Case Information
*2
W ILKINS , Circuit Judge: Until recently, incumbent public
utilities were free to include in their tariffs and agreements
“the option to construct any new transmission facilities in
their particular service areas, even if the proposal for new
construction came from a third party.”
S.C. Pub. Serv. Auth.
v. FERC
(
South Carolina
),
In South Carolina , we upheld the Commission’s removal mandate. 762 F.3d at 71-81. In so doing, we found it premature to address those petitioners’ argument that FERC could not make them eliminate such provisions without violating the doctrine. at 81. Under , FERC must presume a contract rate for wholesale energy is just and reasonablе and cannot set aside the rate unless it is contrary to the public interest. See New England Power Generators Ass’n, Inc. v. FERC , 707 F.3d 364, 366 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (citing United Gas Pipe Line Co. v. Mobile Gas Serv. Corp. ( Mobile ), 350 U.S. 332 (1956), and Fed. Power Comm’n v. Sierra Pac. Power Co. ( ), 350 U.S. 348 (1956)).
The Commission had reserved judgment on whether to
apply this presumption to the rights of first refusal until
evaluating the individual utilities’ compliance filings, and
therefore so did we.
South Carolina
,
I.
Petitioners are members of the RTO, Southwest Power
Pool, Inc. (“Southwest Power Pool”), which provides
transmission service to approximately 6 million households
across portions of eight states. Although public utilities
previously were vеrtically integrated – meaning they
generated, transmitted, as well as distributed electricity –
FERC in the past two decades has undertaken a number of
structural reforms to unbundle the wholesale sale of power
from its transmission, and to require utilities to provide open
access to transmission lines in a nondiscriminatory fashion.
See Atlantic City Elec. Co. v. FERC
,
Yet another reform was Order No. 1000, which required
the removal from utilities’ tariffs and agreements of federal
rights of first refusal to construct transmission facilities in the
regiоnal transmission plan. Order No. 1000, ¶ 268, 76
Fed. Reg. at 49,888. Tariffs are the mechanism through
which regulated utilities unilaterally set their rates and terms
of service.
See Morgan Stanley
, 554 U.S. at 531;
South
Carolina
,
At issue here is a portion of the Membership Agreement Petitioners executed with Southwest Power Pool to join the RTO. Petitioners’ refusal rights were contained in Seсtion 3.3 of their Agreement. Order No. 1000’s removal mandate thus obligated Southwest Power Pool to revise that provision. In its filing to comply with the order, Southwest Power Pool proposed to FERC the necessary deletions to Section 3.3, but simultaneously argued that FERC should not implement the revisions becаuse the Agreement is protected by the Mobile- doctrine.
The Commission thought otherwise. Southwest
Power Pool, Inc., Order on Compliance Filings, Docket No.
ER13-366-000,
et al.
, 144 FERC ¶ 61,059 (July 18, 2013)
(Initial Order),
on reh’g
,
II.
Petitioners contend that any “valid, freely negotiated contract automatically is subject to” . Pet’r Br. 29. On the other hand, FERC is of the view that requires it to determine whether the instrument or provision at issue embodies an “individualized” rate, term, or condition that “appl[ies] only to sophistiсated parties who negotiated [it] freely at arm’s length,” or whether instead the provision is “generally applicable or . . . arose in circumstances that do not provide the assurance of justness and reasonableness associated with arms-length negotiations” – with only the former quаlifying for the presumption. Initial Order ¶ 127; Rehearing Order ¶ 94.
We begin by returning to
Mobile
and
Sierra
.
New
York New York, LLC v. NLRB
,
setting. Even though the utility could not file with the Commissiоn and thereby unilaterally impose a new tariff, the Court further considered whether FERC was statutorily authorized to set aside the contract rate as part of its Section 206(a) authority, which allows it to replace an unjust and unreasonable rate with a just and reasonable one. See id. (citing 16 U.S.C. § 824e(a)). The Court declined to allow FERC to set aside a rate simply because it is not profitable. See id. at 354-55. The Court explained that a public utility may “agree by contract to a rate affording less than a fair return,” and such an agreement does not necessarily mean the utility is “entitled to be reliеved of its improvident bargain.” at 355. When evaluating whether a contract rate is just and reasonable, “the sole concern of the Commission,” explained the Court, “would seem to be whether the rate is so low as to adversely affect the public interest – as where it might impair the financiаl ability of the public utility to continue its service, cast upon other consumers an excessive burden, or be unduly discriminatory.” Id.
