In Re the Appeal of Colorado Interstate Gas Co.

14 P.3d 1099, 270 Kan. 303, 147 Oil & Gas Rep. 192, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 977
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 8, 2000
Docket83,288
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 P.3d 1099 (In Re the Appeal of Colorado Interstate Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Appeal of Colorado Interstate Gas Co., 14 P.3d 1099, 270 Kan. 303, 147 Oil & Gas Rep. 192, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 977 (kan 2000).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

*304 Davis, J.:

Colorado Interstate Gas (CIG), a public utility operating in Kansas as well as other states, appeals from a Kansas Board of Tax Appeals (BOTA) decision regarding the value of its Kansas property for the years 1993,1994, and 1995. Among the numerous issues raised are the standard BOTA must use in its consideration of evidence presented at its hearing and the standard that must be applied in determining the value of the property. We reverse and remand for further proceedings before BOTA.

CIG identifies the following issues in this appeal: (1) procedural errors including (a) BOTA applied an incorrect standard of review, (b) BOTA failed to achieve its statutory mandate of three members in its final orders, and (c) one member of BOTA failed to recuse himself; (2) BOTA erroneously rejected fair market value as the standard to be applied for valuing the Kansas property of public utilities; (3) BOTA failed to exclude intangible property from its calculations as required by law; and (4) BOTA erroneously failed to adjust the valuation for tire impact of an order by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) which increased competition. CIG also raises the following constitutional issues: (5) The 1992 amendment to Article 11, § 1 of the Kansas Constitution violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and (6) K.S.A. 79-5a01 violates both tire Kansas and United States Constitutions by preferentially treating local gas gatherers and processors compared to interstate gas companies performing the same activities.

The resolution of Issue 1(a) involving BOTA’s appropriate standard of review on appeal and Issue 2 involving fair market value as the standard for valuing the Kansas property of public utilities require that we reverse BOTA’s decision and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Because we reverse and remand for further proceedings before BOTA, we do not address other issues raised by CIG in its appeal. The questions regarding whether BOTA failed to achieve a statutorily mandated consensus in its decision, whether a member of BOTA erroneously failed to recuse himself, whether BOTA erroneously failed to exclude intangible property from its calculations, and whether BOTA erroneously failed to adjust the valuation to *305 take into account a FERC order are rendered moot by our decision. Moreover, the two constitutional questions raised by CIG are not ripe for determination by this court. We recognize that BOTA has no authority to rule on these constitutional issues. See Zarda v. State, 250 Kan. 364, 370, 826 P.2d 1365, cert. denied 504 U.S. 973 (1992). However, we have no way of knowing whether, after further proceedings before BOTA applying the correct standard of review, a case or controversy will remain. “It is the duty of the courts to decide actual controversies by a judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles which cannot affect the matters in issue before the court.” Miller v. Sloan, Listrom, Eisenbarth & Glassman, 267 Kan. 245, 262, 978 P.2d 922

FACTS

The record on appeal includes over 1,300 pages of transcript as well as five large volumes of exhibits in addition to 12 volumes of pleadings. The statement of facts submitted by the parties are inadequate for a proper understanding of the issues we must resolve. In order to understand the basis of the appeal and the relative positions of the parties, it is necessary to set forth the facts in much greater detail than is done by the parties.

CIG is a natural gas company which provides transportation, gathering, processing, storage, and production of natural gas. CIG operates in Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Oklahoma, Colorado, Texas, and Kansas. In Kansas, CIG operates its transmission line as well as approximately a thousand miles of gathering lines, a processing plant, and a major storage field.

CIG is defined as a public utility in Kansas for the purpose of taxation. K.S.A. 79-5a01(a)(4). CIG falls into what is classified as the large gas transmission group, a group comprised of eight companies in Kansas. In the valuation of the utilities, all members of the large transmission group are treated in the same manner.

CIG, as a natural gas company under the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717 etseq. (1994), is regulated by FERC. FERC exercises preemptive jurisdiction over most of CIG’s interstate gas activities with the exception of CIG’s merchant, processing, and gathering *306 functions, which are essentially unregulated. FERC regulates the amount that ClG is allowed to charge for each unit of service in the regulated activities. The rate base allowed by FERC is the original costs of assets minus depreciation and minus deferred federal income taxes (DFIT). It is this base on which FERC allows the utility to earn income.

Effective October 1, 1993, FERC issued Order 636, which required that CIG “unbundle” several of its functional operations which provided for increased competition in those areas from other sources.

A key issue before BOTA and in this appeal involves the PVD’s use of the unit method to determine the value of CIG’s Kansas property. Under the unit method of valuing an interstate enterprise, the appraiser first finds the value of the company as a whole. The appraiser must then allocate a portion of that value to Kansas using an allocation factor determined by the appraiser which must have some relationship to the assets whose value is being allocated. The value which is allocated to Kansas is then apportioned among the different taxing jurisdictions.

For each of the subject years, the PVD valued the entirety of CIG’s property using the income approach, cost approach, and market approach to value. In utilizing the income approach, the PVD forecasted CIG’s net operating income for 1993 as $55,918,408; 1994 as $51,180,615; andl995 as $47,550,481. These projected net operating incomes were then capitalized using a rate of 11% for 1993 and 1994, and 11.5% for 1995. CIG’s total value using the income approach was thus $508,349,164 in 1993; $465,278,318 for 1994; and $413,482,443 for 1995. These values were correlated with values determined for the same years using the cost and market approach, with resulting value for the company as a whole of $525,000,000 in 1993; $465,000,000 in 1994; and $430,000,000 in 1995.

The PVD then proceeded to apply an allocation factor to CIG’s unit value in order to determine what part of that unit value should be allocated to Kansas.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.3d 1099, 270 Kan. 303, 147 Oil & Gas Rep. 192, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-appeal-of-colorado-interstate-gas-co-kan-2000.