Standish Telephone Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

499 A.2d 458, 1985 Me. LEXIS 837
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 11, 1985
StatusPublished

This text of 499 A.2d 458 (Standish Telephone Co. v. Public Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standish Telephone Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 499 A.2d 458, 1985 Me. LEXIS 837 (Me. 1985).

Opinion

WERNICK, Active Retired Justice.

On October 27, 1983, Saco River Communications Corporation1 (Saco River), on behalf ■ of its subsidiary corporate division Communications Design, instituted a proceeding before the Public Utilities Commission (Commission). Saco River asked that, pursuant to 35 M.R.S.A. §§ 2301 and 2302 (Supp.1984), respectively, the Commission authorize Communications Design to act as a telephone company and grant to it, as an authorized telephone company, a certificate of public convenience and necessity allowing it to provide discounted intrastate long distance telephone service anywhere in Maine by the resale of tariffed services purchased from other telephone companies.2

The Commission granted the requested certificate of public convenience and necessity, after having found that the proof met the three-pronged test set out in Re Pine Tree Tel. and Tel., Application for Public Convenience and Necessity, No. 82-49, slip op. at 2 (Me.P.U.C. Oct. 14, 1982). That test requires a showing that (1) public need for the proposed service exists; (2) the applicant has the technical ability to provide the service; and (3) the applicant possesses adequate financial resources to complete the project.

The Commission permitted several persons to intervene in the proceeding.3 [460]*460Standish Telephone Company (Standish) and China Telephone Company (China) are the only participants in the proceeding who have seen fit to appeal the January 3, 1985 Order of the Commission authorizing Communications Design, operating as a telephone company, to provide discounted intrastate long distance telephone service anywhere in Maine.4

In their appeal, Standish and China make two basic contentions: first, the standard the Commission used in reaching its conclusions led the Commission to commit an error of law because, the argument goes, it enabled the Commission to authorize another public utility to compete with Standish and China in their service markets without the Commission’s having made a prior finding that the existing service of Standish and China was inadequate; and, second, the Commission was guilty of an abuse of discretion in (a) allowing the new service upon an insufficient showing of public need for it and (b) ignoring, or inadequately considering, the competitional effects of the new service upon the existing independent telephone companies.

We reject the contentions and affirm the Order of the Commission.

Factual Background

The opportunity to offer discounted intrastate long distance telephone service in Maine arises by reason of certain services currently provided under the tariffs of the New England Telephone Company and the various independent telephone companies operating in Maine. In addition to the intrastate long distance service that small volume long distance customers use, known as Message Toll Service (MTS), in which the caller pays a per minute fee with a higher cost for the first minute of the call, the current tariffs provide Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS) and Foreign Exchange (FX) lines. These latter are lesser expense long distance services that are of economic benefit to large volume users. WATS allows a customer to make any intrastate long distance call without incurring MTS charges, but it requires a substantial initial payment per month in addition to its reduced per minute fee. For a fixed monthly charge, FX provides a direct line from the customer’s phone to a central exchange other than the one serving the area where the customer is located. For example, a Portland customer with an FX line to Bangor can call Brewer (a city in the Bangor exchange area) on an FX line without incurring any MTS charges.

Under Saco River’s proposal, Communications Design would provide customers with a phone number in their local exchange as well as an identification number. The customer would first dial the local number, then his identification number and then the intrastate long distance number he wished to reach. A Communications Design switch would send the call over WATS and FX lines leased by Communications Design from New England Telephone and the independent phone companies. Communications Design would buy WATS and FX in bulk and resell those services to its customers. This process would give the customers of Communications Design lower cost intrastate long distance service in return for their putting up with the inconvenience of dialing many extra numbers and sometimes waiting for one of Communications Design’s heavily used discount lines to become available.5

[461]*461In a previous proceeding, In Re New England Tel. and Tel. Co., No. 82-124, slip op. at 80-86 (Me.P.U.C. April 26, 1983), the Commission eliminated tariff restrictions on the reselling of WATS and FX lines.6 At that time, the Commission gave notice that it would be receptive to proposals for restructuring MTS, WATS and FX rates, to have them move more closely towards being cost-based and thus to tend to shut off opportunity for profit-making in the resale of WATS and FX to small volume callers. The telephone companies have not yet applied for a restructuring of tariffs, however, and so the current tariffs continue to encourage Communications Design’s venture.

1.

The principal contention of Standish and China is that, in relying on the three-part test of Re Pine Tree Tel. & Tel., supra, the Commission fell into the error of failing to find one element that, it is argued, is a prerequisite for authorizing a competing utility to enter the service market of an existing utility: that existing service is inadequate.

The contention fails. It reflects a misconception of the meaning of the finding that a public need exists for a proposed type of service — a misconception that arises, no doubt, from a failure to recognize an ambiguity lurking in the phrase “inadequacy of existing service”.

Analysis of our decision in In Re Lefebvre, 343 A.2d 204 (Me.1975) makes the ambiguity apparent. In Lefebvre the existing service was held “inadequate” in two aspects (1) it did not provide at all the “same day and Saturday service” for which there was a public need (p. 206); and (2) such service as was in fact being provided was being provided in a deficient manner, in that the “over-night service was ... slow and there were some missed pickups” (pp. 206-7). Our decision in In Re Powell, 358 A.2d 522 (Me.1976) suggests the same critical distinction. In Powell, however, unlike Lefebvre, the existing service was being well provided. Its inadequacy was that it failed to provide an additional particular service for which a public need existed: “same-day service”. Powell, at 527.

Lefebvre and Powell thus make plain that, even if such service as is actually being provided is being provided well, it is nevertheless inadequate if it is failing to provide a particular service for which there is a public need. This is the square decision in Powell, where the only inadequacy of the existing carrier’s service was its failure to provide publicly needed “same-[462]

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Related

In Re Powell
358 A.2d 522 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1976)
In Re Lefebvre
343 A.2d 204 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1975)

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499 A.2d 458, 1985 Me. LEXIS 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standish-telephone-co-v-public-utilities-commission-me-1985.