In Re Review of the 2005 Annual Automatic Adjustment of Charges for All Electric & Gas Utilities

748 N.W.2d 322, 2008 Minn. App. LEXIS 230, 2008 WL 1971985
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 6, 2008
DocketA07-0653
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 748 N.W.2d 322 (In Re Review of the 2005 Annual Automatic Adjustment of Charges for All Electric & Gas Utilities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Review of the 2005 Annual Automatic Adjustment of Charges for All Electric & Gas Utilities, 748 N.W.2d 322, 2008 Minn. App. LEXIS 230, 2008 WL 1971985 (Mich. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHNSON, Judge.

Due to inadvertence, CenterPoint Energy Minnesota Gas failed to properly account for approximately $28 million in purchases of natural gas that was delivered to Minnesota customers over a five-year period. Although CenterPoint is permitted to *324 recover its gas costs from consumers on a dollar-for-dollar, pass-through basis, Cen-terPoint did not recover that portion of its gas-acquisition costs during the five-year period because of its accounting errors. The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission generally permits a utility to recover pass-through costs for only the most recent prior year. CenterPoint requested a variance from that one-year limitation. The commission denied the request, thus denying CenterPoint recovery of approximately $21 million in gas-acquisition costs incurred in four earlier prior years.

CenterPoint argues that the commission’s decision was inconsistent with the commission’s decisions in response to pri- or, similar requests for variances. We conclude that the commission’s decision was arbitrary and capricious because the commission neither applied the principles it had applied in its prior decisions nor announced new principles concerning variances. Therefore, we reverse and remand to the commission for further proceedings.

FACTS

A. Regulatory Framework

CenterPoint provides natural gas to consumers in Minnesota. As is true with other providers of natural gas, Cen-terPoint is regulated by the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. The commission is responsible for setting the rates that a utility may charge its customers for natural gas. Minn.Stat. § 216B.23, subd. 1 (2006). The commission does so through procedures set forth in Minn. R. 7825.3100-.3700 (2005). Natural gas utilities are permitted to “adjust rates to reflect changes in the cost of energy delivered to customers from those costs authorized by the commission in the utility’s most recent general rate case.” Minn. R. 7825.2390 (2005) (citing Minn. R. 7825.2390-.2920). To that end, gas utilities must submit monthly reports to the commission summarizing the utility’s adjustments for that month. Minn. R. 7825.2910, subp. 1 (2005).

The commission’s administrative rules also provide for a so-called “true-up” procedure by which a utility reconciles its costs and its recovery of costs for the previous year. The utility does so by filing an “annual automatic adjustment of charges” (AAA) with the commission. Minn. R. 7825.2810, subp. 1, .2910, subp. 4 (2005). This procedure allows a utility to recover (or requires it to refund) the difference between the revenue it has received from consumers and the cost of the gas supplied to those consumers during the previous year. Minn. R. 7825.2700, subp. 7 (2005). These rules were promulgated by the commission pursuant to its rulemaking authority under the statutory purchased-gas-adjustment (PGA) scheme, which allows CenterPoint and other public utilities to recover the cost of natural gas on a pass-through basis. See Minn.Stat. § 216B.16, subp. 7 (2006). Significantly for this case, the true-up process applies only with respect to the prior year. Minn. R. 7825.2700, subp. 7.

The commission also has adopted an administrative rule that allows a utility to request a variance from its regulations. The variance rule requires the commission to grant a variance whenever enforcement of another rule would excessively burden the utility and when the variance would not adversely affect the public interest or violate law. Minn. R. 7829.3200 (2005). The commission may consider the matter in an informal proceeding based on written submissions and an oral presentation before the commission, or the commission may refer the matter to the Minnesota Office of Administrative Hearings for a *325 contested-case proceeding. Minn. R. 7829.1000, .1200, subps. 1, 2 (2005).

B. CenterPoint’s Request for Variance

After filing its AAA in September 2005, CenterPoint informed the commission in January 2006 that its internal accounting processes had overstated sales of natural gas between 2000 and 2005. CenterPoint misstated sales in two ways; it mistakenly recognized sales for gas that was lost, and it mistakenly recognized unbilled sales (i.e., sales that were to be billed to customers in the future). Because CenterPoint allocates its gas costs proportionately to all its sales, and because a portion of Center-Point’s gas costs was allocated to quantities of natural gas that were not actually delivered to customers, CenterPoint missed the opportunity to recover the portion of its gas costs that had been allocated to the overstated amount of gas, which in fact never was delivered to consumers. Approximately 80% of the revenue Center-Point receives from consumers is attributable to the costs incurred in obtaining natural gas from suppliers.

In April 2006, CenterPoint followed up on its earlier notice by filing a request for a variance from the one-year limitation in the true-up rule. In that fifing, Center-Point stated that, in any given month, the amount of unbilled sales was “not sufficiently large to stand out and call for further analysis” but that the accumulated total of unbilled sales grew over time, eventually garnering attention after Cen-terPoint filed its September 2005 AAA filing. In October 2006, CenterPoint filed supplemental comments in which the company stated that the total unrecovered amount for the years 2000 through 2005 was approximately $28 million, of which approximately $21 million was unrecovered between 2000 and 2004.

In an order dated December 6, 2006, the commission denied CenterPoint’s request for a variance, reasoning that CenterPoint had not met the requirements for a variance in rule 7829.3200, subp. 1. The commission also ordered an independent audit to review CenterPoint’s accounting procedures and denied CenterPoint’s request for a contested-case hearing pending the results of the independent audit report.

CenterPoint moved for rehearing and reconsideration. In February 2007, the commission held an open meeting to consider the motion. One commissioner moved to reconsider the earlier decision and to grant a one-year variance, which would allow CenterPoint to recover costs incurred in the 2003-2004 period as well as the 2004-2005 period. The motion failed on a 2-2 vote.

On February 22, 2007, the commission issued an order denying reconsideration and clarifying its December 6, 2006, order. The clarifying order confirmed that the total amount of unrecovered costs is $21 million before taxes, and it affirmed the commission’s rationale for denying the variance. CenterPoint now seeks review of the commission’s denial of its request for a variance.

ISSUE

Did the public utilities commission act arbitrarily and capriciously by denying CenterPoint’s request for a variance in fight of the commission’s prior decisions concerning variances?

ANALYSIS

When the court of appeals reviews the decision of an administrative agency, it seeks to determine whether the agency’s decision is:

(a) in violation of constitutional provisions; or
*326

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Related

Avon Township v. State Boundary Commission
293 N.W.2d 691 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
748 N.W.2d 322, 2008 Minn. App. LEXIS 230, 2008 WL 1971985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-review-of-the-2005-annual-automatic-adjustment-of-charges-for-all-minnctapp-2008.