Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Co.

5 S.W.3d 484, 68 Ark. App. 148, 1999 Ark. App. LEXIS 787
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 1, 1999
DocketCA 98-881
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 5 S.W.3d 484 (Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Co., 5 S.W.3d 484, 68 Ark. App. 148, 1999 Ark. App. LEXIS 787 (Ark. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Josephine Linker Hart, Judge.

In this appeal, we review the Arkansas Public Service Commission’s interpretation of a part of Act 77 of 1997, the Telecommunications Regulatory Reform Act of 1997, codified at Ark. Code Ann. §§ 23-17-401— 412 (Supp. 1997). Twenty-six incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs), sixteen of which are the appellants herein, filed a motion to have the Commission vacate Order No. 7 of Docket No. 93-142-U. The Commission refused and assessed civil sanctions against the appellants for knowingly violating Act 77 and other Commission orders. We find no error and affirm.

Order No. 7 approved a joint petition filed by the general staff of the Arkansas Public Service Commission (Staff) and a number of local exchange carriers, requesting that the Commission approve a plan to reduce intraLATA toll rates.1 In Order No. 7, the Commission approved a reduction in intraLATA toll rates of approximately $10 million and designated that $4.8 million of that amount be used to reduce the carrier common line (CCL) access charges paid by the interexchange carriers (IXCs) and other non-LECs to the LECs. The $4.8 million reduction in CCL charges approved in Order No. 7 was implemented by the LECs through a credit on the bills issued to the IXCs by the Administrator of the Arkansas Intrastate Carrier Common Line Pool (AICCLP).

The Telecommunications Regulatory Reform Act, Act 77, allowed incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs) to elect alternative regulation and exempted them from a number of statutory requirements, including the authority of the Commission to fix intraLATA toll rates, Ark. Code Ann. § 23-3-114. Relying on Act 77 and Commission Order No. 9 entered in separate Commission Docket No. 96-428-U2, the appellants that were in attendance at the October 6, 1997, Steering Committee Meeting of the Arkansas IntraLATA Toll Pool, instructed AICCLP Administrator Wayne Gatlin to remove the credits from the interexchange carriers’ (IXCs’) bills beginning October 1997. Twenty days later, the appellants filed a petition with the Commission to vacate Order No. 7.

In their petition to vacate, appellants claimed that the enactment of Act 77 removed the Commission’s authority to mandate uniform statewide toll rates and, therefore, there is no longer any authority or need for the AICCLP to subsidize the IXCs’ toll rates. Although Staff initially agreed that the Commission lacked the authority to enforce the $4.8 million credit after the passage of Act 77, it changed its position and argued along with several IXCs that section 4(D) of Act 77, section 23-17-404(e)(4)(D), precluded any changes in the AICCLP prior to three years after the effective date of Act 77. This section provides: “Except as provided in this paragraph, the intrastate Carrier Common Line (CCL) Pool charges shall continue as effective on December 31, 1996.” Although all the parties at the hearing agreed that this section froze the “CCL Pool charges” for the next three years, they disagreed over whether the Order No. 7 credits were included in the phrase “CCL Pool charges.” In Order No. 4, the Commission held that the $4.8 million credits are included in the phrase “CCL Pool charges” and that Act 77 freezes the level of the CCL pool charges for a period of three years.

For their first point on appeal, the appellants contend that the Commission acted unlawfully and failed to regularly pursue its authority by requiring the appellants to continue to apply the credits established by Order No. 7. They contend that the phrase “intrastate Carrier Common Line (CCL) Pool charges,” which appears in section 23-17-404(e)(4)(D), does not include the credits implemented in Order No. 7 and dispute the Commission’s holding that the phrase is plain and unambiguous.

This court’s review of appeals from the Arkansas Public Service Commission is limited to determining whether the Commission’s findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence, whether the Commission has regularly pursued its authority, and whether the order under review violated any right of the appellant under the laws or the Constitutions of the State or Arkansas or the United States. Ark. Code Ann. § 23-2-423(c)(3), (4), and (5) (1987); Bryant v. Arkansas Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 55 Ark. App. 125, 931 S.W.2d 795 (1996). In AT&T Communications of the Southwest, Inc. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission, 67 Ark. App. 177, 994 S.W.2d 494 (1999), where this court reviewed an interpretation the Commission had given to another part of Act 77, this court noted:

The first rule in considering the meaning of a statute is to construe it just as it reads, giving the words their ordinary and usually accepted meaning in common language. When a statute is ambiguous, we must give effect to the legislative intent. As a guide in ascertaining legislative intent, the appellate court examines the history of the statutes involved, as well as the contemporaneous conditions at the time of their enactment, the consequences of interpretation, and all other matters of common knowledge within the court’s jurisdiction. The interpretation given a statute by the agency charged with its execution is highly persuasive, and while not conclusive, neither should it be overturned unless it is clearly wrong.

Id. at 189-90, 994 S.W.2d at 502 (citations omitted).

The appellants and the other parties to the docket asserted at the hearing, and agreed on appeal, that the phrase “CCL Pool charges” as used in Act 77 should be interpreted in light of the Intrastate Plat Rate CCL Service Tariff (Tariff). The Tariff contains the rates and regulations that apply to the administration of the Intrastate Flat Rate (IFR) Carrier Common Line (CCL) Service and includes three pages of definitions, although it does not define the term “charges.” The third paragraph of section three of the Tariff labeled “General Description,” contains the language on which the Commission relied in holding that the term “CCL Pool charges” includes the Order No. 7 credits:

The amount of the IFR CCL charges to the carriers shall be designed to recover the aggregate intrastate CCL revenue requirement. The CCL revenue requirement may include: 1) the sum of CCL revenue requirements in the intrastate CCL revenue requirements in the intrastate jurisdiction for each LEC in accordance with the allocation procedures...; 2) the aggregate AUSF requirements of the eligible LECs as provided for in the AUSF tariff; 3) the direct expenses incurred by the AICCLP Administrator for billing and collecting the IFR CCL charge; 4) other Commission ordered charges and credits and 5) revenue requirement claims. All such amounts shall be subject to annual approval by order of the Commission. The AICCLP Administrator shall use the approved amounts until they are superseded by subsequent Commission order.

Appellants argue that the first sentence of this paragraph defines CCL charges as revenue requirements and that the components listed in the second sentence should not be included as charges because this sentence uses the word may rather than the mandatory shall. In Order No.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.3d 484, 68 Ark. App. 148, 1999 Ark. App. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-bell-telephone-co-v-arkansas-public-service-co-arkctapp-1999.