Mile High Cab, Inc. v. Colorado Public Utilities Commission

2013 CO 26, 302 P.3d 241, 2013 WL 1715473, 2013 Colo. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 22, 2013
DocketSupreme Court Case No. 11SA312
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 2013 CO 26 (Mile High Cab, Inc. v. Colorado Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mile High Cab, Inc. v. Colorado Public Utilities Commission, 2013 CO 26, 302 P.3d 241, 2013 WL 1715473, 2013 Colo. LEXIS 289 (Colo. 2013).

Opinion

JUSTICE COATS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

1 1 Mile High Cab appealed directly to this court, pursuant to section 40-6-115(5), C.R.S. (2012), from the judgment of the district court affirming the denial of its application for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity. After a lengthy hearing, which included expert testimony both for and against the application, the administrative law judge to whom the application had been assigned issued a recommended decision, finding that the several incumbent carriers opposing the application had adequately proved that public convenience and necessity did not require granting the application and that the issuance of the certificate would be detrimental to the public interest. Although it initially ordered a remand for further evidence, the Public Utilities Commission ultimately granted the intervening carriers' motions for reconsideration and adopted the recommendation of the ALJ to deny the application. On Mile High's petition for judicial review, the district court affirmed.

{2 Because the record does not clearly contain the finding statutorily required for a denial of Mile High's application by the Pub-lice Utilities Commission-that the parties opposing the application proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the public convenience and necessity did not require granting the application and that the issuance of a certificate would actually be detrimental to the public interest-the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions to return the matter to the Public Utilities Commission for further action consistent with this opinion.

I.

1 3 In September 2008 Mile High Cab, Inc. filed an application to operate a taxicab service in the Denver metro area. Several existing carriers- Metro Cab, Yellow Cab, and SuperShuttle International-intervened, and the application was heard by an administrative law judge in September 2009. Following a 13-day hearing, which included expert testimony both supporting and opposing the application, the ALJ issued a decision of some 280 paragraphs, recommending that the Public Utilities Commission deny the application.

[ 4 The ALJ had little difficulty in finding that Mile High established its operational and financial fitness to provide the proposed service, which he understood to statutorily create a rebuttable presumption of public need. He also found, however, that Mile High's proposed service would likely cause an oversupply of the market of a kind that was highly unlikely to lead to the robust competition envisioned by the applicable statutory standard for new entries, and in fact the proposed service could very well result in impaired services, higher rates, and ultimate ly the type of destructive competition the Commission was charged with protecting against. As a result, it found that the intervening carriers had sustained their statutory burden of rebutting the presumption of a public need for the proposed service and had adequately proved that the proposed service would be detrimental to the public interest.

T5 In October 2010, after considering the exceptions and other motions of Mile High and the intervenors, the Commission ordered that the evidentiary record be reopened and the docket remanded to the ALJ to gather evidence on current conditions in the taxicab market and, particularly, the effects of another recent entry to the market and the recent expansion of an existing service permitted by the Commission. Among other things, the Commission noted that evidence that is theoretical in nature would have less probative value than evidence based on the facts and cireumstances of the case and concluded that the information to be gathered on remand might lead the Commission to make a more informed, just, and reasonable decision on whether to grant the application. In December 2010, however, the Commission granted the intervenors' motions for reconsideration, [244]*244reversed its own remand order, and found the ALJ's initial conclusions to have been supported by the existing record.

16 More particularly, the Commission agreed with the intervenors that the remand objectives might be difficult to achieve as a practical matter and that the order called for an investigation beyond the powers of the ALJ. Instead, the Commission proceeded on the basis of the existing record, emphasizing its deference to the ALJ's evaluation of the expert witness testimony. The Commission expressly found that the public convenience and necessity did not require it to accept the risk of the undesirable consequences identified by these witnesses and the ALJ, emphasizing its understanding that a substantial possibility of destructive competition and other negative public interest outcomes would be sufficient to satisfy the statutory standard for denial. Agreeing with what it characterized as the ALJ's finding of a substantial probability that both the adjustment process and the outcomes associated with allowing Mile High's cabs to enter the market would be detrimental to the public interest, the Commission accepted the ALJ's recommendation and denied Mile High's application.

17 On judicial review pursuant to section 40-6-115, C.R.S. (2012), the district court affirmed, finding that the Commission regularly pursued its authority; that the Commission's decision to deny Mile High a certificate was just and reasonable; that the Commission's conclusions were in accordance with the evidence; and that the Commission's ultimate decision to deny was supported by substantial evidence. With regard to the question whether the Commission regularly pursued its authority, in particular, the district court found that the Commission applied the appropriate legislative standard in finding that the intervenors sustained their burden by demonstrating a substantial probability that issuance would be detrimental to the public interest.

T8 Pursuant to section 40-6-115(5), Mile High filed for appellate review directly with this court.

IL

T9 "Taxicab service" refers to a particular kind of motor vehicle passenger transportation that may not be afforded without first obtaining from the Public Utilities Commission a certificate declaring that the present or future public convenience and necessity requires such operation. See §§ 40-10.1-101(19), 40-10.1-201, C.R.S. (2012). In 2008 the specific statutory requirements for granting a certificate to operate a taxicab service were substantially amended. See House Bill 08-1227, 2008 Colo. Sess. Laws 1801-02 (§ 40-10-105, C.R.S. (2008))1 Although a distinction had previously been drawn be[245]*245tween applications by services proposing to operate in counties with a population of less than 60,000 and those proposing to operate in counties with a population greater than 60,-000, see Senate Bill 94-113, 1994 Colo. Sess. Laws 1996 (§ 40-10-105, C.R.S. (2007)), the 2008 amendments increased the population demarcation to 70,000 and singled out seven named counties with populations greater than 70,000, including Denver, for special treatment in the application process.

T 10 Unlike applications for counties with populations of less than 70,000, which were expressly to be "governed by the doctrine of regulated monopoly," see § 40-10-105(2)(a), C.R.S. (2008), certificates for counties with populations greater than 70,000 were not to be deemed "an exclusive grant or monopoly, and the doctrine of regulated competition [was tol prevail," see § 105(2)(b)(I).

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Bluebook (online)
2013 CO 26, 302 P.3d 241, 2013 WL 1715473, 2013 Colo. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mile-high-cab-inc-v-colorado-public-utilities-commission-colo-2013.