Matter of Held Orders of US West

943 P.2d 1007, 123 N.M. 554
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1997
Docket23518
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 943 P.2d 1007 (Matter of Held Orders of US West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Held Orders of US West, 943 P.2d 1007, 123 N.M. 554 (N.M. 1997).

Opinion

943 P.2d 1007 (1997)
123 N.M. 554
1997-NMSC-031

In the Matter of the HELD ORDERS OF U S WEST COMMUNICATIONS, INC.,
U S WEST COMMUNICATIONS, INC., a Colorado corporation, Appellant,
v.
NEW MEXICO STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION, Appellee, and
Tom Udall, Attorney General, State of New Mexico, Intervenor.

No. 23518.

Supreme Court of New Mexico.

July 16, 1997.

*1008 *1009 Montgomery & Andrews, P.A., Thomas W. Olson, Santa Fe and U.S. West, Inc., Andrew E. Ottinger, Jr., Denver, CO, for Appellant.

Tom Udall, Attorney General and David Kaufman, Assistant Attorney General & General Counsel, Santa Fe, for Appellee.

Tom Udall, Attorney General, Charles F. Noble and Karl O. Wyler, Assistant Attorneys General, Santa Fe, for Intervenor.

OPINION

BACA, Justice.

I

1. Appellant, US WEST Communications, Inc. (US WEST) removed this matter from the New Mexico State Corporation Commission (the Commission) to the New Mexico Supreme Court pursuant to Article XI, Section 7, of the New Mexico Constitution, requesting that this Court review two provisions of a Commission Order entered on February 1, 1996. Specifically, U S West requests review of the provision establishing a zero held orders standard for U S West in New Mexico and the provision prohibiting US WEST from charging the costs of alternative service programs to customers. We review the Commission's Order pursuant to Rule 12-102(A)(3) NMRA 1997, and hold that the contested provisions of the Order were lawful, just, and reasonable and will be enforced.

II

2. U S WEST is a telecommunications service provider for a region that includes New Mexico and many other states. See Attorney Gen. v. New Mexico State Corp. Comm'n (In re Rates & Charges of U S West Communications, Inc.), 1996 NMSC 002 ¶ 2, 121 N.M. 156, 159, 909 P.2d 716, 719 (1995). U S WEST is governed by the New Mexico Telecommunications Act, NMSA 1978, Sections 63-9A-1 to -20 (1985, as amended through 1987), and is regulated by the Corporation Commission pursuant to Section 63-9A-5 (1985). The Commission is the department of government "charged with the duty of fixing, determining, supervising, regulating and controlling ... telephone *1010 [utilities.]" NM Const. art. XI, § 7 (power of Corporation Commission over carriers). The Legislature has mandated that U S WEST "maintain the availability of access to telecommunications services at affordable rates." Section 63-9A-2 (1987) (purpose).

3. Fulfilling its obligation to regulate local telephone service providers in New Mexico, the Commission initiated this action to investigate the matter of U S WEST's failure to provide first telephone lines to customers within thirty days of receipt of a service request. The Commission was motivated to investigate U S WEST because a large number of New Mexicans were encountering delays of more than thirty days before having their first telephone line put in place. Ultimately, on February 1, 1996, the Commission entered the disputed Order. U S WEST filed a Petition for Removal on February 26, 1996. On March 12, 1996, this Court issued an Order Granting Intervention to the Attorney General. The Commission issued its Order of Removal on March 25, 1996, and U S WEST filed that Order in this Court on April 24, 1996.

4. U S WEST challenges the provision of the Commission's Order which imposes a statewide standard of zero primary orders held over thirty days, as well as the provision requiring that all costs associated with U S WEST's Service Guarantee Program and Service Alternative Program be booked below-the-line for rate making purposes. A held order is a customer request for a first telephone line which is not put in place within a specified number of days. See, e.g., In re Request of U S WEST Communications, Inc. for a Limited Waiver of Section 22.903 of the Commission's Rules, No. DA 96-605, 1996 WL 183140, at *4 (FCC April 17, 1996) (defining held order customers as "local exchange customers who have been waiting for installation of their first landline telephone service lines for seven or more days"). Booking below-the-line means that all costs associated with the relevant programs must be charged to U S WEST shareholders rather than to U S WEST ratepayers. See National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, NARUC Annual Report on Utility and Carrier Regulation 1987, 854 (1987) (defining below-the-line accounting as "expenses incurred in operation of utility that are charged to the investor not the ratepayer"); see also, Request of U S WEST Communications, 1996 WL 183140, at *2 (requiring below-the-line treatment of expenses generated by alternative service programs to protect ratepayers from subsidizing these alternative services).

5. U S WEST was given 90 days to comply with the Order's provisions. Under the Order, failure to ensure that all New Mexicans received their first telephone line within thirty days of entering their request could result in "additional investigations into the company's operations in this state as well as consideration of any and all appropriate penalties or remedies available under applicable law." U S WEST responded to the Order by requesting removal to the New Mexico Supreme Court.

III

6. U S WEST contends that the Order's zero held orders standard is unlawful, unjust, and unreasonable because: (1) it is arbitrary and capricious in that it establishes a standard that cannot be met, and thus violates Appellant's right to due process of the law; (2) any attempt to meet the zero held orders standard will require large capital outlays without a mechanism for the recovery of the capital expenditures, amounting to an illegal taking; (3) the zero held orders standard applies only to U S WEST, thus denying U S WEST equal protection of the law; and (4) it is not based on satisfactory and substantial evidence. U S WEST further contends that the Order's provision requiring billing of the alternative service programs below-the-line is unlawful, unjust, and unreasonable because: (1) it is not supported by substantial evidence; (2) the Commission lacked jurisdiction to impose the penalty provision governing below-the-line treatment on U S WEST; and (3) a full rate case is required to make determinations about the exclusion of costs associated with the alternative service programs from U S WEST's rates. Both provisions of the Order are lawful, just, and reasonable, and will be upheld.

*1011 7. When presented with an Order entered by the Commission and removed to this Court, we are mandated to decide the case on its merits. See NM Const. art. XI, § 7; In re Rates & Charges of U S West, 1996 NMSC 002 ¶ 10, 121 N.M. 156, 909 P.2d 716. We must weigh the evidence in the record to "make an independent determination that it is more likely than not that the Commission's order is just and reasonable[,]" looking for satisfactory and substantial evidence to support the Commission's Order. Burlington N. R.R. Co. v. Corporation Comm'n (In re Burlington N. R.R. Co.), 107 N.M. 582, 584, 761 P.2d 855, 857 (1988) (citing Missouri Pac. R.R. Co. v. State Corp. Comm'n (In re Missouri Pac. R.R. Co.), 93 N.M. 753, 754, 605 P.2d 1152, 1153 (1980)).

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Related

U S West Communications, Inc. v. New Mexico State Corp.
1998 NMSC 032 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1998)

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