Bell Atlantic—Delaware, Inc. v. Public Service Commission of the State

705 A.2d 601, 1997 Del. Super. LEXIS 113
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 4, 1997
DocketCivil Action No. 96A-07-003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 705 A.2d 601 (Bell Atlantic—Delaware, Inc. v. Public Service Commission of the State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell Atlantic—Delaware, Inc. v. Public Service Commission of the State, 705 A.2d 601, 1997 Del. Super. LEXIS 113 (Del. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRY, Resident Judge.

Background

Bell Atlantic — Delaware, Inc., which I will refer to as “BA-Del” filed a proposed tariff with the Public Service Commission (“PSC”) for a new service known as Residential Intel-lilineQ BRI which is also called Residential Integrated Services Digital Network, abbreviated R-ISDN. Without going into the technical aspects of this service, suffice it to say that the process digitizes signals so that a residential user can have much quicker response time when operating personal computers over the telephone line than is available when using the regular telephone service.

Eventually the tariff or rates proposed by BA-Del were subjected to a hearing before a hearing examiner who reduced them significantly. The hearing examiner’s findings and recommendations were adopted by the Public Service Commission. The result was a much lower tariff then was sought by BA-Del and so BA-Del appealed to the Superior Court. The issue on appeal is whether BA-Del was denied due process of law by the PSC and whether the rates set in place by the PSC are supported by the evidence.

Before the issues are discussed, it is necessary to focus on the requirements of the Telecommunications Technology Investment Act (TTIA) which is found at 26 Del C. § 701 to 711 and which provides the framework for this proceeding.

The TTIA was enacted in 1992 for the purpose of regulating the kind of service (among others) which BA-Del is providing in this case. Whenever a telecommunications service provider proposes to offer a new service, it has to comply with the TTIA. The R-ISDN service proposed here is classified as a basic service within the definition of that term as found in the TTIA. Section 706(a)(1) of the act provides that one who wishes to offer such a service must give notice to the PSC not less than sixty days prior to the proposed implementation date. The notice must also provide the PSC with information sufficient to demonstrate that the service is correctly classified as basic and the proposed rates are just and reasonable.

At 706(b) the statute goes on to provide that:

The Commission may extend the proposed implementation date for any new service for good cause shown; provided, however, that notwithstanding such extension, the service provider may offer its new service as described and classified in its original filing unless the Commission shall have, by final order entered within 90 days of such original filing, established a classification or, in the case of a basic or discretionary service, rate other than that proposed by the service provider.

This Section means that the PSC can investigate the application and in effect extend the proposed implementation date by thirty days. However, unless the PSC issues a final order within ninety days from the filing date changing the rates, the service provider is free to offer the service at its proposed rate at the end of sixty days or ninety days if [603]*603the PSC extends the proposed implementation date by thirty days.

Once the rate is set pursuant to the provisions of § 706 it can only be changed or adjusted in the future pursuant to § 707. That section at subdivision (b) provides that once a year the rates for a basic service may be adjusted pursuant to an inflation based formula which reads:

Change in Rate = Change in Gross Domestic Product-Price Inflater since last rate change minus 3%

Other than changes determined by that formula, the statute at § 707(c) only allows six other exceptions which would result in subsequent rate changes. The first two exceptions authorize a service provider to elect not to implement a rate increase or a rate decrease otherwise required by the inflation formula. The third provides that no rate decrease resulting from the inflation formula can result in a rate lower than the incremental cost of providing the basic service. The fourth provides that the PSC may approve adjustments to the rates for a basic service where the overall result is to neither increase or decrease the total revenue derived from the basic service; in other words, revenue neutral adjustments. The fifth exception deals with adjustment of rates in connection with the purchase of the basic service by another service provider. And the sixth exception allows the PSC to approve a rate change “in order to reflect an unforeseen change in the service provider’s costs of providing telecommunications service, which change occurs for reasons beyond the control of the applicable service provider.” This type of situation is referred to as an exogenous cost.

In the case at bar BA-Del filed its proposed rates for R-ISDN on September November 4. The rate schedule was as follows:

1. A one time connection charge of $125.
2. A monthly recurring charge of $19.50.
3. A usage rate for data transmission of $0.02 per minute per data channel (peak time) and $0.01 (off peak time).
4. A usage rate for voice transmission of $0.03 for the first three minutes of use and $0.005 for each additional minute thereafter.

During the interval the Public Advocate filed a notice of intervention and both she and the PSC staff expressed concern about whether the. proposed rates were just and reasonable; they felt that a thorough analysis had to be undertaken. BA-Del was anxious to implement the service on November 4, 1995 because it was in the process of advertising for a pre-thanksgiving offering of R-ISDN. Both sides recognized that the proposed rates would go into effect on November 4, unless the PSC extended the period for an additional thirty days. The result was an agreement where the parties stipulated that the service could be provided at the proposed rates on November 4, 1995 but that a hearing examiner would be appointed to make findings and recommendations on the proposed rates. The parties agreed and the PSC ordered that the proposed rates would go into effect on November 4 “subject to the Commission’s authority to order implementation of such rates and tariff terms and conditions as it shall determine to be just and reasonable, on a prospective basis, thereafter.”

The parties obviously recognized that it was impracticable to analyze the filing and conduct a hearing within the first sixty days and, recognizing that BA-Del had a legitimate concern with implementing the service by the end of sixty days, they fashioned a device to avoid the imposition of a permanent rate which they thought would have otherwise occurred under § 706(b) absent a thirty day extension or a PSC order revising the rates. In doing this, I am satisfied it was everyone’s intent to treat the rates filed September 5 (which I will call the “September rates”) as interim subject to final order of the PSC at a later date. The agreement which put this scheme into place also provided that if the PSC were to eventually revise the rates, any changes would be on a prospective, not a retroactive basis. In fact the TTIA does not provide a mechanism where a public utility can put a rate into effect under bond as it can in other cases pursuant to 26 Del. C. § 306. In those other instances, any excess revenue derived from an interim rate [604]*604over the rate ultimately set by the PSC would be refunded to the consumer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
705 A.2d 601, 1997 Del. Super. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-atlanticdelaware-inc-v-public-service-commission-of-the-state-delsuperct-1997.