Office of Public Utility Counsel and the Public Utility Commission of Texas v. Texas-New Mexico Power Company ( 2011 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-10-00526-CV
    Office of Public Utility Counsel and the Public Utility Commission of Texas, Appellants
    v.
    Texas-New Mexico Power Company, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 98TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. D-1-GN-09-000071, HONORABLE RHONDA HURLEY, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    This is an administrative appeal of a final order of the Public Utility Commission (the
    “Commission”) in a contested case involving Texas-New Mexico Power Company’s (“TNMP”)
    revised competition transition charge (“CTC”) interest rate. TNMP filed a suit for judicial review
    of the Commission’s decision, which determined the effective date of the revised interest rate. The
    Office of Public Utility Counsel (“OPC”) intervened in support of the Commission’s order.1 The
    trial court reversed the Commission’s order, and the Commission and OPC appealed. We will
    reverse the trial court’s order and render judgment affirming the Commission’s order.
    1
    Texas Industrial Energy Consumers and the Cities of Dickinson, Friendswood, La Marque,
    League City, Lewisville, and Texas City (the “Cities”) also intervened in the proceedings below.
    The Cities have filed an amicus curiae brief in this Court in support of the Commission’s
    determination.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    TNMP is a transmission and distribution utility that was “unbundled” from a
    vertically integrated utility in the restructuring of the Texas market. See generally Tex. Util. Code
    Ann. §§ 11.001-66.017 (West 2007 & Supp. 2010) (hereinafter “PURA”). As a regulated utility,
    TNMP provides services at rates that remain subject to traditional cost-of-service regulation by the
    Commission under PURA. See 
    id. One of
    the rates and charges set by the Commission is TNMP’s
    CTC, the mechanism through which the utility recovers its stranded costs, with interest.2
    In TNMP’s true-up case, the Commission determined the rate of interest to be applied
    to TNMP’s stranded costs from their inception (January 1, 2002, when competition began) to the
    date of the true-up. In its final true-up order, issued July 22, 2005, the Commission established a
    stranded-cost balance for TNMP of $128,820,365 as of January 1, 2002. The Commission added
    interest (carrying charges) of $39,166,214 to these stranded costs, calculated at an annual rate of
    10.93%. The final net stranded-cost recovery authorized by the Commission was $110,603,855. See
    State v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    246 S.W.3d 324
    , 331 (Tex. App.—Austin 2008, pet. filed).
    On November 4, 2005, TNMP initiated Docket No. 31994 (the “CTC Docket”),
    which involved the carrying-charge rate on its CTC as well as a number of other issues. The
    Commission referred the matter to an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) at the State Office of
    Administrative Hearings (“SOAH”). Before the CTC Docket proceeded to a hearing on the merits,
    2
    See generally State v. Public Util. Comm’n, No. 08-0421, 
    2011 WL 923949
    , at *1-2 (Tex.
    Mar. 18, 2011) (reviewing statutory scheme). “Stranded costs” refer to the portion of the book value
    of a utility’s generation assets that is projected to be unrecovered through rates that are based on
    market prices. Id.; see also City of Corpus Christi v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    51 S.W.3d 231
    , 237
    (Tex. 2001).
    2
    however, TNMP and all parties except the Cities entered into a non-unanimous stipulation (or
    indicated that they did not oppose the stipulation).3 Of relevance to this appeal, the NUS provided
    that “[i]nterest on the stranded cost balance beginning July 22, 2005 will be 10.93%. That interest
    rate will prevail unless and until the Commission validly adopts a new rule [regarding the interest
    rate] at which time the terms of the new rule will apply.”
    In fact, during the pendency of the CTC Docket, the Commission was in the process
    of amending its true-up rule, 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 25.263, which provided a new formula for
    computing the stranded-cost interest rate.4 The Commission completed the rulemaking after the
    NUS was signed and filed but before the NUS went before the Commission for review. The
    effective date of the new rule was July 20, 2006.
    After a hearing on the NUS, the ALJ recommended in its proposal for decision that
    the Commission reject the stipulation. In its final order dated November 2, 2006 (the “CTC Order”),
    the Commission declined to adopt the ALJ’s proposal for decision and instead adopted the NUS.
    In the CTC Order, the Commission made reference to the new rule and determined that, “[u]nder the
    terms of the NUS, the new version of the rule sets the interest rate on the stranded-cost balance from
    the date the rule is effective.” In addition, the Commission made the following fact findings:
    3
    The parties variously refer to this agreement as a non-unanimous stipulation and a non-
    unanimous settlement. For clarity, we will refer to it as the “NUS.”
