National Fuel Gas Supply Corporation petitions for review of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s decision retroactively to apply this court’s vacatur of an
I. Background
This ease is only the latest episode in the saga of the Commission’s efforts to introduce greater competition into the market for natural gas. Here we recount only those background facts necessary to an understanding of National’s petition for review; for a more complete account of the events leading up to this case, see
Associated Gas Distributors v. FERC,
A. Order No. 436 and National’s Election
In Order No. 436, 50 Fed.Reg. 42,408 (1985), the Commission concluded that, by refusing to transport gas for producers with which they competed in the sale of gas, integrated pipelines often made it difficult for their customers (local distribution companies or LDCs) to purchase competitively priced gas. The Commission decided that competition would be increased if the pipelines “unbundled” their merchant and transportation services; it therefore created an incentive for a pipeline to provide “open access,” i.e., to transport gas upon a non-discriminatory basis.
The Commission also concluded that “open access” would have little impact upon competition in the market for gas if LDCs remained bound by their contractual commitments to purchase gas from the pipelines. Those contracts gave the LDC the right to demand, and obligated the pipeline to deliver, a certain quantity of natural gas per day (a/k/a the LDC’s “contract demand” or CD); the LDC paid a “demand charge” regardless whether it took any gas and a “commodity charge” for such gas as it actually purchased. As long as an LDC remained bound to pay the “demand charge,” it would find the purchase of gas under its CD, for which it would pay only the “commodity charge,” significantly less expensive than even competitively priced gas on the open market. Therefore, in order to assure a healthy demand for producers’ gas, the Commission required that open-access pipelines allow each LDC customer: (1) to reduce its CD by a specified percentage; or (2) to convert the same percentage of its CD from gas purchase (i.e., fully bundled service) to gas transportation alone.
When Order No. 436 issued on October 9, 1985, National was contractually obligated to purchase nearly 300,000 Dth/day of gas from Tennessee. On December 10, 1986 Tennessee opted to become an open access pipeline and shortly thereafter, on January 24, 1987, National elected to reduce its CD commitment to the maximum extent permitted by Order No. 436. Under the regulations promulgated in that order, the CD reduction would become effective 150 days after National’s election, on June 23, 1987. See 18 C.F.R. § 284.10(c)(2)(i)(B) (1986).
B. AGD, Order No. 500, and AGA
It was also on June 23, 1987, by coincidence, that this court held that Order No. 436 was unlawful in part. In particular, we held that the CD reduction and conversion provisions “suffer[ed] from a want of both legal authority and reasoned decision-making.”
AGD,
The Commission quickly moved to minimize the disruptive impact of the vacatur of Order No. 436. First, on July 2, 1987 the Commission asked this court for leave to stay the effective date of its regulations authorizing LDCs to adjust their CD until after the Commission issued a new order in lieu of Order No. 436.
See Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After Practical Wellhead Decontrol,
“Order Staying Effectiveness of
Second, on August 7, 1987 the Commission issued an interim rule, Order No. 500, 52 Fed.Reg. 30,334 (1987), which became effective upon this court’s issuance of the AGD mandate on September 15, 1985. See 52 Fed.Reg. 35,539 (1987). Order No. 500 readopted most of Order No. 436, with various provisions added and deleted in an effort to respond, on an interim basis, to our decision in AGD. In particular, Order No. 500 retained the CD conversion provision of Order No. 436, but dropped the CD reduction option (while reserving the possibility that the Commission would revisit the subject).
Interpreting
AGD
and Order No. 500 as a retroactive vacatur of the CD reduction provision, Tennessee refused to recognize National’s election to reduce its CD. Shortly thereafter, however, the Commission opined that CD reductions made prior to the issuance of Order No. 500 were still valid, unaffected either by our decision in
AGD
vacating Order No. 436 or by the Commission’s issuance of Order No. 500.
See Interstate Power Co. v. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America,
More than two years after this court’s decision in AGD, the Commission had not yet issued a final order to succeed interim Order No. 500 when this court heard the petitions for review of that order that a number of parties had filed. Tennessee, as one such party, argued that the Commission had erred in Interstate:
[T]he Commission should have retroactively nullified customers’ requests for CD reductions, because this court vacated, and the Commission then decided that it did not have adequate support in the record to repromulgate, the provision of Order No. 436 authorizing those reductions.
