In re Montana Power Co.

590 P.2d 1140, 180 Mont. 385, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 713
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1979
DocketNo. 14310
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 590 P.2d 1140 (In re Montana Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Montana Power Co., 590 P.2d 1140, 180 Mont. 385, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 713 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Montana Power Company (Montana Power or MPC) filed several petitions for rate adjustments before the Public Service Commission (Commission or PSC) designated as Docket Nos. 6279 and 6327. By final amended petition Montana Power requested Commission approval of rates for electric utility service designed to produce an increase in annual operating revenues of $15,650,-601 and approval of rates for natural gas service designed to produce an increase in annual gross operating revenues of approximately $28,800,000. At approximately the same time the Montana [387]*387Consumer Counsel (Consumer Counsel) filed a petition for an electric rate decrease, Docket No. 6336. These matters were consolidated for hearing purposes into Docket No. 6348.

The Commission conducted public hearings in Helena in this docket from October 20 to November 6, 1975; from January 12 to January 23, 1976; and from February 2 to February 13, 1976. Individual commissioners also conducted public hearing in various cities throughout the state during November and December, 1975.

At the hearings conducted in Helena, the Commission heard the testimony of 54 witnesses and accepted 93 exhibits during the course of direct and cross-examination by the Commission, the Commission staff, Montana Power, the Consumer and intervenors Anaconda Company, Great Falls Gas Company, Hoerner Waldorf, Ideal Cement Company and the executive agencies of the United States government.

On July 26, 1976, Montana Power filed a petition to present additional testimony. This petition was subsequently denied on the ground that the testimony to be presented would have been irrelevant and prejudicial as it would have dealt with post-test year data.

Montana Power also filed a motion on July 26, 1976, for immediate temporary rate increases for its gas and electric services. This motion was argued before the Commission on August 12, 1976. On January 6, 1977, the Commission issued Order No. 4220B in which it granted MPC a temporary increase in its natural gas rate, refused to grant a temporary rate increase for electric service and denied the Consumer Counsel’s petition for an electric rate decrease.

The case was submitted for decision to the Commission on December 13, 1976. By Order No. 4220C, dated February 23, 1977, the PSC granted Montana Power an electric rate increase of $2,-069,000 much less than the $15,650,601 sought by MPC, and a gas rate increase of $26,862,000. No party has appealed any portion of the Commission’s gas rate decision.

Montana Power appealed to the District Court two Commission “rate base” (the investment on which returns are allowed) determi[388]*388nations: the PSC’s exclusion of $5.7 million from rate base as exceeding the original cost of the property to Montana Power, and the PCS’s use of an average-year rate base, computed by dividing by two the sum of MPC’s total plant investment at the beginning of the year and total plant investment at the end of the year.

Montana Power also appealed from a portion of the Commission order in which the PSC stated that it now found “questionable” and additional $15.7 million in rate base which, in 1944, the Commission had characterized as “original cost.” Although the PSC did not exclude the questionable amount from rate base, it did order MPC to retain an independent accounting firm acceptable to the Commission to undertake a determination of the original cost of the properties in question. Montana Power also appealed from the order directing it to retain this accounting firm.

The District Court of the Second Judicial District, the Honorable Jack L. Green presiding, issued findings and conclusions on February 22, 1978. The District Court affirmed the Commission as to its rate base determinations eliminating the 15.7 million and using an average-year rate base. From this portion of the District Court’s judgment, Montana Power appeals further.

As to the portion of the Commission’s order finding $15.7 million of Montana Power’s rate base questionable, the District Court reversed the PSC on the ground that the Commission’s 1944 finding that this amount was original cost could not now be questioned. The District Court further concluded that the order requiring Montana Power to retain an independent accounting firm was beyond the authority of the Commission and constituted a confiscation of Montana Power’s property. The Commission and the Consumer Counsel have appealed from these portions of the District Court’s judgment.

Additional facts are presented as they become relevant to the discussion of each issue.

This appeal presents for review the following issues:

1. Whether the District Court correctly affirmed the Commis[389]*389sion’s elimination of $5.7 million from Montana Power’s electric rate base as being in excess of original cost.

2. Whether the District Court correctly held that the Commission had no authority to consider further an item of $15.7 million in rate base which had been defined as an original cost by the PSC in a 1944 decision and therefore correctly held that the PSC had erroneously ordered a confiscatory accounting to determine original cost of this property.

Before proceeding to a discussion of the specific issues raised by this appeal, we find it helpful to make some prefatory remarks regarding the relative roles and functions of the Montana Public Service Commission, the District Court and this Court in utility rate cases.

In Chapter 1, Title 70, Revised Codes of Montana 1947, now Chapters 1-3, Title 69 MCA, the legislature created the Public Service Commission of Montana and delegated to it the “duty . . . to supervise and regulate the operations of the public utilities.” Section 70-101, R.C.M. 1947, now section 69-1-102 MCA. As part of these duties, the Commission is given the power to “investigate and ascertain the value of the property of every public utility actually used and useful for the convenience of the public.” Section 70-106, R.C.M. 1947, now section 69-3-109 MCA. It is the proper exercise of this power that forms the basis of each of the issues in this appeal.

A utility dissatisfied with an order of the Commission has two statutory routes of appeal for judicial review: Section 70-128, R.C.M. 1947, now section 69-3-402 MCA, and section 82-4216, R.C.M. 1947, now sections 2-4-701 through -704 MCA, of the Montana Administrative Procedure Act. Montana Power has chosen the latter of these routes.

This statute strictly limits the scope of judicial review of an administrative agency decision. Under section 82-4216(l)(a), now sections 2-4-701, -702 MCA, only final agency decisions in a contested case may generally be reviewed. Only if review of the final decision would not provide an adequate remedy is a preliminary or intermediate agency action or ruling immediately reviewable.

[390]*390Subsection (7), now section 2-4-704 MCA, of the same statute further limits the scope of review. Under that subsection a District Court is not allowed to substitute its judgment for that of the agency as to the weight of the evidence on question of fact. The court may reverse or modify that administrative decision only if substantial rights of the aggrieved party have been prejudiced by virtue of enumerated agency violations or errors.

In Vita-Rich Dairy, Inc. v. Department of Business Regulation (1976), 170 Mont.

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Bluebook (online)
590 P.2d 1140, 180 Mont. 385, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-montana-power-co-mont-1979.