State ex rel. Montana Power Co. v. Department of Public Service Regulation

548 P.2d 136, 169 Mont. 99, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 455
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1975
DocketNo. 13207
StatusPublished

This text of 548 P.2d 136 (State ex rel. Montana Power Co. v. Department of Public Service Regulation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Montana Power Co. v. Department of Public Service Regulation, 548 P.2d 136, 169 Mont. 99, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 455 (Mo. 1975).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a petition for a writ of review or other appropriate writ to require the Montana Public Service Commission to grant petitioner’s motion for a temporary approval of a natural gas increase.

On March 12, 1975, Montana Power Company, hereinafter called petitioner, filed with the Montana Public Service Commission, hereinafter referred to as the Commission, a petition to increase rates and charges for electric and natural gas services and to change certain regulations concerning them. Those matters became Docket No. 6348 of the Commission.

The Commission set hearing on Docket No. 6348 for September 8, 1975, but this was cancelled and did not commence until October 20, 1975. A second phase of the hearings was set for January 12, 1976. In the meantime, the Commission scheduled “satellite hearings” in nine cities in the state.

To not be repetitious and to fully understand the factual issues involved here reference is made to this Court’s opinion dated October 17, 1975, entitled Montana Consumer Counsel, Geoffrey L. Brazier v. Public Service Commission of Montana et al. and The Montana Power Co., Mont., 541 P.2d 769. In that case this Court approved the use by the Public Service Commission of the so-called “automatic adjustment clause” as applied to the rapidly rising costs of imported Canadian gas.

Pending a decision of the Commission Docket 6348, petitioner on September 23, 1975, filed a motion for temporary approval of gas rate increases subject to rebate. This motion inter alia gave these reasons for the request:

“1. The temporary rate increase requested herein is required to, but will not completely, offset the increased cost to the Applicant of obtaining a natural gas supply to serve its con[101]*101sumers, which cost has increased drastically due to actions by the National Government of Canada.

“2. The cause for these higher gas costs is shown in Appendix ‘C\ attached hereto and incorporated herein, which contains the Orders of the Canadian Government increasing the border price. (These Orders are also contained in Applicant’s Exhibits Nos. 3, 4, 5 and 6, ‘Export Licenses’ which were filed with the Commission in this Docket on June 12, 1975). These documents show that the National Government of Canada has ordered that the border price for gas exported from Canada shall be increased from $1.00 to $1.40 per million BTU effective August 1, 1975, and to $1.60 per million BTU effective November 1, 1975.

“3. Commencing on August 1, 1975, due to these Orders of the Canadian Government, the Applicant’s average monthly cost of purchased gas and royalty increased approximately one million two hundred thousand dollars ($1,200,000). Commencing on December 1, 1975, there will be a further monthly increase of approximately six hundred thousand dollars ($600,000), for a total increase of approximately one million eight hundred thousand dollars ($1,800,000) per month. Applicant must immediately be allowed to pass through these higher costs for this gas acquired for and supplied to Montana gas consumers or it will be unable to continue making these necessary expenditures.

“4. On July 24, 1975, the Federal Power Commission issued an Order in its Docket No. CP74-187, a copy of which is attached as Appendix ‘D’ and incorporated herein. The Federal Power Commission in that Order authorized the Applicant to import natural gas from Canada at the increased border prices of $1.40 per million BTU, effective August 1, 1975, and $1.60 per million BTU, effective November 1, 1975.

“5. Applicant’s Exhibit No. 15, Revised 7/18/75 (‘Gas Utility Return’), a copy of which is attached hereto as Appendix ‘E’ and incorporated herein, shows that under present rates the Applicant would sustain a loss during the test year 1975 of [102]*102$13,031,968 due to the maximum impact of increased purchased gas cost and royalty expenses.”

This motion of September 23 was noticed for hearing October 2, 1975 and was argued on that date. The Commission on October 20 postponed a decision until October 30. On October 31, 1975, the Commission issued its order granting only a portion, 6/llths, of the amount requested. The order granted petitioner $6,510,791 as a temporary increase and denied the remainder, which in effect petitioner alleges precludes it from recovering over 5 million dollars of increased costs annually.

Petitioner alleges the denial of its request by the Commission is:

“a. Contrary to law in that it grants a flow-through (on a temporary approval basis) of only a part of the increased costs of purchased gas and royalty expenses as set forth in the Motion of September 23, 1975, Exhibit ‘A’;

“b. Contrary to law in that it precludes recovery by a flow-through, and on a temporary approval basis, of all of the increased cost of purchased gas and royalty expenses as set forth in the said Motion of September 23, 1975, Exhibit ‘A’;

“c. Contrary to law in that it defies the letter and the spirit of the 1974 Rate Order (Order #4147, dated August 30, 1974) and the decision of this Court dated October 17, 1975, in Case No. 12944, entitled Brazier v. PSC and Montana Power, as Intervenor;

“d. Contrary to law in that if the PSC has any discretion in the matter, then the discretion of the PSC has been abused by not granting the full temporary increase;

“e. Contrary to law in that this Order, regardless of other consequences, would be an illegal and advance reduction of allowable expenses in the main rate case;

“f. Contrary to law in that this Order would deprive Petitioner of its property without due process of law.”

Petitioner further alleges that unless the motion is granted in [103]*103its entirety its financial condition will be seriously jeopardized and its ability to secure Canadian gas will be endangered.

In asking for extraordinary relief from this Court, petitioner notes that a review of the Commission’s decision on the merits of Docket 6348 will take until the spring of 1976 or later if appeals are involved, and this is too late to provide the immediate and necessary relief asked for. Further, that in failing to grant the petitioner’s motion the Commission’s order is pure confiscation, for once petitioner is not allowed to collect during the intervening period, it can never collect for that period and it would suffer a disastrous revenue impairment and loss of financial ability.

On November 7, 1975, this Court issued an alternative writ to show cause and set the hearing for November 14, 1975. Motions to quash and dismiss, answers and memorandums of authority were filed by all counsel and the matter was argued November 14, 1975. Following argument this Court ordered the Commission to file with the Court a copy of its mathematical computations of amounts approved and disapproved for its order of October 31, 1975.

The issue is whether the Commission order filed October 31, 1975, is contrary to the statutory law and its interpretation by this Court, and totally disregards existing contractual commitments of petitioner, and is therefore arbitrary, unreasonable and a denial of petitioner’s right of due process.

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Bluebook (online)
548 P.2d 136, 169 Mont. 99, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-montana-power-co-v-department-of-public-service-regulation-mont-1975.