Harris County Hospital District v. the Public Utility Commission of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 13, 2012
Docket03-10-00647-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Harris County Hospital District v. the Public Utility Commission of Texas (Harris County Hospital District v. the Public Utility Commission of Texas) 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
Harris County Hospital District v. the Public Utility Commission of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-10-00647-CV

Harris County Hospital District, Appellant

v.

The Public Utility Commission of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 250TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-09-002116, HONORABLE SUZANNE COVINGTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Harris County Hospital District appeals the trial court’s order affirming a

final order by the Public Utility Commission of Texas which granted in part the District’s complaint

against Southwestern Bell Telephone, LP d/b/a AT&T (“AT&T”). The District sought a refund from

AT&T, the District’s telecommunications provider, for overcharges from 1995 to September 2008

under the Prompt Payment Act (“PPA”).1 In its final order, the Commission ordered AT&T to pay

the overcharges for half of this period—six and one-half years—with interest until paid. Because

we conclude that the Commission’s order was arbitrary and capricious and prejudiced substantial

rights of the District, we reverse the trial court’s order and remand with instructions that the case be

remanded to the Commission for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

1 See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 2251.001–.055 (West 2008). BACKGROUND

From 1995 to September 2008, AT&T charged the District late payment fees for

telephone service. In 2007, the District filed a formal complaint with the Commission alleging that

AT&T had improperly charged the late payment fees in violation of the PPA. The Office of the

Attorney General on behalf of the State intervened, and the matter was referred to the State Office

of Administrative Hearings for a hearing on the merits.

After the Commission determined that the District was subject to the PPA, the parties

stipulated that the amount of overcharges and interest during the thirteen year period was

$487,273.32. The only issue then at the hearing on the merits was the appropriate amount of refund.

The position of the State and the District was that the District should receive a full refund of the

stipulated amount of overcharges for the entire period. Citing the Commission’s rules and AT&T’s

tariff, they argued that there was no legal basis for the refund to be anything less than the full

amount. AT&T and Commission staff countered that the Commission had discretion to order less

than the full refund and that it should exercise that discretion and limit the refund to approximately

four years of overbilling. They argued that the District was not “blameless” and that AT&T’s

conduct was in “good faith.” The Commission staff also argued that “public interest” required the

District’s failure to complain for thirteen years to be taken into account.

In his proposal for decision, the administrative law judge (“ALJ”) recommended a

refund of the full stipulated amount. He concluded that he could find no “basis in statute or rule”

to “recommend anything less than a full refund.” The ALJ also provided analysis of the parties’

policy arguments but stated that he could not “make such a policy determination” and that “any

2 policy exceptions . . . must be made by the Commission itself.”2 He further stated that the “only

arguable basis upon which the Commission could order less than a full refund would be for policy

reasons not previously enumerated in Commission precedent.” His conclusions of law included that,

under Commission substantive rule 26.27(a)(3)(B)(i) and the terms of AT&T’s tariff, the refund

must be for the entire period of overbilling. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 26.27 (2011) (Public Util.

Comm’n of Tex., Bill Payment and Adjustments).

After an open meeting, the Commission adopted the ALJ’s proposal for decision with

the exception that the Commission limited the refund to the preceding six and one-half years rather

than the full 13-year period of overbilling. In its order, the Commission stated its reasons for the

partial refund:

The Commission notes that the period of overbilling in this case, 1995 to 2008, is an extraordinary long one, particularly when considering the nature of the complainant. [The District] is a large, sophisticated public entity with sufficient resources to have

2 In his analysis, the ALJ found the arguments of AT&T and the Commission staff to be “unjust and untenable.” He explained:

Staff and AT&T essentially argue that [the District]’s lack of diligence in complaining of late payment charges should serve to limit the amount of refund paid back to [the District]. On close examination, this argument seems patently inequitable. Put bluntly, Staff and AT&T’s argument is this: because [the District] should have never paid AT&T the late payment charges and because [the District] did not realize it and complain for a long time, AT&T should be allowed to keep the money—money it was never entitled to receive. To the ALJ, this argument seems unjust and untenable. It allows AT&T to have a windfall simply because both AT&T and [the District] were allegedly mistaken in their belief as to the applicability of the PPA. At a minimum, it seems that equity would dictate that the parties at least be restored to the positions they would have been in if the law had been followed by all parties. Namely, all amounts that should not have been paid by [the District] should be refunded to it.

3 discovered and addressed this situation long before it brought this complaint to the Commission in 2007. It is in a better position than most other customers to discover the overbilling of late charges at issue in this case. Thus, the Commission finds it appropriate to hold [the District] partially responsible for the prolonged accrual of overcharges in this case.

In addition, the Commission acknowledges that the question of whether the Prompt Payment Act applied to late charges to entities such as [the District] was unsettled until last year when the Commission issued its order denying the appeal of Order No. 19. Prior to the decision, the Commission recognizes that telecommunications utilities had a reasonable basis to the position that [the Public Utility Regulatory Act] governed this question. Further, the Commission notes AT&T’s assurances during the March 27, 2009 open meeting that it is conforming its billing to the Prompt Payment Act, and the Commission expects that all other telecommunications utilities will similarly follow the Prompt Payment Act.

“Consistent with the above discussion,” the Commission deleted the ALJ’s finding of fact 13 and

conclusions of law 8 and 11.3 The Commission also added the following findings of fact 10A, 10B,

and 15A and conclusions of law 6A and 11A:

Findings of Fact

10A. [The District] knew, or should have known, that from at least 1995 until 2008 AT&T was improperly charging [the District] late payment charges that were not permitted under the Prompt Payment Act.

10B. It is appropriate to hold [the District] partially responsible for the prolonged accrual of overcharges in this case.

3 In the ALJ’s proposal for decision, finding of fact 13 stated: “As far back as 2000, AT&T recognized that the issue of payment penalties applicable to governmental entities was addressed by the Prompt Payment Act.” In its final order, the Commission stated that it deleted finding of fact 13 because it was “premised, at least in part, on statements attributable to AT&T that were actually made by a predecessor entity that is not . . .

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