Pending are cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiff, Sprint Communications Company, L.P., seeks summary judgment on Counts I and IV of defendant Native American Telecom, LLC’s (NAT) amended counterclaim. NAT seeks summary judgment on all of Sprint’s claims, as well as summary judgment on Counts I and IV of its amended counterclaim. For the following reasons, the court grants in part and denies in part Sprint’s motion and ■ grants in part and denies in part NAT’s motion.
The pertinent, undisputed facts are as follows:
Sprint' provides nationwide long-distance telephone services and is known under the telecommunications regulatory framework as an interexchange carrier (ÍXC).’ Sprint delivers long-distance calls to a local exchange carrier (LEC) for "termination to end-users. Under'the FCC’s current regulatory framework, Sprint pays the LEC a terminating access charge based on the LEC’s interstate access tariff, which is filed with the FCC.
In October 2008, the Crow Creek Sioux Tribal authority authorized NAT to provide telecommunications service on the Crow Creek Reservation subject to the tribe’s laws. Pursuant to the 2008 approval order, NAT began to operate as an LEC. NAT filed its first interstate tariff with the FCC, which became effective on September 15, 2009. NAT’s second interstate tariff became effective on November 30, 2010, and canceled and replaced NAT’s tariff number one. NAT revised its tariff number two, which revision became effective on June 26, 2011. NAT’s third interstate tariff was filed with the FCC in August 2011, and became effective on August 23, 2011.
NAT also, operates a free conference calling system (used for conference calling, chat-lines, and similar services) in connection with 'Free Conferencing Corporation (Free Conferencing). A party using NAT’s services does not pay NAT for the conference call, but rather is assessed charges by the party’s telecommunications provider. NAT then bills "the telecommunications provider an access fee as defined in its interstate tariff. NAT’s access charges, which were billed to Sprint for conference calls, are at issue here.
After paying two of NAT’s bills for charges connected to conference calls, Sprint ceased paying NAT’s terminating access tariffs because Sprint believed that NAT was involved in a traffic-pumping scheme, otherwise known as access stimulation, to generate traffic from free conference calls and chat services. On August 16, 2010, Sprint filed suit against NAT alleging a breach of the Federal Communications Act (FCA) and a state-law unjust enrichment claim. Docket 1.
On March 8, 2011, NAT amended its answer and asserted counterclaims against Sprint alleging a breach of contract and a collection action pursuant to its tariffs, a breach of implied contract resulting from a violation of its tariffs, and a quantum meruit/unjust enrichment claim. NAT also sought declaratory relief. Docket 99.
On November 29, 2011, the FCC released its Connect America Fund final rule, which addresses access stimulation and traffic pumping. See Connect America Fund; A National Broadband Plan for Our Future; Establishing Just and Reasonable Rates for Local Exchange Carriers; High-Cost Universal Service Support, 76 Fed.Reg. 73830 (Nov. 29, 2011). The. FCC also created a transitional framework for VoIP intercarrier compensation.. Id, at ¶ 19. On December 27, 2011, this court issued an order directing the parties to discuss what effect, if any, the FCC’s Connect America Fund final rule had on the issues presented in this case. Docket 128. Then, on February 22, 2012, .this court issued an order discussing the final rule and determined that it did not apply retroactively. Docket 141 at 9-11 (“Thus, the final rule is inapplicable to the time period before the final rule be
The parties stated that they had been engaged in litigation before the South Da-kota Public Utilities Commission (SDPUC). Docket 169 at 5. In that litigation, NAT was granted a certificate of authority by the SDPUC to provide certain telecommunications services in South Dakota. Based on the results of the SDPUC litigation and the lack of action by the FCC during the period of the stay, the parties discussed whether some of the disputes in this case remained viable. Id. at 8-10. The court proposed entering an order that would lift the stay, withdraw the issues that had been referred to the FCC, and establish deadlines for the parties to amend the complaint, counterclaims, and to file any motions to dismiss. Id, at 12. The court also stated that it would rule on any motions to dismiss based on a statute of limitations defense and that a new referral of issues to the FCC could then be discussed. Id. With the parties in agreement, a formal order was issued that same day. See Docket 168.
Sprint did not amend ' its complaint. NAT aménded its counterclaim on September 9, 2014, and added a number of allegations that arose during the period of the stay and FCC referral, Docket 172. A number of procedural motions have since been filed by the parties. Relevant to the present discussion are the parties’, cross-motions for summary judgment. Docket 211, Docket 223.
LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment on all or part of a claim is appropriate when the movant “shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a); see also In re Craig,
1. Sprint’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
Sprint seeks summary judgment on Counts I and IV of NAT’s amended counterclaim. Count I of NAT’s amended counterclaim seeks to enforce each of NAT’s interstate tariffs and to recover the amounts NAT billed to Sprint pursuant to those tariffs. Docket 172 at 17. Count IV seeks declaratory relief regarding Sprint’s obligations pursuant to NAT’s tariffs. Id. at 18-19. Alternatively, Sprint argues that NAT’s cross-motion for summary judgment on Counts I and IV of its amended counterclaim should be denied.
