PPL Electric Utilities Corp. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

912 A.2d 386, 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 665
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 6, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 912 A.2d 386 (PPL Electric Utilities Corp. 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.

Bluebook
PPL Electric Utilities Corp. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 912 A.2d 386, 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 665 (Pa. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*389 OPINION BY

Judge McGINLEY.

PPL Electric Utilities Corporation (PPL) appeals from the order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (Commission) entered on January 17, 2006, which ordered PPL to cease and desist from violating its tariff and Section 1303 of the Public Utilities Code (Code), 66 Pa. C.S. § 1303. 1

Complaint Against PPL

Commercial Utility Consultants (CUC) and Pennsylvania Utility Service Corporation (PUSC) (collectively “Complainants”) are private utility consulting companies which provide consulting and sales tax audit services to, among others, PPL customers. CUC and PUSC contract with commercial utility customers to analyze the rates, tariffs, discounts, and riders that apply to utility billings and submit recommendations for possible savings, credits or refunds. 2 In exchange for these services, CUC and PUSC receive from the customer up to 50% of the customers’ savings that result from their recommendations.

On November 23, 1999, CUC filed a Complaint against PPL in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County (common pleas court). That Complaint was consolidated with a separate action filed by PUSC. Commercial Utility Consultants and Public Utility Service Corp. v. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co., Civ. Action No. 99-09799. In that consolidated action, Complainants alleged that PPL tortuously interfered with their contractual relationships with certain customers of PPL. Those claims were based upon certain actions by PPL including: (1) its calculation of the maximum “interruptible load” on its system; (2) PPL’s agreement to prematurely terminate a one-year contract for “interruptible service” at the request of a customer whose industrial operations turned out to be inconsistent with “inter-ruptible service”; (3) PPL’s adjustment of “base periods” to reflect current normal operations where the base period is used to determine the amount of incremental load eligible for discounted rates; and (4) PPL’s disclosure of confidential customer information to (“Spectrum”) the joint venture of PPL, Spectrum, Inc. and Utilities Management Consultants, Inc. (UMC).

Complainants alleged that these actions by PPL constituted violations of its tariff filed with the Commission and/or violations of the Code.

Issues Referred to Commission pursuant to Primary Jurisdiction

On January 23, 2001, the parties entered into a stipulation whereby the parties agreed to refer certain issues to the Commission for determination under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. 3 On Jan *390 uary 24, 2001, the common pleas court stayed all proceedings in the Chester County Action and referred the following issues to the Commission:

1. Under PPL’s interruptible rates, was PPL required to calculate the 500 MW [megawatt] cap as (1) the twelve month average of each customer’s monthly Maximum On-peak Demand less the customer’s contract Firm Power, or (b) as the total of each customer’s maximum monthly demand during the previous 12 month period less the customer’s contract Firm Power?
2. Under PPL’s Industrial Development Initiatives Rider [IDI], if the customer’s usage during the twelve months ending December 31, 1991, was representative of the customer’s expected normal usage pattern during that time, was PPL authorized to use another base period in applying the Rider?
3. Whether PPL was permitted to provide marketing support and customer account information to the joint venture of PPL and Spectrum, Inc. and Utilities Management Consultants, Inc., which marketing support and information was not made available to other utility consulting companies and businesses?
4. Where the language of PPL’s LP-5 tariff states that interruptible service contracts are to be for a period of one year, may PPL and a customer privately agree to limit the term of the interrupti-ble service contract to 6 months?

On March 19, 2002, Complainants filed a Complaint with the Commission which formulated the issues referred by the common pleas court to the Commission. PPL filed an answer on April 10, 2002. Following exchanges of written testimony and exhibits, the parties participated in eviden-tiary hearings before the ALJ on December 17-18, 2002. 4

Interruptible Service and the 500 MW Cap

The first issue presented to the ALJ involved the formula used by PPL to calculate the 500 MW cap for the amount of interruptible power that PPL would accept on its system.

Interruptible service authorizes PPL to require a customer to stop using electricity or reduce consumption of electricity for periods in the rate schedule. Generally, PPL interrupted service to a customer during periods of peak load, emergencies, testing periods, or when the requirements of all customers approached the maximum level of electricity that PPL was able to generate. Interruptible service was provided at a significantly reduced rate to reflect the lower quality, i.e., the interrup-tible nature, of the service.

This first issue deals with how PPL determined whether the amount of inter-ruptible power from interruptible customers exceeded a total of 500 MW. When the requirements of interruptible customers approached the 500 MW, PPL stopped entering into new interruptible service contracts with other customers. In other words, there was a limit on the number of customers which could subscribe to inter-ruptible service. That number depended upon how PPL calculated the 500 MW cap.

Oliver Kasper (Kasper), PPL’s manager of pricing and contract administration, tes *391 tified that PPL first began to allow greenhouse customers to subscribe to interrupti-ble power in 1983. PPL made several interruptible service options available to its customers. Those appeared in its tariff as Rate Schedules IS — 1, LP-4 and LP-5, and Interruptible Service by Agreement. Notes of Testimony, December 17, 2002, (N.T. 12/17/02) at 59; Direct Testimony of Oliver G. Kasper in 1995 Base Rate Case Before Commission at 10-11, Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 17a, 443a. When originally proposed, these optional interruptible rate provisions were intended in part to address economic and competitive concerns of PPL’s customers.

Kasper testified that on May 13, 1993, PPL filed a supplement to its tariff and proposed to modify certain aspects of its interruptible power provision which included putting a cap on the amount of inter-ruptible power that PPL would generate. N.T. 12/17/02 at 61; R.R. at 19a. PPL filed with the Commission “Proposed Tariff No. 200, Supplement 50” which contained this proposal as follows:

Optional Interruptible Power is available to customers under this rate schedule with at least 1000 KW of year-round interruptible power who contract to accept interruptible service for at least one year, as detailed in this provision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
912 A.2d 386, 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ppl-electric-utilities-corp-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pacommwct-2006.