Coalition for Safe Power v. Oregon Public Utility Commission

939 P.2d 1167, 325 Or. 447, 1997 Ore. LEXIS 66
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1997
DocketCC A8404-02380; CA A81523 (Control); CC A8505-3006; CA A82882; CC A8605-02998; CA A82488; CC A8804-01802; CA A82489; SC S43274
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 939 P.2d 1167 (Coalition for Safe Power v. Oregon Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coalition for Safe Power v. Oregon Public Utility Commission, 939 P.2d 1167, 325 Or. 447, 1997 Ore. LEXIS 66 (Or. 1997).

Opinion

GILLETTE, J.

These four consolidated cases are actions to set aside orders issued by the Oregon Public Utility Commission (the PUC). The actions — or “suits,” as they are styled by statute— were filed pursuant to ORS 756.580(1).1 All four were filed in the Multnomah County Circuit Court in the mid-1980s and were prosecuted in that court without any challenge to that court’s jurisdiction for several years. In 1993, however, the Multnomah County Circuit Court concluded that, under ORS 756.580(2), set out below, 325 Or at 451, it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the proceedings. It therefore dismissed the cases. Petitioners Forelaws on Board (FOB) and Utility Reform Project (URP) appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed. Coalition for Safe Power v. PUC, 139 Or App 358, 911 P2d 1272 (1996). We allowed petitioners’ petition for review to consider whether the Court of Appeals correctly analyzed the effect of ORS 756.580(2). We conclude that it did not and, therefore, reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.

Although each of the present cases pertains to a different PUC order, they are similar in other respects. Each case began when Pacific Power & Light Company (PP&L) filed a tariff schedule revision with the PUC.2 In each case, the PUC opened a proceeding for the filing and held hearings pursuant to ORS 757.210 to examine the propriety and reasonableness of the rate revision.3 In each case, the revision [451]*451became the object of a written “complaint” that was submitted to the PUC within 60 days of the filing.4 And, in each case, the PUC’s final order approving the revision (or some variant thereof) was challenged in Multnomah County Circuit Court under ORS 756.580(1).

As noted, the cases proceeded for some time in Multnomah County Circuit Court. Then, in 1993, PP&L and the PUC filed joint motions to dismiss all four cases for lack of jurisdiction. In arguing for dismissal, they relied on ORS 756.580(2), which provides:

“[An action under ORS 756.580(1)] maybe commenced * * * in the Circuit Court for Marion County, in the circuit court for the county in which any hearing has been held in the proceeding in which the order was made, or in the circuit court for the county in which is located the principal office of any defendant in any such proceeding before the commission, and jurisdiction of any such suit hereby is conferred upon the circuit court for any of such counties to hear and determine such suit.”

Working from the premise that ORS 756.580(2) is a jurisdictional, rather than a venue, statute,5 the PUC and PP&L argued that none of the circumstances that would confer jurisdiction on the Multnomah County Circuit Court under that statute was present — that PP&L was not a “defendant” in the proceedings before the PUC, and that no “hearing” in those proceedings had been held in Multnomah County.6 The [452]*452circuit court agreed, granted the motions to dismiss in each case, and entered judgments accordingly.

In a consolidated appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed. Relying on its own opinion in Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Co. v. Eachus, 111 Or App 551, 826 P2d 105, rev den 313 Or 299 (1992), the court concluded that, because PP&L had “initiated] the PUC proceeding to obtain an order beneficial to itself,” it was not a “defendant” under any conceivable meaning of that term pursuant to ORS 756.580(2). Coalition for Safe Power, 139 Or App at 362-63. The court further held that ORS 756.580(2) is a jurisdictional, rather than a venue, statute.7

Petitioners contend that the Court of Appeals is wrong because, in all four cases, PP&L was a “defendant” before the PUC within the meaning of ORS 756.580(2). They further contend that, in any event, ORS 756.580(2) pertains only to venue. Our review proceeds no further than the first issue, viz., whether, for purposes of ORS 756.580(2), PP&L was a “defendant” in the proceedings in which the challenged orders were made.

With regard to that issue, petitioners maintain that PP&L was a defendant in the proceeding before the PUC for the reason that, in each case, PP&L was a person against whom a complaint was filed. Petitioners rely on ORS 756.500(1), which provides:

“Any person may file a complaint before [the PUC], or [the PUC] may, on [the PUC’s] own initiative, file such complaint. The complaint shall be against any person whose business or activities are regulated by some one or more of the statutes, jurisdiction for the enforcement or regulation of which is conferred upon [the PUC]. The person filing the complaint shall be known as the complainant and the person against whom the complaint is filed shall be known as the defendant.”

[453]*453The PUC and PP&L argue, to the contrary, that PP&L was not a “defendant” in the proceedings before the PUC. In so arguing, they emphasize that the challenged orders arose out of rate case proceedings — proceedings that traditionally are not associated with litigation roles, such as those of plaintiff and defendant. They contend, moreover, that, to the extent that a utility can be assigned to any role in the context of a rate case authorized by ORS 757.210, it must be the role of the traditional plaintiff. That is so, in their view, because it is the utility that initiates the proceeding (by filing a revised tariff), carries the burden of proof and, ultimately, stands to gain from the proceeding.

We are not persuaded by respondents’ arguments. First, the proposition that a utility initiates proceedings by filing a tariff is not born out by the statute. Although rate cases under ORS 757.210 are about

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Related

Neff v. Jackson County
67 P.3d 977 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
939 P.2d 1167, 325 Or. 447, 1997 Ore. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coalition-for-safe-power-v-oregon-public-utility-commission-or-1997.