A. Whether Sprint Can Move for Summary Judgment?
NAT asserts that Sprint cannot move for partial summary judgment because Sprint has not amended its complaint to include the grounds upon which Sprint’s motion is founded.
B. Whether NAT Was Authorized to Provide Telecommunications Services on the Crow Creek Reservation Prior to June 12, 2014?
It is undisputed that the Crow Creek Sioux Tribal Utility Authority granted NAT a certificate of authority to provide telecommunications services on the Crow Creek Reservation in October 2008. Docket 212 at ¶ 2; Docket 220 at ¶ 2. That certificate purported to allow NAT to operate as a CLEC on the Reservation. Docket 14-4 at 1 n. 1. It is also undisputed that NAT filed an application with the SDPUC in October 2011 to provide intrastate access services in South Dakota that originate or terminate off the Reservation. Docket 212 at ¶ 11; Docket 240 at ¶ 11. Further, it is undisputed that the SDPUC did not grant NAT a certificate of authority until June 12, 2014. Docket 220 at ¶ 23; Docket 240 at ¶ 23. Sprint contends that the SDPUC — and not the Tribal Utility Authority — was the only regulatory body that could grant NAT the authority to act as a CLEC whether on the Reservation or not. Until it received that authority from the SDPUC, Sprint argues that NAT could not enforce any of its interstate tariffs.
Describing the original Communications Act of 1934, the Supreme Court observed,
[Wjhile the Act would seem to divide the world of domestic telephone service neatly into two hemispheres — one comprised of interstate service, over which the FCC would have plenary authority, and the other made up of intrastate service, over which the States would retain exclusive jurisdiction — in practice, the realities of technology and economics belie such a clean parceling of responsibility.
La. Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. F.C.C.,
The Supreme Court has recognized “the Federal Government’s longstanding policy of encouraging tribal self-government.” Iowa Mut. Ins. Co. v. LaPlante,
The FCC has further acknowledged that Indian tribes are sovereign and that it would “endeavor to work with Indian Tribes on a government-to-government basis consistent with the principles of Tribal self-government to ensure ... that Indian Tribes have adequate access to communications services.” Statement of Policy, 16 FCC Red. 4078 at *2. “The FCC recognizes the rights of tribal governments to set their own communications priorities and goals for the welfare of their membership.” Docket 46-5 at 3. Thus, the FCC has not only expressed a need to include Indian tribes in the world of domestic telecommunications, but has also recognized that the sovereignty possessed by Indian tribes makes them an active participant.
The FCC has found that Tribes possess the authority to regulate telecommunications services on tribal land. See In the Matter of Western Wireless Corporation, 16 FCC Red. 18145 (F.C.C.2001). In Western Wireless, a carrier sought to deploy a wireless service to members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Id. at ¶ 6. The question before the FCC involved a determination of which body — the Tribe, the State, or the FCC — had regulatory authority over Western Wireless’s services. The FCC noted that the “case presents the issue of the extent .of tribal authority over a non-tribally owned carrier that intends to serve both tribal members and others on the reservation.” Id. at ¶ 13. Under those facts,- the FCC ultimately found that both the state and the Tribe had regulatory authority over certain aspects of Western Wireless’s ser
Similarly, the SDPUC acknowledged the difficult question of which body had regulatory' authority over NAT and the services it provided. Docket 211-5 at 9 (SDPUC Opinion) (noting “[s]ome of the lack of clarity is likely due to the questions regarding jurisdiction of the Commission over NAT” and ■ that NAT requested “whatever authority that this Commission determined it needed.”). In fact, the SDPUC did not believe it had sole regulatory authority. Id. at 16 (“The Commis-r sion finds it has the necessary jurisdiction to grant a certificate of authority- to NAT.... However, the Commission -finds that it does not have primary-regulatory authority over the provision of service by NAT to members on the reservation as NAT is a telecommunications company operating on the Crow Creek Reservation as a limited liability company formed under the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe.”). The Commission, however, did not make additional conclusions about the extent of the Tribe’s authority over services provided on the Reservation. Id. But the Commission did respond to Sprint’s argument that NAT was operating illegally in the state because it did not have a certificate of authority, and concluded that “NAT’s operation without a [state] certificate of authority does not bar it from receiving a [state] certificate of authority.” Id. at 13.
