Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Public Utilities Control Authority.

405 A.2d 638, 176 Conn. 191, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 991
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 3, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 405 A.2d 638 (Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Public Utilities Control Authority.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Public Utilities Control Authority., 405 A.2d 638, 176 Conn. 191, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 991 (Colo. 1978).

Opinion

Rubinow, J.

On May 20, 1977, the Hartford Electric Light Company (HELCO) and the Connecticut Light and Power Company (CL&P) filed rate-increase applications with the Public Utilities *194 Control Authority (PUCA). In those applications, HELCO sought additional revenues of $29,450,000 and CL&P, additional revenues of $60,586,000. On October 25, 1977, after hearings held pursuant to General Statutes § 16-19 (a), the PUCA entered orders authorizing HELCO to increase its rates to produce additional estimated revenues of $12,396,000; and CL&P, additional estimated revenues of $22,637,000. On November 7,1977, HELCO, CL&P, and Northeast Utilities (Northeast), which owns 100 percent of the common stock of HELCO and CL&P, filed in the Court of Common Pleas a petition for judicial review of those orders of the PUCA. In the proceedings on that petition, the Court of Common Pleas granted the following parties permission to enter the case as intervening defendants: Office of Consumer Counsel (Consumer Counsel) p East Lyme and Hartford; and Connecticut Citizen Action Group, Inc.

In the course of those proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas, Consumer Counsel filed a cross appeal to the petition for review. In the cross appeal, Consumer Counsel claimed, inter alia, that the PUCA should have dismissed the HELCO and CL&P applications, on the ground that the applications were “illegal on their face.” The Court of Common Pleas overruled this claim of Consumer Counsel; sustained certain hereinafter-specified substantive claims made by the petitioners in their petition for review; and, with respect to those sustained substantive claims, rendered judgment 1 2 *195 remanding those claims to the PUCA for further consideration. From the latter judgment and from the judgment overruling certain hereinafter-specified procedural claims, the PUCA appealed to this court; the intervening defendants appealed to this court from both of those judgments and from the judgment overruling the claim on the cross appeal that the PUCA ought to have dismissed the applications.

I

The claim that the PUCA should have dismissed the applications is based on a provision in General Statutes § 16-19 (a) directing public service companies to file with the PUCA proposed amendments of their “existing rates.” 3 Consumer Counsel claimed, in asking the PUCA to dismiss the applications, that, when HELCO and CL&P filed their rate-increase applications, there were no “existing rates” because litigation was then pending concerning the rates that HELCO and CL&P could lawfully charge.

That litigation arose out of orders entered on October 7, 1974, by the Public Utilities Commission (PUC), the predecessor to the PUCA, in Docket Nos. 11552 and 11553, which were rate-increase *196 applications of CL&P and HELCO, respectively; and on December 22, 1976, by the PUCA, in Docket Nos. 760604 and 760605, which were rate-increase applications of CL&P and HELCO, respectively. The 1974 applications resulted in PUC decisions authorizing a rate increase; the 1976 applications resulted in PUCA decisions ordering a rate decrease. Appeals were taken from both the PUC and the PUCA decisions, and, when the subject 1977 applications were filed, those appeals were still pending.

In connection with those appeals, this court entered orders in Hartford v. Hartford Electric Light Co., 172 Conn. 13, 372 A.2d 130 (1976); s.c., 172 Conn. 71, 372 A.2d 131 (1976); and 173 Conn. 340, 377 A.2d 1090 (1977). In the latter opinion, we referred 4 to a “Stipulation of Compromise and Settlement” dated May 12, 1977. This stipulation, which was approved by the PUCA 5 on May 12,1977, with respect to the orders in Docket Nos. 760604 and 760605, contains an agreement to terminate all the litigation concerning the decisions of the PUCA in those docket numbers, and the decisions of the PUC in Docket Nos. 11552 and 11553. The rate schedule authorized by that stipulation was not formally approved, however, by the PUCA 6 until May 31, 1977, eleven days after HELCO and CL&P had filed the subject 1977 applications.

The rates that HELCO and CL&P were charging when those applications were filed were the rates authorized by the 1974 PUC decisions. Although *197 the Court of Common Pleas had declared those rates invalid, a subsequent interlocutory ruling of that court permitted HELCO and CL&P to charge those rates while appeals from the PTTC and PUCA decisions were pending. Those 1974 rates are not “existing rates,” the intervening defendants claim, because, first, they had been declared invalid by the Court of Common Pleas and, second, inasmuch as the PUCA had ordered a decrease in rates in 1976, the 1974 rates were not “existing rates” in 1977.

This question about the meaning of “existing rates” had arisen in the course of the PUCA’s proceedings on the 1976 applications. In those proceedings, the claim was made that the PUCA lacked jurisdiction to entertain the 1976 applications “because the Companies’ prior rate schedules, approved in Commission Dockets Nos. 11552 and 11553, have been declared invalid by a trial court.” 7 The PUCA overruled this claim, saying, “The General Assembly clearly did not intend that the Authority’s power over rates should be so limited; indeed, it appears in Title 16 that the General Assembly intended . . . the Authority to possess plenary power over public service companies’ rates at all times.” 8 The PUCA expressly construed “existing rates” to mean the rates in effect, i.e., the rates being charged by the public service company at the time the application was filed to amend the “existing rates.” 9

After this formal finding by the PUCA that the General Assembly intended “existing rates” to mean “rates-being-charged,” there were two sessions of

*198 the General Assembly, the 1977 session and the 1978 session. In neither of these sessions did the General Assembly pass any legislation designed to show a legislative intention different from that found by the PUCA; yet, in 1977, the General Assembly amended the sentence in which the phrase “existing rates” occurs, but left that phrase intact. See Public Acts 1977, No. 77-121. There are thus present in this case two significant aids to the proper determination of what the General Assembly meant by “existing rates” in General Statutes § 16-19 (a). The first is the interpretation by the PUCA.

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Bluebook (online)
405 A.2d 638, 176 Conn. 191, 1978 Conn. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-light-power-co-v-public-utilities-control-authority-conn-1978.