La. Power & Light Co. v. PSC

523 So. 2d 850, 1988 WL 31770
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 3, 1988
Docket87-CA-2779
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 523 So. 2d 850 (La. Power & Light Co. v. PSC) 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. PSC, 523 So. 2d 850, 1988 WL 31770 (La. 1988).

Opinion

523 So.2d 850 (1988)

LOUISIANA POWER & LIGHT CO.
v.
LOUISIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION.

No. 87-CA-2779.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

April 11, 1988.
Application for Rehearing Dismissed June 3, 1988.

*852 J. Wayne Anderson, W. Glenn Burns, Monroe & Lemann, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Marshall Brinkley, Baton Rouge, Michael Fontham, Paul L. Zimmering, Noel J. Darce, Stone, Pigman, Walther, Wittmann & Hutchinson, New Orleans, Robert Rieger, Baton Rouge, Louisiana Public Service Com'n, for defendant-appellee.

R. Gordon Kean, Jr., Sandra Edwards, Baton Rouge, Henry MacNicholas, A.J. Gray, III, Edward M. Carmouche, David L. Sigler, Camp, Carmouche, Barsh, Gray, Hoffman & Gill, Lake Charles, for intervenor.

MARCUS, Justice.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court in a utility rate-making case. Both Louisiana Power & Light Company (LP & L), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Middle South Utilities, Inc. (MSU), and the Louisiana Public Service Commission (the commission) appealed the district court's decision.

On September 20, 1985, LP & L filed an application for emergency and permanent rate relief before the commission. See In re: Application for an Interim Increase in Retail Electric Rates, Docket No. U-16945, Louisiana Public Service Commission. This application for rate relief was based upon the fact that LP & L's Waterford 3 nuclear plant was placed in commercial operation. Interventions were filed by various third parties including the Louisiana Energy Users Group (LEUG).

Under art. 4, section 21 of the Louisiana Constitution, the commission must make a final determination of a rate application within one year. However, in the present case, on November 14, 1985, without the benefit of comprehensive hearings, the commission issued Order No. U-16945 (the November Order) wherein it granted LP & L emergency rate relief in the amount of $407 million. Because the rate increase to which LP & L was granted was so large, the commission ordered that it be "phased in," that is, that LP & L be permitted to collect only a portion of that rate increase in current rates and be required to defer collection of the remainder of the rate increase to a later date, at which time LP & L would collect the amount previously deferred.

Of the $407 million rate increase found by the November 1985 Order to be appropriate, the commission approved a phase-in (deferral) of $206 million for which it guaranteed ultimate recovery. In other words, the commission authorized LP & L to "borrow" the money needed to pay the $206 million deferred with the assurance that LP & L would ultimately recover from its customers the amount needed to repay that "loan."

The November 1985 Order allowed an actual $215 million ($201 million plus $14 million to cover the interest costs on the $206 million deferred) base rate increase for LP & L in addition to guaranteeing the recovery of the $206 million deferred. This rate increase and the deferral were premised upon several conditions, one of which was that "LP & L must agree that the constitutional one-year period for analyzing the rate request shall restart beginning the date the emergency rate increase becomes effective." See the November Order, page 7.

The commission conducted numerous hearings on all issues from November 1985 through January 1987, following which it issued Order No. U-16945-A dated January 30, 1987 (the January 1987 Order). By January 30, 1987, the deferral had been in effect for more than 14 months and therefore had accumulated to $247 million. (The *853 deferral was $206 million on an annual basis or about $17.16 million per month.)[1]

In its January Order, the commission granted LP & L a rate increase of $76.2 million, eliminated the phase-in plan, and ordered LP & L to liquidate the accumulated deferral with the remaining proceeds from a prior settlement between LP & L and one of its gas suppliers, Texaco, Inc. In computing the size of the rate increase, the commission set LP & L's rate of return on common equity (ROE) at 12%, a rate lower than that recommended by the commission's own consultant, Matthew Kahal. LP & L filed petition for appeal and judicial review of the January 1987 Order in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court. LEUG and Occidental Chemical Corporation (Occidental) later intervened in that suit. In addition, the LEUG and Occidental filed a motion for rehearing before the commission challenging the use of the Texaco settlement refund proceeds.

The commission granted a rehearing of the January 1987 Order and received additional testimony and evidence. At that time, the commission's consultant, Mr. Kahal, recommended a phase-in plan that assumed that LP & L would not be permitted to retain any of the Texaco settlement proceeds and that employed the ROE adopted by the commission in the January 1987 Order, 12%. Under this phase-in plan, Mr. Kahal found that the $76.2 million increase had to be raised to $85.9 million. Mr. Kahal recommended the following phase-in plan which included an amortization of the accumulated deferral as follows:

Of the current revenue deficiency of $85.9 million, I recommend that $45.9 million enter rates at this time, deferring the other $40 million. The total rate increase needed this year is slightly greater, $48.2 million, in order to provide LP & L a current return [interest] on the $40 million that is deferred. On February 1, 1988, the $40 million rate increase is implemented thus bringing rates in-line with the cost of service, as estimated at this time.... A third rate increase of $33 million in 1989 would amortize that balance [of accumulated deferred costs] over a seven-year period.

On April 28, 1987, the commission issued Order No. U-16945-B wherein it reinstated the Texaco refunds. In addition, the commission amended the January 1987 Order's rate increase as follows:

LP & L should be granted a $48 million rate increase rather than a $76.2 million increase. This increase is based on the consultants' recommended phase-in. The Commission expects the Company to seek further rate relief in the future pursuant to the phase-in. However, the commission does not by this order approve any future rate increases and will grant an increase to cover amounts the Company is required to defer only if they are shown to be just and reasonable after a hearing. The Commission does not believe the Company is entitled to any guarantee of future increases. This decision will result in a $28.2 million annual rate decrease from the current level of rates.

LP & L filed a motion for rehearing and for clarification of the April Order. LP & L contends that the purpose of that motion was to ensure that the commission had not intended by its April Order to disturb the $247 million deferral established pursuant to the November Order and to establish the $40 million deferral recommended by Mr. Kahal.

On June 26, 1987, the commission issued Order No. U-16945-D which denied the motion for rehearing. In that Order, the commission stated that it intended by its April Order to (1) abandon Order No. U-16945-A (the January 1987 Order), (2) reduce the rate increase granted in the January Order from $76.2 million to $48 million, (3) reinstate the Texaco refunds, and (4) have no effect on the substance of past orders.

After the issuance of the June Order, LP & L amended its petition for appeal and *854

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Bluebook (online)
523 So. 2d 850, 1988 WL 31770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-power-light-co-v-psc-la-1988.