This appeal involves the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s authorization of an increased rate under the Federal Power Act. We are of the view that the procedures used by the Commission were proper, and that the decision of the Administrative Law Judge, as adopted by the Commission, correctly stated the law applicable to the facts. With one exception, the issues resolved do not occasion an opinion. See D.C.Cir. Rule 13(c). We publish our conclusions regarding whether it was proper for the Commission to authorize not only a lower rate than that sought by the utility, but a different type of rate than that proposed by the utility.
I
Winnfield, a city in Louisiana with a population of approximately 7,000, had purchased power from Louisiana Power & Light Company (“LP&L”) under a series of contracts containing rates based on LP & L’s average system fuel costs. When the last of these expired on May 14, 1981, LP & L tendered a proposed agreement with rates based on incremental fuel costs, which meant that, for any hour Winnfield took power from LP&L, the rate would be based on the highest cost LP&L incurred during that hour for power going to its total load. When Winnfield refused to sign, LP&L filed a copy of the unexecuted agreement with the Commission as its proposal for continued service. On July 10, 1981, the Commission accepted the new rates for filing and suspended their effectiveness, subject to refund, until December 12, 1981, as the Commission is authorized to do under § 205 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 824d (1982). It ordered that the prior rates and contract terms become part of LP & L’s filed rate schedule and remain in effect until superseded by a rate schedule allowed to take effect. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 16 F.E.R.C. (CCH) ¶ 61,019 (1981).
After considerable procedural wrangling, including a petition for review to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, the parties submitted prepared direct testimony on September 4, 1981. LP&L asserted the superiority of its incremental pricing system over the prior average cost rates. The City of Winnfield contended that the proposed rates lacked the requisite justification on various grounds, and sought continued service under an average cost rate. The Commission staff agreed with Winnfield; it recommended that the average cost rates be continued, and that LP&L be allowed a rate increase which would provide a 16.5% return on common equity. Rebuttal testimony was taken, an extensive hearing was held, and post-hearing briefs were filed with the AU. In its brief, LP&L indicated that should the Commission reject its proposed incremental cost rate schedule, the utility would accept the FERC staff proposal for increased average cost rates, and suggested modifications of its own.
On November 2, 1981, the AU issued an order which rejected LP&L’s proposed incremental rates as unjust and unreasonable, yet granted LP&L the increase in average cost rates the Commission staff had proposed, based on the staff’s cost-of- *874 service and rate-of-return studies. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 17 F.E.R.C. (CCH) ¶ 63,020 (1981) (Initial Decision). On December 11, 1981, FERC adopted this initial decision, with certain modifications not relevant here, Louisiana Power & Light Co., 17 F.E.R.C. (CCH) ¶ 61,230 (1981), over the dissent of Commissioner Sheldon, who thought the rate increase was “gratuitous,” one “for which [LP&L] did not apply nor [sic ] justify.” Id. at p. 61,443-44. The Commission later denied rehearing, again over the dissent of Commissioner Sheldon. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 18 F.E.R.C. (CCH). ¶ 61,202 (1982). Winnfield brought a timely petition for review in this court under 16 U.S.C. § 825l (1982).
II
After finding the incremental cost rates LP & L proposed to be unjust and unreasonable, the AU found the authority to impose higher average cost rates in the combination of §§ 205(e) and 206(a). She stated:
Under Sections 205(e) and 206(a) of the Act, once the Commission finds the proposed rate unjust, unreasonable, or unduly discriminatory, it shall determine the just, reasonable and lawful rate.
Initial Decision, supra, at p. 65,047. The Commission affirmed without explaining whether it had acted under § 205 or § 206.
In this appeal, Winnfield claims that before setting a just and reasonable rate under § 206(a), the Commission must find the existing rate unjust or unreasonable, which it asserts was not done here; and that the Commission cannot approve under § 205 a rate increase of a sort different from that requested. Brief of Petitioner at 47-53. LP & L claims that the Commission need not find the existing rate unlawful in order to set a just and reasonable rate under § 206, but may do so when it finds that a utility’s proposed rate under § 205 is unlawful. Brief of Intervenor LP&L at 21-26. The Commission agrees with Winnfield’s construction of § 206, but claims that its action was based upon and authorized under § 205. As the Commission sees the law:
If, on its own initiative or pursuant to a complaint, the Commission proceeds to determine whether a current rate is “unjust, unreasonable or unduly discriminatory or preferential,” as specified under Section 206(a), 16 U.S.C. § 824e(a), it must make such a determination as to the existing rate before setting a new rate. However, where as here, the Commission proceeds to establish a rate pursuant to a change proposed by the company, Section 205 controls; and a finding that the current rate is unreasonable is not a prerequisite to the Commission’s setting a new rate.
Brief of Respondent at 22-23.
