606 F.2d 973
196 U.S.App.D.C. 66
PUBLIC SYSTEMS et al., Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, Commonwealth Edison
Co., New EnglandPower Co. et al., Southern
California Edison Company, Consumers
Power Company, Tennessee Gas
Pipeline Co., Intervenors.
PUBLIC SYSTEMS et al., Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, Respondent,
Investor-owned Utility Companies, Consumers Power Company,
Tennessee GasPipeline Co., Intervenors.
Nos. 76-1609, 76-1830.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Oct. 18, 1977.
Decided Feb. 16, 1979.
Rehearing Denied March 30, 1979.
Petitions for Review of Orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory commission.
James N. Horwood, Washington, D. C., for petitioners. Robert C. McDiarmid, Robert A. Jablon, Daniel I. Davidson, and Bonnie S. Blair, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for petitioners.
Dennis Lane, Atty., Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, for respondent. Drexel D. Journey, Gen. Counsel, Robert W. Perdue, Deputy Gen. Counsel, Allan Abbot Tuttle, Sol., Washington, D. C. and Danny J. Boggs, Bowling Green, Ky., Atty., Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, were on the brief, for respondent.
James B. Liberman, Washington, D. C., with whom Frederick T. Searls and Leonard W. Belter, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for intervenor New England Power Co., et al. Mr. Liberman argued for all intervenors.
Joseph C. Swidler, Washington, D. C., was on the brief, for intervenor Commonwealth Edison Co. in No. 76-1609.
George A. Avery and Keith S. Watson, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for intervenor Consumers Power Co.
Melvin Richter and Terence J. Collins, Washington, D. C., entered appearances for intervenor Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.
Before WRIGHT, Chief Judge, BAZELON and ROBB, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by BAZELON, Circuit Judge.
Dissenting opinion filed by ROBB, Circuit Judge.
BAZELON, Circuit Judge:
Petitioners, municipally-owned utilities, challenge a rule promulgated by the Federal Power Commission (FPC) permitting "comprehensive interperiod tax allocation" (CITA) for interstate suppliers of gas and electricity. The rule allows suppliers to "normalize" an unspecified number of tax benefits, a process that permits the utilities to defer tax payments but include the deferred costs in current rates. Petitioners, who buy power wholesale and distribute it locally, allege that the Commission failed to provide a reasoned basis for its action and improperly neglected the anticompetitive consequences of its new policy. We agree and remand for further proceedings.
I.
The dispute over normalization versus "flow-through" of tax benefits arises when utilities have the opportunity to defer current tax liabilities. Under normalization, a utility receives the benefit of the tax deferral but charges rates as though the postponed taxes had been paid. The difference between the taxes actually paid and the larger amount charged to ratepayers is ordinarily retained in a "deferred tax" account. Until the deferred taxes fall due, the funds "are available to the company as working capital free of any charges for interest or dividends." Without normalization, intervenors claim, utilities may have to raise future rates to pay the deferred liability, thus shifting expenses incurred by current consumers to future ratepayers.
Advocates of flow-through, however, contend that under normalization the consumer pays "phantom" taxes. Unless tax benefits are passed on to the taxpayer, the argument goes, the utility will reap a permanent tax saving, since so long as the expenses subject to normalization remain stable or increase, the benefits of postponing present tax liabilities will more than offset previously deferred taxes that currently fall due. This proposition is strengthened in periods of inflation, when current liabilities will likely exceed previously deferred expenses.
The question of normalization versus flow-through first arose before the Commission following the 1954 enactment of § 167 of the Internal Revenue Code, permitting the use of accelerated depreciation for tax purposes. The Commission, emphasizing the congressional goal of encouraging industrial expansion, initially let utilities normalize the benefits of rapid depreciation. In the 1960s, however, the FPC decided that the power industry would expand faster in response to increased consumer demand resulting from lower prices, so it forced the utilities to include in rates only taxes actually paid. The Fifth Circuit, noting that utilities should not be able to win a permanent tax saving through normalization, upheld the adoption of flow-through as a justifiable exercise of the Commission's discretionary authority.
The Tax Reform Act of 1969 partially reversed Commission policy. It allowed a utility to use accelerated depreciation on property acquired after 1969 while charging higher rates to cover the tax expenses that would result from straightline depreciation. Faced with changing economic conditions in the industry notably, a reported shortage of natural gas, and of energy generally the Commission extended normalization to utility property acquired before 1970. The Supreme Court upheld the agency's third policy change in this area in twenty years, stressing the Commission's broad responsibility to regulate in the public interest.
