San Pablo Bay Pipeline Co. LLC v. Public Utilities Commission

221 Cal. App. 4th 1436, 165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 389, 2013 WL 6488287, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 992
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 2013
DocketF064501
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 221 Cal. App. 4th 1436 (San Pablo Bay Pipeline Co. LLC v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Pablo Bay Pipeline Co. LLC v. Public Utilities Commission, 221 Cal. App. 4th 1436, 165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 389, 2013 WL 6488287, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 992 (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

*1438 Opinion

FRANSON, J.

Subsidiaries of Shell Petroleum Inc. that own and operate a crude oil pipeline filed this original writ proceeding to challenge a decision by California’s Public Utilities Commission (the Commission or PUC) concerning the refund of a portion of the fees the subsidiaries collected from Chevron, Tesoro and Valero for transporting oil through the pipeline. The issue before this court is whether the Commission erroneously included privately owned truck racks and storage tanks in the pipeline assets subject to regulation as a public utility. 1

We conclude the Commission properly interpreted its earlier decision that held the Shell Petroleum subsidiaries had dedicated the pipeline to public use. That decision addressed the pipeline as a whole and did not include dedication findings on an asset-by-asset dedication basis and did not explicitly mention the truck racks and storage tanks. Nonetheless, the Commission’s interpretation that those assets were covered by its dedication decision was consistent with the broad statutory definition of “pipe line” (Pub. Util. Code, § 227) and the axiom that the “greater contains the less” (Civ. Code, § 3536).

Therefore, the Commission’s decisions are confirmed.

FACTS

The Parties

The proceedings before this court began with- a petition for writ of review filed by Shell subsidiaries San Pablo Pipeline Company LLC (Pipeline Company) and its affiliate, Shell Trading (US) Company (Shell Trading). For purposes of this opinion, Pipeline Company and Shell Trading are collectively referred to as “petitioners.”

The Commission is the sole respondent. It is the California administrative agency with the statutory authority to supervise and regulate public utilities and to do all things that are necessary and convenient in the exercise of that power and jurisdiction. (Pub. Util. Code, § 701.) The Commission issued the decisions challenged in this writ proceeding.

The three real parties in interest are (1) Chevron Products Company (Chevron); (2) Tesoro Refining and Marketing Company (Tesoro); and (3) *1439 Valero Marketing and Supply Company (Valero). Their “interest" is in recovering part of the money they paid to the Shell affiliates to have crude oil shipped by pipeline from Chevron’s oil production fields near Bakersfield to refineries operated by Tesoro and Valero in the San Francisco Bay Area. The three real parties in interest are collectively referred to as “shippers” in this opinion.

The Shell Group

Royal Dutch Shell pic is the ultimate parent company of the entities comprising the Shell group, which includes the intermediary corporation Shell Petroleum Inc. and petitioners Pipeline Company and Shell Trading.

Both petitioners, through the various layers of corporate organization, are subsidiaries of Shell Petroleum Inc. The intermediary entities between Shell Petroleum Inc. and Pipeline Company include Equilon Enterprises LLC, which does business as Shell Oil Products US (Shell Products). Shell Products is relevant because, when Chevron initiated proceedings before the Commission, Shell Products owned the pipeline that is the subject of this litigation. Currently, Shell Products is a parent company of the pipeline’s present owner, Pipeline Company.

The Pipeline

The pipeline is a 265-mile 20-inch heated crude oil pipeline running from oilfields in Kern County to the San Francisco Bay Area (SJV Pipeline). The SJV Pipeline includes gathering systems that collect oil from production fields and connect into trunk lines. Trucks also deliver crude oil to the SJV Pipeline. For instance, San Ardo crude oil is brought to the Coalinga station by truck, unloaded and then blended with the San Joaquin Valley heavy crude that is transported by the SJV Pipeline. Similarly, the Bakersfield tank farm collects San Joaquin Valley heavy crude delivered by truck. 2 The SJV Pipeline’s facilities also include breakout and storage tanks, which are used to manage deliveries and maintain efficient levels of flow.

The SJV Pipeline transports crude oil to three refineries in the Bay Area: (1) the Shell refinery in Martinez, California; (2) the Tesoro Golden Eagle refinery in Martinez, California; and (3) and the Valero refinery in Benicia, California. The fact that the SJV Pipeline is heated is important because San Joaquin Valley heavy crude is thick (i.e., has a high viscosity) and can be transported efficiently only in a heated pipeline.

*1440 The history of the SJV Pipeline began in the late 1950’s or early 1960’s when Tidewater Oil Company built it to transport crude oil from the Kern River area to Tidewater’s refinery in the Bay Area.

Subsequently, the SJV Pipeline was acquired by Texaco, Inc. In 1986, the State of California and the City of Long Beach filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles County that alleged that Texaco was operating the SJV Pipeline as a common carrier. The basic thrust of the complaint was that buy-sell agreements used by Texaco were a sham designed to evade Commission regulation and that Texaco, by providing transportation services through the buy-sell agreements, had dedicated the SJV Pipeline to public use. 3

In 1994, the Second Appellate District of the Court of Appeal issued an unpublished opinion in State of California v. Chevron Corp, holding that the SJV Pipeline was operated as a private enterprise and was not a common carrier subject to Commission regulation.

In 1998, ownership of the SJV Pipeline changed when Texaco and Shell Oil Company formed Equilon Enterprises LLC (i.e., Shell Products) as a joint venture. The joint venture’s assets included the SJV Pipeline and a refinery in Martinez, California, that Shell Oil Company contributed.

In 2001, Chevron wanted to acquire Texaco and sought regulatory approval of the acquisition. Chevron was permitted to retain Texaco’s ownership rights of crude oil production in the San Joaquin Valley, but was not allowed to keep Texaco’s interest in the SJV Pipeline. As a result, Texaco sold its interests in the pipeline to Shell Oil Company. As part of the sale, a contract was entered that required Shell Oil Company to purchase crude oil from Texaco at the production fields and sell crude oil to Texaco at a delivery point in the San Francisco Bay Area. Chevron, as Texaco’s successor, obtained these contractual rights and used them to satisfy its obligations to deliver crude oil to refineries in the Bay Area.

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

In December 2005, Chevron’s dissatisfaction with the contractual arrangements under which it had access to the SJV Pipeline led Chevron to file a complaint with the Commission. Chevron asked the Commission to find the *1441 SJV Pipeline was a public utility and exercise jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 Cal. App. 4th 1436, 165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 389, 2013 WL 6488287, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-pablo-bay-pipeline-co-llc-v-public-utilities-commission-calctapp-2013.