Section 205 allows utilities to charge new rates by filing them with the Commission. They take effect after a statutorily required notice period, § 205(d), 16 U.S.C. § 824d(d) (1982), unless the Commission suspends them (for up to five months), § 205(e), in order to investigate their lawfulness. Section 205(e) provides:
Whenever any such new schedule is filed the Commission ... may suspend the operation of such schedule and defer the use of such rate, charge, classification, or service but not for a longer period than five months beyond the time when it would otherwise go into effect; and after full hearings, either completed before or after the rate, charge, classification, or service goes into effect, the Commission may make such orders with reference thereto as would be proper in a proceeding initiated after it had become effective____ At any hearing involving a rate or charge sought to be increased, the burden of proof to show that the increased rate or charge is just and reasonable shall be upon the public utility, and the Commission shall give to the hearing and decision of such questions preference over other questions pending before it and decide the same as speedily as possible.
16 U.S.C. § 824d(e) (1982). As is evident, § 205, unlike § 206, allows the Commission *875 to approve rate increases without a showing that current rates are unjust and unreasonable; it need only find the proposed rates to be just and reasonable.
Petitioner, repeating the position taken in dissent by Commissioner Sheldon, contends that when acting under § 205 the Commission must act within the confines of the utility’s proposals; that it may not allow the utility a rate increase of a sort it neither requested nor justified. Nothing in the text of § 205 requires this result. To the contrary, by specifying that “the Commission may make such orders with reference [to a newly filed rate, charge, classification, or service] as would be proper in a proceeding initiated after it had become effective,” the section appears to envision the same breadth of authority as is available under § 206. The case law, however, suggests a limitation that is apparent from the structure of the Act rather than from the terms of its individual sections. In
Public Service Commission of New York v. FERC,
Section 4(e) [analogous to § 205(e) ] ... cannot be used by the Commission to institute any change in a rate-making component, such as cost allocation, that does not represent at least partial approval of the change for which the enterprise had petitioned in its filing. If the Commission seeks to make such changes, it has no alternative save compliance with the strictures of section 5(a) [analogous to § 206(a) ].
Public Service Commission of New York v. FERC, supra,
While affirming the principle of that case, we think it has no proper application here. It is apparent from reading
Public Service
and the cases upon which it relies,
e.g., Southern Natural Gas Co. v. FPC,
The courts were concerned lest the Commission impose its own curtailment plans without following the formalities prescribed by section 5(a) [the correlative of § 206]. To prevent section 5(a) from being undermined, reviewing courts approved curtailment plans filed under section 4 [the correlative of § 205] only if they were the product of the company’s own decision. When reviewing courts found that the plans had in fact been dictated by the Commission and that section 5(a) procedures had not been followed, they did not hesitate to vacate those plans.
There is, however, another valid concern: While the rule announced in
Public Service
was designed to protect the utility, it also serves to protect utility customers, by assuring early notice — in the rate proposal itself — of the sort of rate increase that is sought. Strictly speaking, however, that concern relates not to the power of the Commission to prescribe rates under § 205 but to the procedures that it must employ in doing so. We think fair procedures can be insured within the language of § 205, instead of achieving that goal indirectly by creating out of nothing a prophylactic limitation upon the Commission’s powers. Specifically, § 205 authorizes the Commission to “make ... orders” only “after full hearings,” and that requirement unquestionably imposes the duty to give adequate notice of the subject to which the orders pertain.
Cf. Portland Cement Association v. Ruckelshaus,
We conclude that neither any universally applicable prohibition limiting the form of order that the Commission can issue under § 205 to forms of rates filed by the utility; nor, in the circumstances of this case, any notice requirement imposed by the “full hearing” provision of § 205, prevented the rates prescribed here. It would be empty formalism to strike down those rates solely because they were initially introduced into the proceeding by Commission staff rather than the utility itself. And it would be wasteful to require, instead of the sensible procedure adopted here, that the Commission first deny LP & L’s requested increase and that the utility then commence a separate § 205 proceeding proposing the acceptable increase of *877 rates under the existing scheme that the Commission staff had suggested.
Petitioner asserts that one of the consequences of proceeding as the Commission did was that the utility did not satisfy the § 205 requirement of demonstrating that the approved rate was just and reasonable. The statutory obligation of the utility, however, is not to prove the continued reasonableness of
unchanged
rates or
unchanged
attributes of its rate structure. “[W]e cannot accept the proposition that because a company files for higher rates, it bears the burden of proof on those portions of its filing that represent no departure from the status quo____ The emphasis is on making the petitioner justify the changes in rates, not the constant elements.”
Public Service Commission of New York, supra,
Petition Denied.
Notes
. Although the contract's average-cost rates expired before the Commission resolved this matter, the Commission noted that they were the only filed rates, and continued to apply them until the resolution of this case.
. There is nothing inconsistent in 18 C.F.R. § 35.13(e)(3), which does set forth a burden of production, requiring the utility “to go forward ... on reasonable notice” to sustain its burden of proof.
