Texas Coast Utilities Coalition v. Railroad Commission

423 S.W.3d 355, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 178, 2014 WL 185030, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 41
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 2014
DocketNo. 12-0102
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 423 S.W.3d 355 (Texas Coast Utilities Coalition v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Coast Utilities Coalition v. Railroad Commission, 423 S.W.3d 355, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 178, 2014 WL 185030, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 41 (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

Justice BOYD

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The sole issue in this appeal is whether the Railroad Commission of Texas had authority to adopt a gas utility rate schedule that provided for automatic annual adjustments based on increases or decreases in the utility’s cost of service. We agree with the court of appeals that the Commission acted within its authority, and affirm.

I.

Background

CenterPoint Energy Resources Corporation is a gas utility1 that distributes natural gas to customers located within the Texas Coast Division.2 In 2008, Center-Point filed a “statement of intent” to raise its rates with each of the Division’s forty-seven municipalities, which have original jurisdiction to set rates within their respective boundaries, and with the Commission, which has original jurisdiction to set rates in the Division’s areas that are not within any municipal boundaries.3 Thirty-eight of the municipalities approved the proposed rate schedule, but the remaining nine cities4 denied it. CenterPoint appealed the denials to the Commission, which consolidated the appeals with its own related case covering the areas outside of municipal boundaries. The nine cities formed the Texas Coast Utilities Coalition, through which they jointly appeared in the consolidated rate case. A group of state agencies that are CenterPoint customers also intervened, joining the Coalition’s opposition to the proposed rate increase. After a three-day contested case hearing, the Commission rejected some aspects of the proposed rate schedule and accepted others, ultimately approving a rate increase to allow CenterPoint to generate $1.2 million in additional annual revenue, but not the $2.9 million that CenterPoint had proposed.

CenterPoint’s proposed rate schedule included a “cost of service adjustment” (COSA) clause, which permitted the rate to increase or decrease annually without [358]*358the necessity of an additional full rate case. The Commission concluded that Center-Point’s original proposed COSA clause was “not reasonable,” but accepted a revised COSA clause as part of the final rate schedule. Under the revised COSA clause, the amount of the annual adjustment is calculated by adding the amounts of CenterPoint’s operating expenses, return on investment, and Texas franchise tax liability from the preceding calendar year, subtracting the amount of Center-Point’s non-gas and other revenues, and then dividing the result by the Texas franchise tax statutory rate.5 The quotient is then converted to a per-customer adjustment by dividing it by the average number of customers in each customer class (residential customers, general service-small volume customers, and general service-large volume customers). CenterPoint then divides the amount of the per-customer adjustment by twelve and either adds the result to or subtracts it from each customer’s monthly gas bill. Any resulting increase or decrease, however, is capped at 5% of the customer charge that was in effect at the end of the preceding calendar year.

To effectuate the annual adjustment, the COSA clause requires CenterPoint to file with the Commission and each affected municipality, by May 1 of each year, sworn statements and schedules containing the information necessary to calculate the adjustments to be applied to customer bills on or after August 1 of that year. The Commission and municipalities would thus have at least ninety days to review and object to the schedules and proposed adjustments, and CenterPoint must reimburse “their reasonable expenses for such review in an aggregate amount not to exceed $100,000.” Meanwhile, within forty-five days after filing the schedules, Center-Point is required to publish a notice of the proposed adjustments in the Houston Chronicle describing the proposed rate revision, the effect that the revision is expected to have on each customer class and on average customer bills within that class, the service areas where the adjustments will apply, and the means by which customers can obtain additional information.

The COSA clause includes several provisions intended to ensure that the Commission and municipalities retain the ability to review and object to the automatic adjustments. First, the clause provides that the Commission and any municipality that objects to the adjustment by the end of the ninety-day review period can “take action to deny such adjustment, and [Center-Point] shall have the right to appeal” the denial. Second, the clause provided that the COSA is effective only for an initial implementation period of three years, after which CenterPoint, the Commission, or an affected municipality can object to its renewal.6 Third, the clause provides that it “does not limit the legal rights and duties” of the Commission or any municipality, and “[n]othing herein shall abrogate the jurisdiction of [the Commission or a municipality] to initiate a proceeding at any time to review whether rates charged are just and reasonable.” Finally, the clause provides that its provisions “are to be imple[359]*359mented in harmony with the Gas Utility Regulatory Act.”

In its final order approving the new rate schedule, the Commission expressly found that “it is reasonable to allow CenterPoint to implement the revised cost of service adjustment clause.” In support of this finding, the Commission found that, under the COSA clause, the Commission and municipalities can “examine the prudence of additions made to rate base as part of the annual COSA filing,” will “ultimately determine! ] the reasonableness and necessity of expenses to be recovered in the COSA,” are permitted to “conduct a hearing on the COSA filing,” and can “grant in part and deny in part the utility’s request to implement a COSA adjustment.” In its conclusions of law, the Commission determined that approval of a COSA tariff “lies within the Commission’s jurisdiction, ... does not conflict with the rate-setting provisions of [the Gas Utility Regulatory Act], ... [and] does not prevent a utility or a regulatory authority from exercising the statutory right to initiate a rate case.”

The Coalition and the state agencies that had intervened filed this action for judicial review of the Commission’s order, challenging the Commission’s authority to adopt the COSA clause as part of Center-Point’s rate schedule.7 The district court held that the Commission “did not have statutory authority” to adopt the COSA clause and remanded the matter to the Commission. The Commission and Cen-terPoint appealed, and the Austin Court of Appeals reversed, concluding that the Commission did not exceed its statutory authority. See R.R. Comm’n of Tex. v. Tex. Coast Utils. Coal., 357 S.W.3d 731 (Tex.App.-Austin 2011, pet. granted). The Coalition and the state agencies petitioned this Court for review, which we granted.

II.

Statutory and Regulatory Framework

The Coalition and state agencies raise both procedural and jurisdictional challenges to the Commission’s authority to adopt the COSA clause.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
423 S.W.3d 355, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 178, 2014 WL 185030, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-coast-utilities-coalition-v-railroad-commission-tex-2014.