Petition of Allied Power and Light Company

350 A.2d 360, 133 Vt. 586, 1975 Vt. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 2, 1975
Docket164-74, 183-74
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 350 A.2d 360 (Petition of Allied Power and Light Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of Allied Power and Light Company, 350 A.2d 360, 133 Vt. 586, 1975 Vt. LEXIS 463 (Vt. 1975).

Opinion

Barney, C.J.

In response to a mandate from this Court, the Public Service Board reviewed the utility requests for increases in rates because of increased fuel costs. These changes in charges to consumers were undertaken under the authority of General Order No. 55, governing the use of the so-called “purchased power and fuel adjustment clause”. In a case of the same name, now 132 Vt. 354, the formulation of General *588 Order No. 55 was invalidated insofar as it allowed rate changes without compliance with the provisions of Title 30, Vermont Statutes Annotated, relating to the institution of changed rates or rate schedules. On argument of that prior case it was urged that, in some cases, the purchased power and fuel adjustment changes made by some utilities also fulfilled the preexisting statutory requirements. For that reason, the order of remand in 132 Vt. 354 directed the Public Service Board to examine and determine which, if any, of the purchased power and fuel adjustment changes qualified as proper statutory rate changes. They have now done so, resulting in the approval of a number of filings under General Order No. 55 as properly implemented rate increases. The results are here on appeal by the representative of the public, joined by the Vermont Welfare Rights Organization.

The Public Service Board certified the following two questions for review:

(1) Whether the filings made by certain electric utilities listed in Appendix I of the Findings and Second Supplemental Order of the Public Service Board, dated May 20, 1974, qualify as valid rates under 30 V.S.A. §§ 208, 209, 218, 219, 225, 226 and 227?
(2) Whether the Public Service Board has the power and authority to permit certain electric utilities to recover revenues they would have received under filed tariffs but for a lower court injunction?

In connection with these questions it is crucial to review the specific statutory requirements for bringing about changes in utility rates. 30 V.S.A. § 225 requires a utility to file schedules with the Public Service Board showing all rates and rules affecting rates charged for its services or product. These are available for public inspection. 30 V.S.A. § 228 requires that the schedules also be readily available to the public at the places where utility bills are paid. Rate changes come under these sections. Changes are not to be made in filed tariffs, “except upon thirty days notice to the board and such notice to parties affected by such schedules as the board shall direct.”

30 V.S.A. § 226 provides that the Board, on its own motion, may order an investigation and hearing on the justness and *589 reasonableness of such change. Any five persons adversely affected by the change, or if less than five are affected, any person so affected may petition the Board, which must then investigate the matter and make such order as justice and law require. The balance of § 226 and § 227 set out the mechanics of rate change orders, whether the proceedings are instituted by the Board or by petition. These provisions have had extended discussion in In re New England Telephone and Telegraph Co., 131 Vt. 310, 305 A.2d 598 (1973). 30 V.S.A. §§ 208, 209, 218 and 219 confer upon the Board jurisdiction over, among other things, the rates charged, provide that such rates must be reasonable and without discrimination, and authorize the Board to initiate its own proceedings and establish, on its own authority, appropriate rates and service rules.

The Board, in its hearings on this matter, took into account not only the monthly filings under General Order No. 55, but also the widespread notice and publicity given to the original adoption of General Order No. 55. It also took evidence of the notification of the implementation of General Order No. 55 sent to utility customers when it was first put into effect, which reached customers of Central Vermont Public Service Corporation and Green Mountain Power. The general order specifically provided:

2(h). The Board shall retain jurisdiction over this case and upon good cause shown by any interested person shall investigate and/or hold a public hearing with respect to any matter concerning the Clause whether or not such matter is raised prior to the 90 day period specified in paragraph 2(f) above.

Paragraph 2(f) related to the expiration date of General Order No. 55. It provided that its provisions might be extended by any utility if a petition to that effect was filed with the Public Service Board within ninety days prior to the termination date. A public hearing would then be called, and counsel appointed to represent the public. Other utilities could join in the petition.

General Order No. 55 called for filing, by utilities using the clause, the monthly calculations which generated, under the clause, the factor which, applied to the previously filed tariffs, yielded the electric bill adjusted for purchased power and fuel *590 costs. In its considerations under the previously noted mandate of this Court, the Board reviewed these filings as potentially qualified as rate filings under 80 Y.S.A. § 225. Those it found in other respects qualified, after extensive hearings, it ordered as valid rate increases effective thirty days from the date of filing with the Board. This was intended to bring them into compliance with the thirty-day requirement set out in 30 Y.S.A. § 225. The amounts of uncollected revenue were then calculated on that basis, and a schedule of recovery over a period of time from the utility customers ordered.

On review, the Board’s findings of fact must be accepted here unless clearly erroneous. 30 V.S.A. § 11(b). Since it is the same standard as applies to findings of fact of a trial court under V.R.C.P., we must accept them in the presence of supporting evidence. Petition of Green Mountain Power Corp., 131 Vt. 284, 303, 305 A.2d 571 (1973).

A substantial portion of the appellants’ attack on the order in this case rests on the unquestionable premise that the monthly calculations validated by the Board as proper and supportable rate filings were not furnished to the Board strictly as intended rate filings under 30 V.S.A. § 225. Even though this cannot be questioned, this Court does not view that circumstance as one of critical or controlling importance. It is important to recall that the actions of the utilities with respect to these filings were based upon a then presumably valid order of the -Board. All of the evidence in the case clearly points out that the utilities were seeking relief from the burdens of inordinately and unexpectedly increasing purchased power and fuel costs. To say that they sought relief as improperly directed by their regulatory agency totally disqualifies them from all relief, even though their actions might conform to acceptable statutory standards, would be unjust indeed. It is for this very reason our mandate directed the Board to examine the filings to see if they met the formal requisites of Title 30.

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Bluebook (online)
350 A.2d 360, 133 Vt. 586, 1975 Vt. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-allied-power-and-light-company-vt-1975.