Jersey Central Power & Light Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

589 F.2d 142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1978
DocketNo. 78-1185
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 589 F.2d 142 (Jersey Central Power & Light Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jersey Central Power & Light Co. v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 589 F.2d 142 (3d Cir. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

WEIS, Circuit Judge.

The fuel adjustment clause is a controversial reaction to some of the problems created by the energy crisis. The interpretation by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission of an electrical utility’s tariff containing such a provision is the subject of this petition for review. We conclude that the Commission committed no error in construing the clause as one calling for current charges rather than for past expenses. Accordingly, since there was no “billing lag,” the utility was not entitled to employ a phase-in arrangement in a new tariff to recover “unbilled” expenses.

In response to rapidly escalating fuel costs, Jersey Central Power & Light Company prepared and filed a tariff with the Federal Power Commission 1 incorporating a fuel adjustment clause for charges to be collected from its wholesale customers.2 [144]*144The clause became effective on December 2, 1973, and read in pertinent part:

“An energy cost adjustment factor shall be applied to each kilowatt-hour supplied under this tariff. This energy cost adjustment determined ... in accordance with the formula set forth below, shall be applied to all kilowatt-hours supplied during the billing month.”

There followed a formula that included as factors the cost of fuel and sales in current and base periods, taxes, and a component for adjustment of losses to the delivery voltage. In defining current sales and fuel costs, the tariff stated that these “factors are to be determined as the three month totals for the period ending with the second calendar month preceding the billing month.”

With some revisions not material here, Jersey Central billed its customers under the new arrangement until July 27, 1976, when the company filed a proposed new schedule of wholesale electric „rates, including a three-step increase in the base cost component of the fuel adjustment clause. This phase-in mechanism3 was designed to recover “unbilled fuel costs” still owed by customers, according to the utility, under the superseded adjustment clause. The contention was that such a device, similar in effect to temporary surcharges, was needed to recoup fuel costs already incurred. Because the original fuel adjustment charge was based on a time period ending two months before the billing date, the company asserted that a billing lag had resulted.

The boroughs of Lavallette, Madison, Butler, and Seaside Heights, and Allegheny Electric Cooperative, Inc., wholesale customers of Jersey Central, intervened and urged rejection of the proposed fuel adjustment clause as an attempt to retroactively recover fuel costs which the original clause had failed to include. Subsequently, the customers sought severance and summary disposition of the phase-in question in light of Public Service Co. of New Hampshire, Opinion Nos. 790 and 790-A, FERC Docket ER76-285 (1977), petition for review filed, No. 77-1592 (D.C.Cir.), a decision of the Commission holding illegal a utility’s proposed surcharge to recover unbilled fuel costs in a comparable situation. The Commission then issued an order summarily rejecting the phase-in aspect of Jersey Central’s rate-filing, finding that this arrangement could not be distinguished from an illegal surcharge. After the Commission denied its application for rehearing, Jersey Central filed this petition for review.

The company contends that its prior fuel adjustment clause was designed to permit recovery for the actual monthly excess fuel costs for the period ending two months before the billing date. Thus, it maintains that when it adopted its new clause on September 27, 1976, there occurred a short fall in its collection for the months of June through September. According to the company, unbilled fuel costs incurred in those months, which were due to be collected under the old fuel clause in the months of October to December, 1976, would not be recouped under the new clause without the phase-in procedure.

[145]*145The Commission, however, takes the position that the 1973 tariff did no more than establish a formula, based on past experience, i. e., costs incurred during a prior test period, to compute what was in effect an approximation of the excess and still unknown fuel costs for the billable month. It insists that the company did receive the proceeds of the fuel adjustment charge for every month it had been in effect. Under this view, once Jersey Central had collected its adjustment charge for a particular month, the company had assessed all it was entitled to collect, and there were no un-billed fuel costs still owed by the customer. The Commission contends that because the adjustment rate may have been inadequate to some extent in recapturing costs is not justification for a retroactive charge. Its position is that there was no billing lag and therefore no basis for the phase-in procedure.

The legality of the 1976 clause therefore hinges on the one adopted in 1973. Since the dispute centers on the interpretation of the 1973 tariff, the appropriate place to begin is with its wording, bearing in mind the construction should be that reasonably communicated to those governed by it, and any doubt as to the meaning should be resolved against the filing utility. Cf. United States v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, 194 F.2d 777 (5th Cir. 1952). See also Great Northern Railway v. Merchants Elevator Co., 259 U.S. 285, 290-91, 42 S.Ct. 477, 66 L.Ed. 943 (1922).

The tariff required that an adjustment factor be “applied to all kilowatt-hours supplied during the billing month.” This is inconsistent with the company’s premise that the charge was to be a pass-on of actual past costs incurred. If that were the aim, then the billing should have been computed on the basis of the kilowatt-hours used during the month in which the fuel charges were actually incurred. If, as Jersey Central argues, it was collecting actual fuel costs on a deferred basis, the company would have had to defer collections for several billing periods before recovering costs for the preceding months. Only in this way could the company avoid inconsistency with the provision that the fuel adjustment factor was to “be applied to each kilowatt-hour supplied under this tariff” and “to all kilowatt-hours supplied during the billing month.”

Moreover, the premise underlying the fuel adjustment charge was that the customer should bear the added expense caused by the increased costs of fuel. A customer whose usage fluctuated substantially from month to month, however, would pay more or less than his proportionate share if the usage amount were not the same in the billing month as it had been in the month when the fuel expense was incurred. And, as was argued in the New Hampshire case, if the clause authorized the company to recover actual past costs on a deferred basis, then customers newly entering the system would be paying for fuel charges incurred before they received service and customers leaving the system would avoid paying for fuel used for their benefit.

We think it significant that the tariff stated that the adjustment should be determined “in accordance with the formula set forth,” an approach inconsistent with the company’s argument that an assessment of actual cost was intended.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
589 F.2d 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jersey-central-power-light-co-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission-ca3-1978.