Colstrip Energy Ltd. Partnership v. Northwestern Corp.

2011 MT 99, 253 P.3d 870, 360 Mont. 298, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 134
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 2011
DocketDA 10-0346
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2011 MT 99 (Colstrip Energy Ltd. Partnership v. Northwestern Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colstrip Energy Ltd. Partnership v. Northwestern Corp., 2011 MT 99, 253 P.3d 870, 360 Mont. 298, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 134 (Mo. 2011).

Opinion

JUSTICE NELSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Colstrip Energy Limited Partnership (CELP) appeals an order of the District Court for the Sixteenth Judicial District Court, Rosebud County, denying CELP’s motion to vacate the arbitration award in its dispute with Northwestern Corporation (Northwestern). We affirm.

¶2 CELP raised the following issues on appeal:

¶3 1. Was it permissible for the arbitrators to find the parties’ contract requires the use of specific variables to calculate rates but then fail to apply those required contract variables in the two years in question to avoid awarding damages?

¶4 2. Did the arbitrators exceed their powers when their award relied on the ‘intent” of sophisticated parties to an unambiguous contract instead of interpreting the contract as written?

¶5 3. Did the arbitrators exceed their powers when they issued an award based on their sense of equity rather than enforcing the parties’ contract as written?

¶6 4. Was the District Court’s failure to vacate the arbitration award an abuse of discretion where the arbitrators exceeded their powers?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶7 CELP is a Montana limited partnership which owns an electrical generating plant in Rosebud County. Northwestern is a Delaware corporation and a regulated public utility conducting business in Montana. Under federal and Montana law, utilities such as Northwestern are obligated to purchase electricity from small generating facilities such as CELP. See 16 U.S.C. §824a-3(a)(1) (the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA)), 18 C.F.R. §292.207, and Title 69, chapter 3, part 6, MCA. Rates under PURPA are based on the concept of “avoided costs”-the costs at the onset of a power purchase agreement that the utility avoids by purchasing power from a qualified facility rather than building a power plant to produce it. *300 The Montana Public Service Commission (PSC) oversees the implementation of PURPA in Montana.

¶8 In 1984, CELP’s predecessor, AEM Corporation (AEM), entered into a Power Purchase Agreement (the Agreement) with the Montana Power Company (MPC) for the sale of energy and capacity from the Rosebud County facility for a term of 35 years. In March 1988, following the issuance of numerous orders by the PSC implementing PURPA, AEM and MPC executed a First Amendment to the Agreement. The First Amendment altered the payment scheme under the Agreement by providing that in contract years one through fifteen, AEM would essentially receive a fixed rate for electrical generation. Beginning in the sixteenth contract year, AEM’s annual rates were to be based upon a formula which adopted specific mandatory variables and methods contained in PSC Orders 5017 and 5017a issued in 1983. These rates were to be approved annually by the PSC. The rate formula adopted in the First Amendment required an annual adjustment by comparing the variables in the new contract year with the variables from the immediately preceding contract year’s final approved PSC rates. CELP and Northwestern are the successors to those contracts.

¶9 Eventually, a dispute arose between CELP and Northwestern regarding the contractual methodology used to calculate CELP’s contract rates for energy and capacity for contract years sixteen and seventeen (July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2006). These were the first years CELP’s rates were subject to the formula contained in the First Amendment rather than the fixed rate.

¶10 Sometime in 2007, Northwestern advised CELP that it intended to deduct more than $1 million from its next payment to CELP because of alleged overpayments made by Northwestern for contract years sixteen and seventeen. In response, CELP filed this action challenging Northwestern’s claimed offset on the basis that Northwestern had created its alleged overpayment by using the wrong variable to determine the rates to be paid to CELP. In its cause of action, CELP sought roughly $22 million in damages from Northwestern and alleged, among other things, breach of contract; breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; negligent misrepresentation; violation of due process; deceit; actual fraud; constructive fraud; and abuse of process. CELP also sought judicial review of two orders of the PSC filed under the Montana Administrative Procedure Act.

¶11 Northwestern moved to compel arbitration of CELP’s claims based on the arbitration provision in the Agreement. The District Court *301 ordered CELP’s cause of action against the PSC bifurcated from its action against Northwestern and ordered CELP and Northwestern to arbitration. Northwestern did not raise any counterclaims in the arbitration.

¶12 Over the course of a nearly one-year long arbitration proceeding before a panel of three arbitrators (the Panel), each party presented its case regarding the proper interpretation of both the Agreement and the First Amendment. The arbitration proceedings included a five-day arbitration hearing in San Francisco with testimony from several expert witnesses and significant questioning by the Panel. It also included extensive pre- and post-hearing briefing.

¶13 On August 24, 2009, the Panel issued its Interim Award addressing all of CELP’s counts against Northwestern, reserving for the Final Award only the question of whether either party was entitled to costs and fees as the prevailing party under §29 of the Agreement. The Panel denied CELP’s contract and tort damage claims as well as all other relief sought by CELP noting that it was troubled by the maimer in which CELP shifted its arguments in an effort to manufacture a damage case. The Panel concluded that although Northwestern breached the parties’ contract, CELP failed to prove that this breach caused CELP to suffer compensable damages or underpayments, or that the breach entitled CELP to any other relief.

¶14 The Panel issued its Final Award on October 30, 2009, incorporating almost verbatim the text of the Interim Award. In addition, CELP had sought recovery of its legal fees and arbitration expenses from the Panel, but the Panel denied that request. Instead, the Panel determined that because the relief awarded was of a “mixed nature” in that both CELP and Northwestern gained ‘Victories” and suffered ‘losses,” each party should bear its own legal fees and other litigation expenses incurred in arbitration.

¶15 Northwestern filed a motion with the District Court seeking to confirm the arbitration award while CELP sought to have it vacated. Originally, CELP moved to modify or correct the Final Award, but at a hearing on the parties’ competing motions, CELP argued that the Final Award must be vacated in its entirety because it was not ‘fixable in terms of modification, unless you throw out the vast majority of the arbitration award.” CELP did not challenge the Panel’s failure to award fees and costs.

¶16 The District Court confirmed the Final Award by order dated June 15, 2010. In its order, the District Court found that CELP failed to cite to any factual evidence or legal precedent showing that the *302

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cross v. State
2024 MT 303 (Montana Supreme Court, 2024)
Butte v. Butte Police
2024 MT 292 (Montana Supreme Court, 2024)
Sutey Oil v. Monroe's High Country
2022 MT 50 (Montana Supreme Court, 2022)
Tedesco v. Home Savings Bancorp, Inc.
2017 MT 304 (Montana Supreme Court, 2017)
Martin v. BNSF Railway Co.
2015 MT 167 (Montana Supreme Court, 2015)
Roberts v. Lame Deer Public School District 6
2013 MT 358 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 MT 99, 253 P.3d 870, 360 Mont. 298, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colstrip-energy-ltd-partnership-v-northwestern-corp-mont-2011.