II.
The instant case, a rulemaking proceeding begun in 1971, is the most recent episode in the ongoing saga of normalization versus flow-through. After receiving public comments, the agency issued Order No. 530 on June 18, 1975, announcing a "general policy" in favor of permitting CITA following "appropriate factual showings" in individual rate proceedings. The Commission offered seven examples of tax payments covered by its order, noting that "changed circumstances" required the extension of normalization.
The situation has changed from a period where gas consumption was encouraged to a period of curtailment, and from a period when raising capital was not a problem to a period when pipelines face serious problems in generating and attracting needed capital.
The electric industry today shares many of the problems of the natural gas industry.
Greater use of normalization, the agency said, would improve the regulated firms' cash flow and reduce their need for external financing.
In response to petitioners' request for rehearing, the Commission modified its rule in Order 530-A, on January 19, 1976. The new order attempted to define the "appropriate factual showings" needed to qualify for CITA. The Commission said that a utility seeking normalization would have to demonstrate that CITA would result in only a tax deferral, not a permanent tax saving. Cash flow needs would be relevant to such a showing, but normalization would not be permitted without proof that no tax saving would result. Although the FPC agreed with petitioners that economic conditions had improved for utilities, it reiterated its "general findings of the need for increased cash flow for utilities." Petitioners' claim that normalization might adversely affect competition was left for case-by-case resolution.
Again the FPC granted rehearing, this time at the request of a group of utilities, and on July 6, 1976, the Commission issued Order 530-B, rejecting the tax saving/tax deferral distinction and adopting a general policy of permitting normalization. The Commission proclaimed that normalization would be acceptable so long as it involved only "timing differences rather than . . . permanent differences between book and tax treatment." It reviewed each of the seven examples of tax benefits explicitly covered by its order, and concluded that there was no basis for predicting that tax savings would arise from normalization. And in denying petitioners' request for yet another rehearing for consideration of the tax saving and competition issues, the Commission again prescribed case-by-case handling of competition problems. Surprisingly, however, the agency abandoned its previous insistence that normalization was needed to protect the industry's financial health. Citing an opinion of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the Commission held normalization "the proper and preferable method for ratemaking and accounting purposes."
III.
Petitioners say that the Commission improperly discarded the distinction between tax deferral and tax saving in its final orders. They urge that the possibility of a permanent tax saving through normalization, recognized by many courts, violates the basic tenet of rate regulation that a utility is entitled to earn its cost of service plus an adequate rate of return.
Until now, normalization has been upheld when there was at least a very low probability of tax saving. A rule favoring normalization would reverse the presumptions in rate hearings. Rather than require a demonstration that normalization will generate only a tax deferral, Order 530-B would require a showing that a saving would occur in order to bar CITA. Such proof would have to overcome the Commission's statement that the seven examples discussed in Order 530-B do not involve possible tax savings, but "represent items for which there is only a timing difference." This pro-normalization policy must comport with the spirit of federal utility regulation by ensuring that consumers at least will suffer no detriment under CITA.
That this case presents a Rule, announced in an Order, with direct impact on ratemaking, raises questions about the proper standard of review. We will proceed under § 19(b) of the Natural Gas Act, which prescribes a " substantial evidence" standard for findings of fact in orders. Courts initially restricted § 19(b) to appeals of adjudications, but we think the statute's language does not support the distinction between orders derived from adjudications and those growing out of rulemaking. As one court has observed, the Natural Gas Act "refers more or less indiscriminately to 'rules,' 'regulations,' and 'orders.' " Union Oil Co. v. FPC, 542 F.2d 1036, 1040 (9th Cir. 1976). Our course is supported by the Commission's frequent practice of acting by order, without classifying a proceeding as either rulemaking or adjudication.
In response to these considerations, this court began to review FPC rulemaking under § 19(b) so long as (1) the rule had a direct and immediate effect on the appellants, and (2) there was a sufficient evidentiary record to permit review by an appellate court. The second leg of this standard can raise problems, however, because the record produced in notice and comment rulemaking frequently lacks designated factual findings. As a result, it becomes crucial that the Commission's order include a reasoned opinion detailing those factual elements in the record that underlie the Commission's actions. Our review, as set forth in Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390 U.S. 747, 792, 88 S.Ct. 1344, 1373, 20 L.Ed.2d 312 (1968), must determine "whether each of the order's essential elements is supported by substantial evidence." Of course, to the extent that a rule represents a policy decision without direct factual reference, our review also requires that the Commission action be the product of reasoned decisionmaking.