The Crow Creek Sioux Tribal Utility Authority expressly granted NAT, a majority tribally-owned entity, permission to provide local telecommunications ser-vides on the Crow Creek Reservation. That permission included the authority to act as a CLEC on the Reservation. In light of the observations made by the FCC, the FCC’s Western Wireless decision, the federal government’s long-standing recognition of encouraging tribal self-government, and the SDPUC’s response to Sprint’s argument that NAT was operating illegally, the court finds that the Tribe possessed its own. authority to confer such permission upon NAT. The fact that NAT also sought and obtained permission to provide similar services outside the Reservation from the SDPUC in no way divested thé Tribe of the regulatory authority it enjoyed on the Reservation. Cf. Western Wireless, 16 FCC Red. 18145 at ¶23. Consequently, the court finds that NAT had sufficient authority to provide local telecommunications services on the Reservation prior to receiving the state’s permission to provide those services off the Reservation.
C. Whether NAT’s Interstate Tariffs Number 1 and Number 2 are Unenforceable?
Prior to this court’s February 22, 2012, order, the FCC had issued several opinions involving litigation between IXCs and LECs that were similar to the parties’ disputes here. See In the Matter of Qwest Commc’ns Corp. v. Farmers & Merchs. Mut. Tele. Co., 22 FCC Rcd. 17973 (F.C.C.2007) (Farmers I); In the Matter of Qwest Commc’ns Corp. v. Farmers & Merchs. Mut. Tele. Co., 24 FCC Rcd. 14801 (F.C.C.2009) (Farmers II); In the Matter of Qwest Commc’ns Corp. v. Farmers & Merchs. Mut. Tele. Co., 25 FCC Rcd. 3422 (F.C.C.2010) (Farmers III); AT & T Corp. v. YMax Commc’ns Corp., 26 FCC Rcd. 5742 (F.C.C.2011); In the Matter of All American Telephone Co., et al. v. AT & T Corp., 26 FCC Rcd. 723 (F.C.C.2011) (All American I); In the Matter of Qwest Commc’ns Co., LLC. v. Northern Valley Commc’ns, LLC, 26 FCC Rcd. 8332
With the exception oí Alt‘American I and Northern Valley II (which involved the same tariff at issue in Northern Valley I), the court’s February 22, 2012, order discussed and analyzed each of the then-contemporary FCC decisions. See Docket 141. Sprint suggests the subsequent decisions'from the FCC and’D.C. Circuit enable this court to determine for itself whether NAT properly billed Sprint for access services pursuant tó its tariffs.
I. Summary of Relevant Case History
Through the FCC’s decisions and subsequent appeals, the Commission has acknowledged several theories IXCs may advance in order to challenge either an LEC’s purported provision of switched access services under the terms of the LEC’s tariff or the enforceability of the LEC’s tariff itself. Ip the Farmers and Sancom cases,
By contrast, in the Northern Valley cases, the question was whether the LEC’s tariff itself was lawful. Northern Valley I, 26 FCC Rcd. 8332 at ¶ 2 (explaining that “The tariff therefore violates Commission Rule 61.26 ... and accordingly also violates section 201(b) of the Act.”) (emphasis added); Northern Valley II, 26 FCC Rcd. 10780 at ¶ 6 (similarly finding “that the Tariff violates Rule 61.26, and, accordingly, violates section 201(b) of the act.”) (emphasis added). In that inquiry, the FCC looked at whether the tariff attempted to allow the LEC to impose access charges on the IXCs for calls to entities to whom the LEC offered free service. Northern Valley I, 26 FCC Red. 8332 at ¶7.
Finally, the All American line .of cases involves a blend of these holdings. The Commission noted that some of the traffic billed by the CLECs was not assessed pursuant to enforceable tariffs. All American II, 28 FCC Rcd. 3477 at ¶¶ 35-37. Following Farmers, the FCC found that the CLECs were not terminating calls to “end users” as' defined in their tariffs. Id. at ¶¶ 38-40. And the Commission also found that, based on the egregious facts of the case, the CLECs’ conduct amounted to an unjust and unreasonable practice under the Communications Act. Id. at ¶¶ 24, 33.
a. NAT’s Tariff Number 1
NAT’s interstate tariff number 1 was filed with the FCC and became effective on September 15, 2009. It was then revised and amended on October 21, 2009, to be effective on October 22, 2009. Docket 220 at ¶ 19; Docket 240 at ¶ 19. NAT’s original tariff number 1 explained that “Switched Access Service, which is available to Customers for their use in routing or receiving traffic and/or in furnishing their services to End Users, provides a two-point communications path between a Customer and an End User.” Docket 221-1 at 6. The tariff then defined a “Customer” as the entity “who orders service and is responsible for the payment of charges and compliance with the Company’s regulations.” Docket 221-J. at 3. Thus, to be a customer entailed responsibility for the
[Wlhich subscribes to or otherwise uses local exchange services, interexchange services, Commercial Mobile Radio Service or other wireless service, VoIP services, or other services provided by a local exchange carrier, common carrier, Wireless Provider, VoIP Provider, or other provider of services that transit the Company’s facilities.