    4
    Specifically, the Commission proposed an amendment to rule 25.263(l)(3) to change the
    interest rate on the utilities’ CTC balances from the utility’s cost of capital established in the utility’s
    unbundled cost-of-service case to the utility’s most recently authorized or reported cost of debt, and
    to require the transmission and distribution utilities, like TNMP, to apply for revised carrying
    charges on their CTC balances. See City of Dickinson v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    284 S.W.2d 449
    , 451
    (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, no pet.).
    3
    16A.    The NUS sets the interest rate of 10.93% until the Commission validly adopts
    a new rule, at which time the terms of the new rule will apply.
    ....
    41.     The NUS sets an interest rate of 10.93%, which is subject to change when the
    Commission validly adopts a new rule setting the interest rate.
    41A.    P.U.C. Subst. R. 25.263(l)(3) was revised, effective July 20, 2006, and
    establishes a formula for determining interest on post-true-up balances.
    In Ordering Paragraph No. 1 of the CTC Order, the Commission approved TNMP’s
    application to set the CTC “as modified by the NUS.” The Commission further ordered TNMP to
    file a tariff that conformed to the decisions contained in the CTC Order and that updated the interest
    amounts approved therein. TNMP did not appeal from the Commission’s final CTC Order.
    In accordance with the new rule, which required each transmission and distribution
    utility to file an application to adjust the carrying costs on its CTC within 30 days of the effective
    date of the rule, TNMP initiated Docket No. 33106 (the “Interest Rate Docket”). In its final order
    in the Interest Rate Docket, the Commission approved TNMP’s recommended CTC interest rate
    revision of 8.31%. This Court considered the ratepayer cities’ challenges to the 8.31% interest rate
    in City of Dickinson v. Public Utility Commission, 
    284 S.W.2d 449
    (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, no
    pet.), ultimately affirming the Commission’s determination, see 
    id. at 454.
    Thereafter, TNMP
    initiated the proceeding that is the subject of this appeal, Docket No. 35038 (the “Tariff Docket”).
    The instant dispute arising from the Tariff Docket proceedings concerns exactly when
    the new 8.31% interest rate went into effect. TNMP argued that the new rate would only go into
    effect on the entry of a final order in the Tariff Docket, and that any earlier effective date would
    4
    result in impermissible retroactive ratemaking. The Commission Staff took the position that the new
    rate went into effect on December 27, 2007—the date claimed by Staff as the effective date of the
    Commission’s final decision in the Interest Rate Docket. OPC urged that, in accordance with the
    CTC Order adopting the NUS, the new rate went into effect on the effective date of the revised rule,
    July 20, 2006.
    At the Tariff Docket hearing, each party introduced evidence in support of its
    respective position. The ALJ’s proposal for decision recommended the Commission Staff’s
    proposed date. The Commission declined to adopt the ALJ’s interpretation, however, and instead
    concluded that the CTC Order had adopted the agreement of the parties regarding the effective date
    of the interest rate change and applied the revised interest rate from July 20, 2006, when the revised
    rule went into effect. It memorialized these findings by an order dated October 22, 2008 (the
    “Effective Date Order”). TNMP sought judicial review of the Effective Date Order, and the trial
    court reversed “the Commission’s decision to set a retroactive effective date [of] July 20, 2006 for
    the 8.31% carrying charge rate.” The Commission and OPC now appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, the Commission and OPC argue that, in issuing the Effective Date Order,
    the Commission properly interpreted its 2006 CTC Order to require that the revised-rule interest rate
    apply going forward from July 20, 2006. They urge that because this interpretation of the CTC Order
    is reasonable and supported by the language of that prior order, this Court should defer to the
    Commission’s interpretation in construing the Effective Date Order under review.
    5
    Standard of Review
    This case concerns a suit for judicial review of a final agency decision in a contested
    case. In general, we review the Commission’s final order under the substantial evidence standard
    of review described in section 2001.174 of the Texas Administrative Procedure Act. See Tex. Util.
    Code Ann. § 15.001 (West 2007); Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 2001.174 (West 2008). Under the
    substantial evidence rule, we give significant deference to the agency in its field of expertise.
    Railroad Comm’n v. Torch Operating Co., 
    912 S.W.2d 790
    , 792 (Tex. 1995); AEP Tex. North Co.
    v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    297 S.W.3d 435
    , 447 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, pet. denied). We presume
    that the Commission’s order is supported by substantial evidence, and the complaining parties have
    the burden to overcome this presumption. City of El Paso v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    883 S.W.2d 179
    ,
    185 (Tex. 1994).
