North Star v. PSC

2022 MT 103
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 2022
DocketDA 21-0224
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 MT 103 (North Star v. PSC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Star v. PSC, 2022 MT 103 (Mo. 2022).

Opinion

05/31/2022

DA 21-0224 Case Number: DA 21-0224

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2022 MT 103

NORTH STAR DEVELOPMENT, LLC,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

MONTANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION

Respondent and Appellee,

and

MONTANA CONSUMER COUNSEL,

Respondent, Intervenor, and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the First Judicial District, In and For the County of Lewis and Clark, Cause No. ADV-2020-1703 Honorable Mike Menahan, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Jonathan Motl, Thomas Schoenleben, Bitterroot Law, Hamilton, Montana

For Appellees:

Ben Reed, Lucas Hamilton, Aimee Hawkaluk, Montana Public Service Commission, Helena, Montana

Jason Brown, Robert Nelson, Montana Consumer Counsel, Helena, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: November 10, 2021

Decided: May 31, 2022 Filed:

r--6ta•--df __________________________________________ Clerk

2 Justice Dirk Sandefur delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 North Star Development, LLC (North Star) appeals the March 2021 judgment of the

Montana First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, dismissing its petition for

judicial review of the August 2020 rate determination of the Montana Public Service

Commission (PSC) regarding North Star’s 2019 application for water and sewer utility rate

increase authorizations.1 We address the following restated issues:

1. Whether the District Court erroneously dismissed North Star’s petition for judicial review due to failure to exhaust administrative remedies without considering the asserted futility of doing so?

2. Whether the District Court erroneously dismissed North Star’s petition without considering its assertions that waiver or equitable estoppel precluded PSC assertion of failure to exhaust administrative remedies?

We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 North Star is a small, privately owned public water and sewer service utility, as

defined by § 69-3-101, MCA, subject to PSC regulation under Title 69, chapter 3, MCA.2

North Star owns and operates potable water and wastewater facilities and provides water

1 See Final Order No. 7105f, PSC Docket 2010.06.060. 2 The PSC is a five-member executive branch agency, §§ 2-15-2601, -2602, 69-1-101, -102, and -103, MCA, vested with rule-making authority, §§ 69-1-110(3) and 69-3-103, MCA, and charged with “full power of supervision, regulation, and control of . . . public utilities” in accordance with the provisions of Title 69, chapter 3, MCA. Sections 69-3-101, -102, -106, and -110, MCA. As pertinent here, the PSC’s regulatory duty includes, inter alia, regulating public utilities to ensure that their customer service rates and charges are “reasonable and just.” See § 69-3-201 and Title 69, chapter 3, part 3, MCA. See also Admin. R. M. Title 38, chapter 5, subchapter 25 (PSC regulation of privately owned water utilities).

3 and sewer services to approximately 270 customers in the North Star subdivision in or

about Helena, Montana.

¶3 Starting with its initial August 2010 rate determination on North Star’s June 2010

rate application, the PSC has repeatedly determined and adjusted the monthly rates that

North Star may charge its customers for water and sewer services in its service area. On

January 23, 2019, North Star applied pursuant to Admin. R. M. 38.5.101, et seq., for PSC

authorization for specified water and sewer rate increases.3 On March 25, 2019, North Star

filed an amended water and sewer services rate increases application based on a new or

previously unsubmitted professional engineering report which indicated higher water and

sewer infrastructure costs (mainly in the form of a claimed $5,810,422 gross utility plant

value adjusted up from $1,211,762), thus resulting in significantly higher requested rate

increases.4

¶4 Upon preliminary review pursuant to Admin. R. M. 38.5.184 (1977), the PSC

rejected North Star’s amended rate application on the stated ground that it did not conform

to the minimum PSC rate case filing standards specified in Admin. R. M. 38.5.101 through

38.5.184 (1977-93). Within the specified PSC deadline, North Star timely filed

supplemental testimony and documentation in support of its amended application on

3 The application requested authorization for a base water service rate of $41 per month, plus $5 per 1,000 gallons over 20,000 gallons per month, and a flat sewer service rate of $30.55 per month. 4 The amended application requested authorization for a base water service rate of $124.02 per month (up from the originally requested $41 per month), plus $5 per 1,000 gallons over 20,000 gallons per month, and a flat sewer service rate of $76.89 per month (up from the originally requested $30.55 per month).

4 June 21, 2019. Upon review, the PSC accepted North Star’s amended rate increase

application for consideration on the merits.5

¶5 After granting intervention to the Montana Consumer Counsel6 and one or more

North Star customers, the PSC conducted a noticed public hearing on the merits of North

Star’s amended application on January 29-30, 2020. Upon the close of post-hearing

briefing on March 27, 2020, the PSC subsequently deliberated on the amended rate increase

application in an agenda-noticed work session at its regularly scheduled business meeting

on August 11, 2020. At the end of the work session, the PSC issued a 41-page “Final

Order” that included: (1) disposition of a disputed evidentiary issue regarding Admin.

R. M. 38.5.2532 (2014);7 (2) findings of fact pertinent to applicable PSC “ratemaking

principles”; (3) resulting conclusions and applications of law; and (4) an order authorizing:

5 North Star supported its amended application with, inter alia, written testimony of its rate consultant, a former PSC rate-analyst (Leroy Beeby), and various analytical spreadsheets indicating a claimed “utility plant in service” value adjusted up in accordance with the originally unsubmitted engineering report. Pursuant to §§ 69-1-102, 69-3-201, -109, and -324, MCA, the PSC “may, in its discretion, investigate and ascertain the value of the property of each public utility actually used and useful for the convenience of the public” in order to determine a utility’s “fair and reasonable rate of return.” See Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Dep’t of Pub. Serv. Regulation, 191 Mont. 331, 334, 624 P.2d 481, 482-83 (1981). See also Admin. R. M. 38.5.123, 146, and 182 (1977). The “utility plant in service” value was thus an essential component of North Star’s “rate base” calculation, and in turn, the claimed “investment on which returns are allowed” for purposes of regulated rate determination. See In re Montana Power Co., 180 Mont. 385, 398- 401, 590 P.2d 1140, 1148-49 (1979); Admin. R. M. 38.5.123 and 128 (1977). 6 The office of Consumer Counsel is a constitutionally-created entity charged with “the duty of representing consumer interests in hearings before the [PSC].” Mont. Const. art. XIII, § 2. 7 Admin. R. M. 38.5.2532 (2014) provides that “[w]hen a small water or sewer utility that has been built in connection with a subdivision . . . file[s] a rate application . . . , there is a rebuttable presumption that the value of original utility plant and assets ha[ve] [already] been recovered in the sale of [the] lots in [the] development to be served by the . . . utility.” The PSC determined that it need not apply the presumption because the record indicated that North Star had already recovered the value of its original utility plant and assets.

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2022 MT 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-star-v-psc-mont-2022.