Public Utility Commission v. Allcomm Long Distance, Inc.

902 S.W.2d 662, 1995 WL 366317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 1995
Docket03-94-00408-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 902 S.W.2d 662 (Public Utility Commission v. Allcomm Long Distance, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Utility Commission v. Allcomm Long Distance, Inc., 902 S.W.2d 662, 1995 WL 366317 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

KIDD, Justice.

Appellee Allcomm Long Distance, Inc. (“Allcomm”) filed suit against appellants Southwestern Bell Telephone Company (“Southwestern Bell”) and the Public Utility Commission (the “Commission”), seeking a declaration that the Commission’s final order in Docket Number 10127 (the “Order”) was void. Allcomm also sought an injunction prohibiting its enforcement. The trial court granted Allcomm’s declaratory relief and temporary injunction. Southwestern Bell and the Commission appeal, alleging that the Order was not void and that the court lacked *664 jurisdiction to hear AUcomm’s suit. We will reverse the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Local exchange companies (“LECs”), such as Southwestern Bell, provide a telecommunications service referred to as “access service” to interexchange carriers (“IXCs”), such as AT & T, MCI, and Sprint. Allcomm is one of approximately three hundred IXCs registered in Texas that handle the routing of calls exchanged between long distance areas.

Pursuant to the AT & T divestiture, Southwestern Bell is not permitted to handle long distance telephone calls. The access service LECs like Southwestern Bell provide, however, is necessary for the origination and termination of long distance calls. Access service involves the IXCs’ use of the LECs’ local exchange telephone networks to connect long distance calls. Both intrastate and interstate calls can cross long distance boundaries. 2 For example, a call may originate in Austin, requiring the access service of a LEC in Austin, and be transported long distance by an IXC to Dallas, where the access service of another LEC is needed to terminate the call.

Access service charges are regulated at the federal level by the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) and at the state level by the Commission. The FCC has regulatory jurisdiction over all interstate telecommunications, while the Commission has regulatory jurisdiction over all intrastate telecommunications. 3 The result is two different rate and tariff structures. The FCC-approved access service tariff for interstate calls averages 3.1 cents per minute of use. This is the amount that an LEC like Southwestern Bell is permitted to charge an IXC like Allcomm for the access service necessary to originate a call that terminates in a different state or to terminate a call that originates in a different state. For example, on an interstate call originating in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and terminating in Austin, Texas, the LEC in each city is permitted to charge the IXC 3.1 cents for each minute of the call.

In contrast, the Commission-approved access service tariff for intrastate calls averages 6.9 cents per minute of use, more than double the interstate rate. The Commission has intentionally set intrastate access-service tariffs above cost to assist the LECs in making basic telephone service more affordable for all customers. For an intrastate call from Dallas to Austin, for example, the LEC at each end of the call charges the IXC 6.9 cents for each minute of the call. In the example above, the LEC bills and the IXC pays the access service tariffs for both origination and termination of the call, for a total of 13.8 cents per minute.

In certain instances, the LECs are unable to determine whether an incoming call originated in Texas. Likewise, in certain instances the LECs are unable to determine whether an outgoing call is destined for a point of termination in Texas or in another state. LECs thus have experienced some difficulty in determining whether to apply the FCC’s interstate tariff or the Commission’s intrastate tariff. IXCs, however, are able to capture the data necessary to establish whether calls are interstate or intrastate. Consequently, both the FCC and the Commission require IXCs to “self-report” the percentage of their calls that are interstate through a figure called the “Percent Interstate Usage (PIU).” 4 Due to the significantly lower FCC access service rates for interstate calls as compared to the Commission’s access service rates for intrastate calls, IXCs are presented with an opportunity for substantial cost savings by overstating their percentage of inter *665 state calls. 5

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

To provide guidance to the LECs in proposing tariffs that ensure accurate billing, the Commission adopted Rule 23.23(d)(7). See 16 Tex.Admin.Code § 23.23(d)(7) (1995). 6 The rule’s purpose was to “give ample guidance to the industry as it proposes tariffs to further ensure accurate access billing.” 17 Tex.Reg. 2981, 2986 (1992). The rule required Southwestern Bell to file an intrastate access service tariff proposal within sixty days, and it required all other LECs to file revisions to their tariffs’ PIU provisions to mirror that of Southwestern Bell within thirty days of the proposal. The rule provided guidelines for allowing IXCs to self-report PIUs when the LECs were unable to determine the location of the access service used, but did not specify a method for monitoring and auditing the self-reported PIUs.

Southwestern Bell proposed a tariff that was docketed as a contested case before the Commission under Docket Number 10127. Direct notice was sent to all IXCs registered with the Commission and all LECs in Texas, and notice of the hearing was published in the Texas Register. Allcomm was given notice of the hearing, but chose not to participate. 7 The parties to the contested case hearing entered a non-unanimous stipulation 8 resolving disputed issues, and the Commission approved this stipulation in its Order.

The cornerstone of the stipulation and the Order was the creation of two industry committees “to administer uniform and nondiscriminatory PIU reporting requirements and audit procedures: (1) a PIU Committee and (2) an Audit Committee.” All LECs and IXCs could participate as members of the PIU Committee. All LECs except those affiliated with an IXC could participate as members of the Audit Committee. The PIU Committee and the Audit Committee perform separately defined duties to accomplish the auditing of the IXCs’ PIU reporting.

Although it had not participated in the contested case hearing, Allcomm filed suit in district court, alleging that the Order was void as an unauthorized delegation of regulatory power and responsibility by the Commission to private entities under the Public Utility Regulatory Act of 1996, 74th Leg., R.S., ch. 9, Tex.Sess.Law Serv. 31 (West) (hereinafter “PURA”). 9 Allcomm sought a *666 declaratory judgment that the Order was void and an injunction prohibiting its enforcement. Allcomm conceded that it participated in neither the making of Rule 23.23 nor the hearing for Docket Number 10127, and that it filed no motion for rehearing or suit for judicial review of the Order before the Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
902 S.W.2d 662, 1995 WL 366317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-utility-commission-v-allcomm-long-distance-inc-texapp-1995.