La. Power & Light Co. v. La. Public Service Com'n

377 So. 2d 1023
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 12, 1979
Docket64919, 64920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 377 So. 2d 1023 (La. Power & Light Co. v. La. Public Service Com'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La. Power & Light Co. v. La. Public Service Com'n, 377 So. 2d 1023 (La. 1979).

Opinion

377 So.2d 1023 (1979)

LOUISIANA POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
v.
LOUISIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION et al.
HOOKER CHEMICAL AND PLASTICS CORPORATION
v.
LOUISIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION et al.

Nos. 64919, 64920.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

November 12, 1979.
Rehearings Denied December 13, 1979.

*1024 Stephen M. Irving, Baton Rouge, for intervenor, La. Consumers League, Inc.

Marshall B. Brinkley, Gen. Counsel, Baton Rouge, Michael R. Fontham, Paul L. Zimmering, Stone, Pigman, Walther, Wittmann & Hutchinson, New Orleans, for La. Public Service Commission, defendant-appellee.

R. Gordon Kean, Jr., Sanders, Downing, Kean & Cazedessus, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellee, Hooker Chemicals & Plastics Corp. and intervenor, Union Carbide Corp.

Andrew P. Carter, J. Wayne Anderson, Monroe & Lemann, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant, La. Power & Light Co.

LANDRY, Justice ad hoc.

This appeal, by Louisiana Power and Light Company (LP&L), a sequel to our decision in Louisiana Power and Light Company v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, 369 So.2d 1054 (La.1979), (LP&L One), is from judgment of the trial court ordering LP&L to refund an overcharge to industrial customers and refusing LP&L permission to recoup the refund by means of an off-setting surcharge from all of its customer classes other than industrial. Hooker Chemicals & Plastics Corporation (Intervenor), an industrial customer of LP&L, has filed an exception of res judicata predicated upon the finality of LP&L One. We affirm.

By Order U-13220, dated November 23, 1977, the Louisiana Public Service Commission (Commission) granted LP&L a rate increase of $4,970,610.00 allocated exclusively to LP&L's industrial consumers. The granted increase resulted from an LP&L request for increases totaling $53,986,820.00, during the hearing of which, the Commission's consultant recommended an increase of $13,790,000.00 allocated among all of LP&L's customers. LP&L immediately implemented the $4,970,610.00 increase to its industrial consumers and appealed to the Nineteenth Judicial District Court, East Baton Rouge Parish seeking its requested total increase of $53,986,820.00 and also seeking injunctive relief prohibiting the Commission from employing Order U-13220 to prevent LP&L from implementing a $13,790,000.00 rate increase among all its customers during the pendency of its appeal.

The trial court disallowed LP&L's request for injunctive relief and concluded that the Commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously in both awarding an increase of only $4,976,610.00 and in allocating that entire amount solely to industrial consumers. Consequently, the district court reversed and set aside Order U-13220, awarded LP&L an increase of $13,790,000.00 and remanded the matter to the Commission for determination of the allocation of the $13,790,000.00 increase among LP&L's various customer classes, on a cost of service basis.

In his written reasons for granting the increase and remanding to the Commission, the trial court noted:

"When this has been accomplished, the Court will order a full accounting to be made by LP&L regarding any refund or credit for any amounts paid by the industrial customers pursuant to the Commission's Order No. U-13220 in excess of what would have been the amounts allocable to such industries if the amount of the increase had been properly allocated among all customer classes based on cost of service." (Emphasis added)

In compliance with the order of remand, and, based on historical factors, the Commission issued its Order No. U-13220-A which was incorporated into the trial court's judgment of July 24, 1978, and which pertinently states:

"IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the Public Service Commission's Order No. U-13220 is reversed, cancelled, and set aside;
*1025 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the said rate increase in the sum of $13,790,000 shall be allocated to the various classes of customers of Louisiana Power & Light Company as follows:
Industrial                           $ 4,970,000
Residential                            5,570,000
Commercial                             2,885,000
Municipal and Water Pumping               85,000
Street and Other Lighting                280,000
                                     ___________
           Total                     $13,790,000
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that within 90 days of the date hereof, Louisiana Power & Light shall render a full accounting regarding the refund or credit due for amounts paid by industrial customers pursuant to Commission Order No. U-13220 from date of its implementation by Louisiana Power & Light to date of this Judgment, in excess of what would have been the amount allocated to such industries if the amount of the increase ordered by the Commission Order No. U-13220 had been properly allocated among all customer classes based on cost of service; and the Court shall retain jurisdiction of this phase of the case until the accounting has been made as ordered herein." (Emphasis added)

Both the Commission and LP&L appealed the judgment of July 24, 1978, pursuant to La.Const.1974, Article 4, Section 21(E). In LP&L One we noted:

"The sole issue raised by this appeal is whether the district court erred in ordering LP&L to make an accounting to determine the amount of refund or credit due to industrial customers for the amounts they paid, during the period the Commission's original order (No. U-13220) was in effect, in excess of what would have been the amount allocated to such industries if the original increase had been properly allocated among all customer classes on a cost-of-service basis."

The former appeal was briefed and argued solely on the above stated issue. We denied Hooker's motion to dismiss the appeal in LP&L One. On the merits, in LP&L One, we affirmed the judgment of the trial court, which ordered the refund to industrial customers and in the course of the opinion noted:

"We, therefore, find no error in the district court judgment which ordered LP&L to make an accounting regarding refunds or credits for amounts paid by industrial consumers pursuant to Commission Order No. U-13220 from the date of its implementation by LP&L to the date of the district court judgment in excess of what could have been the amount of the increase allocated to such industries if the amount of the increase ordered had been properly allocated among all customer classes based on cost of service."

No application for rehearing was made by any litigant involved in LP&L One. On June 12, 1979, LP&L filed a "Motion for Allocation" in the district court, to which motion was appended the following results found by the Commission in compliance with the order for an accounting during the period Order No. U-13220 was in effect, namely, December, 1977, to July, 1978:

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