Docket 211-1 at 4. NAT’s tariff also stated that “The End User may be, but need not be the customer of an Interexchange Carrier and may or may not be a customer of the Company.” Docket 221-1 at 4.
NAT’s revised tariff number 1 included a longer definition of “Customer.” As amended, a “Customer” was any entity “which uses service under the terms and conditions of this tariff and is responsible for payment of charges.” Docket 221-2 at 3. Thus, it did not remove the requirement that a customer bear responsibility for payment. Additionally, the tariff provided that “[t]he term ‘Customer’ also refers to an Interexchange Carrier utilizing the Company’s Switched or Dedicated Access services described in this tariff to reach End Users." Id. (emphasis added). The revision, however, did not alter its previous definition of “end user.”
First, NAT’s original and revised tariff number 1 is unenforceable pursuant to the FCC’s Northern Valley line of cases. In Northern Valley, the Commission explained that “a CLEC may tariff access charges only if those charges are for transporting calls to or from an individual or entity to whom the CLEC offers service for a fee.” Northern Valley I, 26 FCC Rcd. 8332 at ¶ 7. As with Northern Valley’s tariff, the portion of NAT’s tariff that states “The End User may be, but need not be the customer of an Interexchange Carrier and may or may not be a customer of the Company” attempts to allow NAT to bill tariffed charges to Sprint for terminating calls that are delivered to non-paying entities. This is so because, under NAT’s tariff, a “customer” bears responsibility for paying NAT for its services, and an “end user” is one who “subscribes to or otherwise uses” NAT’s services. Yet, NAT’s tariff states that the end user was not required to be a customer and' thus was not required to be responsible for paying for the services rendered. Consequently, NAT could not have billed Sprint for tariffed services pursuant to its original and revised tariff number 1.
Second, the record also demonstrates that Free Conferencing did not subscribe to or use (and therefore was not an “end user” of) NAT’s services.
Regarding the second factor, the service agreement also demonstrates that Free Conferencing was not treated like any other customer of NAT. For example, NAT agreed to provide Free Conferencing with “all telecommunications services utilized by [Free Conferencing] in connection with this Agreement without charge.” Docket 221-7 at 7 (emphasis added). Those services included co-location spáce, rack space, dedicated Internet access, analog telephone circuits, electrical power, fire protection, generator and battery backup, switch technician labor, and switch programming service, among others. See id. The fact that NAT provided these services without charge also shows that NAT did not view Free Conferencing as a typical customer. See Farmers II, 24 FCC Rcd. 14801 at ¶ 12 (noting the “host of services to support the conference calling companies’ business venture” provided by Farmers without charge).
As to the third factor, NAT and Free Conferencing operated under an exclusivity agreement. Specifically, NAT agreed that it would “not grant access to its facilities without the express written permission of [Free Conferencing], to any company or individual that would compete in a similar business with [Free Conferencing].” Docket 221-7 at 5. “Such an exclusivity clause is antithetical to the notion of tariffed service.” Farmers II, 24 FCC Red. 14801 at ¶ 14; Sancom, 28 FCC Rcd. 1982 at ¶23 (finding “Saneom’s relationships with the Free Calling Companies were exclusive and demonstrate an intention for Sancom not to provide service as a common carrier.”).
NAT asserts that it and Free Conferencing were aware that the service agreement and the companies’ billing practices would need to be altered in order to comply with the FCC’s Farmers II decision. See, e.g., Docket 240 at ¶ 24 (citing Docket 240-2). According to the service agreement, however, it could “only be amended, modified or supplementéd by a separate written document duly executed by authorized representatives of both” Free Conferencing and NAT. Docket 221-7 at 7. But NAT and Free Conferencing did not reduce the new agreement to writing until 2012. Docket 240 at ¶ 29 (citing Docket 240-2 at 17-18 (SDPUC Transcript)). By that time, NAT’s original and revised tariff number 1 had long since been superseded. And NAT. still did not bill Free Conferencing for services prior to September 2011, which is also beyond the . period when NAT’s original and revised tariff number 1 was in effect. Additionally, the document that purports to replace the 2009 service agreement is not a new agreement but rather a redlined version of the original. Docket 240-8. A number of clauses are incomplete, and it is not clear if the document was ever completed or- carried any legal effect.
The balance of the relevant factors shows that Free Conferencing did not pay for NAT’s services and that Free Conferencing was not an end user of NAT’s services pursuant to NAT’s original or revised tariff number 1. Rather', the arrangement orchestrated by NAT and Free Conferencing resembled a relationship of business partners instead of carrier-customer. Consequently, NAT was not entitled to bill Sprint for switched access services involving calls delivered -to Free Conferencing under, its original or revised tariff number 1. Sancom, 28 FCC Rcd. 1982 at ¶ 25. For these reasons, Sprint is entitled to summary judgment regarding
b. NAT’s Tariff Number 2
(1) The Filed Rate Doctrine
NAT argues that the filed rate doctrine prevents Sprint from challenging whether it did, in fact, provide tariffed access services pursuant to its interstate tariff number 2.
