Gulf Power Co. v. Wilson
This text of 597 So. 2d 270 (Gulf Power Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
GULF POWER COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
Michael McK. WILSON, etc., et al., Appellees.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*271 Alan C. Sundberg, Tallahassee, and Sylvia H. Walbolt and E. Kelly Bittick, Jr., of Carlton, Fields, Ward, Emmanuel, Smith & Cutler, P.A., Tampa, and G. Edison Holland, Jr., Jeffrey A. Stone and Teresa E. Liles of Beggs & Lane, Pensacola, for appellant.
Robert D. Vandiver, Gen. Counsel, and David E. Smith, Director of Appeals, Florida Public Service Com'n, Tallahassee, and Jack Shreve, Public Counsel, and John Roger Howe, Asst. Public Counsel, Tallahassee, on behalf of the Citizens of the State of Florida, for appellees.
OVERTON, Justice.
Gulf Power Company appeals the Florida Public Service Commission's Order No. 23573, which authorized a rate increase for Gulf Power. In authorizing the rate increase, the Public Service Commission (Commission) found that Gulf Power's fair rate of return on equity was between 11.75% and 13.50%. The Commission determined that ordinarily it would have approved Gulf Power's rate of return at 12.55%, but found that it should reduce the return to 12.05% because, as it stated in detailed findings, Gulf Power was guilty of mismanagement. In this appeal, Gulf Power challenges the reduction, asserting that the Commission has no authority to make the reduction and, further, that this reduction violated the basic principles of ratemaking. We have jurisdiction[1] and, for the reasons expressed, affirm the Commission's order.
This matter commenced in December of 1990 when Gulf Power filed rate schedules with the Commission which, if fully implemented, would have allowed Gulf Power an additional $26.3 million in revenue based upon a requested return on equity of 13%. An interim rate increase, which provided an additional $5,751,000 was also awarded pending formal hearings on the petition.
In its prehearing statement, the Commission noted that it would consider whether the authorized return on equity should be reduced if it was determined that Gulf Power had been mismanaged during the 1980s due to various instances of misconduct by one of Gulf Power's management officials.
*272 After hearing expert testimony, the Commission determined that Gulf Power's reasonable rate of return on equity lay between 11.75% and 13.50%. The Commission then set Gulf Power's return on equity at 12.55%, but determined that its findings of mismanagement justified a reduction in Gulf Power's return on equity of fifty basis points. This placed Gulf Power's rate of return at 12.05%, thirty points above the minimum allowable rate of return.
In its order, the Commission summarized its findings of mismanagement as follows:
The record is clear: Gulf Power Company admitted that corrupt practices took place at Gulf Power Company from the early 1980s through 1988, including but not limited to theft of company property, use of company employees on company time to perform services for management personnel, utility executives accepting appliances without payment, and political contributions made by third parties and charged back to Gulf Power Company. The majority of the unethical/illegal activities involved Jacob Horton, the Senior Vice President of Gulf Power Company. Mr. Horton was killed in a plane crash on April 10, 1989.
The Commission concluded:
This record reflects a disregard for the ratepayers and public service, however. Accordingly, we will reduce Gulf Power Company's ROE by fifty (50) basis points for a two year period. This results in a final ROE of 12.05%.
This final ROE is well within the parameters established as fair and reasonable by expert testimony of record. This reduction in the authorized ROE for a two year period is meant as a message to management that the kind of conduct discussed above, which was endemic for at least eight years at this company, will not be tolerated for public utilities which operate in Florida. We have limited the reduction to a two year period to reflect our belief that Gulf Power has turned the corner on dealing with the extensive and long-standing illegal/unethical behavior within the company.
Gulf Power asserts that this is a penalty not authorized by Florida Statutes and is the type of penalty prohibited by article I, section 18, of the Florida Constitution. Article I, section 18, provides that "[n]o administrative agency shall impose a sentence of imprisonment, nor shall it impose any other penalty except as provided by law." Gulf Power contends that, because chapter 366, Florida Statutes, constitutes the general grant of authority to the Commission to regulate utilities and contains no express authority to impose a penalty for the type of corporate conduct involved in this case, the Commission has exceeded its authority. Section 366.095, Florida Statutes (1989), which authorizes the Commission to impose penalties, provides:
The commission shall have the power to impose upon any entity subject to its jurisdiction under this chapter that is found to have refused to comply with or to have willfully violated any lawful rule or order of the commission or any provision of this chapter a penalty for each offense of not more than $5,000, which penalty shall be fixed, imposed, and collected by the commission.
(Emphasis added.) Gulf Power relies largely on our decisions in Florida Tel. Corp. v. Carter, 70 So.2d 508 (Fla. 1954), and Deltona Corp. v. Mayo, 342 So.2d 510 (Fla. 1977). In Carter, the Commission reduced the utility's rate of return below the reasonable rate of return range on the grounds that the services provided were inadequate and insufficient. This Court quashed the order of that Commission, holding that its statute did not authorize it to impose a penalty because of poor or inadequate service that denied the utility a rate increase "which it found to be just." Carter, 70 So.2d at 510. In Mayo, the Commission denied Deltona Corporation a rate increase for sewer and water services based on Deltona's allegedly fraudulent land sales practices. This Court held that "[i]f Deltona has engaged in an unfair business practice or committed fraud, however, it may be a concern of other state agencies or the basis for private law suits ... but it is not a matter of statutory concern to the *273 Public Service Commission." Mayo, 342 So.2d at 512.
Gulf Power asserts that these cases establish that the only "penalties" that the Commission may impose are those expressly authorized by statute, i.e., section 366.095, Florida Statutes. Gulf Power argues that, because it has not violated or refused to comply with any rule or order of the Commission, the fifty basis point reduction violates article I, section 18, of the Florida Constitution. We disagree.
The reduction in Carter resulted in a rate of return well below the range found by the Commission as being fair and reasonable. The effect of that Commission's action was to completely deny the utility a rate increase within the range it found to be reasonable. Similarly, the Commission in Mayo completely denied Deltona a reasonable rate of return. In this case, however, the Commission did not deny Gulf Power a rate increase or impose a penalty that would deny Gulf Power a reasonable rate of return. On the contrary, the return on equity set by the Commission, 12.05%, is well within the range found to be fair and reasonable. The reduction was neither a penalty, as in Deltona and Carter,
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
597 So. 2d 270, 17 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 232, 92 FPSC 630, 1992 Fla. LEXIS 753, 1992 WL 68951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-power-co-v-wilson-fla-1992.