Enterprise Products Operating, LLC v. Iowa Utilities Commission

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 5, 2026
Docket24-1648
StatusPublished

This text of Enterprise Products Operating, LLC v. Iowa Utilities Commission (Enterprise Products Operating, LLC v. Iowa Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Enterprise Products Operating, LLC v. Iowa Utilities Commission, (iowa 2026).

Opinion

In the Iowa Supreme Court

No. 24–1648

Submitted April 15, 2026—Filed June 5, 2026

Enterprise Products Operating, LLC,

Appellant,

vs.

Iowa Utilities Commission,

Appellee.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott D. Rosenberg,

judge.

A pipeline company appeals a $1.8 million civil penalty as exceeding the

statutory maximum in Iowa Code section 479B.21. Decision of Court of

Appeals Vacated; District Court Judgment Reversed and Case Remanded.

Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all participating

justices joined. Waterman, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of

the case.

Robert V.P. Waterman, Jr. (argued) of Lane & Waterman LLP, Davenport;

David J. Hellstern, Amanda A. James, and Andrew G. Carlson of Sullivan &

Ward, P.C., West Des Moines; and Kent Rutter, Kaylen Strench, and John D.

Fognani of Haynes and Boone, LLP, Houston, Texas, for appellant.

Michelle E. Rabe (argued) and Jon C. Tack of the Iowa Utilities

Commission, for appellee. 2

Oxley, Justice.

This case deals with the scope of the damages cap in Iowa Code section

479B.21(1) (2023). Enterprise Products Operating, LLC (Enterprise) purchased

a propane pipeline and two storage facilities, unaware that it was required to

apply for state permits to operate those utilities in Iowa. See id. §§ 479B.3–.4. It

is undisputed that Enterprise was in full compliance with all federally required

safety permits. Nonetheless, Enterprise operated the pipeline and storage

caverns without any state permits in violation of Iowa law for nearly twenty-one

years. By statute, the maximum civil penalty for “any related series of violations”

under chapter 479B cannot exceed $200,000. Id. § 479B.21(1).

After Enterprise’s failure to obtain the state permits was discovered, the

Iowa Utilities Commission1 ordered Enterprise to pay a $1.8 million civil penalty,

assessing the statutory maximum for each of the nine permits that Enterprise

purportedly needed to obtain to do business in Iowa. Enterprise now argues that

the IUC exceeded its statutory authority. As explained below, we agree:

Enterprise’s civil penalty is limited to $200,000 under section 479B.21(1).

I. Factual Background and Proceedings.

Enterprise supplies propane for homes and businesses across the country.

In July 2002, Enterprise purchased a 98% ownership interest in Mid-America

Pipeline Company, LLC (MAPCO) from Williams Natural Gas Liquids, Inc. Since

then, Enterprise has owned and operated two underground storage caverns that

sit in Johnson County and 750 miles of pipeline that transport propane from

Texas into Iowa. When Enterprise bought its interest in MAPCO, the purchase

1The name of the agency was changed from “Iowa Utilities Board” to “Iowa Utilities Commission” as of July 1, 2024. See 2024 Iowa Acts ch. 1170, § 369(2). It was known as the “Iowa State Commerce Commission” when the agency originally issued permits for the utilities at issue in this case. See 1986 Iowa Acts ch. 1245, § 740. We refer to the agency as “IUC” or “Commission” consistently throughout this opinion, regardless of its then-current name. 3

sale agreement warranted that all permits were in place for the pipeline and

storage facilities. That turned out not to be true, despite Enterprise’s belief that

it was for more than two decades.

MAPCO had acquired nine permits under Iowa law between 1961 and

1973 as it built segments of the pipeline and the storage facilities that Enterprise

now owns. Seven permits were issued covering different segments of the pipeline

and ranged from covering hundreds of miles to as little as three miles. The two

storage facilities each had their own permit.

Years later, the statutory scheme under which those permits were issued—

Iowa Code chapter 479—was found to be preempted by federal law. Kinley Corp.

v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 999 F.2d 354, 357–59 (8th Cir. 1993). “Chapter 479

establishe[d] a comprehensive state program supervising the intrastate and

interstate transportation by pipeline of solid, liquid or gaseous substances, with

the exception of water and interstate natural gas, in order to protect the safety

and welfare of the public.” Id. at 356 (footnote omitted). The United States Court

of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that chapter 479 was invalid to the extent

that it regulated “safety in connection with interstate hazardous liquid pipelines.”

Id. at 358.

The general assembly responded to federal preemption in 1995 by enacting

a new scheme—chapter 479B—that does not regulate safety but still contains a

permit requirement for hazardous liquid pipelines and underground storage

facilities. See 1995 Iowa Acts ch. 192, § 31 (codified at Iowa Code § 479B.4

(Supp. 1995)); see also Summit Carbon Sols., LLC v. Kasischke, 14 N.W.3d 119,

130 n.2 (Iowa 2024) (discussing the general assembly’s response to Kinley Corp.

v. Iowa Utilities Board). That scheme remains in effect today. Although MAPCO 4

was required to obtain new state permits under the post-preemption chapter,

see Iowa Code §§ 479B.3, .4(1), it never did.

In 2022, as the IUC was notifying permit holders about pending

expirations and renewal requirements, it discovered that Enterprise needed but

did not have any permits. Enterprise was unaware it was violating any provision

in chapter 479B, explaining that “it is unusual for states to require additional

permitting” beyond “the federal government’s dominant role in regulating

commercial pipelines.” In February 2023, the IUC ordered Enterprise to show

cause why it was operating in Iowa without a state permit. The IUC granted a

two-week continuance for Enterprise to hire local counsel but declined

Enterprise’s subsequent request for additional time to gather information for a

more robust response. The parties participated in a twenty-six-minute hearing

in March, five-and-a-half weeks after the IUC’s show cause order. Enterprise

filed an application for the required state permits on the same day as the hearing.

A month later, the IUC levied a $1.8 million civil penalty against

Enterprise. The IUC assessed a $200,000 penalty—the maximum allowed under

section 479B.21(1)—based on Enterprise’s lack of a permit for each of the nine

long-defunct MAPCO permits. The Commission justified its stiff penalty by

reasoning that “a permit is the cornerstone for all requirements under Iowa Code

chapter 479B and 199 Iowa Administrative Code chapters 9 and 13.”

Enterprise moved for rehearing on several grounds, which the IUC denied

in its entirety in June. Enterprise primarily argued that the IUC’s order exceeded

its statutory authority by imposing a $1.8 million civil penalty because the

penalty for “any related series of violations” is capped at $200,000. Iowa Code

§ 479B.21(1). The IUC disagreed, reasoning that “the lack of a permit for each

hazardous liquid pipeline and hazardous liquid underground storage that was 5

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