321 A.2d 869 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1973
The appeal herein by the plaintiff city of Hartford is prosecuted from an order of the defendant public utilities commission, hereinafter *66 referred to as PUC, granting an interim rate increase to the defendant Connecticut Natural Gas Corporation, hereinafter referred to as CNG. CNG is a public service company, franchised by the PUC to provide gas services, at rates and charges regulated by the PUC, within its assigned territory in the state of Connecticut.
By its letter of July 24, 1972, the PUC suspended the rate increase, pending its further investigation and order, pursuant to General Statutes §
Under date of September 14, 1972, the PUC, after considering CNG's testimony and exhibits, made an interim finding and order, allowing CNG an annual rate increase of $1,750,000, by way of an interim order, in lieu of $2,950,000 requested by CNG, as interlocutory relief. The interim order was made subject to the approval of an interim rate schedule; the filing of a corporate assurance, equal to the entire amount allowed by the PUC; and an order for refund of the increase, together with interest at the annual rate of no less than 8 percent, conditional upon the final order of the PUC, at a subsequent date.
An order of supersedeas, issued on October 12, 1972, was modified on October 13, 1972. The modified order allowed CNG to collect revenues arising from the interim order, pending a final order of the PUC. This was conditioned on the filing by CNG of a *67 corporate assurance in the sum of $1,750,000, and on the further condition that any subsequent refunds would bear 8 percent annual interest.
By writ dated October 12, 1972, the city commenced an appeal to this court, alleging that the interim order was illegal and unconstitutional, on various grounds. The city alleges that it initiated the appeal on behalf of itself, as a gas customer, and also on behalf of certain Hartford residents who were also gas customers. The appeal prays that this court vacate and set aside the interim finding and order, pending a plenary hearing on the CNG application, and "the making and filing of a final Finding and Order by said Defendant Commission thereon."
Two motions to erase have been filed, and remain for determination. The motion of CNG urges that the plaintiff's appeal was brought under §§
The PUC alleges, in a similar vein, that the plaintiff failed to exhaust its administrative remedies, pending a final order of the PUC. The PUC asserts that the final order by it would render moot any decision by this court on the interim order and, finally, that there is no legal support for judicial review of the interim order.
Both motions, for the most part, cover the same basic legal theories, and will therefore be considered together. *68
The court finds that both motions have merit, subject to the comments hereinbelow.
Shortly following the conclusion of oral arguments before this court, on the motions to erase, the PUC, on December 27, 1972, issued its finding and final order. It approved a rate schedule for CNG, providing additional annual revenues of about $1,369,428, over and above the rates existing prior to CNG's initial application. The final increase was thus substantially less than the sum of $1,750,000 authorized in the interim order of September 14, 1972. The order of December 27, 1972, further provided for refunds to CNG customers of interim charges in excess of the final amount allowed, together with interest at 8 percent per annum.
Public Act No. 870, as passed by the 1971 session of the General Assembly, became effective September 1, 1971. In §§ 42 and 43, it amended §§
Section 20 of the UAPA does provide for repeal of any provisions of the General Statutes "inconsistent" with the UAPA. There is no specific reference in the UAPA to a repeal of any portions of title 16. If any repeal of those sections took place, it must arise from a repeal by implication.
In this connection, §
It is thus clear that the UAPA, by its very terms, was not intended to supersede or nullify alternate methods of attack on an administrative decision available under other statutory procedures. To the same effect, see 2 Cooper, State Administrative Law, p. 607, which discusses a comparable provision in the revised model state administrative procedure act.
The argument for repeal by implication is not a persuasive one. The amendments to §§
Repeal of statutes by implication is not favored.Fair Haven W.R. Co. v. New Haven,
It is concluded that §§
The court's conclusion is fortified by Public Act No. 261, enacted at the 1972 session of the General Assembly and approved May 18, 1972. It is captioned, "An Act Concerning the Powers of Transit Districts Formed under Chapter 103a." Section 3 of Public Act No. 261 amends §
The obvious intention of Public Act No. 261 was to recognize the existence and validity of §§
The city has been a party in the proceedings before the PUC, both as to the interim and the final order. Its right to appeal from the final order is set forth in §
In fact, the plaintiff's brief contains a tacit admission of the crucial flaw therein, to wit, the lack of finality of the interim order. The city's prayer for relief seeks to nullify the interim order, only pending a full hearing on the merits of CNG's application and the entry by the PUC of a final order, both of which conditions have taken place. Thus, the plaintiff, somewhat reluctantly, recognizes the hard reality that the interim order, at best, is preliminary and short-lived, and that the final order is the vital and controlling administrative action, with respect to an appeal.
The interim order contained nothing which could give it the status of finality. It stated that the *72 increase, instituted under bond, would be subject to a refund, "pending the Commission's final determination." Subsequent proceedings before the PUC were necessary, and did occur, leading to the final order.
The final order of December 27, 1972, specifically states that it is "in substitution" for the interim order. In other words, the December 27 order, to the extent that it allowed a rate increase substantially below that authorized in the interim order, amended and superseded the interim order. For all practical purposes, the interim order no longer had any force or effect, following a fifteen-day temporary use of the interim rates pending the filing of a rate schedule permitted by the final order.
As a leading text states: "[T]he administrative agency is entitled to the first and the next-to-the-last word. It must be given an opportunity to speak first ... and it cannot be deprived of the power to pass upon the case until it has spoken its final word with reference thereto." 2 Cooper, State Administrative Law, p. 572. To the same effect, seeFlorentine v. Darien,
In Brown v. Hausman, 94 P.U.R.3d 289, the court sustained the validity of a temporary bus fare increase granted by the PUC to the Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company pursuant to §
The "exhaustion" rule has merit, both in concept and in its application to this case. It avoids a needless multiplicity of appeals, essentially based on the same subject matter. It does not deprive the city of its right to seek judicial redress, but merely postpones it, pending a final ruling of the PUC. At that time, as evidenced by the order of December 27, 1972, the actions and errors, if any, of the PUC became fixed and final, on the administrative level, and a more appropriate subject for an appeal. The alleged prejudice to the city, by denial of the interlocutory appeal, seems minimal, or nonexistent.
The right to an appeal is not a constitutional one. It is a statutory privilege, available only to one who has strictly complied with the rules pertaining thereto. Chanosky v. City Building Supply Co.,
On this phase, the court concludes that the interim order was not a final order, from which the city could prosecute an appeal, even when an appeal was attempted pursuant to §
It is clear that the interim order no longer had any real force and effect, upon entry of the final order, either as a mandate to CNG or as a cause for complaint by an aggrieved party, such as the city.
If the court were to entertain and adjudicate the instant appeal, now that the final order has been entered, it would be an exercise in futility. It would be determining issues in the interim order, made moot by the final order.
This court should not decide moot questions, which are disconnected from the granting of actual relief, or from the determination of which no practical relief can follow. New York, N.H. H.R. Co. v.Water Commissioners,
The defendants, however, did not expressly claim a lack of aggrievement, as a ground of their motions to erase. Hence, the court expresses no final opinion as to this issue. Compare Hoberman v. Lake ofIsles, Inc.,
The issues are found for the defendants. Their motions to erase are granted.