    Any questions of statutory construction are reviewed de novo, although an agency’s
    interpretation of the statute it administers is entitled to serious consideration so long as it is
    reasonable and does not conflict with the statute’s language. First Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Combs,
    
    258 S.W.3d 627
    , 631-32 (Tex. 2008). A court applying the substantial evidence rule may reverse
    the agency’s order when the agency has made a prejudicial error of law, including a violation of a
    constitutional or statutory provision, or when the order is “arbitrary or capricious or characterized
    by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.” Tex. Gov’t Code Ann.
    § 2001.174(2).
    In construing orders of an administrative agency, we apply the same rules as when
    we interpret statutes; the ultimate object of construction is to ascertain the intent of the
    6
    administrative body. Railroad Comm’n v. Home Transp. Co., 
    670 S.W.2d 319
    , 325 (Tex.
    App.—Austin 1984, no writ); see Boswell v. Brazos Elec. Power Co-op., Inc., 
    910 S.W.2d 593
    ,
    599-600 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1995, writ denied); Armak Tex. Movers, Inc. v. Railroad Comm’n,
    
    797 S.W.2d 383
    , 388 (Tex. App.—Austin 1990, no writ); Airport Coach Serv., Inc. v. City of
    Fort Worth, 
    518 S.W.2d 566
    , 574 (Tex. Civ. App.—Tyler 1974, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (op. on reh’g).
    Because an administrative agency is a creature of the legislature, it possesses “only those powers that
    the Legislature expressly confers upon it” and “any implied powers that are reasonably necessary to
    carry out the express responsibilities given to it by the Legislature.” Public Util. Comm’n v. City
    Pub. Serv. Bd., 
    53 S.W.3d 310
    , 315 (Tex. 2001). An agency may not, however, “in the guise of
    implied powers, exercise what is effectively a new power, or a power contrary to a statute, on the
    theory that such exercise is expedient for the agency’s purpose.” CenterPoint Energy Entex
    v. Railroad Comm’n, 
    208 S.W.3d 608
    , 615 (Tex. App.—Austin 2006, pet. dism’d). Therefore, any
    questions regarding the scope of the agency’s authority must be resolved in view of the statutory
    language conferring that authority, see In re City of Georgetown, 
    53 S.W.3d 328
    , 331 (Tex. 2001),
    which we review de novo, see City of San Antonio v. City of Boerne, 
    111 S.W.3d 22
    , 25 (Tex. 2003).
    The Effective Date Order Properly Interprets the CTC Order
    In the Effective Date Order, the Commission determined that its prior CTC Order,
    by “adopting the agreement of the parties in the NUS,” established the effective date of TNMP’s
    revised CTC interest rate as July 20, 2006. As evidence that this was in fact its prior determination,
    the Commission pointed to findings of fact 41 and 41A in the CTC Order, and made the following
    additional findings of fact:
    7
    8.      The non-unanimous settlement (NUS) adopted by the Commission in
    Application of TNMP Power Company to Adjust the Competition Transition
    Charge Pursuant to PURA § 39.262(g), Docket No. 31994 (Nov. 2, 2006),
    states in Article II, paragraph D as follows: “Interest on the stranded cost
    balance beginning July 22, 2005 will be 10.93%. That interest rate will
    prevail unless and until the Commission validly adopts a new rule at which
    time the terms of the new rule will apply.”
    9.      In adopting the NUS, the Commission stated in its order [the CTC Order] that
    “[u]nder the terms of the NUS, the new version of the rule sets the interest
    rate on the stranded-cost balance from the date the rule is effective.” Docket
    No. 31994, Order at 4 (Nov. 2, 2006). [Emphasis in original.]
    10.     Finding of fact 41 in the Commission’s order in Docket No. 31994 states:
    “The NUS sets an interest rate of 10.93%, which is subject to change when
    the Commission validly adopts a new rule setting the interest rate.”
    11.     Finding of fact 41A in the Commission’s order in Docket No. 31994 states:
    “P.U.C. Subst. R. 25.263(l)(3) was revised, effective July 20, 2006, and
    establishes a formula for determining interest on post-true-up balances.”
    Based on these findings, the Commission concluded in the Effective Date Order that, “[p]ursuant
    to the non-unanimous settlement and the Commission’s order adopting that settlement . . . , the
    effective date of a new interest rate on CTC balances revised pursuant to P.U.C. Subst. R.
    25.263(l)(3) (effective July 20, 2006), is the effective date of that rule.”
