United States Steel Corp. v. Northern Indiana Public Service Co.

951 N.E.2d 542, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1009, 2011 WL 3484408
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 2011
Docket93A02-1006-EX-632
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 951 N.E.2d 542 (United States Steel Corp. v. Northern Indiana Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Steel Corp. v. Northern Indiana Public Service Co., 951 N.E.2d 542, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1009, 2011 WL 3484408 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*547 OPINION

MATHIAS, Judge.

United States Steel Corporation (“U.S. Steel”) and ArcelorMittal Indiana Harbor, Inc. (“ArcelorMittal” 1 ) (collectively, the “Steel Producers”) appeal from the final order of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (the “Commission”), which is defended by Northern Indiana Public Service Company (“NIPSCO”). On appeal, the Steel Producers raise several issues, which we restate and renumber as follows:

I. Whether the Commission correctly determined that U.S. Steel’s provision of electricity to ArcelorMittal made U.S. Steel a public utility as defined by statute;
II. Whether the Commission correctly determined that U.S. Steel violated Indiana’s Service Area Assignments Act by selling electricity service to Arcelor-Mittal within NIPSCO’s exclusive electric service area;
III. Whether the Commission correctly determined that U.S. Steel’s transportation of natural gas to ArcelorMittal made U.S. Steel a public utility as defined by statute;
IV. Whether the Commission correctly determined that U.S. Steel violated NIPSCO’s gas tariff;
V. Whether the Commission properly dismissed the Steel Producers’ complaint against NIPSCO.

NIPSCO cross-appeals and, claiming that the Commission failed to address three claims raised in NIPSCO’s complaint, seeks a declaration from this court that the Commission’s silence on these issues did not amount to an implicit resolution of these claims against NIPSCO and that these claims therefore remain viable theories of recovery in NIPSCO’s separate federal court action seeking damages from U.S. Steel. In the alternative, if we determine that the Commission did resolve these issues against NIPSCO, NIPSCO requests remand to the Commission with instructions to enter specific findings on these issues.

We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions.

Facts and Procedural History

U.S. Steel owns and operates a large, integrated steel-making operation in northwest Indiana known as Gary Works. Gary Works covers some 3,000 acres along the south shore of Lake Michigan and lies within NIPSCO’s electric and gas service territories. U.S. Steel owns and operates a wide variety of steel production and finishing facilities located within Gary Works.

U.S. Steel consumes a large amount of electricity and natural gas in the operation of Gary Works. Some of the electricity consumed at Gary Works is supplied by cogeneration facilities owned and operated by U.S. Steel within Gary Works. The remaining electricity needed by U.S. Steel for Gary Works is supplied by NIPSCO under a special contract negotiated with U.S. Steel and approved by the Commission in 1999.

NIPSCO delivers, but does not supply, all of the natural gas consumed at Gary Works. U.S. Steel purchases its own supplies of natural gas in the market and has it transported to NIPSCO, which then transports the gas through its local distribution system and delivers it to Gary *548 Works. The interconnections and meters at which NIPSCO delivers electricity and natural gas to U.S. Steel are located near the Gary Works property line. U.S. Steel uses its private infrastructure to distribute the electricity and gas delivered by NIP-SCO to the various operations within Gary Works.

ArcelorMittal, a competitor of U.S. Steel, owns and operates another large steel-making operation in northwest Indiana, known as East Chicago Works. In 2003, ArcelorMittal and U.S. Steel entered into an agreement to swap facilities located within their respective industrial complexes. Effective November 1, 2003, U.S. Steel became the owner of the Pickle Line located within East Chicago Works, and ArcelorMittal became the owner of the Plate Mill located within Gary Works. The transaction conveyed full right, title, and interest in the Plate Mill and its operations to ArcelorMittal. U.S. Steel retained ownership of the underlying Gary Works real estate, which it leased to Arce-lorMittal for a nominal annual rent under a long-term ground lease agreement.

For those not familiar with Gary Works, the size, scope and complexity of its operations are difficult to understand. The Plate Mill is located deep within Gary Works, several miles from the Gary Works property lines. The Plate Mill houses three facilities: (1) a pre-heat facility used to heat slabs of steel, (2) a rolling mill used to flatten heated slabs of steel into plate steel, and (3) a heat treat facility used to temper steel and give it specific, customer-ordered properties.

Upon acquiring ownership of the Plate Mill in November 2003, ArcelorMittal began to operate the heat treat facility, but not the pre-heat facility or the rolling mill. ArcelorMittal did not arrange with NIP-SCO for delivery of electricity or gas to the Plate Mill. Instead, ArcelorMittal purchased electricity and gas service for the Plate Mill from U.S. Steel. This arrangement was a continuation of U.S. Steel’s previous distribution of gas and electricity to itself when it owned the Plate Mill. NIPSCO was aware that U.S. Steel distributed electricity to the Plate Mill after ownership was transferred to ArcelorMit-tal, but claims that it believed that Arce-lorMittal was not operating the Plate Mill at that time and that U.S. Steel was therefore only transmitting the minimal amount of electricity necessary for “plant protection.” Appellant’s App. pp. 11,13.

In May 2007, ArcelorMittal publicly announced its intention to reopen the Plate Mill in September 2007. Because Arcelor-Mittal had already begun operating the heat treat facility, this announcement represented ArcelorMittal’s decision to expand operations at the Plate Mill to include operation of the pre-heat facility and the rolling mill. As a result, NIPSCO contacted ArcelorMittal about providing electricity and gas service to the Plate Mill.

Over the summer of 2007, the Steel Producers and NIPSCO met numerous times regarding electricity and gas service to the Plate Mill. The parties reached an agreement under which NIPSCO installed an electricity sub-meter inside Gary Works on U.S. Steel’s privately-owned electricity distribution lines to measure the flow of electricity to the Plate Mill. Pursuant to the agreement, electricity delivered by NIP-SCO would flow through the interconnection between NIPSCO and U.S. Steel and across U.S. Steel’s internal electricity distribution system to NIPSCO’s sub-meter at the Plate Mill. NIPSCO would bill Arce-lorMittal based on the readings of the sub-meter, and for the purposes of billing U.S. Steel, NIPSCO would subtract the sub-meter readings from the readings of U.S. Steel’s meter. This arrangement was im *549 plemented in the fall of 2007, and since that time, ArcelorMittal has purchased all of the electricity consumed at the Plate Mill from NIPSCO in this manner.

NIPSCO did not agree to implement a similar sub-metering arrangement for natural gas service to the Plate Mill. Rather, NIPSCO informed the Steel Producers that NIPSCO’s gas meter for the Plate Mill could not be installed on U.S.

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Bluebook (online)
951 N.E.2d 542, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1009, 2011 WL 3484408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-steel-corp-v-northern-indiana-public-service-co-indctapp-2011.