Tech Met v. Strategic Energy

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 2015
Docket1058 WDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tech Met v. Strategic Energy (Tech Met v. Strategic Energy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tech Met v. Strategic Energy, (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-A04038-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

TECH MET, INC.; ALFRED POZZUTO; : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF G MONEY, INC. D/B/A NORTH PARK : PENNSYLVANIA CLUBHOUSE; MR. MAGIC CAR WASH : INC.; AND JOHN TIANO, ON THEIR : OWN BEHALF AND ON BEHALF OF ALL : OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, : : Appellants : : v. : : STRATEGIC ENERGY, LLC, : : Appellee : No. 1058 WDA 2014

Appeal from the Order Entered June 4, 2014, in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Civil Division at No(s): GD-05-30407

BEFORE: BOWES, OLSON, and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY STRASSBURGER, J.: FILED APRIL 14, 2015

Tech Met, Inc., Alfred Pozzuto, G. Money, Inc. d/b/a North Park

Clubhouse, Mr. Magic Car Wash, Inc., and John Tiano, on their behalf and on

the behalf of others similarly situated (collectively Plaintiffs), appeal from an

order which granted the motion for summary judgment filed by Strategic

Energy, LLC (Strategic). We affirm.

The trial court aptly summarized the background underlying this

matter as follows.

This is a breach of contract class action brought against [Strategic] on behalf of all Pennsylvania commercial/business customers who entered into a Power Supply Coordination Service Agreement (“Service Agreement”) with Strategic. Plaintiffs contend that they have been overcharged.

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A04038-15

Strategic is an electricity supplier. Strategic purchases electricity in large blocks from Duquesne Light or other sources which it resells to customers pursuant to the terms and conditions of its Service Agreement with the customer. With limited exceptions, through the Service Agreement, Strategic guarantees its customers that the price for electricity will not exceed a specified amount (the price set forth on its Pricing Attachment) for five years.

Plaintiffs contend that Strategic has charged them amounts in excess of the amounts permitted by the Service Agreement. They seek to recover the difference between the amount paid for the electricity and the lesser amount permitted by the Service Agreement.

Strategic contends that its prices have never exceeded the amounts permitted by the Service Agreement. [Strategic filed a motion for summary judgment,] seeking dismissal of [P]laintiffs’ Complaint on the ground that [P]laintiffs were never overcharged.

***

The prices that Strategic may charge its customers are governed by the following provisions of the Service Agreement:

4. PSC Services Fee:

The PSC Services Fee is 0.3 cents per kilowatt-hour for each kilowatt-hour of Electricity provided under this Agreement. The PSC Services Fee is included in the price paid by the Buyer.

7. Price:

The Price to be paid by Buyer for the Electricity and PSC Services provided hereunder during the Term of this Agreement shall not exceed that set forth on the Pricing Attachment below. All pricing terms are inclusive of applicable costs for Energy, Capacity, Transmission, Ancillary Services, Delivery Services, applicable taxes up to the Point of Delivery, overhead expenses as defined by Strategic Energy, and the PSC Services Fee.

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STRATEGIC’S INTERPRETATION

Strategic contends that under the Service Agreement [], the price it may charge shall not exceed the price set forth “on the Pricing Attachment[.]” Plaintiffs do not challenge the evidence showing that Strategic has never charged a price that exceeded that set forth on the Pricing Attachment. Thus, according to Strategic, summary judgment should be entered dismissing [P]laintiffs’ Complaint.

PLAINTIFFS' INTERPRETATION

According to [P]laintiffs, the price set forth in the Pricing Attachment is only a ceiling. The actual price, if it does not exceed the ceiling, consists of the sum of Duquesne Light’s costs for energy, capacity, transmission, ancillary services, delivery services, applicable taxes up to the point of delivery, overhead expenses as defined by Strategic Energy and PSC Services Fee. Under this interpretation of ¶ 7, the maximum price that Strategic may charge is the amount of Duquesne Light’s actual costs plus 0.3 cents per kilowatt-hour.

Trial Court Opinion, 6/4/2014, at 1-3 (footnotes omitted).

The trial court granted Strategic’s motion for summary judgment. In

so doing, the court determined that Strategic offered the only reasonable

interpretation of the relevant contract provisions. The court offered, in part,

the following rationale in support of its decision.

The first sentence of ¶ 7 permits Strategic to charge the amount set forth in the Pricing Attachment. The second sentence protects the buyer by explaining that the price set forth in the Pricing Attachment includes costs which Strategic incurs for energy, capacity, transmission, ancillary services, delivery services, applicable taxes up to the point of delivery, overhead expenses as defined by Strategic, and the PSC Services Fee.

Paragraph 4 describes the PSC Services Fee and reiterates that it is included in the price paid by the buyer.

-3- J-A04038-15

Plaintiffs contend that the first sentence of ¶ 7 only establishes a maximum price that may be charged because ¶ 7 states that the price “shall not exceed that set forth in the Pricing Attachment below.” (Emphasis added.) According to [P]laintiffs, a contract uses the phrase “shall not exceed” only when there is another method for calculating price that may be less than the price set forth in the Pricing Attachment.

However, the Service Agreement cannot be read in the manner which [P]laintiffs propose unless the Service Agreement also provides for a lesser price under certain circumstances. In other words, it could not have been the intention of the parties for the first sentence of ¶ 7 to be construed as only setting a maximum price if the Agreement does not also include a lesser price that shall be charged under some circumstances.

Plaintiffs apparently propose that the second sentence of ¶ 7 be read as follows: “The price to be paid by the Buyer for the electricity and PSC services provided under the Service Agreement shall be the sum of the costs Strategic incurs for energy, capacity, transmission, ancillary services, delivery services, applicable taxes up to the point of delivery, overhead expenses as defined by Strategic Energy, and the PSC Services Fee.”

However, this is not a reasonable construction of the second sentence of ¶ 7. There is nothing in the language of ¶ 7 that in any way suggests that the price shall be based on Strategic’s costs. Thus, [the court is] left with a single method governing the price that may be charged.

If ¶ 7 consisted of only the first sentence, the only reasonable construction of the Agreement would be that Strategic is permitted to charge the amount set forth in the Pricing Attachment. This is so because pricing is governed by ¶ 7, and this is the only provision governing the price to be paid. Where a second sentence is added that does not refer to the price to be paid, there is no difference between the two-sentence paragraph and the one-sentence paragraph.

A contract shall be construed to give meaning to each sentence in ¶ 7. This is accomplished only if the second sentence is construed as describing costs that are included in the

-4- J-A04038-15

price to be paid by the buyer as set forth in the Pricing Attachment. The language of the second sentence does not support any other construction that gives meaning to both sentences.

At least one of the Service Agreements between [P]laintiffs and Strategic, at ¶ 7, included a second paragraph which reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
Tech Met v. Strategic Energy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tech-met-v-strategic-energy-pasuperct-2015.