Crown Castle NG East LLC v. PUC, Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 21, 2020
Docket2 MAP 2019
StatusPublished

This text of Crown Castle NG East LLC v. PUC, Aplt. (Crown Castle NG East LLC v. PUC, Aplt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Crown Castle NG East LLC v. PUC, Aplt., (Pa. 2020).

Opinion

[J-81-2019] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

CROWN CASTLE NG EAST LLC AND : No. 2 MAP 2019 PENNSYLVANIA-CLE LLC, : : Appeal from the Order of the Appellees : Commonwealth Court dated June 7, : 2018 at No. 697 CD 2017 Reversing : the Order of the Pennsylvania Public v. : Utility Commission dated May 4, 2017 : at No. M-2016-2517831. : PENNSYLVANIA PUBLIC UTILITY : ARGUED: October 15, 2019 COMMISSION, : : Appellant :

OPINION

JUSTICE MUNDY DECIDED: July 21, 2020 In this appeal by allowance, we consider the level of deference courts must afford

an administrative agency’s interpretation of its enabling statute. We conclude that an

agency’s interpretation of a clear and unambiguous statute is not entitled to deference.

Additionally, we consider whether the Commonwealth Court erred in concluding that

Distributed Antenna System (DAS) networks are public utilities under the Pennsylvania

Public Utility Code (Code),1 thereby reversing the Pennsylvania Public Utility

Commission’s (PUC) interpretation of the definition of “public utility.” For the following

reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Commonwealth Court.

1 66 Pa.C.S. §§ 101-3316. This case involves the status of DAS networks as public utilities in Pennsylvania.

Appellees, Crown Castle NG East LLC (Crown Castle NG) and Pennsylvania-CLEC LLC

(Pennsylvania-CLEC) (collectively Crown Castle), operate DAS networks. Crown

Castle’s DAS networks provide telecommunications transport services to Wireless

Service Providers (WSP), such as AT&T Wireless, Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile, and

others. The WSPs offer “commercial mobile radio service” (CMRS) to retail end-users.2

2CMRS is a term of art in connection with the Federal Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. §§ 151-624. The Federal Communications Commission regulations define CMRS as: A mobile service that is: (a)(1) provided for profit, i.e., with the intent of receiving compensation or monetary gain; (2) An interconnected service; and (3) Available to the public, or to such classes of eligible users as to be effectively available to a substantial portion of the public; or (b) The functional equivalent of such a mobile service described in paragraph (a) of this definition. (c) A variety of factors may be evaluated to make a determination whether the mobile service in question is the functional equivalent of a commercial mobile radio service, including: Consumer demand for the service to determine whether the service is closely substitutable for a commercial mobile radio service; whether changes in price for the service under examination, or for the comparable commercial mobile radio service, would prompt customers to change from one service to the other; and market research information identifying the targeted market for the service under review. (d) Unlicensed radio frequency devices under part 15 of this chapter are excluded from this definition of Commercial mobile radio service. 47 C.F.R. § 20.3. Although the term CMRS is not used in the Code, the PUC considers CMRS as synonymous with the Code’s term “mobile domestic cellular radio telecommunications service.” PUC Order, Review of Issues Relating to Comm’n Certification of Distributed Antennae Sys. Providers in Pa., M-2016-2517831, 2/23/16, at 3 n.4.

[J-81-2019] - 2 A DAS network transports the wireless traffic of its WSP customers, consisting of voice,

data, and video traffic generated by a consumer’s mobile device (smartphone), over

terrestrial fiber optic lines between “nodes” and “hubs.” The nodes are located on utility,

streetlight, or traffic poles in public rights-of-way. They are comprised of small, low power

antennae that receive radio frequency (RF) signals and additional equipment that

converts the RF signals to optical signals. The optical signals are then transported over

the DAS provider’s fiber optic lines to a WSP’s central hub, which is typically housed in a

building on private property, where the signals are returned to the WSP customers.

Crown Castle’s DAS networks also transport signals for its WSP customers in the reverse

direction, from a hub to a node.3

DAS networks increase the coverage area of their WSP customers’ networks. Due

to the small size of the DAS node equipment, it can be installed on existing structures in

areas that traditional cell towers cannot be located, such as densely populated urban

areas or stadiums. This provides augmented network coverage to WSPs’ retail end-users

with minimal visual or physical impact, unlike cell towers. A WSP provider may operate

3 The Federal Communications Commission has similarly explained: A DAS network consists of three primary components: (i) a number of remote communications nodes (DAS node(s)), each including at least one antenna for the transmission and reception of a wireless service provider’s RF signals; (ii) a high capacity signal transport medium (typically fiber optic cable) connecting each DAS node back to a central communications hub site; and (iii) radio transceivers or other head-end equipment located at the hub site that propagates and/or converts, processes or controls the communications signals transmitted and received through the DAS nodes. In re Implementation of Section 6002(b) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, 32 FCC Rcd. 8968, 8997 n.133 (FCC 2017).

[J-81-2019] - 3 its own DAS networks that serve only its customers, or it may lease a DAS network from

a neutral host, such as Crown Castle.

From 2005 to 2015, the PUC granted certificates of public convenience (CPC) to

at least five neutral host DAS network operators, including Crown Castle NG and

Pennsylvania-CLEC, to operate as Competitive Access Providers (CAP), concluding they

were “public utilities” under Section 102 of the Code, which provides:

“Public utility.”

(1) Any person or corporations now or hereafter owning or operating in this Commonwealth equipment or facilities for:

...

(vi) Conveying or transmitting messages or communications, except as set forth in paragraph (2)(iv), by telephone or telegraph or domestic public land mobile radio service including, but not limited to, point-to-point microwave radio service for the public for compensation.

(2) The term does not include:

(iv) Any person or corporation, not otherwise a public utility, who or which furnishes mobile domestic cellular radio telecommunications service.

66 Pa.C.S. § 102; see also Crown Castle NG E. LLC v. Pa. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 188 A.3d

617, 620 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). Obtaining a CPC provides DAS networks with facilities

[J-81-2019] - 4 siting benefits in that they gain access to public rights-of-way, are exempted from local

zoning rules, and can exercise the power of eminent domain. PUC Order, Review of

Issues Relating to Comm’n Certification of Distributed Antennae Sys. Providers in Pa.,

M-2016-2517831, 3/17/17, at 23, 30 [hereinafter DAS Order]; see also 66 Pa.C.S. § 1104

(noting that a public utility cannot exercise the power of eminent domain until it receives

a CPC).

On November 19, 2015, the PUC granted a CPC to the neutral host DAS network

operator SQF, LLC (SQF). However, two commissioners voted against issuing a CPC to

SQF and filed statements explaining they concluded the PUC did not have jurisdiction to

regulate or issue CPCs to DAS networks because they did not meet the Code’s definition

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