Connecticut Valley Electric Co. v. Patch

202 F.3d 29, 2000 WL 39123
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 2000
Docket99-1754
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 F.3d 29 (Connecticut Valley Electric Co. v. Patch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Valley Electric Co. v. Patch, 202 F.3d 29, 2000 WL 39123 (1st Cir. 2000).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is a sequel to prior litigation growing out of the same district court proceeding. 1 Once again, the issues relate to interim matters; the merits have not yet been decided in the district court. To avoid repetition, familiarity with our prior decisions is assumed; and we confine ourselves to a bare-bones summary limited to events necessary for this appeal.

In 1997, acting under recently enacted state legislation, the New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission (“the Commission”) issued a plan and implementing orders to restructure electric power regulation in the state. The new regime, aimed at promoting competition through various means including market-based rates, created a risk that existing utilities might not be able to recover' their full investment in previously built facilities. The largest utility in the state, Public Service Company of New Hampshire (“PSNH”), obtained a preliminary injunction in the district court based, inter alia, on a colorable claim that the state’s action violated a specific agreement with that company and so also violated bankruptcy court orders and the Contract Clause of the U.S. Constitution. See Patch IV, 167 F.3d at 21, 26, 28.

In our principal decision issued in 1998 — Patch TV — we upheld this preliminary injunction and, with somewhat greater reluctance, its extension by the district court to other New Hampshire utilities that had intervened, including Connecticut Valley Electric Company (“Connecticut Valley”). Id. at 27-29. However, in the same proceeding, the district court had also ordered the Commission to allow a specific rate increase sought by Connecticut Valley to recover increased power costs which the Commission had previously disallowed in December 1997, see Patch V, 167 F.3d at 32-33; in our companion decision — Patch V — we vacated the district court’s injunction in this respect, holding *31 that Connecticut Valley had not shown a likelihood of prevailing in federal court on this aspect of the case. Id. at 36.

Following our decisions, the Commission and PSNH engaged in negotiations and have been moving toward a possible settlement of their differences. While proceedings in the district court as to a permanent injunction for PSNH have been deferred pending approval of the settlement, litigation between the Commission and Connecticut Valley has moved forward; several months ago both sides argued cross-motions for summary judgment on the merits of permanent relief. During this same period, two new and quite distinct disputes have arisen — one relating to the preliminary injunction upheld in Patch IV and the other to the further interim relief that we disallowed in Patch V.

The first of these two disputes stems from a new motion filed by the Commission after Patch TV asking the district court to vacate its earlier injunction barring the New Hampshire restructuring plan. That injunction had rested primarily, as preliminary injunctions normally do, see Ross-Simons of Warwick, Inc. v. Baccarat, Inc., 102 F.3d 12, 15 (1st Cir.1996), on a showing of likelihood of success on the merits coupled with a showing of threatened irreparable injury. The irreparable injury showing, initially made by PSNH, rested in part on an accounting convention regarding the financial treatment of so-called regulatory assets; according to PSNH’s affidavits, the proposed New Hampshire restructuring plan would have triggered changes in the company’s financial statements, placing it in immediate default on huge bank loans.

Our decision in Patch TV affirming the preliminary injunction against the restructuring plan was rendered on December 3, 1998. On January 18, 1999, the Commission moved to vacate the injunction, primarily on the ground that changes in accounting treatment by the Financial Account Standards Board had eliminated the threat relied upon by PSNH in its original showing of irreparable injury. Connecticut Valley vigorously opposed the motion. The district court’s decision on this motion is the first issue on this appeal.

The second dispute arises in the wake of our decision in Patch V vacating a different aspect of the district court’s pendente lite relief. As noted above and explained in detail in Patch V, even before its restructuring plan was scheduled to be implemented, the Commission had disallowed an attempt by Connecticut Valley in December 1997 to implement a specific rate increase designed to pass along to its customers a routine increase in the cost of power it purchases from its parent and wholesale supplier, Central Vermont Public Service Company (“Central Vermont”). The Commission took the view that while the increase in Connecticut Valley’s costs was real, purchasing from Central Vermont was no longer prudent because power could currently be bought for less on the open market. 167 F.3d at 32. Connecticut Valley had a long-term requirements contract with Central Vermont, but the Commission deemed it to be terminable on short notice.

Without sharply distinguishing between this specific disallowance by the Commission and its far-reaching restructuring plan, the district court in April 1998 directed the Commission to allow the increase. It was this further preliminary relief that we found not to be justified because (in our view) Connecticut Valley had failed to show that it was likely to prevail on the merits in its ultimate challenge to this disallowance in federal court. Our Patch V decision vacated this aspect of the district court’s preliminary injunction, thereby permitting the Commission to roll back Connecticut Valley’s retail rates to the pre-1998 level, see 167 F.3d at 36.

The Commission not only rolled back the rate increase but also ordered further temporary reductions by Connecticut Valley, below the level prevailing in December *32 1997, in order to flow back to customers the amount of the increases that had been collected between the time of the district court’s injunction with respect to the disal-lowance and the later vacation of that injunction in Patch V Connecticut Valley then asked the district court to enjoin the Commission from requiring this further reduction until the district court decided the merits of Connecticut Valley’s request for a permanent injunction requiring the Commission to allow the company to charge rates sufficient to cover all of its costs. The Commission opposed the request.

On April 7, 1999, after a hearing, the district court entered an order refusing to dissolve the preliminary injunction upheld in Patch IV and granting in substance the additional relief sought by Connecticut Valley to defer any flow-back of the increase that the company had collected before this court vacated the district court’s April 1998 injunction in that respect in Patch V.

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Related

Hoult v. Hoult
373 F.3d 47 (First Circuit, 2004)
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Lynch
216 F. Supp. 2d 1016 (N.D. California, 2002)
Public Service Co. v. Patch
221 F.3d 198 (First Circuit, 2000)
Public Service Co. of New Hampshire v. Patch
87 F. Supp. 2d 57 (D. New Hampshire, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 F.3d 29, 2000 WL 39123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-valley-electric-co-v-patch-ca1-2000.