Inter-City Beverage Co. v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.

889 S.W.2d 875, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 1651, 1994 WL 580069
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1994
DocketNo. WD 48856
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 889 S.W.2d 875 (Inter-City Beverage Co. v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.) 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
Inter-City Beverage Co. v. Kansas City Power & Light Co., 889 S.W.2d 875, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 1651, 1994 WL 580069 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

HANNA, Judge.

This case presents an issue as to which tribunal has jurisdiction to interpret a provision in the Kansas City Power & Light Company (KCP & L) rate schedule. The appeal resides here, according to some of the parties, by virtue of the parties’ and trial court’s desire for an appellate court determination of subject matter jurisdiction before possible class certification and extensive discovery which 'could result. Notwithstanding the counsels’ statements in their respective briefs and oral argument alluding to a “friendly decision” to circumvent the normal procedures, we will proceed under the assumption that the trial court ruled on the respondents’ motion to dismiss on the merits.

The plaintiffs are eight Missouri and one Kansas industrial or business customers of KCP & L. Their petition for damages, filed August 18, 1993, alleges that the defendant KCP & L misinterpreted language in its rate schedules which resulted in overcharges to them and other similarly situated customers. These tariffs were on file with the Missouri Public Service Commission (MPSC) and the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC). Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment and an award of damages for the “overcharges.”

KCP & L filed a motion to dismiss on October 21, 1993, contesting the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction to construe rate schedules of a public utility, contending generally that the plaintiffs’ petition was a matter within the exclusive jurisdiction of the MPSC and KCC. Both MPSC and KCC requested intervention which was granted and they both joined in the motion for dismissal.

Plaintiffs’ lawsuit charges KCP & L’s interpretation of its tariffs (rate schedules) resulted in overcharges to each plaintiff. The trial court sustained KCP & L’s motion to dismiss December 3, 1993, holding that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. The court ruled that the MPSC and the KCC had exclusive jurisdiction.

A brief description of the rate schedules is in order. The Determination of Demand provision in each of the rate schedules specifies the method to be utilized by KCP & L for computing monthly “billing demand.” The “billing demand” is used to compute the “demand charge” and the “energy charge” which comprise the two components of the monthly billing charged to each commercial and industrial customer served in Missouri and Kansas. A demand charge reflects the cost of maintaining sufficient electric generating capacity to meet the customers’ peak demand needs.

There are variations in the Determination of Demand provisions but the following is representative and sufficient for our purposes:

DETERMINATION OF DEMAND:
Demand will be determined by demand instruments or, at the Company’s option, by demand tests. The billing demand for any month included in the Summer Season shall be the highest demand indicated in any 30-minute interval during that month or such higher minimum billing demand as may be established by contract. The billing demand for any month included in the Winter Season shall be 70% of the highest demand indicated during that month or such higher billing demand as may be established by contract.
[877]*877The minimum billing demand established by contract shall be not less than ten kw for secondary electric service nor less than the higher of:
(i) 80% of the highest billing demand occurring in that portion of the Summer Season included in the 12-month period ending with the current month; or
(ii) 50% of the highest billing demand occurring in that portion of the Winter Season included in the 12-month period ending with the current month.

(Emphasis added). The “established by contract” language was first utilized by KCP & L in its rate schedule in 1951. In calculating the plaintiffs’ bills, KCP & L utilized the alternative methods of computing billing “demand as may be established by contract.” Plaintiffs complain that they had no contracts with KCP & L which would allow KCP & L to bill at the higher demand. They contend they should have received bills for service in each month of the Summer Season based on the highest demand indicated in any 30-minute interval in the summer months and receive bills for service in each month of the Winter Season based on 70% of the highest demand during the winter months. The language in question and the interpretation of the rate schedules has for many years been consistently construed by KCP & L. In September 1992, the emphasized language which precipitated this lawsuit, “established by contract,” was removed. No one disputes the charges following that time. The dispute centers on the years before the language was changed.

Plaintiffs seek damages for overcharges that they contend resulted from the improper construction by KCP & L of the Determination of Demand provisions before the 1992 revision. The plaintiffs timely appealed the court’s ruling sustaining the respondents’ motion for dismissal.

In them first point on appeal, the plaintiffs charge that the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction to decide the appropriate construction to be given the Missouri filed rate schedules of an electric public utility. The parties do not request a decision as to which provision should determine the tariff, but rather they seek a ruling as to which tribunal should make that decision: the MPSC or the circuit court.

Plaintiffs rely exclusively on Wilshire Constr. Co. v. Union Elec. Co., 463 S.W.2d 903 (Mo.1971). The Wilshire case was commenced by five residential developers who sued Union Electric for alleged overcharges collected by Union Electric under contracts for the installation of underground wiring. The issue in Wilshire was the interpretation of the separate contracts that the plaintiffs had signed with Union Electric. In order to interpret the contracts, the court found it necessary to analyze the rate schedule. Id. at 906-07. Thus, the court had to construe the rate schedule in order to properly interpret the contracts. The actual rates set by the MPSC were not at issue. The question addressed was whether the terms of the contracts were consistent with the rate schedules. We are here concerned with whether the rate schedules required written contracts. The court defined its jurisdiction to include those eases in which “a controversy arises over the construction of a contract or of a rate schedule upon which a contract is based_” Id. at 905. In those situations in which there is a claim of an overcharge, only the courts have jurisdiction. Id. Wil-shire does not answer the problem presented here.

Here, we are not concerned with the construction of a contract or a rate schedule upon which a contract is based. The issue placed before this court is which of two rates filed and published with the MPSC should be used. The MPSC is an agency of limited jurisdiction and has only such powers as are conferred upon it by statute. State ex rel. Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. Buzard, 350 Mo. 763, 168 S.W.2d 1044, 1046 (Banc 1943).

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Bluebook (online)
889 S.W.2d 875, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 1651, 1994 WL 580069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-city-beverage-co-v-kansas-city-power-light-co-moctapp-1994.