“ ‘Under [the filed rate] doctrine, once a carrier’s tariff is approved by the FCC, the terms of the federal tariff are considered to be ‘the law’ and to therefore ‘conclusively and exclusively enumerate the rights and liabilities’ as between the carrier and the customer.’” Iowa Network Servs., Inc. v. Qwest Corp.,
Sprint is not challenging the rates set forth in NAT’s tariffs but instead contends that NAT improperly billed Sprint for services that did not fall under the provisions of the tariff itself. Qwest Common’s Co. v. Aventure Common’s,
(2) Original Tariff Number 2
NAT’s original interstate tariff number 2 was filed with the FCC on November 15,
NAT’s original tariff number 2 was even more indistinguishable from the tariff in the Northern Valley cases than its original tariff number 1. There, as here, Northern Valley defined an “End User” as “any customer of an Interstate or Foreign Telecommunications Service that is not a carrier.” Northern Valley II, 26 FCC Rcd. 10780 at ¶ 9. The phrase “telecommunications service” is defined under the Communications Act as “the offering of telecommunications for a fee.” Id. (quoting 47 U.S.C. § 153(53)), Thus the first part of the tariffs.definition of an.end user “is a user to whom [Northern Valley] offers its services for a fee.” Northern Valley II, 26 FCC Red. 10780 at ¶ 9. (emphasis in original). But the additional language in Northern Valley’s tariff, which NAT’s tariff mirrored, stated that “[a]n End User need not purchase any service provided by [Northern Valley].” Id. “Unlike the first sentence, this last sentence seems to define ‘End User’ as an individual or entity to whom [the LEC] offers its services free of charge.” Id. The court in- Northern Valley concluded that -because Northern Valley’s tariff was internally inconsistent, it violated the Commission’s rules and could not be enforced. Id.
Moreover, as the Commission explained, “a CLEC may tariff access charges only if those charges are for transporting calls to or from an individual or entity to whom the CLEC offers service for a fee.” Northern Valley I, 26 FCC Rcd. 8332 at ¶ 7. As with Northern Valley’s tariff, the portion of NAT’s tariff that states “an End User need not purchase any service provided by [the LEC]” attempts to allow NAT to bill tariffed charges to Sprint for terminating calls that are delivered to non-paying entities. Id. NAT’s original tariff number 2 is unenforceable for this reason as well. Id. at ¶ 9. Consequently, NAT improperly billed Sprint for tariffed services under its original tariff number 2.
(3) Revised Tariff Number 2
NAT’s revised tariff number 2 left intact its definition of “Switched Access Service”
In its revised form, NAT’s tariff number 2 became indistinguishable from the tariffs in the Farmers and Sancom cases. Farmers’ tariff,
Notably, however, NAT’s revised tariff number 2 became effective in June 2011 and was shortly thereafter replaced by NAT’s tariff number 3 in August 2011. But it was not until September 2011 that NAT began to issue bills to Free Conferencing. Thus, as with NAT’s original and revised tariff number 1, NAT did not receive any payments from Free Conferencing while NAT’s- original or revised tariff number 2 was in effect. Again, the lack of payment flowing from Free Conferencing to NAT for NAT’s services illustrates that Free Conferencing did not subscribe to and was not an end user of NAT’s services at this time. See Fanners II, 24 FCC Red. 14801 at ¶ 12; see also Sancom, 28 FCC Rcd. at ¶ 19. Moreover, as discussed above, the parties’ 2009 service agreement had not yet been modified (if at all) by the problematic 2012 service agreement until long after NAT’s original and revised tariff number 2 had been replaced. Accordingly, Free Conferencing was still not an “end user” pursuant to NAT’s revised tariff number 2. Consequently, NAT was not entitled to bill Sprint for calls delivered to Free Conferencing under its revised tariff number 2.
(4) Notice-and-Dispute Provisions
NAT argues that Sprint did not comply with the notice-and-dispute provisions of its tariff and that Sprint cannot be granted summary judgment as a result. Specifically, NAT points out that its original tariff number 2 required Sprint to submit a written notice of a “good faith dispute” before Sprint could challenge any of NAT’s invoices. Docket 67-3 at 33. Additionally, under this tariff, Sprint was required to first pay any disputed charges in full. Id. at 34. And if Sprint did not tender payment for any disputed invoices, NAT was allowed to deny Sprint’s challenge. Id.
In sum, Sprint is entitled to summary judgment regarding Counts I and IV of NAT’s amended counterclaim as they pertain to NAT’s original and revised interstate tariff number 2.
