In the Matter of the Request for an Increase in Sewer Operating Revenues of Emerald Pointe Utility Company Public Service Commission of Missouri v. Office of Public Counsel

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 12, 2014
DocketWD76996
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of the Request for an Increase in Sewer Operating Revenues of Emerald Pointe Utility Company Public Service Commission of Missouri v. Office of Public Counsel (In the Matter of the Request for an Increase in Sewer Operating Revenues of Emerald Pointe Utility Company Public Service Commission of Missouri v. Office of Public Counsel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri 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 the Matter of the Request for an Increase in Sewer Operating Revenues of Emerald Pointe Utility Company Public Service Commission of Missouri v. Office of Public Counsel, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 IN THE MATTER OF THE REQUEST  FOR AN INCREASE IN SEWER  WD76996 OPERATING REVENUES OF  EMERALD POINTE UTILITY OPINION FILED: COMPANY;  Respondent,  August 12, 2014  PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF  MISSOURI,   Respondent,  v.   OFFICE OF PUBLIC COUNSEL,   Appellant. 

APPEAL FROM THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION

Before Division Two: Victor C. Howard, P.J., James Edward Welsh, and Anthony Rex Gabbert, JJ.

When Emerald Pointe Utility Company filed a request with the Missouri Public Service

Commission asking for an increase in its annual sewer and water system operating revenues, the

Office of Public Counsel alleged that Emerald Pointe was overcharging its customers through the

collection of a "sewer commodity charge." The Commission noted that the overcharging issue

was an issue that could have been brought in a complaint case, which would have been a separate

action from the rate case. However, by agreement of the parties, the Commission allowed the complaint case to be litigated concurrently with the rate case. After a hearing, the Commission

issued a Revised Report and Order, which authorized an increase in Emerald Pointe's annual

sewer and water system operating revenues and which concluded that the Office of the Public

Counsel failed to meet its burden of proving that the tariff presented to the Commission for

approval in 2000 was Emerald Pointe's lawful tariff and, therefore, failed to prove that Emerald

Pointe violated its tariff by collecting a sewer commodity charge from its customers. The Office

of Public Counsel appeals from that Revised Report and Order complaining only about the

Commission's resolution of the sewer commodity charge. The Office of Public Counsel

contends that the Commission's actions constituted improper retroactive ratemaking and that the

Commission improperly applied a presumption that a previously approved tariff was unlawful.

We affirm.

Background

Emerald Pointe is a "public utility," a "sewer corporation," and a "water corporation," as

defined in sections 386.020 (43), (49), and (59), RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013. The Public Service

Commission is a state administrative agency responsible for regulating public utilities, including

sewer and water corporations, operating within the state. State ex rel. Praxair, Inc. v. Mo. Pub.

Serv. Comm'n, 344 S.W.3d 178, 186 (Mo. banc 2011). The Office of Public Counsel is a state

agency that represents consumers in all utility proceedings before the Commission and in all

appeals of Commission orders. §§ 386.700 and 386.710, RSMo 2000.

On July 16, 2012, Emerald Pointe filed a letter with the Commission requesting an

increase of $186,000 in its annual sewer system operating revenues and an increase of $13,000 in

its annual water system operating revenues. By filing the letter, Emerald Pointe initiated a rate

case under the Commission's Small Utility Rate Case Procedure as set forth in 4 CSR 240-3.050.

2 As provided in 4 CSR 240-3.050(6), the Commission's staff and Public Counsel

undertook an investigation and audit of Emerald Pointe's water and sewer operations. On

March 14, 2013, the Commission's staff and Emerald Pointe filed a partial disposition agreement

with the Commission that purported to resolve several of the issues between them. However, the

Commission's staff and Emerald Pointe were unable to resolve all issues and asked the

Commission to resolve the remaining issues through contested case procedures. Subsequently,

on March 18, 2013, the Office of Public Counsel objected to certain aspects of the disposition

agreement and requested that an evidentiary hearing be held on all issues. In particular, the

Office of Public Counsel requested an evidentiary hearing on the "[a]ppropriate amount of

refund of sewer commodity charge, late fees and reconnection fees" and the "[a]ppropriate

refund procedure for sewer commodity charge, late fees, reconnection fees and customer

deposits."

On April 17, 2013, the Commission conducted a local public hearing in Branson, near

Emerald Pointe's service area. At that hearing, the Commission heard comments from Emerald

Pointe's customers and the public regarding Emerald Pointe's request for a rate increase.

Comments were also received regarding alleged unauthorized charges by Emerald Pointe.

In compliance with the established procedural schedule, the parties pre-filed direct,

rebuttal, and surrebuttal testimony. The Commission held a hearing on May 9, 2013. The

evidence at the hearing established that Emerald Pointe had last changed its sewer rates as a

result of a Small Company Increase Procedure in 2000.1 In that rate case, Emerald Pointe

initiated the rate case process on May 20, 1999, by sending a letter from its President, Gary

Snadon, to the Executive Secretary of the Commission. In the letter, Emerald Pointe asked for a

1 That procedure was contained in 4 CSR 240-2.020 at that time.

3 ten percent increase to both its base rate and its existing sewer commodity usage rate.2 At that

time, Emerald Pointe's tariff authorized it to collect a sewer commodity charge in the amount of

$5.83 per 1,000 gallons. Upon receiving the rate increase request letter from Emerald Pointe, the

Commission's staff undertook an audit of the utility's books and records to evaluate the need for a

rate increase.

On March 7, 2000, Wendall R. "Randy" Hubbs, from the Commission's staff, sent a letter

to Snadon, in which Hubbs forwarded the rate case disposition agreement and the proposed tariff

sheets to resolve Emerald Pointe's request for water and sewer rate increases. The Schedule of

Sewer Rate included a "Usage Charge of $3.50 per 1,000 gallons" for all usage over 2,000

gallons a month. Consistent with the Commission's small company rate procedure at that time,

Hubbs's letter asked Snadon to sign a letter drafted by the Commission's staff that requested a

rate increase in the agreed upon amount, to sign the disposition agreement, and to review the

proposed water and sewer tariffs. The letter instructed Snadon to mail the letter, the signed

agreement, and the tariff sheets directly to Hubbs. Further, the letter stated that, upon the return

of the all the documents, Hubbs would have the Commission's representative sign the agreement

and would then "date the tariff sheets to comply with the Commission's rules." The letter

specifically stated that Hubbs would "file the documents for [Emerald Pointe] with the

Commission."

As instructed by Hubbs's letter, Snadon, on behalf of Emerald Pointe, signed the letter

and disposition agreement. He then mailed the signed letter, which was addressed to Dale Hardy

Roberts, Executive Secretary to the Commission, the signed disposition agreement, and the

2 Emerald Pointe was not represented by legal counsel during the rate case. At the time, the Commission's staff encouraged small utility companies to proceed with small utility rate cases without engaging the services of an attorney.

4 tariffs to Hubbs. According to Snadon, his understanding of Hubbs's letter was that "by mailing

all of the signed documents to Mr. Hubbs, I, on behalf of Emerald Pointe Utility, had filed the

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