Hadson Gas Systems, Inc. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Enron Capital & Trade Resources Corporation, Intervenor

75 F.3d 680, 316 U.S. App. D.C. 98, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 1855
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1996
Docket95-1111
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 F.3d 680 (Hadson Gas Systems, Inc. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Enron Capital & Trade Resources Corporation, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hadson Gas Systems, Inc. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Enron Capital & Trade Resources Corporation, Intervenor, 75 F.3d 680, 316 U.S. App. D.C. 98, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 1855 (D.C. Cir. 1996).

Opinion

*681 Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.

STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:

On July 28,1994 the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued Order No. 567, sweeping away obsolete regulations that had occupied more than 500 pages of fine print in the Code of Federal Regulations. Order No. 567, Removal of Outdated Regulations Pertaining to the Sales of Natural Gas Production, 59 Fed.Reg. 40,240 (1994), Order on Rehearing, 69 FERC ¶ 61,055 (October 17, 1994), Order on Rehearing, 69 FERC ¶61,-342 (December 15, 1994). The regulations were obsolete — or, as we shall see, almost all of them were — because they existed solely for the purpose of implementing the Commission’s 38-year-old enterprise of controlling the prices of natural gas at the wellhead, which it had pursued from the Supreme Court’s decision in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin, 347 U.S. 672, 74 S.Ct. 794, 98 L.Ed. 1035 (1954), to January 1, 1993, when all such controls came to an end. See Natural Gas Wellhead Decontrol Act of 1989 (the “Decontrol Act”), Pub.L. No. 101-60, 103 Stat. 157 (1989). Tucked away in this mass was a single sentence, 18 CFR § 270.203(c), which, though enacted solely for purposes of the price control regime, appears to have material collateral importance. Hadson claims that because of these collateral effects, the Commission was required by § 553 of the Administrative Procedure Act to give affected parties notice and an opportunity to comment, in order to consider (1) arguments for retaining § 270.203(c) or at least (2) ways of mitigating the impact of its removal.

We deny the petition for review. Because the controlling statute left the Commission no authority to retain § 270.203(c), notice and comment could not have served the first purpose suggested by Hadson. As to the second, at least in these circumstances we do not think that § 553 requires an agency to delay formal removal of a legally defunct regulation while it canvasses all possible regulatory impacts. We note, however, that because Hadson has shown that formal removal may have substantial ripple effects, to the point of undermining implicit premises of other regulations, it may have established grounds requiring the Commission to open a rulemaking proceeding for purposes of adjusting those regulations to the new realities. We do not, of course, pass on any such claim, which at this point is hypothetical.

Although the paradigm sale to which Phillips extended the Commission’s regulatory power under the Natural Gas Act (“NGA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 71.7 et seq., was the wellhead sale, the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978 (“NGPA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 3301 et seq., which largely supplanted the Commission’s preNGPA rules, used a different term, “first sale.” It made two critical consequences turn on a transaction’s classification as such. First, Title I of the statute subjected every first sale to the NGPA system of price controls. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 3312-19, repealed effective Jan. 1, 1993, Pub.L. No. 101-60, § 2(b). Second, it generally removed first sales of gas from the Commission’s jurisdiction (apart from its enforcement of the NGPA ceiling prices). 1 See, e.g., NGPA § 601(a)(1)(A), 15 U.S.C. § 3431(a)(1)(A). This relieved parties engaged in a first sale of the serious regulatory burdens that would otherwise have been applicable under Phillips: the needs for a certificate of “public convenience and necessity” for initiation of a sale, as required by NGA § 7(c), 15 U.S.C. § 717f(c), for a certificate of abandonment for its termination, as required by NGA § 7(b), 15 U.S.C. § 717f(b), and for Commission review of the price under the “just and reasonable” standard, as required by NGA §§ 4 & 5,15 U.S.C. §§ 717c & 717d.

Thus the definition of first sale was critical:

(21) First sale
(A) General rule
The term “first sale” means any sale of any volume of natural gas—
(i) to any interstate pipeline or intrastate pipeline;
(ii) to any local distribution company;
*682 (iii) to any person for use by such person;
(iv) which precedes any sale described in clauses (i), (ii), or (in); and
(v) which precedes or follows any sale described in clauses (i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) and is defined by the Commission as a first sale in order to prevent circumvention of any maximum lawful price established under this chapter.
(B) Certain sales not included
Clauses (i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) of subparagraph (A) shall not include the sale of any volume of natural gas by any interstate pipeline, intrastate pipeline, or local distribution company, or any affiliate thereof, unless such sale is attributable to volumes of natural gas produced by such interstate pipeline, intrastate pipeline, or local distribution company, or any affiliate thereof.

NGPA § 2(21), 15 U.S.C. § 3301(21) (emphasis added).

Two aspects of this elaborate definition are relevant for our purposes. First, the opening clause of § 2(21)(B) denies first-sale treatment to sales by affiliates of interstate or intrastate pipelines, or of local distribution companies, thereby exposing them to the regulatory entanglements of the NGA. Had-son is affiliated with two intrastate pipelines and a local distribution company, so the first clause of § 2(21)(B) excludes its gas sales from classification as first sales. The second clause of § 2(21)(B), to be sure, makes an exception from the first clause’s exclusion, saying (once we account for the double negatives) that sales by such affiliates of their own gas production can be first sales. But Hadson made clear at oral argument that that exception was of little or no use to it. Hadson appears, moreover, to be typical of an array of gas marketers that have the sort of affiliation that bars their sales from first-sale treatment under the first clause of § 2(21)(B).

Second, § 2(21)(A)(v) grants the Commission authority to add

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 F.3d 680, 316 U.S. App. D.C. 98, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 1855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadson-gas-systems-inc-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission-enron-cadc-1996.