IV.
Although the initial orders in this proceeding relied on factual findings of economic conditions in the power industry, the orders now before us rest on general policy considerations. Consequently, in § 19(b) review of rulemaking, the court must "assure itself that the Commission has given reasoned consideration to each of the pertinent factors." Our limited review function can be effective "only if the Commission indicates fully and carefully the methods by which, and the purposes for which, it has chosen to act, as well as its assessment of the consequences of its orders for the character and future development of the industry." We find the FPC orders before us fail to (1) assess the consequences of its action for the industry, and (2) indicate "fully and carefully" the purposes behind the order.
The orders provide no indication of the impact on consumers or utilities of adopting CITA. Not only is there no statement as to the financial resources at issue in the pro 196 U.S.App.D.C. 74>>ceeding, but the orders also fail to specify all the expenses that would be covered by CITA, offering instead seven examples without further explanation. Of course, precise quantification of all elements of proposed Commission action is not required. Still, some indication that the agency has gauged the likely effects of its course is essential.
Moreover, the discussion of the seven examples in Order 530-B is incomplete. The order first deals with the normalization of pension costs, taxes, and other expenses incurred during plant construction, all of which can be deducted from current taxes. The order finds normalization "especially appropriate" in these instances, which are, in financial terms, the most significant categories covered by the order. "(I)n any year in which plant construction slackens," the Commission claims, "a company's deferred taxes amortized could exceed its new deferrals." J.A. 851. But there is nothing in the order to support this implicit conclusion that fluctuation in construction activity will prevent utilities from gaining a tax saving. Indeed, the protracted nature of the large-scale construction projects that characterize the power industry suggests that fluctuations in building activity may not be very great. In addition, if the Commission correctly based Orders 530 and 530-A on its view that both the natural gas and electric industries must expand, then the conditions for a tax saving, rather than a mere deferral, may be present if construction-related tax benefits are normalized.
The other, less significant, examples cited in Order 530-B receive summary treatment. We do not pass on the accuracy of the agency's assessment that there is little danger of a tax saving with respect to these items, because there is insufficient explanation of the Commission's position for effective review.
Perhaps more notable than the inadequacy of the Commission's estimate of the impact of CITA is the failure to explain the goals of its policy. Order 530-B states only that the purpose of the Commission's action is to reduce uncertainty about utility revenues so the utilities will be better able to attract capital, "with resultant lower costs to consumers"; that both utilities and consumers will benefit from easier financial planning under a blanket rule in favor of normalization; and that rate cases should be shortened. This statement will not hold. These virtues attributed to the general rule of normalization are characteristics of Any general rule. And, by the terms of the Commission's discussion, a blanket policy in favor of flow-through would generate equivalent benefits.
The sole remaining basis for the Commission's action is its naked assertion in the Order Denying Rehearing that normalization is "the proper and preferable method for ratemaking and accounting purposes." As the Supreme Court has observed, "generalities do not supply the requisite clarity" to permit a reviewing court to sustain an FPC order. Although we are bound to respect agency expertise when reasonably exercised, we cannot rely on bland assurances that a policy is, indeed, to be preferred. This is particularly true where, as here, questions are raised as to the congruence of that policy with broad statutory goals. Moreover, despite the obvious relevance of accounting precepts for some regulatory policies, they cannot supply an independent basis for action when they may conflict with established ratemaking principles.
V.
Petitioners also allege that Order 530-B may have serious anticompetitive impact in states that require flow-through of deferred tax benefits. Wholesalers in such states could be subject to a "price squeeze": they might have to pay the deferred taxes to interstate suppliers while state regulators would require that such benefits be flowed through in retail rates. We remand to the Commission for further action on this issue as well.
On numerous occasions the Supreme Court has recognized both the importance of competition in regulated industries and the responsibility of regulatory agencies to encourage competitive forces. The FPC has been required to examine the impact on competition of ratemaking orders, the issuance of utility securities, and industry supply practices. The price squeeze question raised by petitioners parallels the issue confronted in FPC v. Conway Corp., 426 U.S. 271, 96 S.Ct. 1999, 48 L.Ed.2d 626 (1976), where it was alleged that by increasing wholesale prices, an interstate supplier would squeeze wholesalers with whom it also competed at the retail level. The Court instructed the Commission to consider the relationship between its own rates for interstate power sales and state rate schedules. Id. at 280, 96 S.Ct. 1999.
