEXIS 2517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/at-t-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pa-1999.