Id.
at 136. Tennessee argued further that the Commission had failed to follow the only escape route from the general rule in civil cases that a judicial mandate has retroactive effect,
National Association of Broadcasters v. FCC,
The court in AGA agreed with Tennessee that, in light of the Commission’s acknowledgment in Order No. 500 that the record did not support its repromulgating the CD reduction provision, neither our order of July 17, 1987 permitting the FERC to stay the effective date of the CD adjustment regulations nor the Commission’s own Order No. 500 made our invalidation of the CD reduction provision prospective-only. The court instructed the Commission that “in order to overcome the presumption that [this court’s] vacatur of the CD reduction provision is to be applied retroactively,” the agency would have to consider on remand the three factors identified by the Supreme Court in Chevron Oil.
C. The Orders Under Review
On remand, the Commission promulgated Order No. 500-H, Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After Practical Wellhead Decontrol, 54 Fed.Reg. 52,344 (1989), to succeed interim Order No. 500. After considering public comments upon the question whether the CD reduction option should be reinstated, the Commission there “decided not to restore the CD reduction option generically in the final rule,” although it “continue[d] to believe that the objectives of the CD reduction [were] valid.” Turning then to the question whether our decision in AGD should be applied retroactively to invalidate CD reduction elections that had taken effect prior to its issuance, the Commission concluded that it lacked, and requested that Tennessee and the LDCs that had elected the CD reduction submit the information necessary to perform the Chevron Oil analysis.
1. The First Order
Tennessee and two of its customers (National and Columbia Gas Transmission Com
2. The Second Order
National sought rehearing. When the Commission reexamined its application of the
Chevron Oil
factors to National’s case, the agency reversed its earlier conclusion that National’s reliance upon the CD reduction provision was unreasonable. This time the Commission found that National had in fact relied upon the CD reduction option and that its reliance was detrimental because it caused that company to forego its opportunity to elect CD conversion on Tennessee.
Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After Partial Wellhead Decontrol (In re: Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company),
S. The Third Order
It was then Tennessee’s turn to seek rehearing, for which it made two arguments. First, it argued that the Supreme Court had effectively overruled
Chevron Oil
in
James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
The Commission granted Tennessee’s motion for rehearing in part, changed its direction once again, and vacated National’s CD reduction.
Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After Partial Wellhead Decontrol (In re: Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company),
The Commission reasoned that even under
Beam et al., Chevron Oil
would have a role to play in its analysis. For although the Commission understood the more recent cases to require that a judicial decision be applied retroactively, it also understood them to allow for “consideration of individual equities when deciding remedial issues in particular cases,”
Third Order
at 61,945,
citing Beam,
The Commission then took a fresh look at its.
Chevron Oil
analysis. As to the first element, the Commission reaffirmed its decision that
AGD
established a new rule of law,
Third Order
at 61,946. As to the second element, the Commission determined that
“the
retroactive vacatur of National Fuel’s CD reduction will neither further nor retard the purposes underlying
[AGD]
and Order No. 436.”
Id.
Finally, as to the equities implicated by the retroactive vacatur of Na
(1) National Fuel did not rely to its detriment on the CD reduction provision by incurring alternative firm gas supply obligations; (2) National Fuel did not rely on the CD reduction option to enter into ... agreements to purchas[e] interruptible transportation service from Tennessee; and (3) National Fuel did not rely to its detriment by opting to reduce its CD, and in so doing, by losing the opportunity to convert its CD.
and concluded (at 61,945) that:
[Balancing of the equities, whether undertaken at the remedial stage under the Beam and Harper principles of retroactivity or at the initial choice-of-law level under the third prong of the Chevron Oil analysis ... dictates that Tennessee be afforded the same remedy that it would have obtained had National Fuel not been permitted to reduce its CD from the beginning, ie., payment to it by National Fuel of the full demand charges associated with its CD reduction.
4. The Fourth Order
As the reader will have guessed, National then requested rehearing, which in the fourth order under review, the Commission denied.
Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After Partial Wellhead Decontrol (In re: Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company),
II. Analysis
National, supported by one of its customers (National Fuel Gas Distribution Corporation) as intervenor, now petitions for review of the four Commission orders. National asks that we remand this case to the Commission for further evidentiary proceedings, in support of which it advances two arguments: (1) that the Commission misapplied Chevron Oil to vacate National’s CD reduction retroactively; and (2) that the Commission should have held a formal hearing.
A. Retroactive Vacatur of National’s CD Reduction
National argues that the Commission misapplied all three of the Chevron Oil elements but it concentrates its fire upon the third. Specifically, the petitioner challenges the Commission’s conclusion that National did not rely detrimentally upon the CD reduction aspect of Order No. 436. by foregoing its right instead to elect CD conversion. The Commission, supported by Tennessee as intervenor, defends its application of the Chevron Oil test, of course. Before we turn to the merits of the Chevron Oil dispute, however, we consider the continuing vitality of that case in light of Beam and its progeny.
1. Beam, Harper, and Hyde
In
Beam
the Supreme Court considered whether a rule of law newly announced in a judicial decision must be applied retroactively “to claims arising on facts antedating that decision.”
Concluding that selective retroactivity “breaches the principle that litigants in simi
Nonetheless, Justice Souter did leave open the possibility that a court might, as a remedial matter, decline to apply a judicial decision retroactively. In his view, retroactivity as a remedial matter presents a different question than does retroactivity as a “choice of law” matter (referring here to the choice between the new and the old rule).
Id.
at 538-39,
Two years later, however, in
Harper
the Supreme Court solidified its position, holding that the Court’s “application of a rule of federal law to the parties before [it] requires every court to give retroactive effect to that decision.” — U.S. at -,
Nonetheless, the Court still did not make entirely clear (1) whether it adhered to Justice Souter’s distinction between retroactivity as a choice-of-law and as a remedial question and (2) if it did, whether
Chevron Oil
had any continuing validity. On the one hand, the Court clearly held that “the federal law applicable to a particular case does not turn on whether litigants actually relied on an old rule or how they would suffer from retroactive application of a new one,” thereby suggesting that reliance interests are irrelevant, presumably even at the remedial stage.
See id.
at - n. 9,
Moreover, the outcome of
Harper
suggested that the distinction between remedy and choice-of-law was alive and well: Reversing the decision of the Supreme Court of Virginia holding that
Chevron Oil
countenanced its failure to apply the U.S. Supreme Court’s earlier decision to the later plaintiff, the Court nevertheless declined to order that the amounts paid under the unconstitutional tax be refunded, leaving “to Virginia courts ... the crafting of any appropriate remedy.”
Id.
at -,
Harper
was the Supreme Court’s last word on retroactivity prior to the Commission’s issuance of the
Third
and
Fourth Orders.
As noted above, the Commission concluded in the
Third Order
that
Chevron Oil
survived
In
Hyde,
the Supreme Court clearly held that retroactive application of a judicial decision cannot, except in certain limited and specifically defined circumstances, be blunted at the remedial stage. The plaintiff in
Hyde
acknowledged that her ease was governed by
Harper
and that a prior decision of the Supreme Court had “retroactively invalidated the tolling provision that [made] her suit timely.”
Id.
at -,
The Court, per Justice Breyer, squarely rejected that argument:
[W]e do not see how ... the Ohio Supreme Court could change a legal outcome that federal law ... would otherwise dictate simply by calling its refusal to apply that federal law an effort to create a remedy.
Id.
at -,
If Harper has anything more than symbolic significance, how could virtually identical reliance, without more, prove sufficient to permit a virtually identical denial simply because it is a denial based on “remedy” rather than “non-retroactivity”? Id.
In Hyde, the Court clearly holds that Chevron Oil does not allow a court to depart, even at the remedial stage, from the rule of Harper requiring that a judicial decision be applied retroactively. Instead, where Harper is applicable, a remedy other than retroactive application of a prior decision can be awarded only in four specific circumstances:
[A] court may find (1) an alternative way of curing the constitutional violation, (2) a previously existing, independent legal basis (having nothing to do with retroactivity) for denying relief, or (3) as in the law of qualified immunity, a well-established legal rule that trumps the new rule of law, which general rule reflects both reliance interests and other significant policy justifications, or (4) a principle of law ... that limits the principle of retroactivity itself.
