Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
In 1978 Congress passed the Pole Attachments Act, which set a ceiling and a floor on the price that cable television operators and telecommunications carriers (here called cable operators for simplicity’s sake) must pay to attach their lines to a power company’s utility poles. See 47 U.S.C. § 224(d). The act directs the Federal Communications Commission to “regulate the rates, terms, and conditions for pole attachments to provide that such rates, terms, and conditions are just and reasonable,” id. § 224(b)(1), and then sets the bounds for what is “just and reasonable”:
[A] rate is just and reasonable if it assures a utility the recovery of not less than the additional costs of providing pole attachments, nor more than an amount determined by multiplying the percentage of the total usable space ... which is occupied by the pole attachment by the sum of the operating expenses and actual capital costs of the utility attributable to the entire pole, duct, conduit, or right-of-way.
Id.
§ 224(d). Congress thus specified a minimum charge (characterized by the Supreme Court as the “marginal cost of [the] attachments,”
FCC v. Florida Power
Corp.,
While specifying rate limits, the 1978 act left utilities free to refuse attachment. In 1996 Congress added a requirement that utilities allow attachment except in cases of “insufficient capacity” or for “reasons of safety, reliability and generally applicable engineering purposes.” 47 U.S.C. § 224(f).
Soon after the 1996 amendments, petitioner Gulf Power and other utility companies increased their pole attachment rates to levels above the statutory maximum. Several cable operators filed a complaint against Gulf with the FCC, which ruled that Gulfs increased rates violated the act and the FCC’s implementing regulations.
Gulf now seeks review of that order, arguing that the act fails to provide for just compensation under the Fifth Amendment, and that the FCC’s decision is arbitrary and capricious, or is otherwise not supported by substantial evidence. We find the doctrine of collateral estoppel (or “issue preclusion”) a fatal bar to Gulfs assertion of the constitutional issue, and its remaining arguments unavailing. We thus deny the petition.
Gulf primarily contends that the act and the FCC’s implementing regulations fail to provide just compensation for power companies forced to allow attachments at the prescribed rates. The FCC
In Alabama Power the court faced a challenge by Gulfs sister company to the precise scheme at issue here. Alabama Power, like Gulf, argued that “the statute and regulations fail to provide just compensation.” Id. at 1367. The Eleventh Circuit held that, outside of certain limited circumstances, the act’s rates amounted to just compensation. Id. at 1370-71. Although acknowledging that mandatory attachments could impose an opportunity cost on a utility (namely, loss of the advantage of either using attachment space itself or renting it to another), the court held that the takings clause did not require compensation for that cost in the absence of actual crowding. Thus, it concluded, the act and regulations failed to specify just compensation only when a power company could show that “(1) the pole [in question] is at full capacity and (2) either (a) another buyer of the space is waiting in the wings or (b) the power company is able to put the space to a higher-valued use with its own operations.” Id. at 1370. Because the act itself allows the utility to refuse access altogether in cases of “insufficient capacity,” 42 U.S.C. § 224(f)(2), we take it that the Alabama Power formula will only become relevant in cases where the current set of attachments have filled the pole to capacity and the utility is then presented with either of the two opportunities discussed in part (2) of the formula, namely renting the occupied space to another at a higher rate or using that space itself for a higher-valued use. Refinements of this sort, however, are unnecessary to resolve this case.
The doctrine of issue preclusion generally bars “successive litigation of an issue of fact or law actually litigated and resolved in a valid court determination essential to the prior judgment.”
New Hampshire v. Maine,
As to parties, it is true that Gulf was not a party to that decision (though the FCC obviously was). But there are a number of exceptions to the requirement of identical parties (six, according to the Supreme Court’s count in
Taylor,
We find such control here. Gulf and Alabama Power were under the common control and complete ownership of their parent entity, Southern Company. See Southern Co., Form 10-K, Annual Report for the Fiscal Year Ending Dec. 31, 2010, at 1-1 (Feb. 25, 2011) (“10-K”). Both companies were thus servants to the same master. There seems at most only a trivial difference between a. case where the party sought to be barred is a parent of a corporate party in the first litigation, and one where the two parties are fellow wholly-owned subsidiaries. Compare
Fitzgibbon v. Martin County Coal Corp.,
No. 0536,
Gulf claims, however, that the central issue in Alabama Power — whether the statutory scheme provides just compensation — is quite different from the one it tries to raise here — “Is [the Alabama Power ] ‘test’ ... inconsistent with settled, Fifth Amendment takings jurisprudence[?]” Petitioner’s Reply Br. 9. Put another way, Gulf argues that the issue in the Alabama Power was the constitutionality of the scheme, whereas the issue before us now is whether Alabama Power decided that issue correctly. But if an issue can be turned into a new issue merely by asking whether it had been rightly decided, collateral estoppel would never apply.
Recognizing that we might find it bound by
Alabama Power,
Gulf contends that the FCC applied that decision’s exception to the rate scheme too narrowly. As we saw earlier,
Alabama Power
required a utility, trying to show that the act’s rate scheme failed to provide just compensation, first to prove that its poles were “at full capacity.”
We find the FCC’s interpretation in accord with both the Eleventh Circuit decisions and with common sense. In
Alabama Power,
the Eleventh Circuit explicitly noted that the pole rate scheme already provided for the reimbursement of the make-ready costs of any new attachments, see
Nor is
Southern Company
to the contrary. The court there held that in a situation where
“it is agreed that capacity on a given pole ... is insufficient,”
the FCC may not order make-ready work.
With this interpretation in mind we hold that Gulf failed to meet its burden to show that its poles are at full capacity, as required by Alabama Power. Because proving full capacity is a prerequisite to qualifying for the Alabama Power exception, we need not reach Gulfs arguments concerning the legal standards and record evidence involved in the second of the exception’s preconditions — whether Gulf could show that there were other buyers waiting in the wings or other higher-valued uses for the utility pole space.
The petition for review is
Denied.
