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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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
formerly permitted constitutes its own related series of violations for which the
[Commission] has discretion to levy civil penalties individually.” The IUC also
rejected Enterprise’s fallback argument that the civil penalty violated its
constitutional right to equal protection because the penalty was greater than
what other companies received in similarly situated cases.
After the Commission denied rehearing, Enterprise petitioned for judicial
review. It asserted that its permit violations were a related series of violations
that should be capped at $200,000 because “Enterprise unintentionally failed to
secure one permit for one pipeline.” Enterprise’s petition also included its
argument that the penalty violated equal protection under article I, section 6 of
the Iowa Constitution.
The district court affirmed the IUC’s order assessing $1.8 million in civil
penalties. Enterprise appealed, and the court of appeals also affirmed the IUC’s
order. The court of appeals first concluded that Enterprise did not preserve error
on its challenge to the number of permits that it was required to have—even
though the IUC did not contest error preservation. The court reasoned that
Enterprise did not argue before the IUC that only one permit was required, but
rather that the nine series of violations were related. The court of appeals also
held that each of the nine defunct MAPCO permits represented a distinct “related
series” of daily accruing violations under section 479B.21(1), so the IUC did not
exceed the statutory damages cap with its $1.8 million penalty. Finally, the court
of appeals rejected Enterprise’s equal protection argument, applying rational
basis review and concluding that Enterprise failed to show that similarly situated 6
companies received different treatment. Enterprise filed an application for
further review, which we granted.2
II. Analysis.
Enterprise challenges the IUC’s civil penalty on statutory grounds for
exceeding the maximum civil penalty permitted by section 479B.21(1), and it
raises an equal protection argument under the Iowa Constitution. “Ordinarily,
we look to statutory issues first in order to avoid unnecessary constitutional
questions.” Site A Landowners v. S. Cent. Reg’l Airport Agency, 977 N.W.2d 486,
493 (Iowa 2022) (quoting Simmons v. State Pub. Def., 791 N.W.2d 69, 73–74
(Iowa 2010)). We need not address Enterprise’s constitutional argument
because, as explained below, we resolve the statutory issue in its favor. See
Mormann v. City of Manchester, 27 N.W.3d 820, 831 (Iowa 2025) (deciding a
dispositive matter of statutory interpretation to “adhere to the time-honored
doctrine of constitutional avoidance” (quoting Good v. Iowa Dep’t of Hum. Servs.,
924 N.W.2d 853, 863 (Iowa 2019))).
A. Standard of Review. The parties disagree over whether the IUC’s order
issuing Enterprise a civil penalty is entitled to deference. Enterprise argues that
our review is for correction of errors at law because the issue involves “an
2Six days before oral argument, Enterprise filed a motion for reversal under Iowa Rule of
Appellate Procedure 6.1006(3). It argues that the IUC abandoned the nine-permit premise that forms the basis for a $1.8 million civil penalty because, in February 2026, the IUC granted three permits for the entirety of Enterprise’s propane pipeline and storage tanks—one permit for the eastern leg of the pipeline, one for the western leg, and one for its underground storage caverns. The IUC responded with a motion to strike, claiming that Enterprise’s argument is an attempt to circumvent the court of appeals’ error preservation decision about the number of permits that Enterprise needed. The IUC rejects Enterprise’s position that the Commission “confessed error” in penalizing Enterprise based on MAPCO’s nine invalid permits once Enterprise’s utilities became fully permitted with just three permits. We directed the motions to be submitted with the appeal, but our resolution of the merits of the appeal renders both motions moot. See Ronnfeldt v. Shelby Cnty. Chris A. Myrtue Mem’l Hosp., 984 N.W.2d 418, 428 (Iowa 2023) (recognizing the mootness doctrine applies when “the issues involved have become academic or nonexistent” (quoting State ex rel. Turner v. Midwest Dev. Corp., 210 N.W.2d 525, 525 (Iowa 1973) (per curiam))). 7
erroneous interpretation of a provision of law whose interpretation has not
clearly been vested” with the IUC. Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c). The IUC counters
that this case involves “application of law to fact” such that we can only grant
relief if the agency action was “irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable.” Id.
§ 17A.19(10)(m).
Like the court of appeals, we agree with Enterprise and review for
correction of errors at law. The outcome of this case hinges on interpreting the
scope of the damages cap in section 479B.21(1). See Calcaterra v. Iowa Bd. of
Med., 965 N.W.2d 899, 903 (Iowa 2021) (“We review an agency’s interpretation
of a statute for errors at law unless the legislature has clearly vested interpretive
authority in the agency.”). The general assembly did “not explicitly grant the
[IUC] the authority to interpret” chapter 479B’s maximum civil penalty. Renda
v. Iowa C.R. Comm’n, 784 N.W.2d 8, 14 (Iowa 2010). Nor does the statute contain
“a term of art within the agency’s area of expertise such that the agency’s
interpretative authority can be fairly implied.” Cooke v. Iowa Dep’t of Health &
Hum. Servs., 31 N.W.3d 368, 372 (Iowa 2026). Accordingly, we give no deference
to the IUC’s interpretation of section 479B.21(1). We “will substitute our
judgment for that of the commission if we conclude the [IUC] made an error of
law.” Renda, 784 N.W.2d at 14–15; accord Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c).
