State Public Service Commission v. Missouri Gas Energy

395 S.W.3d 540, 2013 WL 68897, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 23
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 2013
DocketNo. WD 75024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 395 S.W.3d 540 (State Public Service Commission v. Missouri Gas Energy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Public Service Commission v. Missouri Gas Energy, 395 S.W.3d 540, 2013 WL 68897, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 23 (Mo. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

CYNTHIA L. MARTIN, Judge.

The Office of the Public Counsel (“OPC”) appeals the Public Service Commission’s (“Commission”) order approving compliance tariff sheets (“Order”) entered in case number GT-2012-0183. The Order approved revised tariff sheets filed by Southern Union Company, d/b/a Missouri Gas Energy (“MGE”) following the Commission’s determination that an earlier version of the tariff sheets was unjust and unreasonable. OPC objects to the Order because the revised tariff sheets exculpate MGE from liability for negligence causing personal injury or property damage.

We reverse and vacate the Order.

Factual and Procedural History

The procedural history of this ease is dispositive of this appeal.

The Underlying Case and Appeal1

MGE is a natural gas provider to over 500,000 residential, commercial, and industrial customers in thirty-four Missouri counties. The Commission is an administrative agency responsible for the regulation of public utilities, including gas corporations, in Missouri. MGE is subject to regulation by the Commission.

In October 2010, the Staff of the Commission (“Staff’) filed a complaint against MGE asserting that language in MGE’s Tariff Sheet R-342 (“R-34”) was unjust and unreasonable and was void and unenforceable as a matter of public policy. The complaint was assigned case number GC-2011-0100. The objectionable language in R-34 purported to exculpate MGE from tort liability to its customers for personal injuries and property damages. Staff alleged R-34 violated Commission policy established in an earlier report & order (the “Laclede Order”). In the Laclede Order, the Commission rejected a tariff sheet limiting Laclede Gas Company’s liability to its customers. The Staff also asserted that R-34 did not comply with the Commission’s natural gas safety rules set forth at 4 CSR 240-40.030(10)(J) and (12)(S), because the tariff sheet purported to “eliminate MGE’s duty to test for leakage in a competent way, ensure compliance with industry standards and local codes,” warn of potential hazards, and discontinue service to a customer when equipment was unsafe.

OPC is an agency of the State of Missouri that represents consumers in utility proceedings before the Commission and in all appeals of the Commission’s orders. OPC sided with the Staffs position in objecting to R-34.

On November 9, 2011, following competing summary determination motions filed by the parties, the Commission issued a decision (“Final Decision”). The Commission found the fifth paragraph in section 3.19 of R-34 to be unjust and unreasonable. That paragraph provided:

The Company shall not be liable for loss, damage or injury to persons or proper[542]*542ty, in any manner directly or indirectly connected with or arising out of the delivery of gas through piping or gas utilization equipment on the delivery side of the meter, which shall include but not be limited to any and all such loss, damage or injury involving piping, vents or gas utilization equipment, whether inspected or not by the Company, or occasioned by interruption, failure to commence delivery, or failure of service or delay in commencing service due to accident to or breakdown of plant, lines, or equipment, strike, riot, act of God, order of any court or judge granted in any bonafide adverse legal proceedings or action or any order of any commission or tribunal having jurisdiction; or, without limitation by the preceding enumeration, any other act or things due to causes beyond Company’s control, or attributable to the negligence of the Company, its employees, contractors or agents.

The Commission found that this paragraph immunized MGE from events not within MGE’s control and from MGE’s negligence, and that “immunity for negligence is not against public policy for ordinary business activities.” The Commission nevertheless determined that this paragraph of section 3.19 of R-34 was unjust and unreasonable because it immunized MGE from liability against any allegation of negligence relating to inspection, leakage, and repair. This determination was responsive to Staffs concern that R-34 as written could exculpate MGE even if it failed to comply with promulgated safety regulations. The Final Decision thus voided R-34, and ordered MGE to file a revised tariff sheet by December 9, 2011.

OPC appealed the Final Decision (the “Underlying Appeal”), complaining that even though the Commission voided R-34, it nonetheless found that tariff sheets could exculpate public utilities for negligence. We reversed the Final Decision and remanded the matter to the Commission for proceedings consistent with our Opinion. Public Service Commission v. Missouri Gas Energy, No. WD74732, 2012 WL 5205740 (Mo.App. W.D. October 23, 2012).3 We found as a matter of law that the Commission “merely carries out the public policy declared by the Missouri Legislature,” and that no statute:

[G]rants the Commission the authority to limit a public utility’s negligence liability involving personal injury or property damage. Nowhere do the statutes establish a policy suggesting that a public utility company should be immune from negligence liability when its negligence is responsible for a customer’s death, injury, or damage to property.

Id. at 230-31. We found that common law favors a system where “citizens may file an action for negligence when a company’s negligence causes injury or harm,” and that the common law remains intact unless abrogated by statute. Id. We concluded that:

[T]he Commission does not have the statutory authority to approve of a public utility’s attempt to abrogate these common law rights in a tariff sheet. The legislature is the appropriate entity to abrogate negligence claims against public utilities involving personal injury or property damage or it is the entity to expressly delegate that power to the Commission. Until the legislature does so and does so explicitly, however, the Commission has no authority to abrogate an action for common law negli[543]*543gence involving personal injury or property damage.

Id. Therefore, we held that the Final Decision was unlawful because the Commission acted beyond its authority in concluding that it could authorize tariff sheets that exculpate public utilities from claims of negligence resulting in personal injury or property damage. Id.

The Interim, Commission Proceedings

While the Underlying Appeal was pending, MGE filed revised tariff sheets (“Revised R-34”)4 on December 9, 20115 as had been directed by the Final Decision.

The fifth paragraph in section 3.19 of Revised R-34 is identical in pertinent part to the same paragraph in R-34 with the exception of new language shown in bold:

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Bluebook (online)
395 S.W.3d 540, 2013 WL 68897, 2013 Mo. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-public-service-commission-v-missouri-gas-energy-moctapp-2013.