The Utility Reform Project v. Bonneville Power Administration and Peter Johnson, Administrator, Washington Water Power Company, Respondent/intervenor. Public Utility District No. 1 of Clark County, a Washington Municipal Corporation v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter J. Johnson, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Company, a Washington Corporation Washington Water Power Company, a Washington Corporation Portland General Electric Company, an Oregon Corporation, City of Bonners Ferry, Idaho City of Burley, Idaho City of Centralia, Washington Clearwater Power Co., Idaho City of Declo, Idaho East and Mutual Electric Co., Idaho v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter T. Johnson, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Company Pacific Power & Light Company Portland General Electric Co., Columbia Rural Electric Association, Inc., Blachly-Lane County Cooperative Electric Association, Columbia Basin Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter T. Johnson, Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Co. Washington Power Co. Portland General Electric Co. Pacific Power & Light Co. And Washington Public Power Supply System

869 F.2d 437
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1989
Docket85-7678
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 869 F.2d 437 (The Utility Reform Project v. Bonneville Power Administration and Peter Johnson, Administrator, Washington Water Power Company, Respondent/intervenor. Public Utility District No. 1 of Clark County, a Washington Municipal Corporation v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter J. Johnson, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Company, a Washington Corporation Washington Water Power Company, a Washington Corporation Portland General Electric Company, an Oregon Corporation, City of Bonners Ferry, Idaho City of Burley, Idaho City of Centralia, Washington Clearwater Power Co., Idaho City of Declo, Idaho East and Mutual Electric Co., Idaho v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter T. Johnson, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Company Pacific Power & Light Company Portland General Electric Co., Columbia Rural Electric Association, Inc., Blachly-Lane County Cooperative Electric Association, Columbia Basin Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter T. Johnson, Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Co. Washington Power Co. Portland General Electric Co. Pacific Power & Light Co. And Washington Public Power Supply System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Utility Reform Project v. Bonneville Power Administration and Peter Johnson, Administrator, Washington Water Power Company, Respondent/intervenor. Public Utility District No. 1 of Clark County, a Washington Municipal Corporation v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter J. Johnson, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Company, a Washington Corporation Washington Water Power Company, a Washington Corporation Portland General Electric Company, an Oregon Corporation, City of Bonners Ferry, Idaho City of Burley, Idaho City of Centralia, Washington Clearwater Power Co., Idaho City of Declo, Idaho East and Mutual Electric Co., Idaho v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter T. Johnson, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Company Pacific Power & Light Company Portland General Electric Co., Columbia Rural Electric Association, Inc., Blachly-Lane County Cooperative Electric Association, Columbia Basin Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Bonneville Power Administration Peter T. Johnson, Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration Puget Sound Power & Light Co. Washington Power Co. Portland General Electric Co. Pacific Power & Light Co. And Washington Public Power Supply System, 869 F.2d 437 (9th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

869 F.2d 437

The UTILITY REFORM PROJECT, Petitioner,
v.
BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION and Peter Johnson,
Administrator, Respondent,
Washington Water Power Company, Respondent/Intervenor.
PUBLIC UTILITY DISTRICT NO. 1 OF CLARK COUNTY, a Washington
municipal corporation, Petitioners,
v.
BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION; Peter J. Johnson,
Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration; Puget
Sound Power & Light Company, a Washington corporation;
Washington Water Power Company, a Washington corporation;
Portland General Electric Company, An Oregon corporation, et
al., Respondents.
CITY OF BONNERS FERRY, IDAHO; City of Burley, Idaho; City
of Centralia, Washington; Clearwater Power Co.,
Idaho; City of Declo, Idaho; East and
Mutual Electric Co., Idaho, et
al., Petitioners,
v.
BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION; Peter T. Johnson,
Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration; Puget
Sound Power & Light Company; Pacific Power & Light Company;
Portland General Electric Co., et al., Respondents.
COLUMBIA RURAL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION, INC., Blachly-Lane
County Cooperative Electric Association, Columbia
Basin Electric Cooperative, Inc., et
al., Petitioners,
v.
BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION; Peter T. Johnson,
Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration; Puget
Sound Power & Light Co.; Washington Power Co.; Portland
General Electric Co.; Pacific Power & Light Co.; and
Washington Public Power Supply System, Respondents.

Nos. 85-7678, 85-7699, 85-7701 and 85-7702.

United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.

Argued and Submitted March 9, 1988.
Decided Jan. 27, 1989.
As Modified June 7, 1989.

John D. Lowery, Seattle, Wash., for Small Utilities Group.

Andrew J. Kinstler, Seattle, Wash., for Certain Columbia Cooperatives.

