Providence Gas Co. v. Malachowski

600 A.2d 711, 1991 R.I. LEXIS 184, 1991 WL 259527
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 9, 1991
Docket91-80-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 600 A.2d 711 (Providence Gas Co. v. Malachowski) 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
Providence Gas Co. v. Malachowski, 600 A.2d 711, 1991 R.I. LEXIS 184, 1991 WL 259527 (R.I. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

FAY, Chief Justice.

This is a statutory petition for certiorari brought by the Providence Gas Company (company) pursuant to G.L.1956 (1990 Reenactment) § 39-5-1, seeking a review of the report and order of the Public Utilities Commission (commission) issued in docket No.1971. The commission disallowed training-labor costs from the rate base and' established a termination date for the accrual of allowance for funds used during construction (AFUDC) associated with the company’s replacement of a customer-information system (CIS). We affirm the order of the commission in part and modify it in part for the reasons set forth herein.

On May 17,1990, the company filed for a general rate increase to become effective on June 18, 1990. The proposed rate increase included costs, capitalized and added to the rate base, associated with the construction and the implementation of the replacement CIS. The CIS functions to control billing and maintenance records for the customers of the company. Acting pursuant to G.L.1956 (1990 Reenactment) § 39-3-11, the commission suspended the June 18, 1990 effective date for the general increase for five months until November 18, 1990. During this suspension, the commission held hearings during October, November, and December of 1990 and February of 1991 to examine the necessity and reasonableness of the proposed rate increase. On November 8, 1990, the commission suspended the effective date until February 17, 1991. The commission then issued its report and order on February 15, 1991.

The company has filed for a general rate increase, including the capitalized cost of service for its new CIS, which it anticipated placing into service in May 1991. The commission used a rate year of February 28, 1991, to February 29, 1992. The company sought to include, among other things, the costs of training labor associated with the CIS in the total amount to be capitalized, amortized, and added to the rate base. For purposes of this rate case, expenses projected through November 1990 were included in the rate filing. The commission sets customer rates that allow a utility company to earn an amount conducive to attracting investors and also to recover its operating expenses, amortization expenses, and capital costs once the capital project is completed and functioning.

The Division of Public Utilities and Carriers (division) challenged inclusion of the CIS training-labor costs in the rate base. The division recommended disallowing capitalized training-labor costs in order to prevent the company from recovering these amounts twice because it alleged that they were included in the labor expense included in the rate base computed in the prior rate case, docket No.1914.

The company also sought to include the accrual of AFUDC through November 1990 and to accrue these costs until the construction and the implementation of the CIS were complete. 1 The division recommended that the commission disallow the company’s AFUDC accrual after May 1990 when, it asserted, the avoidable delays in the project’s completion and implementation occurred. The division presented no evidence before the commission indicating that the delay was imprudent. The company, however, presented evidence and testimony indicating reasons for the delay in conversion and implementation of the CIS. Raymond Allen, vice president and secretary of the company, testified that because of the nature of the system, the complexity in conversion, the ramifications of system problems on customer service and billing, and the higher intensity business activity during the heating season, such risk of interruption due to system errors could be *713 detrimental to the company and its customers if the system were to be converted at an earlier time.

The company’s prior rate case, docket No.1914, included an amount for the cost for employee labor, charged to expenses and included in the cost of service for that rate case. The division’s expert, David J. Effron (Effron), stated that at the time of the last rate case, docket No.1914, the idea of capitalizing training costs was not considered. He testified that

“[i]n effect, these employees’ time was charged to expense and included in the cost of service in that case. To permit these employee costs to now be capitalized to the cost of the project would, in effect, require ratepayers to pay twice for these costs, once through expenses included in the cost of service in the last case, and again through the recovery by the company of the CIS costs in this and future cases. Such a double recovery would be improper.”

The company neither objected to this testimony nor presented any rebuttal testimony to contradict Effron. The division further presented expert witness Kathryn T. Godb-out’s testimony that the rates in docket No.1914 included anticipated test-year labor wages for this rate case. The company’s witnesses, Bruce G. Wilde, vice president for human resources, and Gary S. Gilheeney, controller and assistant treasurer, did not know whether the company had, in fact, excluded wages to be deferred until the next case.

The commission issued its report and order on February 15, 1991. In that report, the commission, among other things, disallowed the inclusion of training-labor costs in the CIS costs to be capitalized. The commission stated: “Mr. Effron’s assertion that there was a ‘double recovery’ remains unrebutted. In the absence of solid factual evidence to the contrary, we adopt Mr. Effron’s adjustment in the amount of $859,000.” The commission relied on the fact that the company argued that the recommendation to disallow training-labor costs from the CIS’s total costs was erroneous factually, yet it made no citation to the record to support its allegation of error. The commission therefore adopted Effron’s unrebutted testimony and noted the failure of the company to present factual support in the record for its contention of error.

The commission determined that since the rate year went from February 28,1991, through February 29, 1992, and the inser-vice date of the CIS would be considered to be June 1,1991, it would include 75 percent of the costs to reflect 75 percent of the rate year in which the system would be used and useful. The commission would not limit the front end of the AFUDC accrual, and it also rejected the argument of the division’s expert regarding inappropriate accrual because it rejected the division’s argument that the delay on the project was avoidable. Regarding continued accrual, however, the commission ruled:

“[T]he Commission is of the opinion that the accrual of AFUDC must come to an end at some point. Based upon present projections that could occur in May of 1991 or months thereafter. We find that the continued accrual beyond that period is unacceptable. We note that the Company has indicated that the design and construction of the system were completed in late summer of 1990. Furthermore, the Company has suggested that it could have put the system in operation during the fall of 1990 but that it preferred to defer conversion until May, 1991 because in the warmer months ‘demand for service is reduced’ and ‘conversion will be substantially less disruptive.’ * * * Under the circumstances we believe it was within the Company's control to implement the CIS by September 1, 1990. Accordingly, we will limit AFUDC accrual to that date.”

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Bluebook (online)
600 A.2d 711, 1991 R.I. LEXIS 184, 1991 WL 259527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/providence-gas-co-v-malachowski-ri-1991.