FPL Energy Upton Wind I, LP v. City of Austin, Acting by and Through Its Electric Utility Department

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 2007
Docket07-06-00145-CV
StatusPublished

This text of FPL Energy Upton Wind I, LP v. City of Austin, Acting by and Through Its Electric Utility Department (FPL Energy Upton Wind I, LP v. City of Austin, Acting by and Through Its Electric Utility Department) 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
FPL Energy Upton Wind I, LP v. City of Austin, Acting by and Through Its Electric Utility Department, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

NO. 07-06-0145-CV


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


AT AMARILLO


PANEL B


OCTOBER 18, 2007

______________________________


FPL ENERGY UPTON WIND I, L.P., APPELLANT


V.


CITY OF AUSTIN, ACTING BY AND THROUGH ITS
ELECTRIC UTILITY DEPARTMENT, APPELLEE
_________________________________


FROM THE 345TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY;


NO. GN-403274; HONORABLE SCOTT JENKINS, JUDGE
_______________________________


Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

OPINION

Appellant, FPL Energy Upton Wind I, L.P. (FPL), appeals a judgment rendering declaratory judgment in favor of appellee, the City of Austin, acting by and through its Electric Utility Department (Austin), and ordering that FPL take nothing by its counterclaims. We affirm.



Background

In 1999, Austin entered into a Wind Power Purchase Agreement with Texas Wind Power Company (Texas Wind). The Agreement was amended twice in 2000 before Texas Wind assigned its interest in the Agreement to FPL in 2001. (1) The Agreement was subsequently amended a third time. However, it is the second amendment in 2000 that is central to the present dispute.

Pursuant to the Agreement, FPL constructed a wind turbine facility in West Texas for the purpose of generating electric energy from wind. The Agreement provides that Austin will pay FPL for energy that it generates and delivers to a "Point of Delivery," identified in the Agreement to be the Austin city limits. However, the Agreement provides FPL the right to make a written election to change the point of delivery from the Austin city limits to the Point of Generation Interconnection (POGI) located on or adjacent to the site of the wind turbine facility. It is undisputed that, at all times pertinent to the present appeal, FPL had made a valid election to move the point of delivery to the FPL POGI. Under the express terms of the Agreement, risk of loss with respect to all energy passes from FPL to Austin "when such energy is made available to Austin . . . at the Point of Delivery." The Agreement also provides that Austin is required to give written notice of dispute of any charge assessed by FPL within 10 days of its receipt of the statement identifying the charge.

Electric energy is transmitted across Texas over a grid regulated and managed by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT). After electric energy is generated, it is transmitted to a nearby POGI, which is the access point for the energy to get onto the ERCOT grid. Because the POGI is the portal for energy to get onto the ERCOT grid, transmission of energy to a POGI simultaneously places that energy on the ERCOT grid. The energy is then transmitted along the ERCOT grid until it is delivered to a POGI located at the destination point for the electric energy. All of the energy that was covered under the Agreement was to be transported across the ERCOT grid. When the total electric energy being transmitted onto the ERCOT grid reaches high volumes, ERCOT issues instructions that electric energy producers limit their generation of electric energy for periods of time to allow a lessening of congestion on the grid (ERCOT OOME down instructions). (2)

In 2000, the Agreement was amended to provide that, during any period for which FPL makes a valid election to move the point of delivery to the FPL POGI, if Austin does not accept the energy at the point of delivery (defined as a "Curtailment"), Austin is required to pay FPL a curtailment payment for the unaccepted energy. The curtailment payment is set by a formula that presumes that Austin will not accept any of the energy delivered to the point of delivery during the curtailment and imposes a duty on FPL to mitigate damages by requiring it to use commercially reasonable efforts to sell any unaccepted energy to third parties and to apply any payments received toward the curtailment payment owed by Austin.

FPL began producing electric energy in September of 2001. On a few occasions, Austin has elected not to accept energy due to increased costs associated with the transportation of the energy from West Texas to the city of Austin. For each of these voluntary curtailments, FPL invoiced Austin in accordance with the Agreement for the energy it did not accept and Austin paid these invoices.

On other occasions, ERCOT issued ERCOT OOME down instructions directing FPL to limit its generation and delivery of electric energy. On each of these occasions, ERCOT allowed FPL to continue to generate a portion of its electric energy capacity and Austin accepted and paid for the energy delivered to the POGI point of delivery. FPL began sending invoices to Austin that charged Austin the curtailment price for periods covered by these ERCOT OOME down instructions. Within 10 days of Austin's receipt of the first invoice assessing curtailment charges for periods of decreased production due to ERCOT OOME down instructions, Austin sent written notification of dispute of the charges. FPL received this notice of dispute and responded. After receiving additional invoices for curtailment payments arising during periods covered by ERCOT OOME down instructions, Austin sent additional written notification to FPL of its dispute. However, many of these subsequent notifications were not sent within 10 days of Austin's receipt of the invoices including the ERCOT OOME down instruction-related curtailment charges.

After discussions regarding these ERCOT OOME down instruction-related curtailment charges failed to yield results, FPL filed suit for breach of contract in federal court. However, the federal court dismissed the case due to a forum selection clause in the Agreement that required that suit be brought in Travis County, Texas.

Following the dismissal of the federal suit, Austin filed suit in Travis County seeking a declaration whether the Agreement's curtailment provision applies when an ERCOT OOME down instruction prevents FPL from generating energy. Austin additionally sought attorney's fees in relation to its declaratory judgment action. FPL filed an answer, which included a counterclaim for damages for breach of contract.

Before the present case was called for trial, FPL filed a Motion to Open and Close at Trial asserting that FPL had the burden of proof on the whole case. The trial court held a hearing on the motion and Austin assured the trial court that it would submit a formation question as the first question in its proposed jury charge and that Austin would have the burden of proof on this formation question, which was dispositive of its declaratory judgment action. Presumably, on the basis of this assurance by Austin, the trial court overruled FPL's motion.

The case proceeded to trial. At the close of evidence, Austin submitted a proposed jury charge in which the first question was "Does the curtailment provision of amended Section 6.7(b) of the Agreement apply to an ERCOT OOME Down Instruction?" Further, as Austin had indicated at the open/close hearing, this question placed the burden of proof on Austin.

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FPL Energy Upton Wind I, LP v. City of Austin, Acting by and Through Its Electric Utility Department, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fpl-energy-upton-wind-i-lp-v-city-of-austin-acting-texapp-2007.