D. Whether NAT’s Tariff Number 3 is Unenforceable?
It is undisputed that NAT’s interstate tariff number 3 was filed on August 8, 2011, to become effective August 23, 2011. Docket 220 at ¶ 21; Docket 240 at ¶ 21; see Docket 180-1 (NAT’s interstate tariff number 3). NAT’s tariff number, 3 states generally that “Switched Access. Service, which is available to customers for their use in furnishing their services to end users, provides a. two-point electrical communications path between a customer’s premises and an end user’s premises.” Docket 180-1 at 64. A “customer” is defined as any entity “which subscribes to the services offered under this Tariff, in: eluding Interexchange Carriers (ICs), end users and interconnectors.” Id. at Í0. And an “end user” was once again defined as “any customer of an interstate or foreign telecommunications service that is not a earrier[.]” Id. at 12. Thus, as in the Farmers and Sancom lines of' cases, whether an entity is an “end user” under NAT’s tariff number 3 depends on whether it is also a “customer,” and whether the entity is a* “customer” depends on whether it “subscribes to” NAT’s tariffed services. See Farmers II, 24 FCC Rcd. 14801 at ¶ 10; Sancom, 28 FCC Rcd. 1982 at ¶¶ 6, 11.
Unlike NAT’s previous tariffs, Free Conferencing began paying NAT for its services shortly after NAT’s tariff number 3 went into effect. The first bill to Free Conferencing was sent in September 2011, which Free Conferencing paid on September-12, 2011. Additionally, the NAT-Free Conferencing 2009 service agreement was purportedly replaced by a new service agreement in 2012,- also; while this tariff was in efféct. See Docket 240-8. According to the dates on .the newer document, it was executed by the parties between November 30, 2012, and December 6, 2012.
Nonetheless, Sprint advances three other arguments in support of its position that NAT’s tariff number 3 is unenforceable. These arguments, however, have already been addressed by the court. First, Sprint argues the two-year statute of limitations applicable to carriers such as NAT bars NAT’s attempt to recover amounts that came due on or before September 10, 2012. As part of this court’s April 1, 2015, order on Sprint’s motion to dismiss, however, the court found that NAT’s amended counterclaim related back to the dates in its original counterclaim. Thus, the statute of limitations did not bar NAT’s attempt to recover on its bills that came due prior to September 10, 2012. See Docket 248.
II. NAT’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
A. Sprint’s Claims Against NAT
In Sprint’s complaint, Sprint accused NAT of, among other things, unlawfully engaging in access stimulation and improperly billing Sprint for non-tariffed access services. Docket 1. Sprint alleged that NAT violated the Communications Act in several respects,
1. Access Stimulation
NAT argues that, as a matter of law, the FCC’s CAF Order declared the practice of access stimulation to be lawful. As a consequence, Sprint’s argument that NAT is (or was) engaged in an unlawful access stimulation scheme must fail. First, NAT ignores that the CAF Order is not retroactive and did not affect the parties’ dispute prior to its effective date. See In the Matter of Connect America Fund, 27 FCC Rcd. 4040, ¶ 699 n. 1182 (F.C.C.2011) (“Because the rules we adopt are prospective, they will have no binding effect on pending complaints.”). Thus, whether NAT’s conduct prior to the CAF Order was unlawful has not been resolved. Second, the FCC did not consecrate the practice of access stimulation. To the contrary, the Commission noted that one of the purposes of the CAF Order was to “curtail wasteful arbitrage practices.” Id. at ¶33. Of those wasteful practices, access stimulation was singled out as “one of the most prevalent arbitrage activities today[.]” Id. at ¶ 649. And in a subsequent clarification order, the FCC stated that, “Prior to the [CAF Order], the Commission adopted several orders resolving- complaints concerning access stimulation under preexisting rules and compliances with the Communications Act.” In the Matter of Connect America Fund, 27 FCC Rcd. 3070 at ¶25 (F.C.C. 2012). Following this statement is a footnote citing, by way of example, the FCC’s earlier orders from the Farmers and Northern Valley lines of eases. Id. at n. 69. The Commission then stated that the CAF Order “complements these previous
NAT attempts to buttress its argument by pointing out that, under the CAF Order, a CLEC engaged in access stimulation is generally required to refile its interstate tariff and benchmark its rates “to that of the price cap LEC with the lowest interstate switched access rates in the state.” In the Matter of Connect America Fund, 27 FCC Rcd. 4040 at ¶ 679. And “if the competitive LEC’s rates are already below the benchmark rate” prior to the CAF Order’s deadline, “such a LEC" does not have to file a revised interstate switched access tariff.” Id. NAT notes that its tariff number 3 was filed prior to the CAF Order and that NAT has- already reduced its interstate tariff rates -accordingly. Docket 212 at ¶ 4; Docket 220 at ¶ 4. Thus, NAT argues, even if it- was engaged in access stimulation in the past, it is already in compliance with the FCC’s rules and can no longer be found to be in violation of the law.
