Tennessee Consumer Advocate v. Tennessee Regulatory Authority and United Cities Gas Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 5, 1997
Docket01A01-9606-BC-00286
StatusPublished

This text of Tennessee Consumer Advocate v. Tennessee Regulatory Authority and United Cities Gas Company (Tennessee Consumer Advocate v. Tennessee Regulatory Authority and United Cities Gas Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Consumer Advocate v. Tennessee Regulatory Authority and United Cities Gas Company, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

TENNESSEE CONSUMER ADVOCATE, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) TN Regulatory Authority ) Trial No. 95-01134 ) VS. ) ) TENNESSEE REGULATORY AUTHORITY) Appeal No. AND UNITED CITIES GAS COMPANY, ) 01A01-9606-BC-00286 ) Defendant/Appellee. )

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE FILED MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE March 5, 1997

Cecil W. Crowson APPEAL FROM THE DAVIDSON COUNTY Appellate Court Clerk TENNESSEE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

Charles W. Burson Attorney General & Reporter

L. Vincent Williams Consumer Advocate Division 404 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, TN 37243-0500 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

H. Edward Phillips, III Tennessee Regulatory Authority 460 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, TN 37243 ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

REVERSED AND REMANDED

HENRY F. TODD PRESIDING JUDGE, MIDDLE SECTION

CONCUR:

BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE, WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE TENNESSEE CONSUMER ADVOCATE, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) TN Regulatory Authority ) Trial No. 95-01134 ) VS. ) ) TENNESSEE REGULATORY AUTHORITY) Appeal No. AND UNITED CITIES GAS COMPANY, ) 01A01-9606-BC-00286 ) Defendant/Appellee. )

O P I N I O N

The petitioner, Tennessee Consumer Advocate, has petitioned this Court for review of

administrative decisions of the Tennessee Public Services Commission pursuant to T.R.A.P.

Rule 12. By order entered by this Court on October 3, 1996, the review is limited to an order

entered by the Commission on May 3, 1996. However, the circumstances stated hereafter require

reference to an order previously entered by the Tennessee Public Service Commission on May

12, 1995.

The Parties.

Prior to June 30, 1996, the Public Service Commission controlled the charges of public

utilities in Tennessee. On June 30, 1996, the Public Service Commission was discontinued by

enactment of the Legislature which created the Tennessee Regulatory Commission which has

been substituted for the Public Service Commission in proceedings before this Court.

By T.C.A. § 65-4-118, the Consumer Advocate Division of the Office of Attorney

General and Reporter may with the approval of the Attorney General and Reporter appear before

any administrative body in the interests of Tennessee consumers of public utility services.

United Cities Gas Company is a public utility which purchases and distributes natural gas

-2- through its pipelines to patrons in parts of Tennessee.

The Administrative Proceedings.

On January 20, 1995, United filed with the Public Utilities Commission (hereafter

P.S.C.), an application for approval of a scheme of variable rates based upon the wholesale price

of gas purchased from suppliers.

P.S.C. granted leave to the Consumer Advocate to intervene.

On May 12, 1995, the P.S.C. entered an order approving the proposed scheme on

condition that an independent consultant be engaged to review the “mechanism” and report to the

commission annually.

On October 31, 1995, United Gas submitted to the Commission for approval, a contract

with Consulting & Systems Integration, providing that the work was to be performed by a Mr.

Frank Creamer. Subsequently, United Gas requested that Anderson Consulting be substituted for

Consulting Systems because Mr. Creamer had severed his connection with Consulting Systems

and affiliated with Anderson.

The May 3, 1996, order of the Commission, which is the subject of this appeal, approved

the contract with Anderson Consulting and thereby satisfied all of the conditions for activation of

the rate plan conditionally approved in the May 12, 1995 order.

On appeal, the Consumer Advocate presents ten issues for review. Only those which

relate to the May 3, 1996, order will be considered.

The appellant’s fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh issues are:

-3- IV. The commission’s action violated statutory provisions, was asked upon unlawful procedure, was arbitrary and capricious, or was clear error when it took judicial notice of a report prepared by a consultant of UCG.

V. The Consumer Advocate was denied an opportunity to be heard as to the propriety of taking judicial notice of the report.

VI. The Consumer Advocate division was not notified of the material noticed and afforded an opportunity to contest and rebut the facts or material so noticed.

VII. A decision of the Tennessee Public Service Commission is void or voidable when agency members receive aid from staff assistants, and such persons received ex parte communications of a type that the administrative judge hearing officer or agency members would be prohibited from receiving, and which furnish, augment, diminish or modify the evidence in the record in violation of Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-304(b).

At a hearing before the Commission on February 3, 1996, the following occurred:

Mr. Irion: We have the independent consultant here. Does the Commission on wish to hear from him?

Chairman: I think what we have agreed to is just summarize his testimony.

Mr. Williams: He has not made any testimony, and --

Mr. Irion: He has only filed a report, and he is not technically our witness or --

Mr. Williams: I think he is their witness. They chose him and paid for him. We did not have any choice. The Consumer Advocate was not given any choice in the matter who was going to be the witness.

Chairman: The Commission can take judicial notice of that, that record. That’s our record.

Com. Hewlett: This is our consultant.

Mr. Hal Novak: That’s correct, sir. The Commission staff chose this consultant.

Chairman: We can take judicial notice of that and it can referred to in your argument here.

Mr. Williams: I would say that the Commission staff approved the consultant after the company selected the consultant.

-4- Mr. Novak: That’s not true, sir.

Chairman: Well, now wait a minute now, fellows. We can take judicial notice, and will take judicial notice of all our records and reports like that to the Commission and you can refer to that in your argument.

Mr. Williams: What I would also like to do, Commissioner, maybe we need to have a longer period of time. I would like to know what the staff’s position -- it was indicated that the staff had a position that the rule operated effectively, that the Commissioners had obviously heard and were considering. I would like disclosure under the statute of the staff’s position on why they think that it operates correctly.

Com. Hewlett: Well, that would be in my way of thinking not impossible to get into the record, but very difficult it is most appropriate, as I understand the law, for us to discuss with our technical staff. That’s the reason that the Consumer Advocate Division was created because of the ex parte concerns of when our staff were parties to the case and when they are not. Our staff, as I understand it, it not a party to this case, and they are a resource for us for analyzing anything that is before this Commission. In this case this situation. So, I think you are trying to make a party to the case somebody that is not.

Mr. Williams: No, sir, what we are trying to do is get all the salient information on the record. The statute explicitly, the UAPA explicitly requires that the Commission disclose when it has any of the position papers that are presented by the staff, and the Public Records Act does not prevent the disclosure of those items either.

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Related

§ 4-5-304
Tennessee § 4-5-304(b)
§ 4-5-312
Tennessee § 4-5-312(b)
§ 4-5-313
Tennessee § 4-5-313(6)
§ 65-2-109
Tennessee § 65-2-109(1)
§ 65-4-118
Tennessee § 65-4-118

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