Missouri Gas Energy v. Public Service Commission

978 S.W.2d 434, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1525, 1998 WL 479746
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 1998
DocketWD 54710
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 978 S.W.2d 434 (Missouri Gas Energy v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Missouri Gas Energy v. Public Service Commission, 978 S.W.2d 434, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1525, 1998 WL 479746 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

LOWENSTEIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from a final order of the Public Service Commission (“PSC” or “Commission”). The appellant is Missouri Gas Energy (“MGE”). MGE is a subsidiary of Southern Union Company. MGE operates to supply, at the retail level, natural gas in western Missouri. The appellant’s business, formerly known as the Gas Service Company, was acquired by KP Western in the early 1990’s, and operated as KP Western until *436 1994 when Southern Union bought the business and established what is now known as MGE. This case emanates from a series of Gas Line Safety Rules (“Rules”) promulgated by the PSC in 1989 in response to federal legislation. As the name implies, the Rules required gas utilities to substantially replace all of their older service lines and mains. The effect of this requirement was to cause MGE’s predecessor and MGE to incur a new and substantial expense not envisioned by them or accounted for in the then current rates as previously approved by the Commission. During the time that a service or main line construction project is in progress, the utility is allowed to “book a deferred amount,” known as the Allowance for Funds Used During Construction (“AFUDC”), which allows the utility to compensate for the financing costs of the project.

When the project is finished, this new figure is an asset of the utility and is eligible to be placed in its rate base, to be depreciated, for the purpose of figuring a rate of return based on this new substantial asset. The temporary problem created is the accounting treatment of the new asset until a new rate, after a hearing and subsequent order by PSC, goes into effect. The Commission has the regulatory authority to grant a form of relief to the utility in the form of an accounting technique, an Accounting Authority Order, (hereinafter called an “AAO”) which allows the utility to defer and capitalize certain expenses until the time it files its next rate case. The AAO technique protects the utility from earnings shortfalls and softens the blow which results from extraordinary construction programs. However, AAOs are not a guarantee of an ultimate recovery of a certain amount by the utility.

In this case there was a substantial time lag following construction. Also complicating matters, the utility underwent changes in ownership during this period, and as part of gaining approval of the transfers, the new owners agreed to put off any rate request. During this period the PSC granted two AAOs authorizing a 10.54% rate of return for MGE. When MGE’s 1996 rate request was made, the PSC only allowed MGE a rate of return of 4% for 1994 and 6% for 1995 and 1996 on its carrying costs. These figures, which according to PSC equate to MGE’s AFUDC rates, will allow less recovery than MGE anticipated.

The long and short of the points raised by MGE is that the treatment afforded it in the two AAOs approved by the Commission was neither made permanent nor incorporated in the same percentages in the ultimate rates approved by the Commission for MGE. It argues that the resulting loss is unfair. The respondent PSC and the intervenor respondent Public Counsel, assert there is no guarantee to a utility in the grant of an AAO that thé later rate case will contain the same figures. The circuit court affirmed the action of the Commission, and this appeal followed.

The order of the Public Service Commission has a presumption of validity— the burden is on the appellant to prove invalidity. State ex. rel. Mobile Home Estates, Inc. v. Public Service Com’n, 921 S.W.2d 5, 9 (Mo.App.1996). Judicial review is to determine lawfulness of the order under the statutes, as well as reasonableness of the order and whether it is supported by competent and substantial evidence on the whole record. State ex. rel. Utility Consumers’ Council of Missouri, Inc. v. Public Service Com’n, 585 S.W.2d 41, 47 (Mo. banc 1979).

MGE raises seven points in this appeal, some of which are overlapping, but all decry the fact that the degree of relief from the mandated safety expense afforded MGE by the Commission via the AAOs was not reflected in the results of the later rate application. Before entering a discussion of the points, it is helpful to first examine the leading case on Accounting Orders and the effect of AAOs on later rate applications to the PSC.

In State ex. rel. Office of the Public Counsel v. Public Service Com’n of Missouri, 858 S.W.2d 806 (Mo.App.1993), an electric utility sought, and was granted, an accounting authority order to defer depreciation expenses and carrying costs of two of its expensive construction projects. One project would greatly extend the life of a generating site and the other would convert the coal generating station for use of a low-sulfur coal to *437 come into compliance with the Clean Air Act. The PSC, under its statutory authority, adopted an AAO which allowed the utility to defer and record depreciation expenses and carrying costs until subsequent years. Id. at 808 and 811-12. This court upheld the authority of the PSC, as granted by § 393.140, RSMo.1986, to hear an application by a utility and grant to a utility the permission to defer extraordinary expenses from one period to another. The PSC’s decision to defer until the rate case, was affirmed by this court on the basis that the costs were both substantial and unusual. Id. at 811. This court specifically stated that by allowing a deferral under an AAO, the PSC was not granting “rate relief’ to the utility, and was not determining the “actual amount of the deferred costs” that would be recovered. Instead, the rate decision would “be determined in a later rate case,” which the PSC ordered to be filed by the end of the calendar year. Id. at 812. As is applicable to the case at bar, the opinion stated that the AAO, “did not presume to determine a new rate but effectively permitted” the utility to file a rate case by the end of the year, “and then to present evidence and argue that the deferred costs recorded ... should be considered by the Commission in approving a rate change.” Id. at 813. The court reiterated the holding that nothing in the AAO order served to automatically entitle the utility to recover in the subsequent rate case the full amount of the deferred charges allowed by the previous AAO. Id.

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978 S.W.2d 434, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1525, 1998 WL 479746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-gas-energy-v-public-service-commission-moctapp-1998.