Douglas N. Ragen, Portland, Or., for Washington Group.

Harry E. Grant, Seattle, Wash., for City of Bonners Ferry and Small Utilities Group.

Robert B. Ross, Asst. U.S. Atty., Portland, Or., William N. Mathias, Seattle, Wash., for Washington Public Power Supply System.

Stoel, Rives, Boley, Jones & Grey, Stephen S. Walters, Alan R. Merkle, Portland, Or., for Pacific Power & Light Co.

Perkins Coie, David E. Wagoner, Donald G. Kari, Eugene C. Chellis, Seattle, Wash., for Puget Sound Power & Light Co.

Paine, Hamblen, Coffin, Brooke & Miller, Gary A. Dahlke, Robert E. Neate, Spokane, Wash., for The Washington Water Power Co.

Tonkon, Torp, Galen, Marmaduke & Booth, William F. Martson, Barbee Lyon, Portland, Or., for Portland General Elec. Co.

Petition for Review of an Order of the Bonneville Power Administration.

Before TANG and CANBY, Jr., Circuit Judges, and CURTIS,* District Judge.

CANBY, Circuit Judge:

Introduction

This is an original proceeding brought under the Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation Act ("the Regional Act"), 16 U.S.C. Sec. 839f(e)(5). The petition challenges the legality of a settlement agreement entered by the Bonneville Power Administration ("BPA") to settle claims brought by four Investor-Owned Utilities ("IOUs") as a result of BPA's decision to cease construction of a partially-completed nuclear power plant. For reasons we will set forth, we conclude that BPA's settlement was lawful.

The petitioners are: a group of rural electric cooperatives in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and California ("Coops"); the city of Bonners Ferry and 26 other small municipal and rural electric cooperatives known as the Small Utilities Group ("SUG"); and a group of Public Utility Districts from the State of Washington ("Washington Group")1. The primary respondent is BPA.2 Certain investor-owned utilities ("IOUs") have also intervened as respondents. Pursuant to a motion by the IOUs, all affirmative claims against the IOUs are dismissed;3 the IOUs remain in the case only as intervenors defending BPA's action. The Washington Public Power Supply System ("WPPSS" or "Supply System") is also named as a respondent. Claims against the Supply System are similarly dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.4

Petitioners are challenging the settlement agreement (embodied in several documents) entered into by respondent BPA and the IOUs as a partial resolution of the case of Bonneville Power Admin. v. Washington Pub. Power Supply Sys., C-82-1252 (Browning, J.) (W.D.Wash.) ("BPA v. WPPSS "). The settlement agreement resolves the dispute over the "mothballing" of the Supply System's partially-constructed Nuclear Project 3 reactor ("WNP-3"). Collectively, the IOUs owned thirty percent of WNP-3. The Supply System owned seventy percent of the project. Under the initial agreements (Net Billing Agreements), the Supply System was the agent for the IOUs in constructing the plant. The IOUs exercised their ownership rights through a committee, established by contract, called the "Owners Committee."

The Net Billing Agreements required the Supply System to sell its 70 percent share of the output of WNP-3 to the 103 "participant" utilities, which in turn assigned their respective shares of the output to BPA. These agreements required BPA ultimately to pay for the Supply System's 70 percent of all costs associated with WNP-3. During construction, the Supply System was to finance these costs with borrowed funds, to be repaid later through power sales by BPA.

In 1983, BPA recommended that construction of WNP-3 be delayed and the plant "mothballed." The reasons were that the Supply System could no longer sell bonds and that the projected need for power in the Northwest did not support construction of an additional nuclear power plant. A halt to construction followed, and in 1983 the IOUs brought an action in district court challenging the suspension. BPA v. WPPSS.

In that suit against BPA, WPPSS and the 103 utilities that had signed the Net Billing Agreements, the IOUs claimed that these agreements prohibited the construction delay and obligated BPA to pay the costs of construction out of its current revenues if other funds were unavailable.

District Judge Richard Bilby ruled against Bonneville and the Supply System. Judge Bilby held that the Ownership Agreements require BPA to fund construction costs out of its current revenues and that BPA and WPPSS had breached the Agreement by delaying construction of Project 3. He reserved for later adjudication the issues of whether any breach was material and whether there were recoverable damages. Judge Bilby then recused himself. Judge William Browning took over for Judge Bilby and vacated all of Judge Bilby's rulings. On July 10, 1985, Judge Browning reinstated most of Judge Bilby's rulings except for the ruling on the IOU claims for breach of contract.

In September 1985, BPA, the IOUs and the Supply System executed various documents embodying a settlement of the WNP-3 construction delay claims.

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