SOUTHWESTERN POWER ADMINISTRATION, et al., Petitioners v. FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, Respondent
No. 13-1033
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit
Aug. 22, 2014
762 F.3d 27
Argued May 9, 2014.
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For the foregoing reasons, we dismiss Arrington‘s appeal as to his Rule 60(b) motion and affirm the district court‘s denial of his Rule 36 motion. We also conclude that we lack authority under
So ordered.
Mid-West Electric Consumers Association, Inc., et al., Intervenors.
Henry C. Whitaker, Attorney, U.S. De-
Sherry Quirk, David Fitzgerald, Jeffrey C. Genzer, and Kristen Connolly McCullough were on the brief for intervenors Mid-West Electric Consumers Association, et al. in support of petitioners. Monica M. Berry entered an appearance.
Lona T. Perry, Senior Attorney, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, argued the cause for respondent. With her on the brief were David L. Morenoff, Acting General Counsel, and Robert H. Solomon, Solicitor.
Rebecca J. Michael and Sonia C. Mendonça were on the brief for intervenor North American Electric Reliability Corporation in support of respondent. Meredith M. Jolivert entered an appearance.
Before: GARLAND, Chief Judge, and SRINIVASAN and PILLARD, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SRINIVASAN.
SRINIVASAN, Circuit Judge:
Section 215(b)(1) of the Federal Power Act grants the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission jurisdiction over “all users, owners and operators of the bulk-power system ... for purposes of approving reliability standards ... and enforcing compliance.” The terms of that provision specify that the group of “users, owners and operators” generally subjected to the Commission‘s jurisdiction “include[s]” the United States. A different provision, section 215(e) of the Federal Power Act, authorizes the Commission and its designee the North American Electric Reliability Corporation to impose monetary penalties on “a user or owner or operator of the bulk-power system” for violations of reliability
The Corporation, asserting its power under section 215(e)(1), assessed a monetary fine against the Southwestern Power Administration, a federal government entity that markets hydroelectric power. Southwestern, along with the Department of Energy and the Department of the Interior, appealed the penalty to the Commission. They argued that the relevant provisions of the Federal Power Act effect no unequivocal waiver of the United States‘s sovereign immunity from monetary penalties, as would be necessary to sustain the fine. The Commission upheld the penalty. It reasoned that section 215(b)(1) and section 215(e) work in tandem to establish an unambiguous waiver of sovereign immunity with regard to monetary penalties.
We disagree. Section 215(b)(1) generally subjects federal government entities to the Commission‘s jurisdiction to enforce compliance. But to authorize a monetary award against the federal government, the statute must do more than generally bring the government within the Commission‘s enforcement jurisdiction—it must unequivocally subject the government to monetary liability. Neither section 215(b) nor section 215(e), nor the two considered in combination, speaks with the requisite clarity to waive the federal government‘s sovereign immunity from monetary penalties. We therefore vacate the Commission‘s order.
I.
Section 215 of the Federal Power Act requires the development and enforcement of mandatory reliability standards for the bulk-power system. See
A.
The Federal Power Act provisions addressing enforcement of those reliability standards lie at the center of this case. First, section 215(b)(1), entitled “Jurisdiction and applicability,” generally outlines FERC‘s jurisdiction:
The Commission shall have jurisdiction, within the United States, over the [Electric Reliability Organization] certified by the Commission under subsection (c) of this section, any regional entities, and all users, owners and operators of the bulk-power system, including but not limited to the entities described in section 824(f) of this title, for purposes of approving reliability standards established under this section and enforcing compliance with this section. All users, owners and
operators of the bulk-power system shall comply with reliability standards that take effect under this section.
A separate provision of the Federal Power Act, section 215(e), entitled “Enforcement,” addresses both FERC‘s and the Electric Reliability Organization‘s enforcement authority. Under section 215(e)(1), the Electric Reliability Organization “may impose ... a penalty on a user or owner or operator of the bulk-power system for a violation of a reliability standard,” subject to certain procedural requirements.
Finally, section 316A of the Federal Power Act, entitled “Enforcement of certain provisions,” generally authorizes FERC to assess a “civil penalty of not more than $1,000,000” per day against “[a]ny person who violates any provision of subchapter II of this chapter or any provision of any rule or order thereunder.”
B.
In this case, the Corporation, relying on its authority under section 215(e)(1), assessed a monetary penalty of $19,500 against the Southwestern Power Administration for violating various reliability standards. Southwestern, a federal power marketing agency, is a subdivision of the Department of Energy. It markets hydroelectric power produced from Army Corps of Engineers projects in the southwestern United States.
Southwestern, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Interior contested the monetary penalty before FERC. They disputed neither Southwestern‘s obligation to adhere to the reliability standards nor its violation of those standards. Instead, they contested Southwestern‘s amenability to a monetary sanction, arguing that section 215 contains no unambiguous waiver of the federal government‘s sovereign immunity from monetary penalties. FERC disagreed, determining that section 215 unequivocally waives sovereign immunity. FERC, Order on Review of Notice of Penalty, Docket No. NP11-238-000, 140 FERC ¶ 61,048 ¶ 42 (2012), reh‘g denied, FERC, Order Denying Rehearing, 141 FERC ¶ 61,242 ¶ 26 (2012) (Rehearing Order). FERC reasoned that section
FERC also rejected Southwestern‘s contention that section 316A confines the reach of section 215‘s monetary-penalty authority to non-governmental entities. Southwestern argued that section 316A encompasses monetary fines for violations of section 215 and rules promulgated thereunder, but confines section 215‘s penalty authority only to “person[s],” a term defined to exclude the United States. FERC determined that section 215 is unconstrained by section 316A and instead “acts as a separate grant of penalty authority with respect to violations of mandatory Reliability Standards.” Id. ¶ 47.
