Narragansett Electric Co. v. Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission

35 A.3d 925, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 9, 2012 WL 366526
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 23, 2012
DocketNos. 2010-142-M.P., 2010-179-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 A.3d 925 (Narragansett Electric Co. v. Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Narragansett Electric Co. v. Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission, 35 A.3d 925, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 9, 2012 WL 366526 (R.I. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice FLAHERTY,

for the Court.

On June 1, 2009, National Grid (or the company) filed an application with the Public Utilities Commission (the commission or PUC) in which it sought additional revenues for its electricity distribution operations in Rhode Island.1 In its filing, the company requested an increase in electric distribution rates sufficient to enable it to collect additional revenues of $75.3 million, an increase of 33 percent.2 The Division of Public Utilities and Carriers3 (the division) opposed the company’s rate request; it recommended that the PUC reduce the base-rate-revenue requirement sought by the company by $37.82 million. Particular to this case, the company included a proposal to revise its capital structure4 to include a common equity component of 50.05 percent. In contrast, the division, through the expert testimony of Matthew Kahal, recommended a 47.5 percent common equity component. Also, the company requested a $2.4 million increase in rates to support an incentive compensation plan for certain of its employees; the division recommended that that amount be reduced by half. Finally, the company proposed modifications to its union contract labor expense, storm expenses, outside legal expense, vegetation management, inspection and maintenance expense, as well as rate base additions through the year.5

On April 29, 2010, the commission issued a report and order in docket No. 4065. In its decision, the commission reduced the company’s increase in its revenue requirement to $15.9 million. In so doing, the commission set the common equity component of the company’s capital structure at 42.75 percent. It also reduced by half the company’s request to establish a variable pay scheme for certain of its employees. On May 6, 2010, the company petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari under G.L.1956 § 39-5-1.6 We issued the writ [929]*929on May 17, 2010.7 On October 6, 2011, after thoroughly briefing the issues, the parties appeared before this Court for oral argument. We have carefully reviewed the record, and for the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm in part and vacate in part the decision of the commission.

Regulatory Proceedings

As is the custom in a major rate case, extensive written testimony and voluminous discovery was submitted by National Grid, the division, and several interve-nors.8 The commission reviewed reams of documents, hundreds of pages of transcripts, and listened to eleven days of oral testimony. Moreover, the PUC conducted hearings around the state to solicit public comment. At the conclusion of all the hearings, the parties submitted significant post-hearing memoranda and reply memo-randa. On February 9, 2010, the PUC, in an open meeting, voted to authorize a base distribution revenue increase of approximately $16.2 million, an amount far lower than the company’s final proposed increase of $57.7 million. Indeed, it was even significantly lower than the division’s recommendation.

There are two overarching issues framing our review of this case. First, the company argues that the PUC determined a capital structure that was both unreasonably low and that was not supported by the record. Second, it argues that the PUC erred when it reduced the company’s proposal for an incentive based compensation plan by 50 percent.

When it filed its rate case, the company’s capital structure was overly reliant on equity, with a ratio of 85.57 percent equity and 14.4 percent debt. It is undisputed that this structure was not reasonable for ratemaking purposes because it would have had a marked impact on electrical rates for consumers.

For this reason, the company aimed to improve the internal balance of its capital structure. To accomplish this goal, the company sought to issue approximately $550 million in long-term debt. This, it anticipated, would reduce the common equity ratio to 50.05 percent, a more appropriate allocation for ratemaking purposes. The company contended that it reasonably expected that its debt issuance would be approved before the new rates went into effect, and therefore it proposed that the commission accept that capital structure as a “placeholder.”9 As expected, the corn-[930]*930mission rejected the company’s existing rate structure, featuring 85.57 percent common equity, as unreasonable, but it also declined to accept the proposed capital structure of 50.05 percent as sufficiently firm. The company contends that this was error and that the PUC did not follow its established policy of using the actual capital structure of a utility when that structure is reasonable.

During the hearings before the PUC, the division’s expert objected to the use of the company’s proposed capital structure because, in his opinion, it represented only a “plan or set of intentions,” even though the company and the division had reached an agreement with respect to it.10 Instead, the division’s expert testified that he recommended that the PUC adopt a capital structure for the company that was based on the capital structures of a “proxy group” of similarly situated utilities. In the opinion of the division’s expert, a capital structure featuring a 47.5 percent equity ratio was reasonable and appropriate. This, however, also was rejected by the PUC.

On January 12, 2010, the PUC issued a “record request”11 that inquired about the effect that a 38 percent common equity rate would have on the return on equity. It is telling that the division responded that it had “not conducted a formal analysis of the cost of equity implications” of that type of capital structure. On February 9, 2010, the commission conducted an open meeting, and in the course of that meeting, it decided all the issues that had been presented in docket No. 4065.

At that meeting, the PUC decided that an equity ratio of 42.75 percent was appropriate. It also voted to disallow 50 percent of the variable pay expense requested by the company. The commission relied on the expert testimony of the division’s witness, David Effron, who had testified that the attainment of financial goals is a shareholder oriented goal; thereby making shareholders, not ratepayers, the primary beneficiaries of increases to the company’s earnings. Effron also testified that when attainment of financial goals benefits shareholders, costs associated with attaining those goals are not proper for inclusion in a utility’s revenue requirement, because those costs should not burden ratepayers.

The PUC found the testimony of the company’s expert on this issue, William Dowd, to be “unpersuasive in establishing any link between the company’s attainment of financial goals and ratepayer benefits.” Therefore, because the company was unable to satisfy the PUC that the requested $2.4 million was sufficiently tied to a benefit for ratepayers, it disallowed $1.2 million of the requested increase. It is from these two rulings that the company seeks our review.12

Standard of Review

The General Assembly has prescribed the standard of review for cases brought before this Court in accordance with § 39-5-3.

“The findings of the commission on questions of fact shall be held to be prima facie true, and as found by the [931]

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35 A.3d 925, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 9, 2012 WL 366526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/narragansett-electric-co-v-rhode-island-public-utilities-commission-ri-2012.