C. G. E. Ford Heights, LLC v. Miller Modification of June 9, 1999

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 4, 1999
Docket1-97-2121, 2384 cons.
StatusPublished

This text of C. G. E. Ford Heights, LLC v. Miller Modification of June 9, 1999 (C. G. E. Ford Heights, LLC v. Miller Modification of June 9, 1999) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. G. E. Ford Heights, LLC v. Miller Modification of June 9, 1999, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION

August 04, 1999

No. 1-97-2121 and 1-97-2384, Consolidated

CGE FORD HEIGHTS, L.L.C. 1 , and CGE FULTON, L.L.C.,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

    v.

DAN MILLER 1 , RUTH KRETSCHMER, WILLIAM DICKSON 1 , RICHARD KOLHAUSER and KARL McDERMOTT 1 , in Their Individual and Official Capacities as Members of the Illinois Commerce Commission,

Defendants-Appellees

(Commonwealth Edison Company,

Defendant).

---------------------------------------

THE VILLAGE OF ROBBINS and ROBBINS RESOURCE RECOVERY PARTNERS, L.P.,

JAMES EDGAR 2 , in His Official Capacity as the Governor of the State of Illinois; WILLIAM DICKSON 1 , RICHARD KOLHAUSER, RUTH KRETSCHMER, KARL MCDERMOTT 1 , and DAN MILLER 1 , in Their Official Capacities as Commissioners of the Illinois Commerce Commission; KEN ZEHNDER 2 , in His Official Capacity as Director of the Department of Revenue,

)

Appeal from the

Circuit Court of

Cook County

Nos. 96 CH 2560 and        96 CH 12873,          Consolidated

Honorable

Robert Boharic,

Judge Presiding.

MODIFIED ON DENIAL OF REHEARING

PRESIDING JUSTICE CAHILL delivered the opinion of the court:

1 The court granted a motion changing CGE Ford Heights, L.L.C. to New Heights Recovery & Power, L.L.C., and substituting Terry Harvill, Richard Mathias and Edward Hurley for Karl McDermott, Dan Miller and William Dickson.

      2 The court granted a second motion substituting George Ryan and Glen Bower for James Edgar and Ken Zehnder.

Plaintiffs appeal the dismissal of several counts of their complaints for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.  The counts were directed to the governor, members of the Illinois State Commerce Commission (ISCC) and the Director of the Department of Revenue.  In response to a motion under section 2-619 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 1996)), the trial court dismissed the state defendants based on sovereign immunity.  Counts against Commonwealth Edison (ComEd) remain pending in the trial court.  We affirm dismissal of some of the counts on grounds other than sovereign immunity, reverse the dismissal of others, and remand with directions.

Plaintiffs, CGE Ford Heights L.L.C., CGE Fulton, L.L.C. (CGE), the Village of Robbins, and Robbins Resource Recovery Partners (Partnership), filed two separate complaints, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent what they allege is retroactive application of Public Act 89-448.  Pub. Act 89-448, §5 (eff. March 14, 1996).  Public Act 89-448 took effect on March 14, 1996, amending a section of the Public Utilities Act commonly referred to as the "Retail Rate Law" (220 ILCS 5/8-403.1 (West 1996)).

The "Retail Rate Law" was first amended in 1987 to encourage burning used tires as a source of energy.  The 1987 amendment authorized qualified solid-waste-to-energy facilities (QSWEF) to enter into 20-year contracts with Illinois electrical utilities for the sale of electricity generated by incinerator plants.  The statute and the parties refer to these incinerator plants as "QSWEFs."  For lack of a livelier acronym, we will live with QSWEF in this opinion, but will more often call them "plants."  The "retail rate" is substantially higher than the wholesale rate the utilities would otherwise pay for electricity bought from private generators of electricity.  Under the statutory scheme, ComEd receives tax credits from the state equal to the difference between the retail rate ComEd pays the plants and the wholesale rate.  The law further requires the plants to reimburse the state for the amount of the tax credits, but only after the debt incurred to build the plant is retired.  

Public Act 89-448 abolished subsidies for tire burning plants.  The amendment redefined QSWEFs as plants that use methane gas generated from landfills.  Plaintiffs, which burn tires, no longer qualify as QSWEFs under the amendment and are not entitled to the retail rate.  While the legislation was pending, ComEd notified plaintiffs that if the bill became  a law, ComEd would no longer pay them the retail rate for electricity.  On the date Public Act 89-448 took effect, each of the plaintiffs had in hand signed contracts with ComEd to supply electricity at the retail rate.  Two of the three plants were up and running.  One was in the planning stage.  Each contract, appended to the complaints, contained the following clause:

"Service and billing, hereunder, *** shall continue for 20 years from the date Customer's Qualified Solid Waste to Energy Facility begins commercial operations, unless terminated by the written agreement of the parties, the Customer loses its status as a Qualified Solid Waste to Energy Facility *** or the company ceases to obtain full Public Utilities Revenue tax Credits *** associated with the purchase under this contract for any reason."  (Emphasis added.)

Plaintiffs never refer to this contract clause in their briefs.  The day after the law was signed, ComEd stopped paying the retail rate.

Plaintiffs allege in their complaints that they built their plants in reliance on the old law.  Plaintiffs allege that, without the retail rate, their plants cannot meet daily operating expenses or service their loans.  

The Robbins plant was certified by the ISCC as a QSWEF on February 20, 1992.  The plant began to generate electricity in October 1996, about six months after Public Act 89-448 became law.  Full commercial operation began in 1997.    

CGE Ford Heights was certified by the ISCC as a QSWEF on June 2, 1992.  Ford Heights entered into a 20-year contract with ComEd and started up in December 1995.  Twelve days after the 1996 amendment became law, the Ford Heights plant closed and the owners filed for chapter 11 reorganization.  Ford Heights remained a debtor-in-possession during the bankruptcy proceedings.  Ford Heights is now reorganized and known as "New Heights."   

CGE Fulton entered into a 20-year contract with ComEd on January 26, 1995, effective when the plant began to generate electricity.  To date, the plant has not been built.  The complaint alleges that funding for construction of the plant "unraveled"  after the amendment became law.

CGE filed a six-count complaint on March 14, 1996.  Counts I and II allege breach of contract claims against ComEd.  Count III alleges that retroactive application of Public Act 89-448 to CGE's plants violates due process rights.  Count IV alleges that retroactive application of Public Act 89-448 impairs CGE's contracts with ComEd.

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