OPINION
Plaintiffs, Michigan Bell Telephone Company, d/b/a Ameritech Michigan and Verizon North, Incorporated (collectively “plaintiffs”), appeal the district court’s order denying their request for a preliminary injunction of § 310(7) of the Michigan Telecommunications Act of 2000 (“MTA”). MTA § 310(7) abolished a fee imposed upon customers known as the end user common line charge (“EUCL”). Defendants, John Engler, Governor of the State of Michigan, and David A. Svanda, Robert B. Nelson and John G. Strand, Commissioners of the Michigan Public Service Commission (“MPSC”), cross-appeal the district court’s order enjoining another provision of the MTA, § 701, which froze regulated telephone rates at their Mаy 1, 2000 level until December 31, 2003, except for services the MPSC deemed competitive. The provisions of the MTA at issue applied only to telephone service providers with more than 250,000 subscribers— namely the plaintiffs.
For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order preliminarily enjoining MTA § 701, and REVERSE the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion for enjoinment of MTA § 310(7).
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs each provide local telephone service to over 250,000 customers in the State of Michigan. Together, the plaintiffs supply over 90% of the local telephone service in the State. Thirty-six other companies account for the remainder of local telephone service, but none of them has more than 250,000 subscribers.
The plaintiffs charge their Michigan customers a monthly fee for “local exchange service.” This service includes a certain number of “local” telephone calls which originate and terminate within a defined calling area. The plaintiffs also offer “local toll service,” which covers calls not defined as either local or long distance. The plaintiffs charge customers on a per-minute basis for local toll calls.
The plaintiffs also charge their customers other fees, two of which are the interstate end user common line charge (presently $4.35) and the intrastate end user common fine charge. Verizon imposes an intrastate EUCL monthly charge of $3.50, and Ameritech imposes a $3.28 monthly intrastate EUCL charge. Further, prior
On July 17, 2000, Act 295 of the Public Acts of the State of Michigan for 2000 was signed by Governor John Engler, and took immediate effect. Act 295 amended the MTA to ensure that “every person has access to just, reasonable, and affordable basic residential telecommunication service,” and to “allow and encourage competition [in] providing telecommunication services.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 484.2101(2)(a), (b). As stated previously, two provisions of Act 295 are at issue herein— § 310(7) and § 701: § 310(7) abolishes the intrastate EUCL; and, § 701 freezes telephone rates for service providers with more than 250,000 subscribers until December 31, 2001, unless a provider’s services are deemed competitive by the MPSC in various circumstances.
In the proceedings before the district court, the plaintiffs argued, inter alia, that MTA §§ 310(7) and 701(1) violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The plaintiffs assert that these provisions are facially unconstitutionаl because they do not provide a mechanism through which telephone service providers may ensure that they receive a just and reasonable rate of return on their investment. As noted above, the district court denied the plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction with respect to MTA § 310(7), and granted it with respect to § 701. On September 22, 2000, the plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal of the district court’s order and simultaneously moved this court for an emergency injunction of MTA § 310(7). On September 28, 2000, Chief Judge Martin granted the plaintiffs’ emergency motion.
II. LAW
A. Severability
As an initial matter, the court must determine whether MTA § 701, the rate freeze provision, may be severed from § 310(7) which abolishes the EUCL. The plaintiffs argue that the two provisions may not be severed, and, therefore, the district court should have enjoined both statutory provisions. Michigan’s sever-ability statute provides:
If any portion of an act or the application thereof to any person or circumstances shall be found to be invalid by a court, such invalidity shall not affect the remaining portions or applications of the act which can be given effect without the invalid portion or application, provided such remaining portions are not determined by the court to be inoperable, and to this end acts are declared to bе sever-able.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 8.5. The Michigan Supreme Court explained the operation of an identical provision in another statute as follows:
Relying on the Act’s severability clause, § 18, defendants maintain that the Legislature expressly intended to preserve as much of the Act as possible. This clause provides: ‘Sec. 18. If any portion of this act or the application of this act to any person or circumstance is found to be invalid by a court, the invalidity shall not affect the remaining portions or applications of this act which can be given effect without the invalid portion or application, if the remaining portions are not determined by the court to be inoperable.’ The doctrine of severability holds that statutes should be interpreted to sustain their constitutionality when it*592 is possible to do so. Whenever a reviewing court may sustain an enactment by proper construction, it will uphold the parts which are separable from the repugnant provisions. To be capable of separate enforcement, the valid portion of the statute must be independent of the invalid sections, forming a complete act within itself. After separation of the valid parts of the enactment, the law enforced must be reasonable in view of the Act as originally drafted. One test applied is whether the law-making body would have passed the statute had it been aware that portions therein would be declared to be invalid and, consequently, excised from the Act.
