Cities Service Gas Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

627 F.2d 1027
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 6, 1980
Docket78-2009
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 627 F.2d 1027 (Cities Service Gas Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cities Service Gas Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 627 F.2d 1027 (10th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

BARRETT, Circuit Judge.

Cities Service Gas Company (Cities) petitions this Court to review and set aside the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (Commission) Opinions Nos. 24 and 24-A issued August 29, 1978 and October 31,1978 respectively.

Cities is a natural gas pipeline company which purchases natural gas from producers, and sells it to various customers in a number of midwestern states. Cities’ sales for resale of natural gas in interstate commerce come within the Commission’s rate jurisdiction.

The cost of purchased gas constitutes the largest single component of a pipeline company’s cost of service and it is an expense of doing business which is recovered by the pipeline in the rates it charges to customers. Commission regulations allow pipelines to include provisions within their tariffs for purchased gas cost adjustments (PGA clauses) whereby a pipeline’s changes in purchased gas costs are monitored and adjusted every six months without the need for rate *1029 proceedings every time producer prices increase. PGA adjustments reflect, on a six month basis, the current cost of purchased gas. Increases in purchased gas costs which occur between PGA filing adjustments are recorded in an unrecovered purchased gas account and are recovered through a surcharge filed with the next PGA adjustment.

During periods of increasing producer prices, pipelines, of necessity, incur substantial increases in their unrecovered purchased gas account balances. Furthermore, during the time period in question herein, the Commission’s PGA regulations did not permit the collection of carrying charges on balances for unrecovered purchased gas costs. This policy was changed, however, on January 1,1979, at which time the Commission adopted regulations effective prospectively allowing pipeline companies to collect carrying charges accrued on balances for unrecovered purchased gas costs. This policy change was undertaken after the Commission “found that pipelines were incurring greater balances in their deferred accounts for purchased gas costs. 18 C.F.R. 154.38(d)(4)(c)”. [Commission’s Brief at p. 4].

It is important to recognize that PGA adjustments reflect changes only in purchased gas costs and act to supplement, rather than to supplant, general rate increase filings in which a pipeline is allowed to adjust its rates to reflect changes in all of its costs.

The instant proceedings were initiated by Cities on July 23, 1973 when it filed a general rate increase. By order of August 22,1973, the Commission suspended the rate filing for five months and permitted it to become effective, subject to refund on January 23, 1974. These rates, at issue here, were thereafter in effect from that date until April 22, 1975, when they were suspended by another rate proceeding.

By stipulation and agreement Cities and Commission resolved the majority of the issues relative to Cities’ rate levels for the period affected. Agreement was not reached, however, on the propriety of including unrecovered purchased gas costs as working capital in Cities’ rate base.

It is uncontested that during the January 23,1974 to April 22,1975 period, the cost of purchased gas to Cities rose dramatically due to producer price increases allowed by the Commission. These increases, in turn, substantially increased Cities’ unrecovered purchased gas account during this period to an average annual balance of $10,915,-352.00, reflecting carrying costs of approximately $2 million annually.

On February 7, 1977, an administrative law judge (ALJ) denied Cities’ proposal to earn a return on its unrecovered purchased gas costs by including that amount as working capital in its rate base. In so doing the ALJ observed:

. a comparison of Exhibit 2 (on which Cities Service’s rates were based) with Exhibit 37 (on which the approved settlement was based) reveals that — with unrecovered purchased gas costs excluded from each exhibit — the total of the several elements conceded to comprise working capital dropped from $27.7 million (12 months ended March 31, 1973, as adjusted) to $19.2 million (12 months ended January 31,1975) — a drop of $8.5 million. Accordingly, even assuming, arguendo, the validity of Cities Service’s general philosophy as to the working-capital-nature of the expenditures involved, it is highly possible — if not totally probably [sic] — that the decreases with respect to the uncontested elements in working capital provided Cities Service with the funds for the so-called unrecovered purchased gas costs. [R.Jt. App. at p. 67].

The Commission affirmed the AU’s refusal to permit Cities to earn a return on its unrecovered purchased gas costs but based its denial on different reasons. The Commission held, inter alia : Carrying charges on unrecovered purchased gas balances were prohibited by its regulations; whereas it had previously waived the regulations on two occasions and permitted carrying charges, both cases presented “unusual circumstances”; Cities failed to establish the average balance in its unrecovered purchased gas account was a representative *1030 figure; and Cities failed to justify its proposed return on unrecovered purchased gas costs through its rates.

On appeal Cities contends: (1) the Commission unlawfully prohibited it from earning a return on an investment [unrecovered purchased gas costs] prudently and necessarily incurred in serving its customers; and (2) the Commission’s purported “reasons” for denying cost recovery are illogical, arbitrary, capricious, and otherwise unlawful. Because of their direct interrelationship, these issues will be considered simultaneously.

Under 15 U.S.C.A. § 717c Cities has the burden of establishing that a proposed rate increase is “just and reasonable”. Once a pipeline company has met this burden, the Commission is then obligated to determine and fix “just and reasonable” rates:

The history of the Commission’s early experience with the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717 et seq., has been fully developed in our first area rate opinion, Permian Basin, supra [390 U.S. 747] at 755-759 [88 S.Ct. 1344, 1353-1356, 20 L.Ed.2d 1312] and may be merely summarized here. With the passage of the Act in 1938, 52 Stat. 821, Congress gave the Commission authority to determine and fix “just and reasonable rate[s],” § 5(a), 15 U.S.C. § 717d(a), for the “sale in interstate commerce of natural gas for resale for ultimate public consumption for domestic, commercial, industrial, or any other use . . . .” § 1(b), 15 U.S.C. § 717(b). The Act was patterned after earlier regulatory statutes that applied to traditional public utilities and transportation companies, and that provided for setting rates equal to such companies’ costs of service plus a reasonable rate of return.

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Bluebook (online)
627 F.2d 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cities-service-gas-company-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission-ca10-1980.