RAM Broadcasting of Colorado, Inc. v. Public Utilities Commission

702 P.2d 746, 1985 Colo. LEXIS 468, 1985 WL 1083639
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 8, 1985
Docket84SA225
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 702 P.2d 746 (RAM Broadcasting of Colorado, Inc. v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RAM Broadcasting of Colorado, Inc. v. Public Utilities Commission, 702 P.2d 746, 1985 Colo. LEXIS 468, 1985 WL 1083639 (Colo. 1985).

Opinion

DUBOFSKY, Justice.

RAM Broadcasting of Colorado, Inc. (RAM) appeals a Denver district court order affirming the denial by the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) of RAM’s application for a certificate of public convenience and necessity 1 to operate a one-way interconnected paging service 2 in the Colorado Springs and Pueblo metropolitan areas, and in a wide area extending along the 1-25 corridor from Denver to Pueblo. We affirm.

RAM filed its application with the PUC in May 1980, asserting that there was an unmet heed for its paging services in Pueblo and Colorado Springs, and along the 1-25 corridor. Contact-Colorado Springs, Inc. (Contact), 3 a radio common carrier that operates one-way paging services in Colorado Springs, filed the only protest to RAM’s application. Contact maintained that it and other existing carriers could meet any need for interconnected paging services in the area outlined in RAM’s application. After several postponements, the hearing on RAM’s application began September 28, 1981, and continued intermittently until March 9, 1982. In addition to RAM corporate witnesses who testified that the company had the financial and engineering ability to provide the’ services proposed in its application, RAM presented sixty-six public witnesses who testified about the inadequacy of existing paging service and their need for the services proposed by RAM.

In the past, all one-way paging systems in Colorado have been “tone-only,” which gives a paging customer the limited information available from a one- or two-tone signal,, or “tone-voice,” which allows the paging customer to receive a short verbal message in addition to the tone signal. RAM proposed to offer its customers the new technology of a “digital” paging system, allowing the paging customer to receive on a pager with a lighted window a ten-digit display, typically a telephone number and a three-digit coded message. RAM’s public witnesses expressed their desire for digital paging and their dissatisfaction with certain inherent drawbacks in tone-only and tone-voice paging, and complained of the inadequacy of paging services presently available in Colorado Springs and Pueblo and along the 1-25 corridor from Denver to Pueblo. Contact presented testimony that Contact and Radio Contact Corporation were supplying or would soon *749 supply digital display paging in Pueblo, Colorado Springs, and the area in between.

The hearing examiner recommended that the PUC deny all portions of RAM’s application. RAM filed exceptions to the recommended decision, and the PUC denied the exceptions, adopting the hearing examiner’s recommended decision in full. RAM requested review of the PUC decision in Denver district court under section 40-6-115, 17 C.R.S. (1984), which provides statutory authority for review of PUC decisions under a writ of certiorari. The district court affirmed the PUC’s decision in all respects.

RAM now appeals the district court decision, maintaining that Contact did not have standing to protest any portion of RAM’s application other than the request for authority to operate in Colorado Springs and that the PUC acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying RAM’s application. Because the resolution of the standing question affects the rest of the case, we address that issue first.

I.

RAM objected to Contact’s participation throughout the proceedings except to the extent that Contact protested RAM’s request for authority to operate in Colorado Springs. RAM asserts that Contact had no standing to protest the other portions of RAM’s application because Contact operated only in Colorado Springs and therefore had no interest that could be affected by RAM’s application to operate in Pueblo or in a wide area along the Front Range. In support of its contention, RAM quotes the Colorado rule on standing first enunciated in Wimberly v. Ettenberg, 194 Colo. 163, 168, 570 P.2d 535, 539 (1977). Standing to pursue a lawsuit in Colorado depends upon whether the plaintiff has suffered an actual injury and whether the injury suffered is to a legally protected or cognizable interest. Id.; Denver Center for the Performing Arts v. Briggs, 696 P.2d 299, 304 (Colo. 1985); Marco Lounge, Inc. v. City of Federal Heights, 625 P.2d 982 (Colo.1981); Cloverleaf Kennel Club, Inc. v. Colorado Racing Commission, 620 P.2d 1051 (Colo.1980). However, standing to participate in a PUC proceeding, delineated by statute and rule, differs from standing to bring a lawsuit.

Section 40-6-109, 17 C.R.S. (1984), provides that in hearings before the PUC,

such persons, firms, or corporations as the commission may allow to intervene, and such persons, firms, or corporations as will be interested in or affected by any rule or order that may be made by the commission in such proceeding, and who shall become parties to the proceeding, shall be entitled to be heard, examine and cross-examine witnesses, and introduce evidence.

This provision creates two classes that may participate in PUC proceedings: those who may intervene as of right and those whom the PUC permits to intervene. DeLue v. Public Utilities Commission, 169 Colo. 159, 454 P.2d 939, cert. denied, 396 U.S. 956, 90 S.Ct. 428, 24 L.Ed.2d 421 (1969). Under the statute, the PUC has promulgated rule 7A.2., 4 C.C.R. 723-1 (1980), limiting persons whom it will permit to intervene to those having “a substantial personal interest in the subject matter of the proceedings [whose] intervention will not unduly broaden the issues.”

RAM filed a single application with the PUC for a certificate of public convenience and necessity that would extend to the three areas designated in its application. RAM’s engineering consultant testified that he would have to rework completely the engineering for the proposed paging system if only a portion of RAM’s application were granted, implying that the application was for a single, extensive paging system. Contact’s interest would be affected by a PUC grant of RAM’s application, because a grant would allow additional competition for the paging business in Colorado Springs. Therefore, Contact was an intervenor as of right in the entire hearing held on RAM’s application. Even if Contact were not an intervenor as of right, however, the PUC granted Contact permission to participate in the proceeding, and *750 Contact was entitled to participate as a permissive intervenor throughout the hearing under the statute and the rule promulgated by the PUC. We conclude that Contact had standing to protest all portions of RAM’s application and to participate in the entire hearing.

II. .

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702 P.2d 746, 1985 Colo. LEXIS 468, 1985 WL 1083639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ram-broadcasting-of-colorado-inc-v-public-utilities-commission-colo-1985.