Peoples Natural Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission
This text of 664 A.2d 664 (Peoples Natural Gas Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The Peoples Natural Gas Company (Peoples) appeals from an order of the Public Utility Commission (PUC) directing Peoples to apply anticipated Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) benefits1 to the monthly budget bill of Alice Baker and ordering Baker to pay $5 a month towards her arrearage until her account with Peoples is fully paid.2 We reverse.
PUC made the following findings of fact.3 Baker and her daughter reside in a three-story, single family house with three bedrooms, two bathrooms, basement, attic, kitchen, living room and dining room; natural gas is used for heating and cooking. [666]*666(PUC Finding of Fact, No. 25.) Baker receives $478 a month in Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits and $50 a month in child support. Her daughter receives $338 a month in SSI benefits; however, the SSI check is made payable to Baker’s sister. (PUC Finding of Fact, No. 26.) Baker’s monthly expenses are $300 in rent payments, $35 in electrical bills and $100 in food costs. (PUC Finding of Fact, No. 28.) As for Baker’s natural gas bills, Baker testified that her sister takes the bills and “tells [Baker] that [she] will pay them. [Baker] does not know how much her sister pays [Peoples].” (PUC Finding of Fact, No. 27.) However, Baker’s gas bills have gone unpaid in an amount in excess of $3,296.
In response to Peoples’ notice that her natural gas service would be terminated for nonpayment of bills, Baker filed an informal complaint with PUC’s Bureau of Consumer Services (Bureau), which ordered Peoples to take into account Baker’s future LIHEAP grants and to reduce Baker’s monthly budget amount accordingly. (PUC op. at 1.)
Peoples appealed the Bureau’s decision and a telephonic hearing was held before an administrative law judge (ALJ). The ALJ determined that Baker had failed to meet her burden of proving a present inability to pay the current monthly budget amount plus an additional monthly amount toward arrearag-es. (ALJ op. at 12.) The ALJ ordered Baker to pay the current monthly budget amount, with no adjustment for future LI-HEAP grants, plus an additional $50 per month toward the arrearage. (ALJ op. at 15.)
Subsequently, PUC “exercised its right under 66 Pa.C.S. § 332(h) to review the ... case at Public Meeting” and, thus, placed the ALJ decision “on a future Public Meeting Agenda for the review of the full Commission.” 4 (R.R. at 41a.) Following that meeting, PUC reversed the ALJ’s decision, holding that Baker proved an inability to pay her current monthly budget payment amounts for natural gas service plus an additional amount per month toward the arrearage on her account. (PUC Conclusion of Law, No. 3.) PUC directed Peoples to recompute Baker’s 1994r-95 monthly budget bill after applying all LIHEAP funds that Baker received for 1993-94 and ordered Baker to pay the recomputed amount plus $5 towards her arrearage. (PUC op. at 14-15.)
Peoples now appeals to this court,5 arguing that PUC exceeded its statutory authority in ordering Peoples to recompute Baker’s 1994-95 monthly budget bills based on LIHEAP grants equal to Baker’s 1993-94 LIHEAP benefits. Peoples essentially asserts that PUC usurped the authority of the Department of Public Welfare (DPW) over LIHEAP benefits.6 We agree.
PUC, as an administrative agency, can exercise only those powers expressly granted to it by statute or which are necessarily implied from its express powers. Fairview Water Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Comm’n, 509 Pa. 384, 502 A.2d 162 (1985). LIHEAP is a Federal block grant program which, pursuant to Federal law, is administered by DPW. 55 Pa.Code § 601.1, § 601.5; see 42 U.S.C. §§ 8621-29. Here, PUC has ordered:
2. That [Peoples] shall recompute [Baker’s] monthly budget bill after applying all LIHEAP funds received by [Baker] and [667]*667designated to [Peoples] for the 1993-94 winter heating season.
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5. That commencing with the first gas bill, received by [Baker] after the date on which [PUC’s] Order is entered, [Baker] shall pay her calculated optional monthly payment amount, for current natural gas service, by the due date, plus an additional $5.00 toward the arrearage on her account for natural gas service with [Peoples],
6. That [Baker] shall continue making the payments specified in Order Paragraph 2 until the arrearage on her account for natural gas service with [Peoples] shall be fully paid.[7]
(PUC Order, Nos. 2, 5-6.) (Emphasis added.) Thus, PUC requires that Peoples calculate Baker’s monthly budget bill for the 1994-95 winter heating season based on LI-HEAP benefits that she received during the 1993-94 winter heating season.8
We believe that, by this order, PUC has in effect determined that Baker will be eligible for LIHEAP benefits in 1994-95 and that Baker will be entitled to the same amount of assistance as she received in 1993-94. However, PUC is without authority to make such a determination. As administrator of the LIHEAP program, only DPW can decide whether Baker is eligible for LIHEAP benefits and, if eligible, the amount of benefits she should receive. DPW might determine that Baker is not eligible or that Baker should not receive the same amount of benefits previously granted. Indeed, the record in this case shows that DPW granted Baker $170 in LIHEAP energy assistance and $300 in crisis energy assistance for the 1992-93 winter heating season, but only $96 in LI-HEAP energy assistance and, as of the date of the hearing in this case, no crisis energy assistance for the 1993-94 winter heating season.9 (PUC Findings of Fact, Nos. 8-11.)
Thus, because PUC has unlawfully determined that Baker is eligible for LIHEAP benefits for the 1994-95 winter heating season and has ordered, without authority, that Baker receive an amount equal to her 1993-94 LIHEAP grant, we reverse.10
MCGINLEY, J., dissents.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 28th day of August, 1995, the order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, dated August 3,1994, at Docket No. Z-00211774, is hereby REVERSED.
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664 A.2d 664, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-natural-gas-co-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-1995.