MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Public Service Commission

840 P.2d 765, 186 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 1992 Utah LEXIS 38, 1992 WL 101550
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1992
Docket890251, 890252
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 840 P.2d 765 (MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Public Service Commission, 840 P.2d 765, 186 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 1992 Utah LEXIS 38, 1992 WL 101550 (Utah 1992).

Opinions

STEWART, Justice:

In 1985, the Public Service Commission (Commission) granted Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co., now U.S. West Corp. (U.S. West),1 a $22 million general rate increase and established 14.2% as its authorized rate of return on equity. In granting the increase, the Commission assumed that U.S. West would pay a federal corporate income tax of 46%, the then-existing rate.

On October 22, 1986, Congress enacted the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (Act), which provided a two-step reduction in the federal corporate income tax rate, from 46% to 40% effective June 1987, and then to 34% effective January 1988. This amounted to a total reduction of approximately 26%.

In December 1986, the Commission requested that the major utilities in the state provide it with information showing the anticipated effect of the reduced income tax rates on their earnings. The president of U.S. West responded that although the initial impact on cash flow would be negative, “the tax law is a critical factor in averting rate requests.” He further stated, “Considering all of the data, I feel very good about the possibility of rate stability for our customers over the next few years. The benefits of the 1986 Tax Reform Act will go to ratepayers since they work to offset intrastate increases in our continuously changing industry.” In January 1987, the Commission requested that the Utah Division of Public Utilities (Division) review the responses of the companies. The Division recommended that the Commission not order U.S. West to reduce its rates. The Commission then directed the Division to undertake a formal investigation of U.S. West’s rate of return.

The Committee of Consumer Services (Committee) was created by the Legislature to serve as “advocate ... of positions most advantageous to a majority of residential consumers.” Utah Code Ann. § 54-10-4(3) (1990). On June 1, 1987, the Committee filed a motion with the Commission asking it to declare the rates of all public utilities subject to the Commission’s jurisdiction to be interim rates or, alternatively, to require them to establish refund reserve accounts from which excess earnings could be refunded to ratepayers. The Commission denied the motion on June 30, 1987, referring in part to the Division’s report that U.S. West’s rate of return for 1986 and 1987 would be less than 13% and 12% respectively, less than its authorized rate of 14.2%. [768]*768The Division represented that the net effect of the Act on U.S. West’s earnings would be an increase of $1.2 million in 1987 and $0.5 million in 1988. The Division also reported that it was monitoring U.S. West’s earnings on a monthly basis and would alert the Commission to any significant changes.

By August 1987, utility regulators in forty-three states and the District of Columbia had taken some action to reduce utility rates in response to the Act.

On August 11, 1987, the Committee requested that U.S. West disclose its earnings. U.S. West objected on the ground that the Division was already monitoring its earnings. The Committee then moved to compel U.S. West to respond to the request for data. The Commission ruled in November 1987 that the motion to compel would be held in abeyance pending completion of the Division’s investigation, but that in the meantime the Division should give the Committee the financial information it had obtained from U.S. West.

On September 1, 1987, the Division filed a second report with the Commission indicating that U.S. West’s rate of return remained below its 14.2% authorized rate of return. Again, the Division recommended that the Commission take no action.

The Division’s conclusions appear to have been seriously in error. U.S. West’s actual rate return had exceeded its authorized rate of return in six of the first eight months of 1987, even though the first phase of the federal tax reduction was not effective until June 1987. Data furnished by U.S. West to MCI Telecommunications Corporation in September 1988 in response to interrogatories provided the following monthly breakdown for U.S. West’s return on equity for its Utah intrastate operations:

Month 1987 1988
January 12.02% 17.23%
February 15.14% 15.62%
March 3.52% 22.04%
April 15.00% 16.23%
May 16.62% 12.29%
June 17.86% 16.02%
July 16.24%
August 25.31%
September 20.76%
October 17.24%
November 19.89%
December 24.48%

As is evident from these figures, U.S. West’s rate of return increased dramatically after the first phase of the tax reduction became effective. For the last six months of 1987, U.S. West’s average monthly rate of return on equity was over 20%.

In December 1987, the Division and U.S. West privately negotiated a $9 million reduction in future rates to be effective January 1, 1988. The Commission approved the stipulation without a hearing or findings of fact to justify the amount of reduction and without disclosing what U.S. West’s earnings had been in 1987, what they would likely be in 1988, or by how much they exceeded the authorized rate of return.

Subsequent events disclosed that the $9 million reduction was inadequate to reduce U.S. West’s earnings to its authorized rate of return. U.S. West’s high rate of earnings continued for the first six months of 1988. During that period, its average monthly earnings were in excess of a 16% rate of return, even with the January 1987 rate reduction. Thus, U.S. West’s earnings significantly exceeded its authorized rate of return for each of the twelve months following the effective date of the first phase of the tax reductions under the Act.

On January 28, 1988, the Committee requested that U.S. West produce the financial data on which the $9 million rate reduc[769]*769tion was negotiated. This request was made after the second phase of the tax reduction became effective. U.S. West responded that it considered the investigation closed and refused to disclose the data. The Committee then hired an independent consulting firm to review both the settlement and U.S. West’s earnings. In May 1988, the firm issued a report asserting that the $9 million stipulated rate reduction was “clearly inadequate.”

In July 1988, the Commission initiated a general rate case, docket No. 88-049-07, to investigate the reasonableness of U.S. West’s rates and earnings. Again the Commission denied the Committee’s request to declare U.S. West’s rates interim rates. Instead, the Commission ruled that if U.S. West’s earnings were in excess of its authorized rate of return, they would be subject to a rebuttable presumption that they were unjust and unreasonable and subject to refund. In August 1988, the Division, the Committee, and U.S. West stipulated to a further rate reduction of $31 million, a $20 million reduction to be effective September 1, 1988, and an $11 million reduction to be effective January 1, 1989.

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MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Public Service Commission
840 P.2d 765 (Utah Supreme Court, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
840 P.2d 765, 186 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 1992 Utah LEXIS 38, 1992 WL 101550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mci-telecommunications-corp-v-public-service-commission-utah-1992.