Indus. Customers of Northwest Util. v. Puc

246 P.3d 1151, 240 Or. App. 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 29, 2010
DocketUE177 A138879
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 P.3d 1151 (Indus. Customers of Northwest Util. v. Puc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indus. Customers of Northwest Util. v. Puc, 246 P.3d 1151, 240 Or. App. 147 (Or. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

246 P.3d 1151 (2010)
240 Or. App. 147

INDUSTRIAL CUSTOMERS OF NORTHWEST UTILITIES, an Oregon nonprofit corporation, Petitioner,
v.
PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION OF OREGON and PacifiCorp, dba Pacific Power, Respondents.

UE177; A138879.

Court of Appeals of Oregon.

Argued and Submitted July 14, 2010.
Decided December 29, 2010.

*1153 Irion A. Sanger, Portland, argued the cause for petitioner. On the briefs were Melinda J. Davison, Jesse E. Cowell, and Davison Van Cleve, P.C.

Judy C. Lucas, Senior Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent Public Utility Commission of Oregon. With her on the brief were John R. Kroger, Attorney General, and Jerome Lidz, Solicitor General.

Katherine McDowell, Portland, argued the cause for respondent PacifiCorp. With her on the brief were Amie Jamieson and McDowell & Rackner PC; Roy Pulvers and Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP; and Natalie Hocken.

Before SCHUMAN, Presiding Judge, and WOLLHEIM, Judge, and ROSENBLUM, Judge.

SCHUMAN, P.J.

Under Oregon law, a public utility is allowed to build into its rates the amount that the utility expects to pay in income taxes. There was, for a long while, no regulatory mechanism to subsequently verify whether the utility's tax projections—and the amount assumed in rates—bore any relationship to the amount of taxes actually paid by the utility. In 2005, the Oregon legislature passed a law intended to close that loophole, thereby prohibiting public utilities from charging ratepayers for taxes far in excess of what the utilities actually pay. The law requires a public utility to annually file a tax report with the Oregon Public Utility Commission (PUC), which the commission then reviews to determine the difference between the amount of taxes assumed for ratemaking purposes and taxes ultimately paid either by the utility or by the utility's affiliated corporate group that are "properly attributed to the regulated operations of the utility." ORS 757.268(4). If the commission determines that the difference between the taxes assumed in rates and the taxes paid is $100,000 or more, it triggers an automatic adjustment to the rate schedule, otherwise known as an "automatic adjustment clause." Id.

This case involves an automatic adjustment clause that resulted from the PUC's review of the 2006 tax report filed by PacifiCorp, an Oregon-regulated utility that filed its 2006 federal income tax returns as part of an affiliated corporate group. Because PacifiCorp filed its 2006 tax returns as part of an affiliated corporate group, the PUC was required to determine what share of the taxes paid by the affiliated group was "properly attributed" to PacifiCorp's Oregon-regulated activities. In doing so, the PUC applied its own administrative rule, OAR XXX-XXX-XXXX, which establishes a methodology for determining the "amount of income taxes paid that is properly attributed to regulated operations of the utility." Applying that methodology, the PUC concluded that the taxes assumed in PacifiCorp's rates were actually considerably less than the taxes paid that were "properly attributed" to PacifiCorp's regulated operations, thereby triggering a rate adjustment in favor of the utility.

On judicial review, Industrial Customers of Northwest Utilities (ICNU)—intervenor in the proceedings below—challenges various aspects of the PUC's review of PacifiCorp's 2006 tax report. First, ICNU perceives an inconsistency between the authorizing statute, ORS 757.268, and the methodology set out in OAR XXX-XXX-XXXX for determining whether taxes paid are "properly attributed" to the regulated operations of a utility; the rule, ICNU argues, impermissibly allows a utility to calculate its taxes based on "hypothetical numbers" rather than actual tax payments, thereby thwarting the very purpose of the statute. Second, ICNU contends that the PUC abused its discretion in refusing to amend a protective order that, according to ICNU, unduly restricted its access to PacifiCorp's documents and made it impossible for ICNU to effectively participate in the PUC proceedings. And third, ICNU contends that the PUC acted inconsistently with the commission's own rules and delegated authority *1154 by striking the testimony of ICNU's expert. We affirm.

I. THE ADMINISTRATIVE SCHEME

At the center of this case is Senate Bill (SB) 408,[1] a bill aimed at closing the gap between what utilities were collecting from ratepayers for taxes and what the utilities were actually paying in taxes. The problem stemmed, for the most part, from the difference between the way that tax liability was calculated for ratemaking purposes and the way that it was calculated under state and federal tax laws. The PUC permitted a utility to charge ratepayers for "taxes that assume the utility is not part of an affiliated group of corporations for tax purposes." ORS 757.267(1)(c). In reality, however, utilities were filing their taxes as part of an affiliated corporate group, whereby losses from within the affiliated group had the potential to reduce or eliminate the utilities' tax liability. Under that system,

"[t]he parent company of a utility [could] employ accounting methods, debt, consolidated tax return rules and other techniques in a way that result[ed] in a difference between the tax liability paid to units of government by the utility, or the affiliated group of corporations of which the utility is a member, and the amount of taxes collected, directly or indirectly, from customers."

ORS 757.267(1)(d).

SB 408 represented a legislative effort to square the amount of taxes assumed in rates with the taxes actually paid by the utility or its affiliated corporate group—or, as legislators explained it, to "true up" the difference once the utility or its affiliated group had actually paid its taxes. To that end, SB 408 requires every Oregon public utility to "file a tax report with the Public Utility Commission annually, on or before October 15 following the year for which the report is being made" that "contain[s] the information required by the commission," including:

"(a) The amount of taxes that was paid by the utility in the three preceding years, or that was paid by the affiliated group and that is properly attributed to the regulated operations of the utility, determined without regard to the tax year for which the taxes were paid; and
"(b) The amount of taxes authorized to be collected in rates for the three preceding years."

ORS 757.268(1). The commission then reviews that tax report and any other information that the commission has obtained. ORS 757.268(4).

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Bluebook (online)
246 P.3d 1151, 240 Or. App. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indus-customers-of-northwest-util-v-puc-orctapp-2010.