REGULATORY COM'N OF ALASKA v. Tesoro Alaska Co.

178 P.3d 1159, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 36, 2008 WL 756741
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2008
DocketS-12352, S-12391
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 P.3d 1159 (REGULATORY COM'N OF ALASKA v. Tesoro Alaska Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
REGULATORY COM'N OF ALASKA v. Tesoro Alaska Co., 178 P.3d 1159, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 36, 2008 WL 756741 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 2003 Tesoro Alaska Company and Williams Alaska Petroleum, Inc., protested the 1986-1996 rates charged by the owners of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System. The Regulatory Commission of Alaska denied their protest as untimely. Tesoro and Williams appealed to the superior court, which remanded the case for further proceedings. This court granted a petition for review. We reverse the order of the superi- or court and direct that the decision of the Regulatory Commission be affirmed.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) began operation in 1977. In 1986, after a prolonged dispute about the rates charged by the owners of TAPS (collectively “the Carriers”), the State of Alaska and the Carriers submitted' an Intrastate Settlement Agreement (hereinafter the “Settlement”) to the Alaska Public Utilities Commission 1 for approval. 2 The Settlement set rates from the beginning of the pipeline through 1986. With respect to future rates, the Settlement set rate ceilings, but parties would still be able to protest rates prospectively. Under the Settlement, rates and rate ceilings were calculated using a methodology unique to TAPS, called the TAPS Settlement Methodology, or TSM.

The Commission opened Docket P-86-2 in 1986 to consider the Settlement. In Order P-86-2(14) (“Order 14”), the Commission approved the Settlement as to the rates prior to 1986. Order 14 emphasized the fact that the “economically impacted parties ... all of which are knowledgeable and sophisticated *1162 and have sufficient resources to make their views known to the Commission and, further, have all had notice and an opportunity to be heard, are either silent or actively support the imposition of the settlement rates.” As shippers, Tesoro and Williams 3 were among the economically impacted parties who actively supported the Settlement. Since there were no pending objections by economically impacted parties for “periods prior to July 11, 1986,” the Commission approved the rates contained in the Settlement for that period only.

One shipper, Petro Star, protested the Settlement rates as of July 11,1986. Because of this protest, the Commission began the process of determining whether or not the rates after that time were just and reasonable. Order 14 therefore suspended the TAPS rates as of July 11,1986. 4

The Commission’s investigation of the rates continued until 1991, at which time Petro Star and the Carriers submitted a settlement (“the Petro Star Settlement”) to the Commission for approval. 5 The Commission issued P-86-2(41) (“Order 41”) in 1993 addressing the Petro Star Settlement and the Intrastate Settlement. Order 41 accepted the Petro Star Settlement. 6 It then found that since Petro Star had settled, there was no longer “an economically impacted party contesting the [Intrastate] settlement.” Order 41 noted that 3 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 48.090(d)(2) enables the Commission to terminate a proceeding if all of the parties stipulate to such a termination, provided that the Commission did “not find that the public interest requires the proceeding to be continued.” The Commission, referring to its earlier order (Order 14), found that the economically impacted entities, including shippers, should be “deemed ... to be knowledgeable and sophisticated and in possession of sufficient resources to make their views known to the Commission.” It also noted that they “had notice and an opportunity to be heard.” Since no economically impacted entity was protesting the rates that had been calculated using TSM since Order 14, Order 41 held that “the public interest [did] not require the proceeding to be continued.” It therefore accepted the Settlement. Order 41 nonetheless continued the suspension of the rates for 1986-1993 in order to determine “that those filed rates were correctly calculated under TSM.”

After Order 41 was issued in 1993, Tesoro and Williams did not file a motion for reconsideration and did not protest that the rates calculated under TSM for 1986-1993 were unjust or unreasonable. Tesoro and Williams 7 also did not protest the rates for 1994, 1995, or 1996. 8 In late 1996, Tesoro protested the rates filed by the carriers for 1997. The Commission promptly suspended the 1997 rates and embarked upon an investigation of whether the rates were just and reasonable. In November 2002 the Commission issued P-97-004(151) (“Order 151”), which held that the rates set by the Carriers from 1997-2000 were not just and reasonable and set new rates that were much lower than those filed by the Carriers. Order 151 also noted that the Carriers’ rates through 1997 potentially exceeded their reasonable costs of providing service by up to 9.9 billion dollars. 9

After issuing Order 151, the Commission finally turned its attention to the question of *1163 whether the rates filed for 1986-1996 were correctly calculated under TSM. It scheduled a prehearing conference in March 2003 “to determine whether any party still believed it necessary to verify TSM calculations and inputs for 1986-1996.” A few days before the hearing, Tesoro filed a petition to intervene and a protest of the 1986-1996 rates. Williams moved to intervene shortly thereafter. Tesoro and Williams asked the Commission to adjudicate whether the rates were just and reasonable. 10 The Commission in Order 68 declined to expand the scope of its investigation to look at whether the 1986-1996 rates were just and reasonable and found that the Shippers’ petition to intervene was not timely.

The Shippers appealed to the superior court. The. court, in an order dated June 7, 2006, remanded the matter for further proceedings and instructed the Commission to determine if it “properly acted in excluding appellants as economically interested parties,” and emphasized that it should “consider each year at issue separately.” It also held that the Commission should determine the just and reasonable rates for “any years in which the appellants were improperly excluded,” and for those years from which the appellants were properly excluded, it “must still determine whether the rates at issue were ‘correctly calculated’ ” under TSM. The Commission, the Carriers, and the State of Alaska filed a petition for review of the superior court order. Williams and Tesoro filed a cross-petition. Both were granted, with instructions for each side to file a single, consolidated brief. 11

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

When reviewing an order of a superi- or court acting as a court of appeal in an administrative agency proceeding, we independently review the agency decision. 12

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Bluebook (online)
178 P.3d 1159, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 36, 2008 WL 756741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regulatory-comn-of-alaska-v-tesoro-alaska-co-alaska-2008.