FERC therefore upheld the Corporation‘s imposition of a monetary penalty against Southwestern. Southwestern, the Department of Energy, and the Department of the Interior appeal.
II.
This case revolves around the settled understanding that a waiver of sovereign immunity “must be unequivocally expressed in statutory text and will not be
Viewed through the lens of those strict standards, section 215 of the Federal Power Act effects no unequivocal waiver of the federal government‘s sovereign immunity from monetary penalties. The Corporation imposed the fine in this case pursuant to its authority under section 215(e)(1), the provision addressed specifically to the Corporation‘s power to assess penalties. That provision enables the Corporation to assess a penalty against “a user or owner or operator of the bulk-power system” found to violate reliability standards.
FERC grounds its assertion of an unequivocal waiver in a separate provision, section 215(b)(1). That provision generally sets out FERC‘s jurisdiction with regard to the promulgation and enforcement of electric reliability standards for the bulk-power system. It grants FERC jurisdiction “over the [Electric Reliability Organization] certified by the Commission,” over “any regional entities,” and over “all users, owners and operators of the bulk-power system, including but not limited to the entities described in section 824(f) of this title, for purposes of approving reliability standards established under this section and enforcing compliance with this section.”
There is a logic to FERC‘s interpretation, but we are required to construe any ambiguity against a waiver of sovereign immunity. The statute is not “so free from ambiguity that we can comfortably conclude ... that Congress intended to subject the Federal Government to awards of monetary damages.” Lane, 518 U.S. at 200. Contrary to FERC‘s reading, section 215(b)(1) does not unambiguously define “users, owners and operators” as including the United States for all of section 215. Another provision defines certain terms “[f]or purposes of” section 215, but that provision contains no definition of “users, owners and operators.”
That interpretation runs as follows. Under section 215(b)(1), the terms of which incorporate the United States through a statutory cross-reference, Congress generally granted FERC jurisdiction over federal government entities to en-
That understanding of the distinction between section 215(b)(1) and section 215(e) draws additional support from another provision, section 201(f). Under section 201(f), “[n]o provision in this subchapter shall apply to, or be deemed to include,” inter alia, “the United States ... unless such provision makes specific reference thereto.”
The Supreme Court‘s decision in Ohio, 503 U.S. 607, supports that understanding of the interplay between the two provisions. The Court there addressed a claimed waiver of the government‘s sovereign immunity from punitive monetary fines (i.e., fines for past viola-
In Ohio, the term “person” was expressly defined to include the United States for purposes of the clauses in the citizen-suit provision subjecting the United States to suit, but that understanding did not carry through to the clause allowing for imposition of appropriate civil penalties, at least with regard to punitive fines. Here, similarly, the term “users, owners, and operators” expressly includes the United States for purposes of paragraph (b)(1)‘s general conferral of jurisdiction, but that understanding does not necessarily carry through to the “user[s] or owner[s] or operator[s]” subject to monetary penalties under subsection (e)‘s grant of penalty authority. Paragraph (b)(1) “does not purport to apply the more expansive definition” of “users, owners and operators” throughout the section. Id. at 619 n.14. By contrast, terms like “bulk-power system,” “transmission organization,” and “regional entity” are defined “[f]or purposes of [section 215].”
Finally, the intersection between section 316A and section 215(e) fortifies the plausibility of that interpretation. Section 316A, entitled “Enforcement of certain provisions,” authorizes FERC to impose civil monetary penalties, up to $1 million per day of violation, on “[a]ny person who violates any provision of subchapter II of this chapter or any provision of any rule or order thereunder.”
FERC maintains that section 215(e) constitutes a more specific penalty provision for violations of reliability standards, such that section 316A has no relevance to this case. But FERC itself has previously looked to section 316A to guide its interpretation of section 215(e)‘s penalty authority, concluding that section 316A‘s cap of $1 million per day applies to penalties imposed under section 215(e) for violations of reliability standards. See Rules Concerning Certification of the Electric Reliability Organization, 71 Fed. Reg. 8662, 8711 (Feb. 17, 2006). In any event, section 316A at least raises an ambiguity about whether section 215(e) waives the federal government‘s sovereign immunity from monetary penalties. Even assuming section 316A does not apply of its own force to fines for violations of section 215‘s reliability standards, section 316A at least counsels against construing section 215(e) to authorize monetary awards against the United States. Otherwise, there would be a notable incongruity between two provisions whose plain terms both address monetary penalties for violating section 215‘s reliability standards—one of which would allow penalties against federal government entities, and the other of which would not. In the face of that sort of incongruity, the requirement to give effect to any plausible construction preserving sovereign immunity is controlling.
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So ordered.
