Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Utility Commission of Texas

112 S.W.3d 208, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 5940, 2003 WL 21554290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 2003
Docket03-02-00249-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 112 S.W.3d 208 (Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Utility Commission of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Public Utility Commission of Texas, 112 S.W.3d 208, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 5940, 2003 WL 21554290 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

LEE YEAKEL, Justice.

Appellant Entergy Gulf States, Inc. (“Entergy”) appeals from a district-court judgment affirming a final order of appel-lee the Public Utility Commission of Texas (the “Commission”). 1 Entergy sought a rate increase to recover additional sums from its share in the construction of the River Bend Nuclear Generating Station in St. Francisville, Louisiana (“River Bend”). The Commission denied Entergy’s request, finding that Entergy failed to present a prima facie case that the additional cost of the plant’s construction above the adjusted definitive cost estimate (“DCE”) was prudent. 2 Appellees Texas Industrial Energy Consumers and the cities of Beaumont, Bridge City, Conroe, Groves, Nederland, and Port Neches support the Commission’s decision denying the rate increase. We will affirm.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Construction of River Bend began in 1977. After suspending construction from *211 October 1977 to February 1979, construction resumed and the plant achieved operational status in 1986. At that time, River Bend began serving customers in Southeast Texas and South Central Louisiana. River Bend’s construction cost approximately $4.5 billion, well above the original cost estimate. As a partner in the project, Entergy was responsible for seventy percent of the construction costs. In 1986 Entergy applied to the Commission for a rate increase, seeking to include approximately $3.15 billion of its River Bend construction costs in its cost of service. En-tergy also initiated a contested case to determine what portion of its total costs the utility might include in its rate base as being a “prudent” investment. The two actions were consolidated as Docket 7195.

Over a six-month period, two administrative law judges and a “hearings examiner” (the “Examiners”) conducted a hearing on the rate request and submitted to the Commission an “Examiner’s Report” (the “Report”) and proposed order. In the 395-page Report, the Examiners evaluated the prudence of River Bend’s costs by examining the parties’ evidence. Entergy and a number of other interested parties submitted their own reports, each arguing the prudence of River Bend’s cost. The Examiners noted that the evidence demonstrated that every change in construction had been documented, but that the documentation was insufficient to prove that the changes were prudent. Regarding the examiners’ opinion of Entergy’s evidence, the Report stated:

[Entergy] did not present any credible reconciliation of plant costs with specific causes, much less with specific regulatory changes. Even if the causes for change were legitimate, it did not show that the amount of money spent to meet various goals were reasonable. It did show more generally that regulatory changes had a dramatic effect on the project’s scope and cost. Yet from the evidence one cannot tell how wisely and efficiently money was spent on design development, scope changes, and meeting regulatory changes.

Ultimately, the Report concluded that: (1) $274 million, or nine percent (later adjusted to 8.3 percent), of the total plant cost should be excluded from Entergy’s cost of service as imprudently incurred; (2) En-tergy’s decision to restart construction of River Bend in 1979, a decision that some parties criticized, was prudent; and (3) a reasonable DCE, based on information available in 1979, should have been $2,273 billion (“adjusted DCE”), instead of Enter-gy’s construction manager’s 1979 estimate of $1,729 billion (“original DCE”).

The Commission adopted only part of the Report’s recommendations. The Commission agreed with the Examiners that the decision to build River Bend was prudent and that the original DCE should be adjusted upward to $2,273 billion, as this sum was prudently incurred; thus Entergy’s seventy percent share of the prudently incurred cost was $1,591 billion. The Commission, however, did not adopt the Report’s recommendation to disallow only 8.3 percent of the total plant cost. Instead, the Commission deferred its decision on whether Entergy prudently incurred the remaining $1,453 billion in additional costs. The Commission noted that “[t]he evidence is inadequate to support a finding of either prudence or imprudence with regard to construction costs in excess of $2,273 billion ... [and] should be excluded from plant in service at this time.... ” Therefore, the Commission effectively deferred a decision on the additional $1,453 billion.

Entergy and several other parties sued in district court, as authorized by the Public Utility Regulatory Act (“PURA”), seek *212 ing judicial review of the Commission’s final order in Docket 7195. See Act of May 26, 1983, 68th Leg., ch. 274, § 69, 1983 Tex. Gen. Laws 1258, 1314 (amended 1995 & 1997) (current provision at Tex. UtiLCode Ann. § 15.001 (West 1998)). Concurrently, Entergy filed a new contested case with the Commission, Docket 8702, to address the $1,453 billion not adjudicated in Docket 7195.

Before direct judicial review began in Docket 7195, the Office of Public Utility Counsel (“OPUC”) and twelve municipalities sued the Commission in district court, requesting a declaration that the Commission lacked the power to reconsider, in a separate contested case, the prudence of the $1,453 billion expenditure deferred in Docket 7195. Ancillary to their suit for declaratory relief, the plaintiffs requested a permanent injunction restraining the Commission from conducting any further proceedings addressing the prudence of the $1,453 billion. The district court, declaring that res judicata and collateral es-toppel barred reconsideration of those costs by the Commission, granted the permanent injunction, enjoining the Commission from proceeding with Docket 8702. The Commission appealed. This Court reversed the district-court judgment and dissolved the injunction, allowing Docket 8702 to proceed. Public Util. Comm’n v. Coalition of Cities for Affordable Util. Rates, 777 S.W.2d 814 (TexApp.-Austin 1989), rev’d, Coalition of Cities for Affordable Util. Rates v. Public Util. Comm’n, 798 S.W.2d 560 (Tex.1990). The supreme court reversed this Court, holding that the doctrines of res judicata and collateral es-toppel barred Entergy’s relitigation in Docket 8702 of the issues originally reviewed in Docket 7195, and that “the PUC was powerless to defer its decision to a future proceeding.” Coalition of Cities, 798 S.W.2d at 564-65. The appeal in Docket 7195 then went forward in the district court, which reversed the Commission’s final order on an unstated ground and remanded the rate case to the Commission.

On remand, the Commission held that, because its deferral of the decision on the $1,453 billion was invalid, the remaining portions of the order in Docket 7195 “appeared to hold that [Entergy] had failed to meet its burden” and the $1,453 billion was properly excluded. Entergy appealed. The district court rejected Entergy’s argument that the Commission’s decision was statutorily infirm but reversed the Commission on two minor points.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.3d 208, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 5940, 2003 WL 21554290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/entergy-gulf-states-inc-v-public-utility-commission-of-texas-texapp-2003.