Indiana Gas Co. v. Office of the Utility Consumer Counselor

610 N.E.2d 865, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 211, 1993 WL 72326
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1993
Docket93A02-9106-EX-259
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 610 N.E.2d 865 (Indiana Gas Co. v. Office of the Utility Consumer Counselor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Gas Co. v. Office of the Utility Consumer Counselor, 610 N.E.2d 865, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 211, 1993 WL 72326 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

SHARPNACK, Chief Judge.

This case is another phase in the effort of Indiana Gas Co. ("Gas Co.") to prevent the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission ("Commission") from implementing its interpretation of the "earnings test" in processing applications for gas cost adjust *867 ments. The first phase resulted in the decision of the third district in Indiana Gas Co. v. Office of Utility Consumer Counselor (1991), Ind.App., 575 N.E.2d 1044. Gas Co. contends that because this case is sufficiently different from Indiana Gas we need not follow it. In addition, Gas Co. contends that some of the issues presented here were not addressed by Indiana Gas.

Before addressing the issues raised by Gas Co., it would be helpful to give context to the issues by explaining the process by which a gas utility is permitted to adjust its charges to customers to reflect fluctuations in its cost of gas without going through a complete rate change process. The process is provided for in 1.C. 8-1-2-42(g) and is referred to a gas cost adjustment application (GCA). Although the process was initially conceived to meet a situation in which gas costs were rising frequently and sharply, it is equally applicable to a situation where the cost of gas is falling. Id. GCAs generally seek to pass through, on a dollar for dollar basis, any increase or decrease in gas cost the utility is experiencing. In setting up the process to be applied by the Commission in determining GCAs, the legislature required that the GCA be subjected to an earnings test. Specifically, the provision was:

"(g)(8) A gas utility may apply for a change in its gas cost charge not more often than each three (8) months. When such application is filed, the petitioning utility shall show the the commission its cost of gas for the period between its last order form the commission approving gas costs in its basic rates and the latest month for which actual gas costs are available. The petitioning utility shall also estimate its average gas costs for a recovery period of not less than the three (8) calendar months subsequent to the expiration of the thirty (80) day period allowed the commission in subdivision (1). The commission shall conduct a summary hearing solely on the gas cost adjustment requested in the petition subject to the notice requirements of IC 8-1-1-8 and may grant the requested gas cost charge if it finds that:
* * * * * *
(C) the gas cost adjustment applied for will not result, in the case of a public utility, in its earning a return in excess of the return authorized by the commission in the last proceeding in which the basic rates and charges of the public utility were approved; however, if the gas cost adjustment applied for will result in the public utility earning a return in excess of the return authorized by the commission in the last proceeding in which basic rates and charges of the gas utility were approved, the gas cost adjustment applied for will be reduced to the point where no such excess of return will be earned...."

1.C. § 8-1-2-42(g)(8) (emphasis added).

It is the interpretation and application of the earnings test that is at the heart of this case. Gas Co. argues that this statute requires that any excess earnings must result solely from the requested adjustment, le., be caused by it. Gas Co. continues from this proposition to the further argument that since the requested GCAs here were for reductions to reflect decreased gas costs, there is no way that the adjustments could result in or cause an excess return.

The Commission has taken the position that the earnings test in the statute requires it to determine if the utility is earning in excess of the return authorized in the last general rate setting. The authorized return is expressed in terms of an annual net operating income permitted to the utility. If the utility is found to be earning more than that amount on a quarterly basis, the Commission reduces the requested adjustment to the extent necessary to bring the anticipated return for the three month period covered by the GCA in line with the authorized return on a quarterly basis. In the application of the earnings test by the Commission, it is not material that the excess earnings were generated by factors other than the requested adjustment. In fact, the Commission ree-ognizes that excess earnings will never be *868 caused by a gas cost adjustment because the adjustment merely passes on the change in gas cost. The Commission, however, has concluded that it would violate its mandate from the legislature to approve an adjustment that would permit the continued earning of excess net income. (Order, Commission Cause no. 87091, Record, GCA27, pp. 644-655) 1

It is in this context that we review this case.

This is the consolidated appeal of three separate orders of the Commission. In two of these cases, cause numbers 87894-GCA26 and 37394-GCA27, the Commission initially issued orders granting Gas Co. authority to reduce the charges to its customers in order to reflect its current costs of procuring gas. This reduction in charges was to be accomplished by credits reflected on bills to customers. The initial order in GCA26 which covered the months of June, July, and August of 1990 was entered on May 30, 1990, and was designated as an "Order on Less Than All Issues." This order, in addressing the issue of return to be earned, noted the conflicting positions of the utility and the utility consumer counsel and the fact that the utility was earning a net operating income in excess of that authorized in the last general rate case. The order stated:

"The Commission is unable at this time to make a finding as to which result is appropriate. Therefore, on an interim basis, subject to refund, we find it appropriate to approve the Applicant's requested GCA factor, expressly reserving resolution of this issue for a second Order to be issued in this Cause."

The initial order in GCA2T for September, October and November, 1990, was issued on August 22, 1990, and was also designated as an "Order on Less Than All Issues." With respect to the return to be earned, the order provided, "This issue will be addressed in a subsequent order."

On January 16, 1991, final orders were issued in both GCA26 and GCA27. These orders each recited that the initial order had been on less than all of the issues. In the final order in GCA27, the Commission noted that the initial order of August 22, 1990, had provided that the "appropriate return to be earned should be addressed in a subsequent Order." In each order, the utility was ordered to initiate quarterly refunds in its next GCA in the amount of $364,920 for the period covered by GCA26 and $481,725 for the period covered by GCA27. On May 29, 1991, the Commission entered orders on reconsideration in each of GCAs 26 and 27, confirming the earlier final orders, and an order in GCA8O0 under which the refunds of the amounts determined to be excess returns in GCAs 26 and 27 were to be made over the period covered by GCABO: June, July, and August of 1991.

The Commission did not consider the claim of Gas Co.

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Bluebook (online)
610 N.E.2d 865, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 211, 1993 WL 72326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-gas-co-v-office-of-the-utility-consumer-counselor-indctapp-1993.