Pletz v. Austin,
B. Standard of Review
The court reviews the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction for an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, this court will not disturb a district court’s findings of fact unless clearly erroneous, but reviews a district court’s legal conclusions de novo. See Southwest Williamson County v. Slater,
A district court must consider four factors in determining whether to issue a preliminary injunction. The district court must consider: “(1) whether the movant has a strong likelihood of success on the merits; (2) whether the movant would otherwise suffer irreparable injury; (3) whether issuance of a preliminary injunction would cause substantial harm to others; and (4) whether the public interest would be served by issuance of a preliminary injunction.” Slater,
C. Constitutionality of Challenged Provisions
1. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
By enacting Act 295, the State of Michigan sought to control intrastate telephone rates charged by Ameritech Michigan and Verizon. Courts have long held that State imposed regulatory price con
The Due Process Clause requires a mechanism through which a regulated utility may challenge the imposition of rates which may be confiscatory. See Calfarm, supra; Guaranty Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Gates,
MTA § 701, prohibits any rate increase for every “telecommunication service” offered to subscribers for more than three years, between May 1, 2000, and December 31, 2003, with two exceptions.
The competitive opt-out provision contained in MTA § 701(3), on its face, fails in four respects. First, it does not address the reasonableness of currently regulated rates. Second, the mere possibility that regulated rates may become competitive does not reduce or eliminate the possibility that such rates are confiscatory. Next, the opt-out provision fails to provide for timely relief from confiscatory rates.
Although MTA § 701 does not contain adequate safeguards, other provisions of the MTA arguably attempt to ensure the plaintiffs receive a constitutional rate of return. MTA § 304(1) provides that “the rates for basic local exchange service shall be just and reasonable,” it defines “reasonable rate,” or “just and reasonable rate,” as “a rate that is not inadequate, excessive, or unreasonably discriminatory. A rate is inadequate if it is less than the total service long run incremental cost of providing the service [TSLRIC].” See id. § 484.2102(y). The plaintiffs argue that the statutory definition of a “just and reasonable rate” contained in MTA § 304(1) does not pass constitutional muster. The court agrees. The definition contained in MTA § 304(1) clearly does not guarantee a constitutionally adequate rate of return for regulated telephone service providers because it merely permits telephone service providers to cover costs, and does not ensure a fair and reasonable rate of return on investment. See In Re Permian Basin, supra.
Moreover, the Ninth Circuit in Guaranty National Insurance Co. v. Gates,
Furthermore, the TSLRIC-based definition of an inadequate rate which the district court relied upon does not ensure that telephone service providers reсeive a constitutionally fair and reasonable rate of return. The Michigan Legislature has defined TSLRIC as follows:
Total service long run incremental costs means, given current service demand, including associated costs of every component necessary to provide the service, 1 of the following:
(i) The total forward-looking cost of a telecommunication service, relevant group of service, or basic network component, using current least cost technology that would be required if the provider had never offered the service.
(ii) The total cost that the provider would incur if the provider were to initially offer the service, group of service, or basic network component.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 484.2102(ff). On its face, § 484.2102(ff) sets the TSLRIC at a level which only accounts for the cost of providing services. Under the definition set forth in MTA § 304(1), a rate would only be inadequate if it was set below the cost incurred by the service provider. This clearly does not satisfy the constitutional standard set forth above because it merely ensures cost recovery without guaranteeing a fair and reasonable rate of return on investment. See Guaranty National, supra, at 515. In sum, MTA § 304(1) does not define a “just and reasonable” rate in a manner which guarantees plaintiffs an adequate rate of return on their investment.
The district court also erroneously determined that MTA § 304(7) provides adequate safeguards against confiscatory rates. MTA § 304(7) states:
In reviewing a rate alteration under subsection (6), the [MPSC] shall consider only one or more of the following factors if relevant to the rate alteration as specified by the provider:
(a) Total service long run incremental cost of basic local exchange services.
(b) Comparison of the proposed rate to the rates charged by other providers in this state for the same service.
*596 (c) Whether a new function, feature, or capability is being offered as a component of basic local exchange service.
(d) Whether there has been an increase in the costs to provide basic local exchange service in the geographic area of the proposed rate.
(e) Whether the provider’s further investment in the network infrastructure of the geographic area of the proposed rate is economically justifiable without the proposed rate.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 484.2304(7). The district court determined that the last two factors adequately protected plaintiffs’ right to an adequate rate of return.
