Questar Gas Co. v. Utah Public Service Commission

2001 UT 93, 34 P.3d 218, 433 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 213 P.U.R.4th 176, 2001 Utah LEXIS 176
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2001
DocketNo. 20000076
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2001 UT 93 (Questar Gas Co. v. Utah Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Questar Gas Co. v. Utah Public Service Commission, 2001 UT 93, 34 P.3d 218, 433 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 213 P.U.R.4th 176, 2001 Utah LEXIS 176 (Utah 2001).

Opinion

INTRODUCTION

HOWE, Chief Justice:

T1 Questar Gas Company ("Questar" or "the company") seeks review of the report and order issued by the Public Service Commission in docket number 98-057-12, denying Questar's application for (1) approval of an affiliate contract and (2) recovery through the company's 191 gas cost balancing account of gas processing costs incurred pursuant to that contract.

BACKGROUND

« 2 During the mid to late 1990s, the heat value (measured in "Btu's or "British thermal units") of natural gas entering the southern portion of Questar's distribution system began to decline. This decline created a significant safety hazard to the company's customers because natural gas appliances in homes and businesses can be operated safely only with gas containing a limited range of per-volume Btu values.1 The decline in Btu values was caused by an increase in the amount of carbon dioxide ("CO;") in the gas being delivered to the southern point of Questar's system, which was mixing with the other gas in its system.

T3 Questar met with the Public Service Commission ("Commission"), the Utah Division of Public Utilities ("Division"), and the Utah Committee of Consumer Services ("Committee") in January 1998 to explain this hazard and to explore ways to prevent it. Subsequent to the meeting, Questar continued to explore solutions to the problem. It decided that the quickest, surest, safest, and most economically efficient action was to remove enough CO; from the gas stream to bring it within safe heat value ranges before it entered the Company's system.

14 Questar entered into a contract with one of its affiliates to provide the removal services, which required the construction and operation of a processing plant.2 In November 1998, Questar filed an application with the Commission for approval of the contract and for authorization to include the costs incurred pursuant to it in the Company's account 813, which in turn is included in the Company's account 191 of the Uniform System of Accounts,3 or gas balancing account.4

15 The Division and the Committee opposed the application, and on December 8, 1999, the Commission denied it ("December 8 order"), concluding that Questar had not produced sufficient evidence to show the contract was prudent and that the costs could not be recovered through account 191 because they were not eligible for treatment under the "pass-through" statute, section 54-7-12@B)(d) of the Utah Code.5 The Commis[221]*221sion concluded the costs were not eligible for treatment under this statute. It held instead that the Company would have to seek relief in a general rate proceeding 6 or in an abbreviated proceeding as outlined in [Utah Department of Business Regulation v. Public Service Commission, 614 P.2d 1242 (Utah 1980) ("Wage case").

T6 Questar seeks review of the December 3 order, arguing that the Commission erred in refusing recovery of the COz; processing costs through account 191 because the Commission mistakenly tied account 191 to the pass-through statute. Questar agrees that the CO; costs do not qualify for treatment under the pass-through statute, but maintains that they are still recoverable through procedures specific to account 191. It argues that account 191 is not tied to the pass-through statute, but is instead a separate mechanism-with its own procedures-used to facilitate the transfer of certain unexpected costs on a dollar-for-dollar basis from the utility to its customer.7

ANALYSIS

T7 In reviewing whether the Commission correctly denied recovery of the Company's CO; processing costs through account 191, we must determine (1) whether, as the Commission urges, account 191 is simply an accounting tool to implement the results of a statutory pass-through proceeding, or whether the account is a separate mechanism to change rates with its own set of procedures; and (2) if the latter, whether the Commission improperly refused to follow those procedures in reviewing Questar's application.

I. ACCOUNT 191

A. Creation and Purpose

T8 The gas balancing account was approved by the Commission in the final report and order of No. 78-057-13 ("order" or "April 3 order"), and the language of this order describes its purpose and effect. In response to increasingly volatile fuel costs and a request by Mountain Fuel Company, the Commission created the account in 1979 "in order to pass through to consumers the legitimate costs of purchased gas and royalty costs" without incurring the time and expense of filing frequent rate change applications. Utah Pub. Serv. Comm'n, Rep. and Order, No. 78-057-13, at 4 (April 3, 1979).

19 A straightforward reading of the April 3 order reveals that the Commission did not intend for the balancing account to be "merely" an accounting tool, but created it as a more efficient interim rate-changing mechanism for recovering certain gas costs.8 The operation of the account was [222]*222intended to replace more frequent rate relief requests by allowing the utility to record in and recover through the account certain costs9 on a dollar-for-dollar basis without having to go through a lengthy rate- making process. This order anticipates that "rate changes [will be] made under [the account balance] proposal" and that such changes will be made pursuant to procedures that comply with statutory and regulatory requirements. Utah Pub. Serv. Comm'n, Rep. and Order, No. 78-057-13, at 5. However, the order does not tie the account to the pass-through statute, but merely states that the procedure to be followed would be "similar to that used in the current pass-through procedure." Id.

110 The Commission contends that this account has been used only in conjunction with and to implement rate changes made in a proceeding held pursuant to section 54-7-12(8)(d), the pass-through statute. Thus after finding that the CO; processing costs were not eligible for treatment under that section, the Commission concluded that Questar could not recover its costs through account 191. However, as we have just noted, the Commission, in the April 3 order, did not tie the balancing account to section 54-7-12(3)(d), but approved its creation to make rate changes pursuant to procedures that comply, with statutory and regulatory requirements, some of which are "similar to [those] used in the current pass-through procedure." Id.

' 11 In addition to the Commission's intent as outlined in the April 3 order, the Commission's approval of the use of account 191 for purposes other than those authorized in seetion 54-7-12(8)(d) shows that the account can be and has been used apart from section 54-7-12(8)(d) proceedings. In 1981, the Commission approved a stipulation between Mountain Fuel Supply Company, Wexpro Company, the Division, the Committee, and the staff of the Wyoming Public Service Commission ("Wexpro agreement") that allowed Mountain Fuel to recover certain costs through account 191 that did not qualify for treatment under the pass-through statute.

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Related

Questar Gas Com. v. Pub. Ser. Com.
2007 UT 79 (Utah Supreme Court, 2007)
In Re Questar Gas Co.
2007 UT 79 (Utah Supreme Court, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
2001 UT 93, 34 P.3d 218, 433 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 213 P.U.R.4th 176, 2001 Utah LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/questar-gas-co-v-utah-public-service-commission-utah-2001.