NAT’s argument has been made before. In the All American II Reconsideration Order, the FCC observed:
Defendants argue that carriers who act unjustly and unreasonably in violation of the Act and Commission rules may do so with impunity as long as they benchmark their access rates to the competing incumbent local exchange carrier. Nothing in the [CAF Order ] supports this contention. Indeed, the Commission’s prior decisions demonstrate the exact opposite to be the case.
All American II Reconsideration Order, 29 FCC Red. 6393 at ¶ 16. In a footnote following the last sentence, the FCC cited its prior decisions from the Northern Valley, YMax, Sancom, and Farmers lines of cases. Id. n. 66. The Commission went on to’ explain that one of the purposes of the CAF Order was to curtail rather than legitimize access stimulation, and that the CAF Order does not “insulate the Defendants from the consequences of a finding that their conduct was unjust, unreasonable, and unlawful, in violation of the Act and the Commission’s rules.” Id. at ¶ 17. Thus, nothing in the CAF Order or the FCC’s prior and subsequent decisions stands for the proposition that access stimulation should simply be viewed as lawful conduct. NAT’s motion for summary judgment on this point is denied.
2. Issue Preclusion
In Sprint’s complaint, one of Sprint’s-factual allegations was that NAT exists solely to generate access stimulation revenue. Docket 1 at ¶ 2 (“NAT purports to operate local exchange carrier operations on the Reservation but in reality exists only to engage- in traffic pumping.”). According to NAT, this issue was resolved against Sprint at the SDPUC proceeding. Further, NAT asserts that the doctrine of issue preclusion prevents Sprint from continuing to advance the same argument here.
Because the parties’ dispute is before this court pursuant to federal question jurisdiction,
In the Eighth Circuit, whether issue preclusion applies turns on the satisfaction of five elements:
(1)The party sought to be precluded in the second suit must have been a party, or in privity with a party, to the original lawsuit;
(2) The issue - sought to be precluded must be the same as the issue involved in the prior action;
(3) The issue sought to be precluded must have been actually, litigated in the prior action;
(4) The issue- sought to be precluded - must have- been determined by a valid and final judgment; and
(5) The determination in the prior action must have been essential to the prior judgment.
Ginters v. Frazier,
During the SDPUC proceeding, the state regulatory agency addressed whether it would grant NAT’s application to provide intrastate telecommunications services in South Dakota. Docket 211-5 at 2. Sprint, along with several. • other parties, intervened to-contest. NAT’s application. Id. The parties engaged in broad discovery and numerous procedural motions were raised and resolved. See id. at 5-8. After several years- of litigation, the SDPUC granted NAT’s application. In doing so, it considered several factors such as whether NAT had sufficient technical, financial, and managerial capabilities to offer services in the state. Id. at 9 (citing SDCL 49-31-3 and -71). The SDPUC also considered
Regarding NAT’s financial capabilities, Sprint “asserted that NAT’s business plan is reliant on access revenues from access stimulation” and that NAT did not have a viable financial future. Id. at 10-11. The SDPUC noted that “To date, NAT’s revenues are reliant on its business relationship with Free Conferencing” and that the CAF Order would “negatively impact NAT’s revenues.” Id. at 11. Nonetheless, the SDPUC found that NAT was taking steps to “actively plan for a future without these revenues” and that “the entirety of the evidence regarding [NAT’s] financial capabilities” weighed in favor of granting NAT’s application. Id. at 11-12.
As to NAT’s managerial capabilities, “Sprint further asserted that NAT was a ‘sham’ entity that was ‘established for the sole purpose of traffic-pumping.’ ” Id. at 12. Sprint also argued that NAT brought little benefit to the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe. Id. The SDPUC proceeding noted that the chairman of the tribe refuted Sprint’s contention that NAT did not benefit the tribe and highlighted various services such as an Internet library and Internet Technology and Learning Center that NAT was involved in. Id. at 13 (also noting that “NAT and the tribe are actively seeking additional development opportunities.”). Ultimately, the agency found that NAT was not a sham entity. Id. Likewise, addressing Sprint’s concerns that granting NAT a certificate of authority was not in the public interest, the SDPUC reiterated that “the Commission has found that NAT is not a sham entity.” 'Id. at 15.
The first element of issue preclusion is satisfied, as Sprint intervened in and was a party to the SDPUC proceeding. The second element is also met because Sprint has alleged in both this proceeding and the SDPUC proceeding that NAT exists solely to engage in access stimulation. Likewise, NAT sought to counter Sprint’s allegation in that proceeding as well as in this proceeding. The third element is met because the SDPUC directly addressed the parties’ contention and found that NAT provided a number of benefits for the tribe and tribal members, and that NAT is pursuing business ventures that do not involve access stimulation. The fourth element is satisfied because the decision of the SDPUC was never appealed and the time for appeal has passed. Finally, the fifth element is satisfied because whether NAT existed for purposes beyond engaging in access stimulation bore directly on the SDPUC’s findings that it had the financial and managerial capacity to deliver telecommunications service in the state, and whether granting NAT a certificate of authority was in the public interest. Therefore, the elements of issue preclusion are satisfied. Consequently, Sprint may not assert that NAT exists solely to engage in access stimulation. On this point, NAT’s motion for summary judgment is granted.