B. Maximum Civil Penalty. Iowa Code chapter 479B governs hazardous
liquid pipelines and storage facilities. The general assembly’s stated purpose for
enacting the chapter is to give the IUC the ability “to protect landowners and
tenants from environmental or economic damages which may result from the
construction, operation, or maintenance of a hazardous liquid pipeline or
underground storage facility.” Id. § 479B.1. The Commission therefore has the
authority “to approve the location and route of hazardous liquid pipelines, and 8
to grant rights of eminent domain where necessary.” Id. Unlike its predecessor
scheme in Iowa Code chapter 479, chapter 479B does not regulate the safety of
interstate pipelines because such regulations are preempted by federal law. See
Kinley, 999 F.2d at 358 (“Congress has expressly stated its intent to preempt the
states from regulating in the area of safety in connection with interstate
hazardous liquid pipelines.”).
Still, pipeline companies must apply for a permit to operate hazardous
liquid pipelines or store hazardous liquid underground in Iowa. Iowa Code
§ 479B.4. Violating that law, or any other requirement in chapter 479B, gives
rise to a civil penalty that grows with each passing day of noncompliance until
the fine reaches a prescribed maximum. Id. § 479B.21(1). Section 479B.21(1)
provides the following:
A person who violates this chapter or any rule or order issued pursuant to this chapter shall be subject to a civil penalty levied by the [commission] in an amount not to exceed one thousand dollars for each violation. Each day that the violation continues shall constitute a separate offense. However, the maximum civil penalty shall not exceed two hundred thousand dollars for any related series of violations.
Id. We must determine whether Enterprise’s civil penalty for operating its
pipeline and storage facilities without obtaining permits is capped at $200,000.
We conclude that it is.
It is undisputed that Enterprise did not comply with the requirements of
chapter 479B. Enterprise maintained and operated its pipeline and underground
storage facilities without applying for a permit for 7,535 days—roughly twenty-
one years between acquiring MAPCO and applying for a permit with the IUC. See
id. §§ 479B.3, .4(1). Under section 479B.4, “[a]ny pipeline company now owning
or operating a pipeline or underground storage facility in this state shall be
issued a permit by the [commission] upon supplying the information as provided 9
for in section 479B.5, subsections 1 through 5, and meeting the requirements of
section 479B.13.” Id. § 479B.4(1). Each day that Enterprise “maintain[ed]” and
“operate[d],” id. § 479B.3, its pipeline and storage facilities without meeting those
requirements “constitute[d] a separate offense” that carried a daily fine of up to
$1,000 until the penalty for that series of violations reached the $200,000
statutory limit, id. § 479B.21(1).
The IUC cannot impose a penalty against Enterprise based on MAPCO’s
nine permits that—as the parties agree—were invalidated after the Eighth
Circuit’s 1993 decision in Kinley. See 999 F.2d 357–59. When Enterprise
purchased its interest in MAPCO years later in 2002, there were no valid state
permits for the pipeline or storage facilities. In other words, what the IUC’s order
relied on to impose a penalty—i.e., “the previous [IUC]-approved permit P-Docket
numbers” from when MAPCO obtained permits in the 1960s and 1970s—could
not have been transferred to or renewed by Enterprise. Those permits were
issued under a scheme that was preempted by federal law long before Enterprise
owned or operated any pipeline or storage facilities in Iowa; they never could
have been used by Enterprise. The IUC cannot penalize Enterprise based on
those invalidated MAPCO permits, so the $1.8 million civil penalty cannot stand.
The parties’ arguments center around the phrase “any related series of
violations” in chapter 479B’s damages cap. Iowa Code § 479B.21(1). The IUC
contends that Enterprise incurred a daily fine for each permit that it needed but
did not obtain; the daily fines were distinct violations; and the series of daily
fines associated with each separate permit is a distinct “related series of
violations” for which it can assess up to a $200,000 penalty. We disagree.
Instead, we agree with Enterprise that such an interpretation would render
the word “related” superfluous. See Iowa Individual Health Benefit Reins. v. State 10
Univ. of Iowa, 999 N.W.2d 656, 663 (Iowa 2023) (“We presume statutes . . . do
not contain superfluous words.” (quoting State v. Boone, 989 N.W.2d 645, 650
(Iowa 2023))). A “series of violations” inherently contemplates a like relationship
among the continuing daily offenses that are treated as distinct violations under
Iowa Code section 479B.21(1). See State v. Amsden, 300 N.W.2d 882, 885 (Iowa
1981) (defining series as “a group of (usually) three or more things or events
standing or succeeding in order and having a like relationship to each other”
(quoting Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2073 (1976))). But the
statutory maximum applies to a “related series,” not just a “series.” Iowa Code
§ 479B.21(1).
To give the word “related” meaning, we must identify Enterprise’s violation:
maintaining and operating a pipeline and storage facilities without a permit. See
id. §§ 479B.3–.4. That violation stemmed from its acquisition of MAPCO under
the mistaken belief that its pipeline and storage facilities already had all permits
in place, as the purchase sale agreement warranted. Whether Enterprise needed
one, three, or nine permits has no bearing on its maximum civil penalty in this
case. Enterprise needed to apply for permits under section 479B.4(1) to maintain
and operate its utilities in Iowa, but it did not do so. The number of permits that
Enterprise needed does not matter because those series of violations were related
when they arose from the same event—that is, Enterprise’s acquisition of
MAPCO’s pipelines and storage facilities without subsequently applying for the
required permits. The maximum civil penalty allowed by statute is therefore
$200,000. See id. § 479B.21(1). 11
III. Conclusion.
For these reasons, we vacate the decision of the court of appeals, reverse
the district court, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
Decision of Court of Appeals Vacated; District Court Judgment
Reversed and Case Remanded.
All justices concur except Waterman, J., who takes no part.