    In its suit for judicial review of the Effective Date Order, TNMP challenged the
    Commission’s conclusion that the CTC Order had adopted July 20, 2006 as the effective date for the
    new interest rate, characterizing it as an “egregious misconstruction of the NUS (and the 2006 CTC
    Order).” According to TNMP, the parties to the NUS agreed only that the “terms” of the new rule
    would apply when the Commission adopted a new rule. TNMP further asserts that because the CTC
    Order simply repeated the agreement of the parties to the NUS, the Effective Date Order “amounted
    8
    to an amendment of [the] 2006 CTC Order,” allowing the Commission to confer itself the authority
    to set a “retroactive” effective date.
    The Commission argues that the CTC Order represents the Commission’s approval
    of the parties’ NUS. We agree. Thus, in adopting the NUS, the Commission was entitled to, and
    did, interpret the effective-date language contained in the NUS and to formulate a reasonable remedy
    to effectuate the terms of that agreement. See AEP Tex. 
    North, 297 S.W.3d at 447
    (stipulation and
    agreement entered into by parties lost its character as private contract and assumed character of
    administrative order when it became basis for Commission’s decision) (citing In re Entergy Corp.,
    
    142 S.W.3d 316
    , 323-24 (Tex. 2004)); see also Public Util. Comm’n v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co.,
    
    960 S.W.2d 116
    , 119-20 (Tex. App.—Austin 1997, no pet.) (PURA confers on Commission power
    to accept and act upon agreement between parties, and power to interpret agreement when dispute
    subsequently arises). Therefore, our inquiry must concern not the language of the NUS itself, but
    the interpretation of the NUS that the Commission adopted and memorialized in the CTC Order
    (from which TNMP never appealed) and subsequently interpreted in the Effective Date Order. See
    City of Abilene v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    146 S.W.3d 742
    , 747 & n.7 (Tex. App.—Austin 2004, no
    pet.) (“Agencies are entitled to interpret their own orders, for administrative purposes, so long as the
    agency does not use the occasion to interpret as a means to amend the prior order.”) (citing Home
    Transp. 
    Co., 670 S.W.2d at 325
    ); see also Chocolate Bayou Water Co. & Sand Supply v. Texas
    Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n, 
    124 S.W.3d 844
    , 853 (Tex. App.—Austin 2003, pet. denied)
    (prohibiting collateral attack on final agency order after time for appeal has passed). And in
    construing the Effective Date Order, which in turn construes the CTC Order, we must give “great
    9
    weight” to the Commission’s interpretation, just as we give great weight to an agency’s interpretation
    of its own rules and regulations. AEP Tex. 
    North, 297 S.W.3d at 447
    .
    Accordingly, we conclude that at the time it issued the CTC Order, the Commission
    interpreted the NUS to require the interest rate to change “from the date the [new] rule is effective,”
    and that such an interpretation was reasonable. The CTC Order’s fact findings and ordering
    paragraphs are consistent with that conclusion, which is further bolstered by the language in the CTC
    Order (quoting the NUS) that “unless and until the Commission validly adopts a new rule,” the
    former 10.93% rate would apply. As the Commission points out, the “unless-and-until language”
    can reasonably be construed to mean that the 10.93% rate “ceases to apply on the date the Revised
    Rule becomes effective. Thus, if the revised rate does not apply as of that date, there is no interest
    rate for stranded costs in the interim.” See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.023(5) (West 2005) (courts
    may consider “consequences of a particular construction” when construing statutes); AEP Tex.
    
    North, 297 S.W.3d at 447
    (courts construe orders of administrative agencies according to same rules
    as when interpreting statutes) (citing Home Transp. 
    Co., 670 S.W.2d at 325
    ).
    Read together, the relevant portions of the CTC Order, including the findings of fact,
    comport with the Commission’s conclusion in the Effective Date Order that the Commission had
    intended the effective date of the revised rate to be July 20, 2006, and thus set the new interest rate
    as of that date. Therefore, because there is no inconsistency between the CTC and Effective Date
    Orders, the Commission did not improperly “amend” the prior order by its subsequent interpretation.
    See City of 
    Abilene, 146 S.W.3d at 747
    (recognizing that agency is entitled to interpret its own order,
    10
    so long as it does not use occasion as means to amend prior order).5 TNMP maintains, however, that
    the Commission’s interpretation of its prior order is unreasonable and should not be adopted because
    it would result in retroactive ratemaking. Specifically, TNMP argues that retroactive ratemaking
    occurred when the Commission recognized an effective date for the CTC revised interest rate that
    was earlier than the date on which the revised interest rate was numerically calculated. We disagree.