Id.
at -,
2. Retroactive application of AGD after Hyde
We consider first whether
Harper
and
Hyde
apply to this case. Although those cases surely appear to require the retroactive application of
AGD
against National, the Commission argues that it is unclear whether
Harper
applies here because “the overruling of
Chevron Oil
does not necessarily govern in the context of agency action.” In this regard, the agency contends that
Beam
and its progeny “are grounded on Article III of the Constitution, which is inapplicable to administrative agencies,” and that “this and other courts have recognized that the overruling of
Chevron Oil
does not necessarily govern in the context of agency action,” for which it cites
Laborers’ Int'l Union v. Foster Wheeler Corp.,
The Commission’s argument is unpersuasive for two reasons. First, Article III is not the Supreme Court’s only basis for requiring the retroactive application of judicial decisions. Although the Court in
Harper
noted that “the nature of judicial review strips [a court] of the quintessentially legislative prerogative to make rules retroactive or prospective as [it] sees fit,” — U.S. at -,
Second, the Commission’s Article III argument seems to miss the distinction between an administrative agency’s retroactive application of a judicial decision — the case before us here — and the agency’s retroactive application of its own adjudicative decision. Because Article III does not apply to an agency adjudication, the Commission may have some freedom to apply its own decisions prospectively even after
Harper. Id. (“Beam
does not clearly foreclose selective retroactivity” of an agency’s own adjudications).
But see UFCW, Local No. 150-A v. NLRB,
Our conclusion here is not at all inconsistent with the three cases upon which the Commission relies. Neither
District Lodge 64
nor
Foster Wheeler
deals with the question whether an agency must apply a judicial decision retroactively. Instead, they consider only whether
Harper
requires an agency to apply its own adjudications retroactively. While
Atlantic Richfield
does deal with an agency’s retroactive application of a judicial decision, it was decided before
Harper
or
Hyde;
the court declined to require the agency to apply an earlier court decision retroactively, but it did so purportedly as a remedial matter.
See District Lodge 64,
Because we think that
Harper
and
Hyde
do apply here, we do not need to determine whether the Commission correctly applied
Chevron Oil.
Instead, we need to determine only whether retroactive applica
National says that the Commission’s conclusion that it did not detrimentally rely upon the CD reduction option by foregoing its right to CD conversion is arbitrary and capricious. This claim is based upon National’s premise that such reliance requires that we provide Tennessee with a remedy other than the retroactive application of
AGD.
After
Hyde,
however, it is clear that simple relianee of the “sort at issue in
Chevron Oil
” and in
Hyde, see
— U.S. at -,
Furthermore, it is clear that the retroactive application of
AGD
to vacate National’s CD reduction would fall into none of the four circumstances that Justice Breyer identified in
Hyde.
There is here involved no “previously existing, independent legal basis (having nothing to do with retroactivity) for denying relief,” no “well-established general legal rule that trumps”
AGD,
nor any “principle of law ... that limits the principle of retroactivity itself.” The only exception to the rule of
Harper
even possibly applicable here is the first, which allows the court (or agency) retroactively applying the new judicial decision to find “an alternative way of curing” the problem infecting the rule of law that the new rule replaced. The Court conceived that exception with “the special circumstance of the tax eases in mind”: a state court may “cure” the constitutional defect in a state tax law “where the violation depends, in critical part, upon differential treatment of two similar classes of individuals ... either by similarly burdening, or by similarly unburdening, both groups.”
Id.; see, e.g., McKesson Corp. v. Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco, Fla. Dept. of Business Regulation,
B. Failure to Hold An Evidentiary Hearing
National seeks an evidentiary hearing so that it can present evidence in support of its arguments about reliance. Even if National were able to show that it relied to its detriment upon the CD reduction provision, however, the Commission would not have the discretion to deny Tennessee the remedy of retroactive vacatur of National’s CD reduction. Therefore, we need not consider
III. Conclusion
For the aforementioned reasons, the petition for review is
Denied.
