Connecticut Municipal Group v. Federal Power Commission, Connecticut Light and Power Company, Intervenor

498 F.2d 993, 162 U.S. App. D.C. 260, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9165, 1974 WL 333510
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 15, 1974
Docket72-2208
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 498 F.2d 993 (Connecticut Municipal Group v. Federal Power Commission, Connecticut Light and Power Company, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Municipal Group v. Federal Power Commission, Connecticut Light and Power Company, Intervenor, 498 F.2d 993, 162 U.S. App. D.C. 260, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9165, 1974 WL 333510 (D.C. Cir. 1974).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The Connecticut Municipal Group moves to reinstate its petition for review of an order of the Federal Powe. Commission 1 which was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction by order of this Court on July 23, 1973. After further Consideration we conclude that the issue which the Connecticut Municipal Group seeks to have litigated is properly reviewable by this Court and accordingly *994 grant the motion. Because of the confusion generated by the Court’s dismissal and subsequent events, and in order to avoid in future cases the delay suffered by the parties in this case, we record in this opinion the accommodation that will be made in prospective cases presenting similar circumstances.

I.

Since 1964 the Connecticut Light and Power Company (CL&P) has sold electricity wholesale to various public agencies in Connecticut represented by the Connecticut Municipal Group (CMG) 2 pursuant to contracts filed with the Federal Power Commission as rate schedules under Section 205 of the Federal Power Act. 3 Fuel adjustment clauses permitted CL&P to pass on increases in cost of fuel without the necessity of filing new tariffs with the FPC.

On August 15, 1971, the President issued Executive Order 11615 4 which, under authority of the Economic Stabilization Act, 5 initiated Phase I of the Wage-Price Freeze. To implement that executive order with respect to public utilities subject to its jurisdiction, FPC issued Order 437 6 which prohibited rate increases for the duration of Phase I— from August 15 to November 14, 1971. This suspended operation of CL&P’s fuel adjustment clauses during that period.

By Executive Order 11627 7 the President delegated to the Price Commission the authority to control price changes during Phase II. In the Price Commission’s regulations, Section 300.016(a) 8 permitted rate increases by public utilities on or after November 14, 1971, provided the increase had been approved by the regulatory agency having jurisdiction over the utility. 9 Section 300.-016(b) 10 allowed rate increases which had been approved by a regulatory agency prior to November 14, 1971, but had been suspended by Executive Order 11615, if reviewed by the regulatory agency and found “consistent with” the purposes of the Economic Stabilization Act.

In response to these regulations, FPC issued Order 437A, 11 which related to rate increases in general by public utilities, and Order 437A-5, 12 which was directed specifically to rate increases under suspended fuel adjustment clauses on file with FPC. Order 437A provided that any rate increases prevented by Phase I would be reviewed for consistency with the purposes of the Economic Stabilization Act and that any rate approved by FPC would be effective as of November 14, 1971. By Order 437A-5, FPC concluded that its* own regulation 35.14, 13 which established the standards for approval of fuel adjustment clauses, was consistent with the purposes of the Economic Stabilization Act and therefore would be employed as the standard for determining whether the suspended clauses were consistent with that Act. *995 In order to reactivate the clauses and increase the electricity rates pursuant thereto, public utilities were directed to certify to the FPC, with supporting data, that rate increases to be made under the clauses complied with Section 35.14. 14

After reviewing the information submitted by the Connecticut Power and Light Company, on October 12, 1972, the FPC issued Order 437A-12, 15 approving CL&P’s fuel adjustment clauses and, in accordance with Order 437A, authorizing rate increases based on those clauses to become retroactively effective as of November 14, 1971. The order provided that “this date, however, shall be subject to authorization by the Price Commission and we shall so provide.” 16

Pursuant to Price Commission regulation 300.308(e), which exempted from reporting and certification requirements any rate increases made under fuel adjustment clauses and approved by the FPC, CL&P requested the Price Commission’s concurrence that the rate increase could become effective without its approval. By letter of November 28, 1972, the Price Commission indicated its concurrence. After FPC denied rehearing of Order 437A-12 on December 1, 1972, the Connecticut Municipal Group filed a petition to review that order in this Court. We granted CL&P leave to intervene on February 14,1973.

II.

The question CMG presented to this Court was whether FPC’s approval on October 12, 1972, of an effective date of November 14, 1971, for cost increases under the fuel adjustment clauses constituted retroactive ratemaking in violation of the Federal Power Act. Contemporaneously with the petition filed in this Court, CMG’s members filed an action in District Court 17 which challenged Order 437A-12 both as inconsistent with the Economic Stabilization Act, and as retroactive ratemaking violative of the Federal Power Act.

CL&P and the FPC moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that Order 437A-12 was issued not under authority of the Federal Power Act but solely, under the Economic Stabilization Act, and that only the District Court and the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals (TECA) had jurisdiction to review the order by virtue of Section 211(a) and (b) of the Economic Stabilization Act. 18 This Court dismissed the petition on July 23, 1973, “for lack of jurisdiction.” No memorandum accompanied the order. It was unclear whether this Court dismissed the petition because no Federal Power Act issues were raised or because the issue of retroactive ratemaking, though perhaps plausible, was so integrated with the price stabilization issues as to make separate reviews in this Court and TECA impracticable.

On October 30, 1973, TECA upheld Order 437-12 on the ground that it was consistent with the purposes of the Economic Stabilization Act. 19 Although the retroactive ratemaking issue was argued before TECA, and although it was *996 aware of this Court’s dismissal of CMG’s petition for review, TECA specifically declined to reach the issue, stating:

We do not reach this issue because we cannot.

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498 F.2d 993, 162 U.S. App. D.C. 260, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9165, 1974 WL 333510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-municipal-group-v-federal-power-commission-connecticut-light-cadc-1974.