The question before us is whether the Commission's determination to review the price squeeze issue on a case-by-case basis was reasoned decisionmaking. In Order 530-A, the Commission resolved, without further discussion, to consider this contention only in particular cases. The Commission discussed the issue in one paragraph in the Order Denying Rehearing of Order 530-B. First, relying on its finding that normalization would bring only timing differences in tax payments, the agency denied that it had to consider the price squeeze problem at all. J.A. 877. The order, however, then counselled petitioners that a price squeeze might not "necessarily" occur under normalization, and concluded that the issue would be dealt with best in specific cases. There may be good cause for the view that price squeeze situations will not result from adoption of CITA, or that case-by-case treatment, rather than review in a rulemaking proceeding, would be a superior administrative method for handling the problem. Unfortunately, such rationales cannot be found in the Commission's glancing treatment of the matter.
Consequently, the orders are remanded to the Commission for further action not inconsistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
ROBB, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I cannot agree with the majority that the substantial evidence standard of review should be applied to these orders of the Federal Power Commission. Moreover, I believe the orders should be upheld as rational exercises of the Commission's rulemaking power under the appropriate standard of review, that is, was the Commission's action arbitrary or capricious? Accordingly, I dissent.
The Commission has twice before considered the issue of normalization as against flow-through. It concluded once that normalization was the preferable policy, and was upheld on a later appeal. See Amere Gas Utilities, 15 F.P.C. 760 (1956); El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. FPC, 281 F.2d 567 (5th Cir. 1960). On subsequent consideration it required utilities to flow-through their tax savings to their customers, and was again upheld on appeal. See Alabama-Tennessee Natural Gas Co., 31 F.P.C. 208 (1964), Aff'd sub nom. Alabama-Tennessee Natural Gas Co. v. FPC, 359 F.2d 318 (5th Cir.), Cert. denied, 385 U.S. 847, 87 S.Ct. 69, 17 L.Ed.2d 78 (1966). Now, it has returned to a policy favoring normalization, and, for the first time, its conclusion as to which policy is preferable in light of current economic conditions has been successfully challenged.
The Commission expressed this most recent conclusion in a series of orders issued after notice-and-comment rulemaking which proceeded according to the statutory mandate of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). Technically, the subject of these orders was a change in the Commission's Uniform Systems of Account regulations. See 18 C.F.R. Chpt. I Pt. 101. Commission activity more appropriately characterized as rulemaking, rather than adjudication, is difficult to imagine.
The APA dictates review of such informal rulemaking to determine whether it is "arbitrary, capricious, (or) an abuse of discretion." 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) (1976). This standard of review should govern the action taken here, unless it is displaced by section 19(b) of the Natural Gas Act, which requires that "substantial evidence" support Commission "findings of fact." 15 U.S.C. § 717r(b) (1976). The court today imposes the substantial evidence test on informal rulemaking pursuant to the Natural Gas Act.
The court reaches its conclusion by asserting that "substantial evidence" must support the "factual predicate" on which the Commission rule is promulgated. It then invalidates the rule on the ground that it lacks adequate support in the record. To invalidate the Commission's order on this ground is, in effect, to reject the ordinary procedures of notice-and-comment rulemaking. Informal rulemaking does not necessarily involve either the creation of a record sufficient to withstand review under a substantial evidence standard or findings of the kind most susceptible to judicial review. See K. Davis, Administrative Law of the Seventies, § 29.-01-6 (1976).
The thesis of the majority is untenable in light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 435 U.S. 519, 98 S.Ct. 1197, 55 L.Ed.2d 460 (1978). There, addressing the imposition of procedural safeguards not mandated by statute, the Supreme Court stated:
this sort of review fundamentally misconceives the nature of the standard for judicial review of an agency rule. . . . If the agency is compelled to support the rule which it ultimately adopts with the type of record produced only after a full adjudicatory hearing, it simply will have no choice but to conduct a full adjudicatory hearing prior to promulgating every rule.
Id. at 547-48, 98 S.Ct. at 1214.
