Central Power & Light Co. v. Public Utility Commission

17 S.W.3d 780, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 2896, 2000 WL 545932
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 2000
Docket03-99-00204-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 S.W.3d 780 (Central Power & Light Co. v. Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Power & Light Co. v. Public Utility Commission, 17 S.W.3d 780, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 2896, 2000 WL 545932 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*782 JOHN E. POWERS, Justice (Retired).

Central Power and Light Company (the “Company”), a regulated public utility, appeals from a district-court judgment affirming the final order of the Public Utility Commission (the “Commission”) in a suit brought by the Company for judicial review of that order, as authorized by section 1.301 of the Public Utility Regulatory Act (“PURA”). See Tex. UtiLCode Ann. § 1.301 (West 1998). 1 The municipalities of San Juan, Pharr, and San Benito intervened in the suit in defense of the Commission’s final order and have filed on appeal a joint brief. We will affirm the district-court judgment.

THE CONTROVERSY

The Company furnishes electric power to customers in a number of Texas municipalities and has entered into contracts with numerous home-rule cities. 2 By such contracts, the Company has obtained the use of city streets, alleys, highways, and public grounds for Company facilities. In compensation, the contracts require the Company to pay “franchise fees” to the cities in amounts fixed by the contracts or, by city ordinances.

For a number of years, the Company paid the franchise fees in accordance with the contracts and ordinances. The Company, in turn, recouped the expense indirectly from its customers as one of the “reasonable and necessary operating expenses” that the Company is entitled to recover by and through its electric-service rates fixed' by the Commission. See PURA § 36.057(a) (West 1998); see generally Ron Moss, Ratemaking in the Public Utility Commission of Texas, 44 Baylor L.Rev. 825, 827-43 (1992).

In a 1982 rate case before the Commission, under the agency’s Docket 4400, the Company proposed that it be allowed to recoup its franchise-fee payments directly from its customers on a current basis rather than through rates set from time to time by the Commission. This would be done, according to the Company’s proposal, by adding directly to customer bills a pro-rated part of the applicable franchise-fee payments to a city, adjusted periodically as the Company made such payments. The payments would, of course, be then omitted from the Company’s “reasonable and necessary operating expenses” in any future calculation of rates fixed by the Commission.

In the course of Docket 4400, numerous cities (including San Juan and Pharr, but not San Benito) agreed to the Company’s proposal and entered into a stipulation to the effect indicated. The Commission adopted the stipulation in its final order in Docket 4400, which declared as follows:

Municipal franchise payments shall be recovered by the Gompany on a current basis by means of a factor to be included in each applicable customer rate schedule. The factor for each rate class will be computed from the cost study finally approved in this docket and shall be *783 expressed as a percentage of the customers’ total bill excluding sales tax. The factor will apply to revenues produced by the base rate and fuel charge for each rate class and shall be included within the total dollar amount shown as owing on the customers’ bill.

In mid-1996, some fourteen years after the 1982 final order in Docket 4400, the cities of San Juan and Pharr sued the Company in a district court of Hidalgo County; in December 1996, the city of San Benito sued the Company in a district court of Cameron County. The three cities claimed damages based on the Company’s alleged underpayment of the franchise fees required by their ordinances and contracts with the Company, alleging causes of action for breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, fraud, declaratory judgment, an accounting, and the imposition of a constructive trust upon funds held by the Company that were lawfully owned by the named cities. San Benito alleged as well the elements of a class action in behalf of other cities similarly situated. No class action determination has been made insofar as we are informed.

In January 1997, the Company filed in the Commission a “petition for declaratory relief.” Therein, the Company alleged the named cities were claiming by their lawsuits additional sums not authorized by the terms of the stipulation in Docket 4400, which the Company alleged was a binding contract and “an essential part of the overall agreement between the parties with regard to franchise fees and, to an even greater degree,” the Company’s rates fixed by the final order in Docket 4400. It appears the named cities were claiming an amount of franchise fees based on a percentage applied to Company revenues that included franchise-tax and sales-tax collections made by the Company; and, the Company alleged in its petition, the parties in Docket 4400 “never contemplated basing municipal franchise payments on these other revenues.”

In its petition to the Commission, the Company requested that the agency issue the following declaratory orders:'

1. “[A] declaration from the Commission that it has primary jurisdiction over [the Company’s] collection and payment of municipal franchise fees, based upon the agreed mechanism established ... in Docket No. 4400”;
2. A declaration that “[a]ny challenge to the procedure established in the Stipulation and Order in Docket 4400 regarding [the Company’s] collection and payment of municipal franchise fees must be made at the Commission”; and
3. A declaration that “[t]he ... cities are estopped from challenging the procedure established in the Stipulation and Order in Docket 4400 regarding [the Company’s] collection and payment of municipal franchise fees in any forum other than the Commission.”

As a legal basis for the requested relief, the Company alleged “that the Commission has continuing jurisdiction over franchise fee issues based on the final Order ... in Docket 4400.”

The Commission found there was no necessity for an evidentiary hearing because the “proceeding involves only a legal interpretation of the Commission’s authority over disputes relating to the collection and payment of franchise fees to municipalities.” In the final order we now review, the Commission denied the Company’s request for a declaratory order “that the Commission ... has primary jurisdiction over the payment of municipal franchise fees” and dismissed the Company’s petition for want of jurisdiction to issue a declaratory order on the terms requested. In support of its decision, the Commission recited in its order the following conclusions of law:

1. the Commission possesses “authority to issue a declaratory order ... in *784 accordance with” section 14.051(5) of the Texas Utilities Code; 3
2. the Commission possesses authority to determine “the proper allocation and collection of franchise fees in utility rates once a home-rule municipality ... has determined the appropriate franchise fee owed by a utility”; but
3.

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17 S.W.3d 780, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 2896, 2000 WL 545932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-power-light-co-v-public-utility-commission-texapp-2000.