Knox County Rural Electric Membership Corp. v. PSI Energy, Inc.

663 N.E.2d 182, 1996 Ind. App. LEXIS 339, 1996 WL 123238
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1996
Docket93A02-9406-EX-370
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 663 N.E.2d 182 (Knox County Rural Electric Membership Corp. v. PSI Energy, Inc.) 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
Knox County Rural Electric Membership Corp. v. PSI Energy, Inc., 663 N.E.2d 182, 1996 Ind. App. LEXIS 339, 1996 WL 123238 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARPNACK, Chief Judge.

Knox County Rural Electric Membership Corporation ("Knox") appeals the order of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission ("Commission") stratifying Knox's service territory and granting appellee/cross-appel-lant, PSI Energy, Inc. ("PSI"), the right to service appellee/cross-appellant, Black Beau ty Coal Company's ("Black Beauty") coal mining operation. We affirm.

Knox raises three issues for our review:

1. whether the Commission exceeded its authority when it stratified Knox's service territory;
*185 2. whether the Commission acted contrary to law when it linked the boundary of PSI's service territory with the permits filed with the Department of Natural Resources; and
3. whether the Commission acted contrary to law by failing to compensate Knox for its loss in servicing the assigned area.

On cross-appeal, PSI and Black Beauty raise two issues:

1. whether the Commission erred by holding that a customer who legally purchases electricity may not construct its own private distribution facility to transport the electricity across the boundary of two suppliers' service areas without violating Ind.Code § 8-1-2.38-4(b); and
2. whether the Commission erred by not finding an underground mining tract to constitute either a split-site or a single industrial operation.

BACKGROUND

Before addressing the merits of this litigation, it would be helpful to give context to the issues by briefly explaining the history of retail electric service territories and by setting forth the applicable statute in detail. In 1980, the General Assembly enacted Ind. Code § 8-1-2838 creating a procedure in which the Commission was directed to draw the boundaries for electrical service areas. This legislation emerged from a long history of disputes between the rural cooperatives and privately or municipally owned utilities. Prior to 1980, the rural cooperatives were subject to eminent domain by private and municipal utilities under certain cireum-stances which created bitter disputes and were a source of much litigation. The purpose of the 1980 act was to draw permanent boundaries in an effort to eliminate these disputes and litigation. See Umited Rural Electric v. Indiana & Michigan Electric (1990), Ind., 549 N.E.2d 1019, 1021. Accordingly, the relevant portions of the statute provide:

"8-1-2.3-1. Legislative findings-Declaration of policy.-It is declared to be in the public interest, that, in order to encourage the orderly development of coordinated statewide electric service at retail, to eliminate or avoid unnecessary duplication of electric utility facilities, to prevent the waste of material and resources, and to promote economical, efficient, and adequate electric service to the public, the currently unincorporated areas of Indiana shall be divided into designated geographic areas within which an assigned electricity supplier has the sole right to furnish retail electric service to customers.
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8-1-2.3-3. Assigned service areas.-
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Once established according to this section, the boundaries of assigned service areas may not be changed except as provided in section 6 [IC 8-1-2.3-6] of this chapter.
8-1-2.3-4. Service area rights.-(a) As long as an electricity supplier continues to provide adequate retail service, it shall have the sole right to furnish retail electric service to each present and future consumer within the boundaries of its assigned service area and no other electricity supplier shall render or extend retail electric service within its assigned service area unless the electricity supplier with the sole right consents thereto in writing and the commission approves....
(b) If an electricity supplier unlawfully renders or extends retail electric service within the assigned service area of another electricity supplier, the electricity supplier which has the sole right to furnish retail electricity service in that assigned service area may bring an action ... to enjoin the other electricity supplier from rendering or extending such unlawful retail electric service.
* * * * * *
8-1-2.3-6. Change of service area boundaries.-The boundaries of the assigned service areas of electricity suppliers may not be changed except under any one (1) of the following cireumstances:
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(3) In the case where a landowner owns a single tract of land which is intersected by the boundary lines of two (2) or more *186 assigned service areas, and retail electric service can best be supplied by only one (1) electricity supplier [a split-site], or in the case where a customer or customers which are housed in a single structure or which constitute a single governmental, industrial or institutional operation, and the electricity suppliers involved are unable to agree which shall furnish the electric service [a single operation], any of the electricity suppliers may submit the matter to the commission for its determination based upon public convenience and necessity. If, after notice and hearing, the commission determines that one (1) or more electricity suppliers are to supply the required retail electric service and the boundaries of an assigned service area are to be changed, the assigned service area maps of the electricity suppliers shall be changed to reflect the new boundaries."

I.C. 8-1-2.3-1 et seq. The legislation also authorized the Commission to administer the regulatory scheme. It is the Commission's interpretation and application of L.C. § 8-1-2.3 that is at the heart of this case.

FACTS

Black Beauty is a coal mining company that acquired the underground mineral rights to a deposit of underground coal known as the Monroe City Reserve in Knox County, Indiana. The total area to be mined underlies the service areas of PSI and Knox, two corporations engaged in the business of providing retail electric service. Both Knox and PSI qualify as electrical suppliers under the territorial protection legislation enacted by the Indiana General Assembly in 1980. In August of 1983, the Commission approved boundary lines defining the respective territories of each.

The coal is to be mined by perhaps as many as three underground mines, identified as AQ1, AQ2, and AQ3. At present, Black Beauty has fully developed and has begun to mine AQ1. The second mine, AQ2, is in the process of being developed, and AQ3, is completely undeveloped. 1 The operation of AQ1 began in 1993 and is expected to continue for fourteen to twenty years.

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Bluebook (online)
663 N.E.2d 182, 1996 Ind. App. LEXIS 339, 1996 WL 123238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-county-rural-electric-membership-corp-v-psi-energy-inc-indctapp-1996.