Subsequent decisions have refined the doctrine in several
ways. In
Morgan Stanley
, one of the two Supreme Court
cases other than
Mobile
and that Petitioners rely on,
see
Pet’r Br. 29-37, the Court confronted long-term contracts
through which utilities bought power at historically elevated
rаtes during an energy crisis,
see
554 U.S. at 540-41.
Although it reaffirmed that
Mobile-Sierra
applied to those
utilities’ buyer’s remorse,
id.
at 548, the Court explained that
contract rates agreed to via fraud or duress do not merit the
presumption. at 554;
see also id.
at 535 (clarifying that
the term, “public interest,” simply refers to a “differing
application
of th[e] just-and-reasonable standard”);
id.
at 534
(describing the various ways parties can contract around
Mobile-Sierra
). In
NRG Power
, the second case Pеtitioners
invoke, the Court confirmed that attaches to the
challenged rates even in suits brought by non-parties.
NRG
Power Marketing, LLC v. Maine Public Utilities Commission
(
NRG Power
),
These cases show that the Supreme Court has at least
thus far applied the doctrine to rates, although we are
presented here with a right of first refusal provision. As
neithеr party advocates for restricting
Mobile-Sierra
exclusively to rates, there is no need to decide that question.
We assume
arguendo
that the presumption is not so limited.
More importantly, this precedent reflects that no matter the
contract provision at issue, even if the doctrine
might apply to it generally, FERC did not err in determining
that the doctrine does not extend to anti-competitive measures
that were not arrived at through arms-length bargaining. In
other words, the term must be the product of adversarial
negotiations between
sophisticated parties pursuing
independent interests. Although
Sierra
’s holding аrose in the
rate-setting context, the Commission properly noted the
Supreme Court’s concern about the impropriety of interfering
with a “
bargain
,” however “improvident.” , 350 U.S.
at 355 (emphasis added). Indeed, the doctrine “rests on ‘the
stabilizing force of contracts,’”
NRG Power
,
That is what happened with the rights at issue here. As
the Commission in its expert judgment already determined,
the rights of first refusal created “a pre-existing barrier to
entry” for nonincumbent transmission owners.
South
Carolina
, 762 F.3d at 77 (citing Order No. 1000 ¶¶ 256-57,
76 Fed. Reg. at 49,886). Rather than promote competition,
FERC found they created disincentives for nonincumbents to
identify and commit resources to cost-effective solutions to
transmission needs.
See id.
The Seventh Circuit has gone so
far as to describe such self-protective and anti-competitive
agreements as cartel-like.
See MISO Transmission Owners v.
FERC
,
All of this means that the Commission arrived at a legally
valid outcome without requiring us to decide the propriety of
its assumption that
Mobile-Sierra
applies outside the context
of rates and procedures for setting rates. Indeed, both parties
have argued this case on the premise that is
generally availаble to all contractual provisions that have
some effect
on rates. To be clear, as we stated in
New
England Power
, the Commission certainly is free to exercise
its discretion to apply the presumption to terms other than
contract rates, even where it is not required to do so, at least
with respect to rate-related terms. 707 F.3d at 371
(“FERC's determinаtion that the logic of still
applied [to an auction rate] is ‘a reasonable choice within a
gap left open by Congress’ and so within the purview of the
agency's discretion under § 205(a) of the FPA.”). Had FERC
used its two-part test in a truly discretionary manner, perhaps
we could uphold it on that basis. As it stands, the
Commission made no such discretionary judgment, and we
need not fully endorse the approach it did take as the law
requires denial of the petition in any case.
See Morgan
Stanley
,
***
For the foregoing reasons, we deny the petition for review.
So ordered.
Notes
[1] Intervening in support of OG&E are Southwestern Public Service
Co., ITC Great Plains, LLC, Southwest Power Pool, Inc., Xcel
Energy Services, Inc., Mid-Kansas Electric Co., LLC, and
Sunflower Electric Power Corp. Intervening on behalf of FERC are
Western Farmers Electric Cooperative, American Wind Enеrgy
Assoc., Duke-American Transmission Co., LLC, LS Power
Transmission, LLC, and LSP Transmission Holdings, LLC.
Because it is different from the basis on which the Commission
relied,
see K N Energy, Inc. v. FERC
,
[2] We hold only that does not apply to the right of first refusal provision in Section 3.3, and do not reach the Commission’s statement in its Rehearing Order regarding the characteristics of the larger Membership Agreement.
