State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Nantahala Power & Light Co.

388 S.E.2d 118, 326 N.C. 190, 110 P.U.R.4th 250, 1990 N.C. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 7, 1990
Docket93PA89
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 388 S.E.2d 118 (State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Nantahala Power & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Nantahala Power & Light Co., 388 S.E.2d 118, 326 N.C. 190, 110 P.U.R.4th 250, 1990 N.C. LEXIS 12 (N.C. 1990).

Opinion

FRYE, Justice.

The issue in this case is whether the Utilities Commission may pass on to the ratepayers the benefits of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA-86) through a rulemaking procedure rather than a ratemaking procedure. The Court of Appeals held “there is no authority either in our statutes or in the case law that allows rates to be adjusted by a rulemaking process.” Utilities Commission v. Nantahala Power and Light Company, 92 N.C. App. 545, 553, 375 S.E.2d 515, 520 (1989). The Court of Appeals reversed the orders of the Utilities Commission as applied to Nantahala Power and Light Company (Nantahala). We now reverse the Court of Appeals and hold that the Commission properly ordered the affected utilities, through a rulemaking procedure, to lower their rates to reflect the savings generated by the TRA-86.

One effect of the TRA-86, which was signed by the President on 22 October 1986, was to lower corporate tax rates from 46% to 34% effective 1 July 1987. On 23 October 1986, the Commission issued Docket No. M-100, Sub 113, which was entitled Order Initiating Investigation. While the docket numbering designation given this order was that of a rulemaking action, the order itself did not specifically say that the Commission was instituting a rulemaking action. The order was provisional in nature, generally requiring the affected utilities to determine the savings generated by the TRA-86 and place this amount in a deferred account pending further orders of the Commission. In this order, the Commission noted:

This reduced tax rate when effectuated will have an immediate and favorable impact on the cost of providing the aforementioned public utility services to consumers in North Carolina. It is incumbent upon this Commission to take the appropriate action as required so as to preserve and flow through to ratepayers, as a reduction to public utility rates, any and all cost savings realized in this regard which would otherwise accrue solely to the benefit of the' companies’ stockholders.

The Commission further explained that it “opens this docket to examine and quantify the benefits to be derived by each utility ... arising from this tax reform,” in part because of the applicability *193 of the TRA-86 to all the utilities and the short period of time remaining until it became effective.

The Commission then ordered:

1. That effective January 1, 1987, the federal income tax and the related gross receipts tax components of the rates and charges of all electric, telecommunications, and natural gas distribution companies and all water and sewer companies with annual operating revenues in excess of $250,000 subject to the jurisdiction of this Commission shall be, and hereby are, ordered to be billed and collected on a provisional rate basis pending final disposition of this matter.
2. That effective January 1, 1987, each and every utility subject to the provisions of this Order shall place in a deferred account the difference between revenues billed under rates then in effect, including provisional components thereof, and revenues that would have been billed had the Commission in determining the attendant cost of service based the federal income tax component thereof on the Internal Revenue Code as now amended by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, assuming all other parameters entering into the cost of service equation are held constant.
3. That each and every utility subject to the provisions of this Order shall determine the dollar amount of the impact of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 on its annual level of income tax expense included in its North Carolina jurisdictional cost of service consistent with ordering paragraph No. 2 above and file same with the Chief Clerk of the Commission no later than November 30,1986. Said filing shall include all workpapers and a statement of all assumptions made in complying with the foregoing requirements. Further, each affected utility in conjunction with the foregoing shall file proposed rate adjustments giving effect to the reduction in its cost of service arising from the Tax Reform Act of 1986. The Commission will consider any additional information or comments any party may wish to offer.

On 10 November 1986, the Public Staff filed a motion recommending that each utility subject to the 23 October 1986 Order determine the dollar amount of impact which the TRA-86 had on it based on the test year for that utility as set in the utility’s *194 last general rate case. The Commission adopted the Public Staff’s motion in an Order Ruling On Motion issued 4 December 1986.

Nantahala filed a compliance with the Commission’s order on 15 January 1987. In that filing, Nantahala stated that it “strenuously objects to a requirement that it flow through as an (sic) reduction in its rates any decrease in federal income tax expense arising from the Tax Reform Act of 1986.” Nantahala based this objection on the fact that it was currently receiving only about an 8% rate of return while, in Nantahala’s last general rate case, the Commission authorized it to collect a 12.52% rate of return. Nantahala contended that the rates should only be adjusted when all components of the cost of service were examined rather than be adjusted based on the decrease of an isolated component of cost of service such as this tax decrease. Nantahala urged the Commission not to flow through the savings from this tax decrease unless it examined whether this decrease was offset by other items in the cost of service and whether the overall cost of service had actually decreased.

The Commission filed a final order on 20 October 1987, and this order was amended by an Order Modifying Order of October 20, 1987. The final effect of these two orders was that Nantahala and the other affected utilities had to calculate “[t]he rate reductions related to the tax savings from TRA-86” and “file only one set of tariffs in this docket decreasing rates effective January 1, 1988, to reflect the 34% federal corporate income tax rate.” Two Commissioners dissented from the order of 20 October 1987. Commissioner Tate stated that our statutes only allow rates to be set in general rate cases or in complaint cases. She explained that this procedure was neither a rate case nor a complaint case, and yet it decreased rates. Commissioner Cook concurred in the part of the order which affected Nantahala and dissented from the portion of the Order which flowed through less than 100% of the tax savings to the telephone subscribers.

Some utilities were not affected by this final order because they had either voluntarily complied with the order or were currently involved in rate cases. The telephone companies as a group were allowed to offset part of their savings with revenue reductions previously ordered by the Commission, and, therefore, they were not affected by this final order. Water and sewer companies were likewise, as a group, treated differently from the rest of the utilities *195 in this order. Of all the utilities affected by the final order, only Nantahala appealed the Commission’s action to the Court of Appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
388 S.E.2d 118, 326 N.C. 190, 110 P.U.R.4th 250, 1990 N.C. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-utilities-commission-v-nantahala-power-light-co-nc-1990.