Texas Industrial Energy Consumers, Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation, and Office of Public Utility Counsel v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and Southwestern Electric Power Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 11, 2021
Docket03-17-00490-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Industrial Energy Consumers, Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation, and Office of Public Utility Counsel v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and Southwestern Electric Power Company (Texas Industrial Energy Consumers, Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation, and Office of Public Utility Counsel v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and Southwestern Electric Power Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Texas Industrial Energy Consumers, Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation, and Office of Public Utility Counsel v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and Southwestern Electric Power Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

ON REMAND

NO. 03-17-00490-CV

Texas Industrial Energy Consumers, Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation, and Office of Public Utility Counsel, Appellants

v.

Public Utility Commission of Texas and Southwestern Electric Power Company, Appellees

FROM THE 200TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GV-14-000536, THE HONORABLE DARLENE BYRNE, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case involves an agency’s interpretation of its prior administrative order. In

2014 the Public Utility Commission of Texas issued an order that, among other things, construed

an earlier order the Commission had issued in 2008. Texas Industrial Energy Consumers

(TIEC), Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation (CARD), and the Office of Public Utility

Counsel filed suit in Travis County District Court for judicial review of the 2014 Order.

Defendants were the Commission and Southwestern Electric Power Company (SWEPCO). The

district court affirmed the Commission’s Order. This Court reversed and remanded on the basis

of a separate issue and did not address the Commission’s interpretation of its 2008 Order. The

Texas Supreme Court reversed this Court’s judgment, affirmed the trial court’s judgment as to the issue we had addressed, and remanded the case to this Court to decide the issue we had not

addressed. We will reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the case to the Commission

for further proceedings.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case had its genesis in 2007, when SWEPCO applied to the Commission for

an amendment to its certificate of convenience and necessity (CCN) to allow it to construct a

new coal-fired power plant called the Turk Plant.1 That proceeding was given PUC Docket

No. 33891. In 2008, after a lengthy hearing before the State Office of Administrative Hearings

(SOAH), the Commission granted SWEPCO’s application but imposed significant conditions

and limitations.

The Commission’s 2008 Order in Docket No. 33891 conditionally granted

SWEPCO’s application but placed a cap on the amount of “capital costs” that SWEPCO would

later be able to include in its rate base:

[T]he Commission conditionally grants the CCN for SWEPCO’s ownership in the 600 MW Turk Plant on obtaining all of the necessary environmental permits, limits the costs that may be included in ratebase to Texas’s jurisdictional allocation of SWEPCO’s ownership share of total plant cost of $1.522 billion,[2] and places other limitations and requirements on SWEPCO.

....

1 For policy reasons related to retail competition among providers of electricity, SWEPCO is still subject to traditional cost-of-service rate regulation. See Tex. Util. Code § 39.501. 2 At that time SWEPCO was scheduled to own (and ultimately did end up owning) about 73.3% of the Turk Plant. Because the plant also provides electricity for parts of Louisiana and Arkansas, Texas’s “jurisdictional allocation” for plant production is 32.7% of SWEPCO’s 73.3%, or approximately $365 million. 2 The cap on the capital costs that Texas retail consumers may be responsible for is the Texas jurisdictional allocation of $1.522 billion.

Following completion of the Turk Plant in 2012, SWEPCO applied to the

Commission for permission to change its rates to earn a return on its capital investment in the

plant. SWEPCO’s application was challenged before the Commission by TIEC, CARD, and

others, primarily on the ground that during construction SWEPCO had not properly monitored

the economic prudence of completing the project. The final Order in that proceeding, to which

the Commission assigned Docket No. 40443, is the subject of this appeal.

After another lengthy hearing before SOAH, the Commission found in Docket

No. 40443 that SWEPCO had met its burden of proving that completing the Turk Plant was

prudent. In addition, although the issue had not been briefed by the parties, the Commission

determined initially that the amount of SWEPCO’s construction financing costs, referred to as

“allowance for funds used during construction” (AFUDC), was meant to be included in the

capital-costs cap imposed by the 2008 Order in Docket No. 33891. On rehearing, however, the

Commission reopened the record and admitted additional evidence regarding the capital-costs-

cap issue. A majority of the commissioners found that the 2008 Order was

ambiguous and not conclusive regarding whether the Commission at that time intended to include AFUDC in the $1.522 billion cap on capital costs. Therefore, the Commission looks beyond the order in Docket No. 33891 to the underlying record evidence in that docket.

Subsequently, two of the commissioners reversed their earlier decision and found that AFUDC

was not included in the cap:3

3 The third commissioner, the only one who had been on the Commission when the 2008 Order was issued, dissented. 3 In [looking to the underlying record evidence], the Commission finds that the cap was based on estimates of construction costs excluding AFUDC as testified to by parties to that docket. Based on that evidence, the Commission now concludes that the AFUDC was a separately calculated component of capital costs that was not intended to be included in the cap. Accordingly, the Commission determines that the order in Docket No. 33891 did not include AFUDC in the cap on capital costs, and that SWEPCO may recover the Texas jurisdictional share of those costs from ratepayers.

On this basis, the Commission allowed SWEPCO to include AFUDC separately in its rate base,

which amounted to approximately $250 million more than would have been allowed if the cap

on capital costs had been construed to include AFUDC.

TIEC, CARD, and others filed a suit for judicial review to challenge this Order on

both the prudence issue and the capital-costs-cap issue. The trial court affirmed. On further

appeal, this Court reversed the Commission’s Order based on our holding that SWEPCO had not

met the standard the Commission purported to apply, thereby rendering the Commission’s

decision arbitrary and capricious. See Texas Indus. Energy Consumers v. Public Util. Comm’n,

608 S.W.3d 817, 829 (Tex. App.—Austin 2018), rev’d, 620 S.W.3d 418 (Tex. 2021). Because

that decision resulted in a complete reversal of the Commission’s Order, this Court did

not address the costs-cap issue. Id. at 829 n.14. On further appeal, the Texas Supreme

Court reversed this Court’s judgment, holding that the Commission’s prudence decision was

supported by substantial evidence. See Public Util. Comm’n v. Texas Indus. Energy Consumers,

620 S.W.3d 418, 432 (Tex. 2021). The supreme court remanded the case to this Court for

consideration of the costs-cap issue. Id.

DISCUSSION

The single narrow issue remaining for decision here is whether the cap on “capital

costs” in the Commission’s 2008 Order in Docket No. 33891 was intended to include AFUDC.

4 This required the Commission, in the 2014 proceeding, to interpret its 2008 Order. The

Commission’s 2014 Order in Docket No. 40443 concluded on rehearing that the cap in the 2008

Order did not include AFUDC. TIEC and CARD complain that the 2014 Order was erroneous

because the 2008 cap unambiguously included AFUDC.4 SWEPCO and the Commission argue

that the Commission’s 2014 Order was correct, both in concluding that the 2008 Order was

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Texas Industrial Energy Consumers, Cities Advocating Reasonable Deregulation, and Office of Public Utility Counsel v. Public Utility Commission of Texas and Southwestern Electric Power Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-industrial-energy-consumers-cities-advocating-reasonable-texapp-2021.