Kidd v. Texas Public Utility Commission

481 S.W.3d 388, 2015 WL 7697794
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 25, 2015
DocketNO. 03-14-00661-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 481 S.W.3d 388 (Kidd v. Texas Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidd v. Texas Public Utility Commission, 481 S.W.3d 388, 2015 WL 7697794 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Bob Pemberton, Justice

This appeal’ can be considered a sequel of sorts to this Court’s recent Bonser-[390]*390Lain decision,2 in which we held in part that the remedies provided by the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)3 for challenging agency actions in court do not extend to authorizing suits to challenge an agency’s refusal to promulgate rules.4 Here we consider whether, in an instance when, an agency has denied a petition requesting it to promulgate rules—a decision that cannot in itself be judicially challenged under the APA, per Bonser-Lain— the APA has nonetheless conferred jurisdiction on courts to enforce an asserted right of the petitioners to obtain a public hearing at which they can present arguments and evidence to justify the rules they had requested. We conclude it does not.

BACKGROUND

While the underlying controversy encompasses a more diverse array of issues, the facts material to the narrow jurisdictional questions before us are straightforward and undisputed. The appellants are approximately 135 individuals who, with others, joined in filing a May 17, 2012 petition to the Public Utilities Commission requesting that the Commission initiate rulemaking processes to address a number of perceived concerns related to the ongoing deployment of so-called “Smart Meters” by Texas electric utilities. In their petition, appellants also prayed that the Commission convene a public hearing at which they could present evidence of what they regarded as the compelling need for the rules they had requested. The Commission docketed appellants’ -petition as “Project No. 40404,” published notice of the petition, afforded an opportunity for public comment, and received over 120 written comments, most of which favored the petition. However, the. Commission did not additionally convene the public hearing that appellants had requested.

On July 13, 2012, the Commission issued an order denying appellants’. rulemaking petition. In the order, the Commission explained that it already had another project pending, No. 40190, in which it had been studying the feasibility of an opt-out program “to address [Petitioners’] concerns” about Smart Meters and in which it had received' “extensive comments that raise concerns like those in the petition in this project.” The Commission deemed it “more efficient and effective ... to consider smart meter concerns in one project,” and opted to “focus its consideration of concerns about smart meters [in] Project No. 40190” instead of 40404.5

Seeking to challenge this administrative order in the Judicial Department, appellants filed suit against the Commission in Travis County district court. As the suit originated, appellants’ claims sought primarily to compel the Commission,to proceed with;Project 40404 and initiate the [391]*391rulemaking they had sought in their petition, which had sought rules more expansive than merely an opt-out program. Appellants also complained specifically of the Commission’s failure to afford them the “full hearing and determination on the merits” they had requested, insisting that both the APA and Commission rules guaranteed them that procedural right. To establish the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction over their claims (which, again, named the Commission .as the defendant and would have thereby.implicated sovereign immunity),6 appellants purported to rely on the waiver of immunity incident to the remedy provided by section 2001.038.of the APA, which authorizes “an action for declaratory judgment” against an agency to determine “[t]he validity or applicability of a rule” where “it is alleged that the rule or its threatened application interferes with or impairs, or threatens to interfere with or impair, a legal right or privilege of the plaintiff.”7 The Commission answered and the other appellees identified in our caption intervened.

During the pendency'of appellants’ suit, this Court issued its decision in Bonser-Lain. That ruling prompted the Commission, with the briefing Support of the other appellees, to filé a plea to the jurisdiction seeking dismissal of all of appellants’ claims based on Bonser-Lain’sholámg that the APA’s remedies do1 not authorize claims seeking to challenge an agency’s decision not to promulgate rules.8 In response, appellants acknowledged that Bon-ser-Lain precluded any claims purporting to seek judicial reversal, of the Commission’s denial of their rulemaking petition. However, appellants distinguished these claims focusing on the Commission’s denial of their rulemaking petition) per se, from their cláims complaining of the Commission’s failure or refusal to convene a public hearing at which they could present argument and evidence to demonstrate the need for the rules they had requested. While Bonser-Lain was fatal, to thé former claims, it did not impact the latter, they insisted, because the APA and the Commission’s rules conferred upon them an “absolute procedural right” to present their position .to the Commission through this public hearing (and, perhaps, prompt subsequent Commission action) that was not dependant upon, nor could be avoided by, the Commission’s denial of their rule-making petition or whether that decision could be challenged in court. Appellants [392]*392similarly reasoned that the APA authorized .them to enforce these hearing rights in court and obtain a remand to the Commission for purposes of conducting the public hearing.

The district court granted the Commission’s plea in its entirety and dismissed all of appellants’ claims for want of subject-matter jurisdiction. It is’from that final judgment that this appeal is taken.'

ANALYSIS

Appellants seek reversal of the portion of the district court’s judgment that dismissed their claims seeking a public hearing. As refined by the briefing and oral argument on appeal, appellants’ position rests upon two sets of basic contentions: (1) the APA and Commission rules entitled them to a public hearing at which they could presént evidence and argument to justify the rules they had requested, and this “absolute procedural right” is not dependent upon, nor limited by, the Commission’s decision not to grant their rule-making petition; and (2) the remedy and accompanying waiver of sovereign immunity provided by APA section 2001.038 authorizes appellants to sue the Commission to enforce this right and obtain judicial relief compelling the Commission to hold the hearing. Both sets of contentions rest principally upon construction of the APA, which presents a question of law that we review de novo,9 We seek to ascertain the Legislature’s intent, which is. first and foremost a function of the objective meaning of the words- it has used in the statute.10 We consider statutes as a whole rather than their isolated provisions.11 We presume that the statute’s language was chosen with care, with each word included, or omitted, purposefully.12 We rely on the ordinary meaning of the words used, except where a different meaning is supplied by legislative definition or is apparent from context, or -unless such a construction leads to absurd results that the Legislature could not have intended.13

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Bluebook (online)
481 S.W.3d 388, 2015 WL 7697794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidd-v-texas-public-utility-commission-texapp-2015.