MTA § 304(7)(d) does not guarantee telephone service providers a constitutional rate оf return. On its face, it merely provides for a rate increase to cover the cost of providing service in a geographic area. Under MTA § 304(7)(d), the plaintiffs again may be required to subsidize rates in certain geographic areas with rates in other areas, or with revenues collected from other unregulated lines of business. Furthermore, the statute’s provision for increased costs does not consider the need for a return on investment which the above-discussed precedent requires. Consequently, MTA § 304(7)(d) does not adequately safeguard against confiscatory rates.
With respect to § 304(7)(e), the district court reasoned that “[i]n order for a provider’s investment in the local exchange network to be ‘economically justifiable,’ ... it must be sufficient to cover costs and to service both debt and equity investments in the company. That is the essence of economic justification.” (JA, 57.) The district court does not cite to any authority in support of this proposition. Considering the inadequacy of the definition of “just and reasonable” contained in MTA § 304(1) discussed by the court ante, it may be inferred that an “economically justifiable” rate is one which merely covers the increased cost of providing local exchange service.
In sum, MTA § 701 freezes telephone rates, and § 310(7) abolishes the EUCL without providing a mechanism to safeguard the right to earn a constitutional rate of return. Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ have demonstrated a substantial likelihood of demonstrating that MTA §§ 701 and 310(7), respectively, are unconstitutional.
2. Balance of Hardships and Public Interest
The plаintiffs assert that they would be unable to recoup any losses incurred as a result of the abolishment of the EUCL pursuant to MTA § 310(7), and the rate freeze imposed by § 701. They assert that the “retroactive rate-making doctrine” bars any recoupment of their losses. The plaintiffs’ argument is without merit.
Has thе commission statutory power to order retroactively a refund to be made by the telephone company to its subscribers out of charges for services rendered (and in large part paid prior to the date of the order), such charges having been made in conformity with the existing rates fixed by the commission (or its predecessor) and in effect during the time the services were rendered?
Id. at 202. After reviewing Michigan law, the court concluded that “[tjhere is no express or reasonably implied statutory provision authorizing the commission to alter or readjust telephone rates or charges retroactively.” Id. at 205. Therefore, the court held
[T]he commission has only such power relative to fixing the rates or earnings of the telephone company as are by statute expressly or by necessary implication vested in it. Under such rule we cannot find that the commission has either express or implied statutory authority to retroactively reduce appellee’s rates or its accrued earnings. Instead the commission’s rate-fixing orders are effective only prospectively.
Id. at 206. The court’s holding was based on the following proposition: “[Ojrderly protection of the rights of the parties concerned requires the holding in law that a lawfully established rate remains in force until altered by a substаntially lawful rate.” Id. at 204. Therefore, the MPSC’s authority in fixing rates is only prospective, and it may not impose a retroactive rate where the previous rates were lawfully established and imposed.
The plaintiffs and the district court incorrectly relied upon Michigan Consolidated Gas Company v. Michigan Public Service Commission,
“Our Supreme Court has explicitly held that a commission may not establish retroactive rates thereby correcting any injustice caused by a delay in establishing necessary increased rates. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission (1946),315 Mich. 533 ,24 N.W.2d 200 ; General Telephone Company of Michigan v. Public Service Commission, Supra, 341 Mich. At p. 632,341 Mich. 620 ,67 N.W.2d 882 6 Thus, had*598 the preliminary injunction not issued, and had the company prevailed in the trial of this cause, the latter would have achieved a hollow victory indeed since there would have been no legal avenue open to the company by which to recoup its financial losses. We think this case presents a classic example of a situation in which a party will suffer ‘irreparable harm’ in the event that a preliminary injunction is not issued.”
Id. at 217 (quoting appellate court case of the same name,
The cases discussed above stand only for the proposition that the MPSC may not adjust past rates by establishing retroactive rates. This proposition inheres from the Michigan Supreme Court’s determination in Michigan Bell, supra, that the MPSC’s “lawfully established rate remаins in force until altered by a subsequently lawful rate.”
