Willman v. Washington Utilities & Transportation Commission

93 P.3d 909, 122 Wash. App. 194
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 1, 2004
DocketNo. 22411-2-III
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 93 P.3d 909 (Willman v. Washington Utilities & Transportation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willman v. Washington Utilities & Transportation Commission, 93 P.3d 909, 122 Wash. App. 194 (Wash. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Kato, C.J.

This appeal involves an ordinance adopted by the Yakama Nation Tribal Council imposing what it calls a franchise fee from utilities operating within the boundaries of the Nation’s reservation. The Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (WUTC) allowed PacifiCorp (which operates as Pacific Power and Light Company) and Cascade Natural Gas Corporation to pass on the cost of the fee to all customers within the reservation. Elaine Willman and Citizens Standup! Committee (hereafter petitioners) contend the fee is presumptively invalid and discriminatory against nonmembers. They also contend the WUTC erroneously concluded the fee should be recovered only from customers within the reservation [199]*199rather than from the utilities’ customers statewide. We affirm and deny the petitioners’ request for attorney fees.

The federal government created the Yakima Indian Reservation by treaty in 1855. The reservation encompasses approximately 1.3 million acres of land, mostly in Yakima County. See Brendale v. Confederated Tribes & Bands of Yakima Indian Nation, 492 U.S. 408, 415, 109 S. Ct. 2994, 106 L. Ed. 2d 343 (1989) (plurality opinion). The federal government holds approximately 80 percent of the reservation land in trust for the benefit of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Indian Nation (Nation); approximately 20 percent is owned in fee, either by the Nation or its individual members, nonmember Indians, and non-Indians, as a result of the allotment period of the late 19th century. See Yakima County v. Confederated Tribes & Bands of Yakima Indian Nation, 502 U.S. 251, 253-56, 112 S. Ct. 683,116 L. Ed. 2d 687 (1992). The result is what the Nation calls a “crazy-quilt patchwork” of property ownership. Administrative Record (AR) at 127; see AR at 135.

In August 2002, the Yakama Tribal Council adopted a franchise ordinance whose preamble states in part:

Utilities operating on the Reservation have placed Utility facilities on lands owned or controlled by the Yakama Nation without authorization or for which authorization has expired and the Tribal Council finds that it is in the public interest to require Utilities operating on the Reservation to obtain permission for such facilities by entering into agreements with the Yakama Nation.

AR at 9.

The ordinance requires any utility operating within the reservation to obtain a franchise from the Nation and provides for a fine of $1,000 per day for operating without a franchise. In addition, any utility operating within the reservation (regardless of whether it has obtained a fran[200]*200chise) is required to pay a “franchise fee” of three percent of its gross operating revenue.1 AR at 12.

PacifiCorp and Cascade, both of which are subject to the franchise fee, filed tariff revisions with the WUTC, seeking to pass on the costs to all customers within the reservation’s boundaries.2

The WUTC’s staff concluded the fee is “essentially a business and occupation tax, not a franchise fee.” AR at 48. The staff recommended that the WUTC allow the tariff revisions by following its earlier decision in Brannon v. Qwest Corp., WUTC Docket Nos. UT-010988, TG-010989, UE-010990, UE-010995, UT-010966, TG-011084 (Jan. 11, 2002), which addressed taxes imposed on utilities operating in the Lummi and Swinomish reservations.

Elaine Willman, a non-Indian who lives on fee land within the reservation in the community of Toppenish, opposed the tariff revision on behalf of herself and the Citizens Stand Up! Committee, of which she is executive director. She argued the utilities’ decision to pay the franchise fee was imprudent because it was an invalid charge against nonmembers of the Nation who lived within the reservation. She also argued recovery of the fee would unlawfully discriminate against nonmembers of the Nation, who have no say in tribal government and do not benefit from it. Alternatively, she argued the franchise fee should be treated as a general operating expense and should not be charged solely to ratepayers within the reservation.

The WUTC accepted the staff’s recommendations and took no action, allowing the tariff revisions to take effect by [201]*201operation of law. See RCW 80.28.060 (rate change takes effect in 30 days unless WUTC suspends it); WAC 480-07--900(4)(b) (“no action required” portion of agenda). The WUTC’s chairwoman summarized the reasoning:

[Q]uestion number one is it a tax or a fee, I answer that question, this is a tax. Question number two, if it’s a tax, is it a valid tax? And, I answer that question that it is not for me to decide. I would presume it’s valid unless there is case law that clearly invalidates it and I don’t think we have that case. If we get that case from federal court, there could be a different answer. But, I think we did go over that previous and previous decision of the [WUTC]. Question number three, if it is a tax, how must or should it be spread. So, that’s really two parts, either how must it be spread if there is a must, or how should it be spread, if we have some discretion, and tentatively, I answer that question that it should be spread within the whole reservation. The fourth question is what about the affect [sic] of the tax and our application of it to the non tribal members? And, as I listen to this, clearly, the non tribal members are in a different position than the tribal members and they... the benefit of the tax on them may be different. But, it seems to me that... that is a question that is not one that we, either can or should act on, I am not sure of those two terms. Because, that gets right back to tribal law in general which is very complicated but, the relationship of the non tribal members to the tribe and to the taxes is ... not our bailiwick and it seems to me it is the bailiwick of the federal court and I have some sympathy for the non tribal members here. It seems to me their answer that... the appropriate avenue is to challenge this tax in federal court and as I said earlier, if they succeed, we would follow the ruling of that court just as we have followed the ruling of the Department of Revenue in another situation.

AR at 209.

Petitioners initiated this action by filing a petition for review in the Yakima County Superior Court, naming as defendants the WUTC, Cascade, and PacifiCorp. The petitioners asked the court to enter a declaratory ruling holding that (1) the Nation has no authority to tax utility service to nonmember customers receiving service within the reser[202]*202vation; (2) the utilities’ decisions to pay the franchise fee was imprudent; and (3) the utilities’ revised tariffs are unlawfully discriminatory. They also asked the court to enjoin the WUTC and the utilities from implementing the revised tariff and to order the WUTC to implement a mechanism for exempting nonmembers from paying the Nation’s franchise fee. In support of these requests, the petitioners relied, in addition to the administrative record, on declarations of several individuals that were not part of the administrative record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 P.3d 909, 122 Wash. App. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willman-v-washington-utilities-transportation-commission-washctapp-2004.