    The Commission’s Interpretation Does Not Result in Retroactive Ratemaking
    We note from the outset that “[t]he rule against retroactive ratemaking is often
    misunderstood and misapplied.” State v. Public Util. Comm’n, 
    883 S.W.2d 190
    , 199 (Tex. 1994).
    The rule prohibits the Commission from setting future rates to allow a utility to recoup past losses
    or to refund to customers excess utility profits. 
    Id. “Restated, the
    rule prohibits a utility commission
    from making a retrospective inquiry to determine whether a prior rate was reasonable and imposing
    a surcharge when rates were too low or a refund when rates were too high.” 
    Id. In short,
    “the rule
    against retroactive ratemaking only requires that [utilities], the Commission, and courts abide by an
    administrative determination that a particular rate is just and reasonable.” CenterPoint Energy
    
    Entex, 208 S.W.3d at 623
    .
    5
    TNMP argues that we should consider the fact that it continued to collect interest at the
    10.93% rate when it filed its compliance tariff in November 2006, after the CTC Order was issued,
    and apparently no other party objected. The intent or interpretation of TNMP, or of the other
    participants in the CTC Docket, does not control our analysis, however. Indeed, the most that could
    be inferred from TNMP’s subsequent conduct and the alleged inaction on the part of the other parties
    is that the effective date language in the CTC Order was ambiguous. Assuming without deciding
    that the CTC Order was ambiguous, we would be constrained to adopt the interpretation of the
    Commission so long as it was not unreasonable. Fiess v. State Farm Lloyds, 
    202 S.W.3d 744
    ,
    747-48 (Tex. 2006). As we will address further, the Commission’s interpretation is reasonable and
    does not, as TNMP asserts, result in impermissible retroactive ratemaking.
    11
    Here, the rate at issue was set by the 2006 CTC Order. Prior to that order, there were
    no CTC rates set for TNMP and TNMP was not authorized to charge a CTC.6 Therefore, as the
    Commission argues, there could be no retrospective inquiry into the reasonableness of any CTC
    rates and, thus, no recoupment of past losses or refund of excess profits in those rates. Cf. 
    State, 883 S.W.2d at 199
    . The change in the interest rate resulted from the prospective application of the
    formula adopted under the Commission’s new rule, not from an evaluation of the adequacy, or
    inadequacy, of the stranded cost interest rate established for TNMP in its true-up case.7 The
    Effective Date Order does not amount to a determination by the Commission that prior rates were
    unreasonable; rather, it merely implemented the CTC Order. Because the Commission did not
    engage in retroactive ratemaking in the CTC Docket, the Effective Date Order did not result in
    retroactive ratemaking.
    Finally, TNMP argues that the Commission’s order adopting amended rule
    25.263(l)(3) prohibits the Commission from setting an effective date for the revised interest rate that
    is earlier than the date of an order determining what the rate would be. In that order, the
    6
    This fact distinguishes the instant case from that of a “similarly situated” utility that TNMP
    argues was treated more favorably by the Commission. We also note that the effective-date
    language of the NUS adopted by the Commission in TNMP’s CTC Order is unique to this case, and
    controls the outcome here. See Application of AEP Texas Central Company For a Competition
    Transition Charge Pursuant to PUC Subst. R. 25.263(n), Docket No. 32758, available
    at http://interchange.puc.state.tx.us/WebApp/Interchange/application/dbapps/login/pgLogin.asp at
    Docket No. 32758, Item 189.
    7
    Moreover, as the Commission and OPC point out, no statute or rule requires the
    CTC revised interest rate to have been numerically quantified before the effective date of the revised
    rate. On the contrary, the history of stranded-cost recovery illustrates that interest charges
    become effective long before the date principal stranded cost amounts or stranded cost interest rates
    are ever quantified.
    12
    Commission recognized that the CTC is a “rate” as defined under PURA, and that PURA authorizes
    the Commission to change rates on a prospective basis. Having determined, however, that the CTC
    Order revised TNMP’s CTC interest rate prospectively from the effective date of the amended rule,
    we find no inconsistency between the order adopting the amended rule and the Effective Date
    Order’s implementation of the CTC Order.
    In light of the foregoing, we sustain the Commission’s and OPC’s issues on appeal.
    CONCLUSION
    Having sustained the Commission’s and OPC’s issues on appeal, we reverse the
    judgment of the trial court and render judgment affirming the Commission’s order.
    J. Woodfin Jones, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Jones, Justices Henson and Goodwin
    Reversed and Rendered
    Filed: May 11, 2011
    13