In Michigan Bell, supra, the Supreme Court grounded its decision on the fact that there was no express or reasonably implied statutory provision authorizing the Commission to alter or readjust rates or charges retroactively. Indeed, the Supreme Court found that the Commission’s statutory authority to fix utility rates was ‘quite clearly prоspective only.’ ... In this proceeding, however, Ameritech Michigan’s effort to rebill the IXCs is not based on a Commission order that retroactively affects Ameri-tech Michigan’s rates, but upon a statutory provision that expressly precludes enforcement of the 55% discount ordered by the Commission until July 1, 1997. In passing Section 312b, the Legislature was aware of the Commission’s prior orders. Indeed, in Section 312(b)(4), the Legislature made reference to those orders. Accordingly, the Commission does not agree that the prohibition against retroactive ratemaking, which is grounded on interpretation of the Commission’s statutory ratemaking authority, should be appliеd to this situation. Ameritech Michigan’s right to recover the undiscounted amount for access charges between July 26, 1996 and June 30,1997 is based upon an act of the Legislature that the Supreme Court has determined controls the outcome of this proceeding. Therefore, the Commission agrees with Ameritech Michigan that the Supreme Court’s decision precludes application of the prohibition against retroactive ratemaking to those proceeding because the Supreme Court has determined that the Commission’s imposition of a 55% discount in access charges for Ameritech Michigan’s customers between July 26, 1996 and June 30, 1997 was unlawful.
MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. Ameritech,
Although the plaintiffs may recoup their losses by raising rates, and consequently would not suffer irreparable financial harm, there are other forms of irreparable harm which may befall them if the court does not enjoin enforcement оf MTA §§ 701 and 310(7), respectively, pendent lite. The plaintiffs assert that they will lose customer good will if they are forced to recoup losses by substantially raising rates and fees for the period during which this action may be litigated. This court has held that even if higher rates and fees do not drive customers away, loss of established goodwill may irreparably harm a company. See Basicomputer Corp. v. Scott,
Of course, we must balance the harms which the plaintiffs may suffer against those which plaintiffs’ subscribers may suffer if MTA §§ 701 and 310(7), respectively, are enjoined. The plaintiffs assert that if the challenged portions of the MTA are ultimately declared constitutional, they will provide refunds to their subscribers with interest. In General Telephone Company of Michigan v. Michigan Public Service Commission,
If lawful and reasonable rates fixed by the commission are as great or greater than those established and collected by the company ... no refunds will be required; however, if the cоmmission shall fix and determine rates which are lower than the [ ] rates collected by the company, and said rates fixed by the commission are lawful, reasonable and nonconfiscatory, then the difference between the rates collected by the company ... and said rates prescribed by the commission shall be refunded to the company’s customers.
Id. See also Michigan Consolidated Gas Company v. Michigan Public Service Commission,
Finally, we must determine whether the issuance of an injunction will serve the
In summary, the plaintiffs have presented a serious question as to the constitutionality of the challenged provisions of the MTA, and have demonstrated that the irreparable harm which may befall them outweighs any potential harm to the State of Michigan, and more importantly, to their own subscribers. Accordingly, a preliminary injunction against enforcement of MTA §§ 310(7) and 701, respectively, is warranted. See Friendship Materials, Inc. v. Michigan Brick, Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court to enjoin MTA § 701 is AFFIRMED, and the district court’s denial of plaintiffs’ motion to enjoin MTA § 310(7) is REVERSED. Accordingly, this matter is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. The relevant provisions of MTA § 701 state:
(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act and except as allowed by section 304(1) or for services determined to be competitive under subsection (3) and for rates charged under contract, the rate charged for every telecommunication service provided to an end-user in this state shall be no higher than the rate charged for the service as of May 1, 2000....
(3) The rates determined under this section shall remain in effect for each service until December 31, 2003, or until the commission determines that a service is competitive for an identifiable class or group of сustomers in an exchange, group of exchanges, or other clear
. The court need not address the timing of rate relief — that is, whether the plaintiffs are entitled to a pre- or post-deprivation hearing on a rate reduction — for the purpose of this facial challenge at the preliminary injunction stage.
. Importantly, the court also held that "[n]either [the statute] nor the Nevada Insurance Code of which it [was] a part provide[d] any mechanism to guarantee a constitutionally fair and reasonable return.” Id. at 512.
. Although the district court may be correct in its determination that there is no limit on the MPSC’s authority to set rates "anywhere within thе range from inadequate on the one hand to excessive on the other,” it is axiomatic that due process guarantees a fair and reasonable regulatory rate, not just the possibility of acquiring such a rate from an authority selecting rates within a prescribed range containing confiscatory and fair rates. (JA, 62.)
. The court also notes that in addition to the constitutional inadequacy of MTA § 304(7)(e) with respect to defining an "economically justifiable” rate, it only provides for increased rates in areas where telephone service providers wish to invest in new infrastructure. It does not address the need to increase rates in other geographic areas where rates may be confiscatory whether or not telephone service providers have proposed, begun, or completed new infrastructure investment.
. In General Telephone Company of Michigan v. Michigan Public Service Commission,
