Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
We issued an opinion in the matter on July 12, 2002, granting the original petitions for review and vacating portions of the underlying orders of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC” or “Respondent”) as beyond the jurisdiction
I. Background
While we will not rehash the entire course of proceedings to date in this controversy as it is set forth in
Atlantic City Elec. Co. v. FERC,
After our remand, the Commission entered its order on remand, December 19, 2002,
Pennsylvania-New Jersey-Maryland Interconnection,
101 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,318,
II. Analysis
As noted above, this Court has the power to enforce its mandates, including the power to “correct any misconception of its mandate by a[n] ... administrative agency subject to its authority.”
Id.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is subject to our authority.
See
16 U.S.C. § 825i(b) (1994). Pursuant to that authority, we entered the prior mandate. In the opinions supporting that prior mandate, we held that FERC did not have jurisdiction to “require the utility petitioners to cede rights expressly given to them in § 205[.]”
Atlantic City,
In its response to Petitioner’s application to this Court to vacate the offending portion of the new order, FERC contends that it was able to reconsider and reinstate the original result because we have in the past upheld its authority to provide further explanation on remand, supporting the original result. It is true, that we have allowed additional reasoning on remand,
see, e.g., Southeastern Michigan Gas Co. v. FERC,
FERC’s approach does worse than take a sentence out of eontext-it takes an element of a sentence out of context. What we in fact said in our conclusion was: “FERC
can
point to no statute authorizing its requirement that the utility petitioners cede their statutory rights under section 205 of the Federal Power Act to file changes in rate design with the Commission.”
Likewise, FERC’s refusal to comply with the prior mandate of this Court concerning the right of the utilities to withdraw from the ISO pursuant to § 203 of the FPA is equally invalid. Again, we held in our prior decision that FERC’s order exceeded its statutory jurisdiction. That section empowers FERC to act only upon “the disposition of the facilities themselves.”
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we reaffirm and clarify our prior decision that FERC has no jurisdiction to enter limitations requiring utilities to surrender their rights under § 205 of the FPA to make filings to initiate rate changes. We further reiterate that the Commission has no jurisdiction to enter the portion of its order on remand requiring approval under § 203 of the Act before a public utility can withdraw from an ISO. FERC must not re-enter the orders exceeding its jurisdiction. In short, the petition to enforce the mandate is allowed.
So ordered.
Notes
. Other utilities have petitioned for leave to intervene or, in one case, to participate as amicus. Perceiving no prejudice to anyone by their joinder and a real interest according them standing in the cause, we are hereby allowing those motions.
