In Re the Deregulation of the Installation & Maintenance of Inside Wiring

420 N.W.2d 650, 1988 Minn. App. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 8, 1988
DocketCO-87-1768
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 420 N.W.2d 650 (In Re the Deregulation of the Installation & Maintenance of Inside Wiring) 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 the Deregulation of the Installation & Maintenance of Inside Wiring, 420 N.W.2d 650, 1988 Minn. App. LEXIS 284 (Mich. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

NORTON, Judge.

This appeal involves the costs associated with the installation and maintenance of *652 telephone wires located within the buildings of telephone customers (“inside wiring”). Following deregulation of inside wiring by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in February 1986, the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (“Commission”) began proceedings to investigate the reasonableness of rates charged by Minnesota telephone companies. Determining that relator Northwestern Bell (NWB) had failed to show cause why its rates should not be reduced as a result of the deregulation, the Commission ordered a reduction in NWB’s rates. We affirm.

FACTS

Prior to January 1987, NWB and other local exchange telephone companies owned the wiring on customers’ premises, and installed and maintained the inside wiring with no extra charge to telephone customers. Instead, costs necessary to cover the installation and maintenance of inside wiring were paid by customers through their monthly local telephone service bills. These costs were considered to be expenses, and were therefore among the factors taken into consideration by the Commission in setting rates in prior rate cases brought by NWB and other telephone companies.

In February 1986, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued an order requiring that states such as Minnesota deregulate the installation and maintenance of inside wiring. Following the issuance of this order, the ownership of inside wiring was, practically speaking, transferred from telephone companies to their customers. Correspondingly, the responsibility for installing and maintaining inside wire was also transferred to telephone customers.

As a result of this deregulation, NWB began charging its customers additional and separate costs for installing or servicing inside wiring. At the same time, however, NWB did not lower its monthly charges to customers for local service, even though in its prior rate case, “Docket 600,” in 1984, the Commission had allowed NWB to include inside wiring costs as expenses to be charged to telephone customers in their monthly local service rates.

On October 24, 1986, the Commission ordered a formal investigation into the reasonableness of NWB’s general rates. This order required NWB to file financial information by April 1, 1987 regarding all of its revenues and expenses. This proceeding, “Docket 354,” is a separate proceeding, unrelated to the present appeal.

In November 1986, the Department of Public Service (DPS) submitted a report to the Commission addressing several issues raised by the deregulation of inside wiring. On December 5,1986, the Minnesota Attorney General, Residential Utilities Division, filed a petition with the Commission requesting an investigation into the effect of the deregulation on local telephone rates.

On December 31, 1986, the. Commission issued an order consolidating the DPS investigation and the petition of the attorney general. This order addressed several questions involved in the deregulation of inside wiring, including the reduction of NWB’s local rates as a result of the deregulation. With regard to this issue, the Commission stated:

In its April 17, 1985 Order in In The Matter of the Request of Northwestern Bell Telephone Company for Authority to Implement a Premises Maintenance Plan and a Trouble Isolation Charge, [PMP] * * * the Commission observed:
In NWB, Docket No. * * * 600, the Commission considered the aggregate cost of maintaining premises wiring and, under the residual ratemaking principle followed there, allowed adequate recovery of those costs through the local exchange service rates. Now, NWB proposes to separately charge for wiring maintenance. Since its costs are already accounted for in the local exchange service rates, the gross revenue effect of the PMP proposal represents an increase in revenues over costs to NWB. Looked at otherwise, NWB will have double recovery for wiring maintenance costs through both its local exchange service rates and the proposed PMP *653 rates. The Commission concludes that such a double recovery is unjust and unreasonable.

(Emphasis in original.) The Commission recognized that other changes in NWB’s costs may have taken place to offset this reduction in costs covered by the local service rate, but concluded that without a general review of the company’s rates the Commission had no way of discovering what those other costs might be. The Commission therefore concluded:

Unless and until the telephone company presents evidence to the contrary, the Commission will direct that basic service rates be lowered to account for the removal of inside wire and riser cable maintenance expense and the removal of house riser cable from rate base.

The Commission placed the burden of disproving this analysis upon the local exchange telephone companies, ordering each telephone company to file a report showing the actual amount of its inside wiring expenses in 1986 and a proposal for adjusting its rates to reflect the deregulation of inside wiring. The Commission ordered each telephone company to make this filing by February 13, 1987, or show good cause why its local rates should not be reduced as a result of the deregulation.

NWB filed a motion for reconsideration of the Commission’s December 31 order, challenging the Commission’s authority to lower rates by means of an order to show cause, rather than a general contested rate case, and claiming that the Commission’s order was arbitrary and capricious and not based upon substantial evidence in the record.

On February 20, 1987, the Commission issued an order denying NWB’s motion for reconsideration and clarifying its December 31 order. The Commission first determined that it possessed the authority to proceed by a show cause order. Regarding NWB’s claim that the show cause order was arbitrary and capricious and based upon insufficient evidence, the Commission again cited its premises maintenance plan order, cited above; the FCC order deregulating inside wiring; and a letter from NWB to the Commission advising the Commission that its installation and maintenance charges for wiring would be detar-iffed after January 1, 1987. The Commission concluded that such evidence “conclusively demonstrates that NWB’s current rates, as of January 1, 1987, recover expenses for services no longer regulated and no longer performed by NWB without separate additional charge.”

The Commission also reasoned that it could have characterized the situation simply as an “unbundling” of the services provided through NWB’s local service rates. The Commission explained:

Prior to January 1, 1987, NWB’s local service rates provided both inside wire maintenance service and local dial tone service. The charge for multiple services was “bundled” into a single local service rate. After January 1, 1987, when one of these services was deregulated, it became necessary to “unbundle” the local service rate and separately identify the charge for the wiring service being deregulated to insure fair and reasonable rates.

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Related

In the Matter of Petition of N. St. Power
676 N.W.2d 326 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2004)
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Petition of Minnesota Power & Light Co.
435 N.W.2d 550 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
420 N.W.2d 650, 1988 Minn. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-deregulation-of-the-installation-maintenance-of-inside-wiring-minnctapp-1988.