In re International Transmission Co.

847 N.W.2d 684, 304 Mich. App. 561
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 2014
DocketDocket No. 317798
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 847 N.W.2d 684 (In re International Transmission Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re International Transmission Co., 847 N.W.2d 684, 304 Mich. App. 561 (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

BOONSTRA, J.

Intervenor-Appellant Arlie D. Murdock Revocable Living Trust (Murdock Trust) appeals as of right the July 29, 2013 order of the Michigan Public Service Commission (PSC) approving petitionerappellee International Transmission Company’s (ITC) proposed modification of an approved route over Murdock Trust’s land to accommodate a transmission line. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case arises from ITC’s proposed modification of an approved route obtained as part of the construction, operation, and maintenance of a 140-mile-long, double-circuit, 345,000-volt transmission line (the “Thumb Loop Project”). ITC’s project is subject to the Clean, Renewable, and Efficient Energy Act, MCL 460.1001 et seq., which 2008 PA 295 added to the Customer Choice and Electricity Reliability Act, MCL 460.10 et seq. MCL 460.1001(2) announces the legislative purpose of promoting “the development of clean energy, renewable energy, and energy optimization,” the diversification of the resources used to meet the state’s energy needs, the use of indigenous energy resources, private investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency, and improved air quality. MCL 460.1149(1) allows the PSC to issue an expedited siting certificate for a transmission line to an independent transmission company. MCL 460.1153(1) and (2) call for notice to affected landowners and for a contested case to be conducted on the application. MCL 460.1153(4) provides that the PSC’s decision on these applications overrides local codes and ordinances. MCL 460.1153(5) states that an expedited siting certificate is “conclusive and binding as to the public convenience and necessity for that transmission line and its compatibility with the public health [564]*564and safety or any zoning or land use requirements in effect when the application was filed” for purposes of any attendant eminent domain proceedings.

The Thumb Loop Project is being constructed to transmit energy generated from wind power. The transmission route that ITC initially proposed forms a loop that begins just north of Frankenmuth, runs northeast through Tuscola and Huron Counties, loops around the north side of Bad Axe, and runs south through Sanilac and St. Clair Counties. On February 25, 2011, over the objections of various intervenors, the PSC issued an order approving ITC’s proposed route for the Thumb Loop Project and granting an expedited siting certificate for it. That decision is not the subject of the instant appeal, inasmuch as it was affirmed in an earlier appeal to this Court.1

Sometime after that order was issued, a wind turbine was constructed on Murdock Trust’s property in the path of the approved route. ITC determined that the route would need to be modified to allow for the turbine. However, the parties were unable to agree on a modification of the route. On February 8, 2013, ITC brought a condemnation action against Murdock Trust in Sanilac County Circuit Court, seeking an easement across Murdock Trust’s property. Murdock Trust moved the circuit court for summary disposition; ITC [565]*565moved for a stay of proceedings in the circuit court based on the primary jurisdiction of the PSC. The circuit court granted the motion to stay the proceedings, and the parties proceeded before the PSC. On April 23, 2013, ITC filed with the PSC a motion for clarification of the February 25, 2011 order and a request for ex parte relief, or, alternatively, immediate consideration of its motion. The basis for the motion was ITC’s decision to modify the route to allow for the turbine.

Murdock Trust raised no objections to the route across its land as originally proposed, but the day after ITC moved for clarification and ex parte relief, Murdock Trust petitioned to intervene out of time in response to ITC’s plan to change the location of the route. According to the application to intervene, the original route for the transmission line “was to be placed on the far west side of Landowner’s primary parcel, such that the full 200 foot width of the easement would not be entirely placed on Landowner’s parcel,” and “ITC’s originally-proposed occupation of Landowner’s parcel in question was . . . expected to amount to approximately 9 acres,” but “[t]he materially-altered centerline route change just now requested by ITC would divide Landowner’s primary parcel in two, increase the distance traversed across the parcel, . . . cut the distance between the high voltage line and a house on the parcel by almost one-half, and ... increase the number of acres that would be taken to over 13 acres.” The PSC granted Murdock Trust’s motion to intervene.

The PSC, in later approving the requested modification of the route, held as follows:

ITC’s proposed adjustment to the route is no greater than 700 feet at its widest, results in a line that is considerably shorter than the approved line on the Trust’s property, and [566]*566avoids the necessity of cutting a 200-foot swath through a large stand of trees on the Trust’s property.... The adjusted route remains on cropland, and remains on the parcel that would have hosted the approved route (but avoids the adjacent treed parcel that was affected by the approved route). Finally, the adjusted route does not cross the property of any landowner that did not receive notice of this proceeding. In sum, the adjustment facilitates the delivery of wind power and is relatively narrow; and the adjusted route remains with the same landowner, affects the same type of land, and runs over the same parcel as the approved route.

Accordingly, the PSC concluded that “the route adjustment proposed by ITC is within the scope of minor adjustments contemplated by the February 25 order,” issued an order to that effect on July 29, 2013, and thus approved the modified route as proposed by ITC. This appeal followed. On September 27, 2013, this Court granted ITC’s motion to expedite this appeal.2

II. NOTICE

Murdock Trust argues that the notice provided to it (in 2010) pursuant to MCL 460.1153(1) was constitutionally defective, because the notice did not provide a map of proposed or alternate routes or state that the route might subsequently be altered by ITC. Further, Murdock Trust argues that recipients of the notice were given only a week to sift through hundreds of pages of documents to ascertain whether their parcels would be affected, and to seek intervention. We disagree.

Murdock Trust made only cursory reference to this issue in a footnote to its initial trial brief before the PSC. There is no indication that Murdock Trust actu[567]*567ally made this argument to the PSC or that the PSC considered it in making its decision. The purposes of preservation requirements include encouraging parties to give the trial tribunal the opportunity to make the correct decision. See Napier v Jacobs, 429 Mich 222, 228-229; 414 NW2d 862 (1987). In this case, the footnote in Murdock Trust’s brief did not call for a decision or otherwise challenge the propriety of past or present proceedings, nor did it invoke constitutional due process. Therefore, we deem this issue to be unpreserved. Unpreserved claims of constitutional error are reviewed for plain error affecting substantial rights. Kern v Blethen-Coluni, 240 Mich App 333, 336; 612 NW2d 838 (2000).

MCL 460.1153(1) provides:

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Bluebook (online)
847 N.W.2d 684, 304 Mich. App. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-international-transmission-co-michctapp-2014.