Lopez v. PUBLIC UTILITY COM'N OF TEXAS

816 S.W.2d 776, 1991 WL 164738
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 25, 1991
Docket3-90-178-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 816 S.W.2d 776 (Lopez v. PUBLIC UTILITY COM'N OF TEXAS) 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
Lopez v. PUBLIC UTILITY COM'N OF TEXAS, 816 S.W.2d 776, 1991 WL 164738 (Tex. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

*778 POWERS, Justice.

The district court dismissed, for want of subject-matter jurisdiction, certain claims brought by the plaintiffs against the Public Utility Commission and the City of Robs-town. The plaintiffs appeal. We will modify the judgment and affirm it as modified.

THE CONTROVERSY

In 1989, the governing body of the City enacted an ordinance affecting the electric rates chargeable by the City’s municipally owned utility. The plaintiffs challenge the resulting rates in the present lawsuit, which they filed after first initiating in the Commission a similar attack upon the rates.

Plaintiffs’ Appeal to the Commission

In the Public Utility Regulatory Act (PURA), Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 1446c § 26(c) (Supp.1991), the Legislature provided that the customers of a municipally owned electric utility, who live outside the municipal limits, may appeal to the Commission from an act of the City’s governing body affecting the rates of the utility. The Commission may then determine, in a proceeding de novo, the rates the City “should have fixed in the ordinance from which the appeal was taken,” and then set such rates by the Commission’s own order. PURA § 26(g).

A party in such a case initiates an appeal by filing in the Commission a “petition for review signed by the lesser of 10,000 or 5 percent of the ratepayers served by such utility outside the municipal limits.” PURA § 26(c). The statute provides further that: (1) each person receiving a separate bill from the utility shall be considered a “ratepayer,” but “no person shall be considered as being more than one ratepayer” even though he receives more than one bill; and (2) the “petition for review shall be considered properly signed if signed by any person, or spouse of any such person, in whose name residential utility service is carried.” Id.

Following enactment of the City ordinance, the plaintiffs filed in the Commission a petition for review under the terms of PURA § 26(c), alleging they were ratepayers served by the City’s electric utility outside the municipal limits.

The Commission Rules

The Commission has adopted procedural rules augmenting the provisions of PURA § 26(c). The Commission's Rule 21.61 classifies the pleadings possible to be filed in an agency proceeding, according to whether the cause comes within its “original” or “appellate” jurisdiction. The latter refers to the Commission’s power to review a city’s rate ordinances. 16 Tex.Admin.Code § 21.61 (1988). 1

Rule 21.62 specifies the requisite form and content of such pleadings. For example, Rule 21.62(g) prescribes the form and content of petitions filed by ratepayers receiving service outside the city limits. If they wish to appeal to the Commission under PURA § 26(c), their petition must: (1) state clearly and concisely the rate action, by the city’s governing body, from which the appeal is taken; (2) designate an individual, group, or organization to serve as the petitioners’ designated “attorney in fact” in the course of the appeal and contested case, and in any proceeding in a court of law; (3) list each signatory’s name, telephone number, and address (other than a post-office box), and where electric service is received if different from such address; and, (4) state that the appeal is taken under PURA § 26(c) rather than under § 26(b), the latter being applicable to appeals taken to the Commission by citizens within a municipality. Rule 21.-62(g)(l)-(3).

Rule 21.62(g)(5) declares that a page of the petition is invalid if it omits any of the required information or the information is not reasonably subject to verification; “however, if the omitted or illegible material consists only of the name, telephone number, or address of a signatory, only such signatures are to be deemed invalid” *779 and any “remaining signatures on that page shall be accepted.” Rule 21.62(g)(5) concludes with the statement that “[a]ny disputes over the informational sufficiency or legibility of a petition shall be resolved by” interim order of the presiding hearings examiner.

Rule 21.65 of the procedural rules provides that pleadings shall be accepted “conditionally” for filing, even though they may be insufficient under the rules. Subsequent provisions in Rule 21.65 delineate a procedure for the cure of any material pleading deficiencies and a corresponding extension of filing deadlines.

Rule 21.65(c) establishes a procedure for the verification of petitions in appeals taken to the Commission, under PURA §§ 26(b) or (c), from the rate actions of the governing bodies of municipalities. The procedure consists of allowing the municipality a period of time within which to verify the status of the signatories and to object to the authenticity of any signatures, any objection being resolved by the presiding hearings examiner after notice and hearing as authorized in § 21.62(g)(5).

The Commission’s Dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Petition

In the present case, the City initially filed a motion requesting that the Commission dismiss the plaintiffs’ petition on the ground that it was not timely filed in the agency. 2 After the Commission overruled the motion, the City commenced the verification process authorized in Rule 21.65(c). In the process, the City allegedly persuaded several individuals to notify the Commission that they withdrew their signatures because they did not wish to pursue the appeal. The City thereafter objected to the plaintiffs’ petition on two grounds contemplated in Rule 21.62(g): (1) the petition did not state clearly and concisely the rate action challenged by the plaintiffs; and (2) the petition was not signed by 28 individuals, the minimum number required to bring an appeal under PURA § 26(c).

The Commission's examiner issued an order requesting additional factual information relating to the City’s verification of signatures, and gave the plaintiffs and the Commission an opportunity to respond. Neither did so. The examiner then convened a hearing to obtain such factual information and to receive evidence regarding the merits of the appeal. In connection with this hearing, the plaintiffs neither adduced evidence nor offered a brief in support of their position in the case, either as to the merits or as to any irregularities in the verification process.

In a post-hearing report to the Commission, the examiner recommended that the petition be dismissed (1) for lack of jurisdiction in the Commission, there being only 12 valid signatures instead of the minimum number of 28 required by PURA § 26(c); and (2) for lack of a petition that stated clearly and concisely the action, taken by the governing body of the City, from which the appeal was prosecuted. The examiner recommended alternatively that if the Commission determined it had jurisdiction over the controversy, then it should prohibit the utility’s recovering through its rates certain expenditures contemplated by the City ordinance, these being impermissible items of recovery under the ratemaking provisions of PURA. The report recommended certain findings of fact and conclusions of *780

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
816 S.W.2d 776, 1991 WL 164738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-v-public-utility-comn-of-texas-texapp-1991.