Of course, a threshold issue of reviewability arises whenever appellate examination of an agency order is sought. On the issue of reviewability the court will consider the nature of the record upon which the rule in question was promulgated. Thus, as this court has stated, "(r)ecent cases have emphasized that the 'determining factor' in connection with the reviewability of Commission orders is . . . whether the record is sufficient to allow meaningful review." American Public Gas Co. v. FPC, 178 U.S.App.D.C. 217, 220, 546 F.2d 983, 986 (1976). Although review does encompass an inquiry "into the factual predicate for the rule, i. e., the existence or non-existence of the condition advanced as the basis for the rule", Id. at 221, 546 F.2d at 987, the inquiry, as its phrasing indicates, will be satisfied by less than the substantial evidence required in a record in a formal adjudication under the APA. Nevertheless, the court today combines the jurisdictional provision of the Natural Gas Act with language in earlier opinions addressing the initial question of whether an order is reviewable at all, and imposes an obligation on the Commission to support with substantial evidence its orders issued pursuant to informal rulemaking.
The accounting rules prescribed in the Commission's orders withstand appellate scrutiny under the correct standard of review, testing only whether they are arbitrary and capricious. Although the Natural Gas Act requires that the Commission establish "just and reasonable" rates, see 15 U.S.C. § 717c(a) (1976), it allows the Commission great latitude in reaching that result. See Permian Basin Rate Cases, 390 U.S. 747, 776-77, 88 S.Ct. 1344, 20 L.Ed.2d 312 (1967); FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co., 320 U.S. 591, 602, 64 S.Ct. 281, 88 L.Ed. 333 (1943). Here, the Commission's orders involved a rational exercise of its regulatory authority, well within its administrative discretion. I see no reason to fault the Commission's conclusion that
The adoption of normalization of income taxes for rate purposes will contribute to the health of the electric and natural gas industries by increasing cash flow and by reducing external financing requirements. In addition, normalization will contribute to the financial stability of companies and improve fixed charge coverages.
(J.A.340)
The validity and utility of the challenged accounting rules in the Commission's work of determining just and reasonable rates will only be shown in case-by-case ratemaking proceedings. Accordingly, as the Commission said in Order No. 530, it
contemplates that in each rate proceeding, where an applicant utility (electric or gas) seeks to avail itself of these normalization procedures, it shall present a factual showing appropriate to sustain its claim; and that any entity opposing the requested procedures shall present a factual showing appropriate to sustain its counterclaim. It is contemplated that these showings shall be in the nature of an obligation of coming forward with evidence to support the respective claims advanced. The Commission's ultimate findings and conclusions on these and all other questions shall reflect the substantial evidence rule of the Federal Power Act and Natural Gas Act.
(J.A.341)
It is certainly not inevitable that normalization will lead to the inflation of any utility's rate base or a return to investors on capital that they did not contribute to the utility. Consequently, the imposition of a substantial evidence standard of review is premature until the results of those rate adjudications are before an appellate court. At that time, the results of the ratemaking, but not the rules under which it was conducted, must be supported by substantial evidence. "Under the statutory standard of 'just and reasonable' it is the result reached not the method employed which is controlling." FPC v. Hope Natural Gas Co., supra, 320 U.S. at 602, 64 S.Ct. at 287.
The Commission decided to defer consideration of the potential anticompetitive consequences of normalization until individual ratemaking proceedings are conducted. The majority states that this procedure lacks a rational basis. Yet even the petitioner acknowledges that the potential anticompetitive "price squeeze" to which it alludes would arise only under certain state regulatory regimes. (Pet.Br. at 53) And extreme deference is owed to the Commission in its choice of administrative procedures. See Alabama-Tennessee Natural Gas Co. v. FPC, 359 F.2d 318 (5th Cir.), Cert. denied, 385 U.S. 847, 87 S.Ct. 69, 17 L.Ed.2d 78 (1966). The Commission's decision to delay consideration of a potential problem in the coordination of state and federal regulatory programs until the program actually arises is self-explanatory, an example of administrative economy. The lack of an articulated justification for this choice of regulatory procedures is not ground for a remand unless such a decision in notice-and-comment rulemaking must be supported by substantial evidence on a record created in proceedings far more extensive than those mandated by the APA. This indirect imposition of additional procedural requirements, beyond those that the APA imposes, is not permissible. See Vermont Yankee Power Co. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, supra.
CONCLUSION
The choice between normalization and flow-through is for the Commission. If it selects its policy in notice-and-comment rulemaking, this court's review of that choice is limited to determining whether that choice was rational. This court is not authorized to reject the Commission's reasoning because the court does not agree with it or thinks better explanations might have been made. Nor can the court substitute its policies for those of the Commission. In my opinion the record here is sufficient to show that the Commission's choice was rational. When the Commission applies its rules in ratemaking, the Commission and the court will require that substantial evidence support the results reached in those proceedings. Because the court today prematurely demands a record more elaborate than that required by the statute, I respectfully dissent.