Connecticut Nat. Gas v. Dep. of Cons. Pro., No. Cv95-0705660s (Jun. 6, 1995)

1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 6854
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 6, 1995
DocketNo. CV95-0705660S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 6854 (Connecticut Nat. Gas v. Dep. of Cons. Pro., No. Cv95-0705660s (Jun. 6, 1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Nat. Gas v. Dep. of Cons. Pro., No. Cv95-0705660s (Jun. 6, 1995), 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 6854 (Colo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This administrative appeal concerns the applicability of certain state licensing requirements to employees of regulated gas utility companies who perform repair and maintenance work on gas-fired appliances for customers of the gas utility companies. The appellants are Connecticut Natural Gas Corporation, the Southern Connecticut Gas Company, and Yankee Gas Services Company ("gas companies"). They appeal from a declaratory ruling of the state of Connecticut Heating, Piping and Cooling Work Examining CT Page 6855 Board and the Plumbing and Piping Work Examining Board ("boards") made upon a request for a declaratory ruling by the Connecticut Heating and Cooling Contractors Association, Inc. ("association".)

The State of Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection is also named as a respondent, having referred the association's request for a declaratory ruling to the boards.

The Department of Public Utility Control ("DPUC") intervened in the administrative proceedings of the boards pursuant to General Statutes § 4-177a but is not a party to this appeal.

The United Steelworkers of America, which represents affected gas company employees, was granted amicus curiae status by the court, Maloney, J.

Aggrievement has been admitted and is found by the court to have been established.

History of the Proceedings

By a petition dated June 30, 1994, the Connecticut Heating and Cooling Contractors Association requested that the Commissioner of Consumer Protection for the State of Connecticut issue a declaratory ruling that employees of the gas companies who perform service, repair and maintenance of gas-powered appliances in the homes of gas company customers are subject to the licensing requirements of Chapter 393 of the General Statutes. In its request for a declaratory ruling, the association specifically indicated that it was not requesting a ruling as to whether the employees through whom the gas companies respond to emergency calls, such as reports of leaking gas or loss of gas pressure, must comply with the licensing requirements (Record Doc. 1, p. 2).

Advising the association that the responsibility for implementing Chapter 393 is delegated by statute to the respondent boards, the Commissioner forwarded the request for a declaratory ruling to those boards, which jointly held a hearing on September 21, 1994. The gas companies requested and were granted status as parties; and the DPUC requested and was granted status as an intervenor in that proceeding.

At the hearing, the association and the gas companies presented testimony and exhibits. The boards issued their declaratory ruling on January 30, 1995. The gas companies took a CT Page 6856 timely appeal pursuant to General Statutes §§ 4-176(h) and 4-183. Upon the application of the gas companies, the boards granted a stay of their declaratory ruling until June 30, 1995.

The declaratory ruling of the board is that "repair and maintenance work done on the consumer side of the [gas] meter constitutes an intrusion into the field of work which calls for licensing." The boards further observed that "[j]ust because a service is done by a public utility company does not necessarily make that service a public utility service within the meaning of Section 20-340 (2)." The boards summarized their conclusion as follows:

To summarize, the work in question requires a license because it is not public Utility service, and because the Gas Companies are not regulated by DPUC.

(Record, Document #58).

Issues

The gas companies allege in their appeal that the boards' decision should be overruled and that their appeal should be sustained because the decision "is in violation of statutory provisions, was made upon unlawful procedure, is clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative and substantial evidence on the whole record, is arbitrary and capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion or is affected by other errors of law. . . ."

The gas companies identify the claimed errors of law as

a. failure to hold that the services at issue are exempt from licensing requirements pursuant to General Statutes § 20-340(2);

b. failure to find that the DPUC regulates the gas companies' operations;

c. disregard of the relevant facts and circumstances;

d. the boards were biased and not impartial;

e. the boards departed from the precedent of not requiring CT Page 6857 licensure.

At oral argument the gas companies did not seek to make any evidentiary showing with regard to their claims that the administrative adjudicators were biased or that they proceeded according to any illegal procedure. The court will therefore treat these grounds for appeal as having been abandoned.

The essence of the gas companies' claim of error is that the activities in question are exempt from licensing requirements because of a statutory exemption and that the boards failed to give effect to that exemption.

The boards made the following findings:

1. The Gas Companies are public service companies as defined in Section 16-1(4), Connecticut General Statutes.

2. For an indeterminate number of years, employees of the Gas Companies have been and presently are offering to perform and are performing various types of heating and cooling and plumbing and piping work on the customer side of the meter on the premises of their customers.

3. The work performed by these employees falls within the definitions of heating and cooling and plumbing and piping work in Section 20-330.

4. These employees, except for a scattered few, did not and do not hold licenses issued by the Heating, Piping and Cooling Board or the Plumbing and Piping Board to do such work.

5. These employees go through training programs provided by the Gas Companies, but these training programs are not regulated by DPUC or overseen regularly by anyone other than the Gas Companies.

6. No authority has been cited whereby DPUC requires such training programs.

7. The Gas Companies offer service contracts to their customers for the work in question, but these contracts are not regulated by DPUC. CT Page 6858

8. The rates charged for these service contracts are reviewed but not regulated by DPUC.

9. The public utility service of Gas Companies, whether or not they also manufacture the gas, is the transportation and distribution of gas to the consumers.

10. Ownership of the gas is transferred at the meter, thus this is where the Gas Companies' public utility service ends.

11. In 1967, the Legislature amended what is now Section 20-340(2), by adding, inter alia, the following: "only if the work performed is in connection with the rendition of public utility service. . . ."

12. The licensees doing the work in question are regulated by the two boards and not by DPUC.

13. The work in question is not regulated by DPUC.

14. The work in question is not public utility service work within the meaning of that term in Section 20-340(2).

Standard of Review

The scope of judicial review of the decisions of administrative boards or agencies is well established:

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Bluebook (online)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 6854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-nat-gas-v-dep-of-cons-pro-no-cv95-0705660s-jun-6-connsuperct-1995.