International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union 1395 v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co.

920 N.E.2d 721, 48 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2897, 2010 Ind. App. LEXIS 90, 2010 WL 334528
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 2010
Docket93A02-0906-EX-498
StatusPublished

This text of 920 N.E.2d 721 (International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union 1395 v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co.) 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
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union 1395 v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co., 920 N.E.2d 721, 48 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2897, 2010 Ind. App. LEXIS 90, 2010 WL 334528 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

MAY, Judge.

In a 1995 settlement Indianapolis Power and Light (IPL) obtained a rate increase, part of which would fund a trust for non-pension retiree benefits. IPL continued to fund the trust for six years. When IPL was acquired by a holding company, it curtailed its funding of the trust and cut employee benefits, but it continued charging its customers pursuant to the rate increase settlement. The Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission ("the Commission") decided the terms of the settlement did not require continued funding, and on appeal, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and some of the IPL retirees (collectively, "IBEW") dispute the effect of the language in the settlement. We affirm. 1

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1995, IPL sought a rate increase to recover about $290 million from ratepayers to cover the cost of certain non-pension retiree benefits. IPL expected the cost of these benefits would increase because in 1992, the Commission issued an order allowing regulated utilities to adopt a different accounting standard, the "accrual method," 2 in accounting for their non-pension retiree benefits. The change in accounting method was adopted in 1992, but the Commission deferred decisions on the ratemaking treatment of those costs until each utility's next general ratemaking proceeding. For IPL, that was 1995.

*723 In the proceedings leading up to the 1995 settlement, IPL proposed to establish and fund a Voluntary Employees' Benefi-clary Association trust (the "VEBA trust") to pay for the benefits. IPL asked that the cost of the VEBA benefits be computed based on the SFAS 106 "accrual" method, and in the settlement agreement the Commission said "SFAS 106 costs shall be treated as proposed by IPL." (App. at 40.) In its rate order adopting the agreement the Commission approved "the treatment of non-pension post-retirement benefit costs in accordance with [SFAS 106]." (Id. at 50.)

IPL funded the trust for six years, but then stopped the funding when it was acquired by a holding company. Nevertheless, it continued to collect the increased rates provided by the settlement.

In November 2007, IBEW brought a complaint before the Commission to enforce the 1995 order and settlement agreement. IBEW wanted the Commission to order IPL to resume its contributions to the VEBA trust and to make a sufficient contribution to the trust so it would be in the financial position in which it would have been had IPL not stopped making payments. IBEW and IPL both moved for summary judgment.

The Commission granted IPL's motion. It interpreted the wording in the settlement "SFAS 106 costs shall be treated as proposed by IPL," (id. at 9), to relate only to "the accounting treatment of those costs," and noted it had "made no specific finding related to the actual dollar numbers associated with that accounting treatment." (Id. at 11.) As the agreement did not specify any rate adjustment for SFAS 106 costs, the Commission determined it did not require "some set amount of funding for post retirement benefits," and therefore did not require "ongoing funding of the VEBA trust." (Id.)

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

1. Standard of Review

Our Supreme Court recently explained in N. Ind. Pub. Serv. Co. v. United States Steel Corp., 907 N.E.2d 1012 (Ind.2009) ("NIPSCO ") the standard of review to apply when the Commission enters a summary judgment order interpreting a settlement agreement. NIPSCO argued its appeal was not the product of a regulatory settlement but rather a dispute between two private parties over contract interpretation, which would be a question of law appropriate for de novo review. NIPSCO asserted the Commission made no use of ratemaking principles or agency expertise, so it deserved no deference on the question of contract interpretation.

The Court found "this paints too simple a picture of the processes under which the Contract became a Commission order":

Regulatory settlements bear important differences from agreements governed purely by the law of contracts. Such an agreement does not become effective until and unless the Commission acts on the agreement. A contract between private parties takes on public interest ramifications onee the Commission approves it. The Commission maintains the authority and statutory responsibility to supervise and regulate the Contract.
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As it commonly does in hearing the disputes before it, the Commission did more than find facts; it deployed its expertise in the subject matter, one source of judicial deference to the Commission's decision-making. Here, the Commission approved the contract when the parties entered it, effectively making it an order of the Commission. This means the Commission interpreted its *724 own order, not a contract entered by the parties and later disputed.
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Appellate courts apply a de novo standard when reviewing a trial court's summary judgment order because the reviewing court faces the same issues that were before the trial court and analyzes them the same way. By contrast, review of an agency order does not involve the same analysis on appeal. As Justice Arterburn wrote, "ratemaking is a legislative, not a judicial function...." Agencies are not judicial bodies. They are executive branch institutions which the General Assembly has empowered with delegated duties. As such, an adjudication by an agency deserves a higher level of deference than a summary judgment order by a trial court falling squarely within the judicial branch. We therefore apply the established standard of review for judicial review of Commission orders ... basic facts are reviewed for substantial evidence, legal propositions are reviewed for their correctness. Ultimate facts or "mixed questions" are evaluated for reasonableness, with the amount of deference depending on whether the issue falls within the Commission's expertise.
In this case, interpreting the Commission's order is a question falling well within the Commission's expertise. NIPSCO acknowledges the 1999 order itself involved the Commission's special competence, and interpreting the meaning of the order is not substantively different than approving the Contract. We therefore consider this question as a mixed question of law and fact with a high level of deference, examining the logic of the inferences made and the correctness of legal propositions without replacing our own judgment for that of the Commission.

Id. at 1017-18 (citations omitted).

IBEW acknowledges the NIPSCO analysis, but distinguishes it and invites us to apply the typical summary judgment standard. It asserts "the disputed provision in NIPSCO ... called for technical understanding of the distinction between demand charges and energy charges in a two-part electric rate," while the provision before us calls only for interpretation of the phrase "as proposed by IPL." (Br. of Appellants at 19.)

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920 N.E.2d 721, 48 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2897, 2010 Ind. App. LEXIS 90, 2010 WL 334528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-brotherhood-of-electrical-workers-local-union-1395-v-indctapp-2010.