CONCLUSION
NAT cannot enforce its interstate tariffs number 1 and 2 regarding calls that terminated to Free Conferencing. Whether NAT can recover for amounts that it billed to Sprint pursuant to its interstate tariff number 3 for calls delivered to Free Conferencing cannot be resolved on the facts presented. NAT’s argument that access stimulation is lawful conduct is unfounded. Nonetheless, the court agrees with NAT’s limited argument that Sprint is precluded from litigating the issue of whether NAT exists solely to engage in access stimulation by virtue of the SDPUC proceeding. The court expresses no opinion on the
ORDERED that Sprint’s motion for partial summary judgment (Docket 228) is granted in part and denied in part in accordance with this opinion.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that NAT’s motion for partial summary judgment (Docket 211) is granted in part and denied in part in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Because both parties have moved for summary judgment, additional facts will be discussed as they pertain to tile" specific issues raised in the parties’ motions.
. NAT initially asserted that Sprint had conceded the calls at issue were properly billed as access charges because of a statement of undisputed material fact that Sprint submitted in its previous summary judgment motion. NAT has clarified that it did not intend to argue Sprint admitted NAT’s charges were valid. Docket 245.
. The FCC denied Northern Valley's petition for reconsideration on-October 5, 2011. In the Matter of Qwest Commc’ns Co., LLC v. Northern Valley Commc’ns, LLC, 26 FCC Rcd. 14520 (F.C.C.2011).
. The FCC released a reconsideration order of All American I on the same day that it released its All American II decision.’ In the Matter of All American Tele. Co. v. AT & T Corp., 28 FCC Rcd. 3469 (F.C.C.2013). There, the FCC denied All American's petition for reconsideration.
. Sancom subsequently filed a petition for reconsideration. See In the Matter of Qwest Commc’ns Co., LLC v. Sancom, Inc., 28 FCC Rcd. 8310 (F.C.C.2013). Thereafter, the parties submitted a joint motion to dismiss, infqrming the Commission that they had resolved their dispute. Id. at ¶ 2. The Commission granted the motion.
.The FCC noted that Sancom "is materially similar to and controlled by” the Farmers line of cases. Sancom, 28 FCC Rcd. 1982 at ¶ 11. "Indeed, the Tariff's descriptions of 'end user' and ‘customer’ are identical to the definitions at issue in Qwest v. Farmers." Id.
. The Commission also noted several other unlawful provisions in the tariff, such as the requirement that disputed bills first be paid in full and a provision that altered the statute of limitations. Northern Valley II, 26 FCC Rcd. 10780 at ¶¶ 11-14.
. While not addressed by NAT, the fact that NAT’s tariff defined an "end user" as one who “subscribes to” or, alternatively, "otherwise uses” NAT’s services does not alter this analysis. See YMax, 26 FCC Rcd. 5742 ¶¶ 24-28 n. 87.
. Many of the specific services NAT provided to Free Conferencing were identical to those in Fanners II. See Farmers II, 24 FCC Rcd. ¶ 12 n. 48 (detailing how Farmers provided "collocation space, rack space, digital subscriber line services and other dedicated Internet access, electrical power, fire protection, generator and/or battery backup, switch technician labor, switch programming, and dedicated DS3 trunks to its switches.”).
. During the SDPUC proceeding, a witness for NAT testified that he was ‘‘not sure that this document reflects all of the changes accurately” when asked about the amended service agreement. Docket 240-2 at 17-18.
. NAT does not argue the Filed Rate Doctrine bars Sprint’s claims regarding NAT’s tariff number 1.
. Notably, NAT’s tariff also attempts to define a "Customer of an Interstate or Foreign Telecommunications Service” as ''any person or entity who sends or receives an interstate or foreign Telecommunications service transmitted to or from a Buyer across the Company’s Network, without regard to whether and how much payment is tendered to either the Company or the Buyer [.]” Docket 221-4 at 4 (emphasis added). This definition is materially identical as the same definition contained in Northern Valley’s tariff that the Commission also found to be problematic. Northern Valley II, 26 FCC Rcd. 10780 ¶ 9 n. 38 (providing definition).
. Sancom's tariff contained the same definitions. Sancom, 28 FCC Rcd. 1982 at ¶¶ 6, 11 (“Indeed, the Tariff's definitions of-'end user’ and ‘customer’ are identical to the definitions at issue in [Farmers II].”). For the sake of clarity, the court will refer only to Farmers’ tariff for comparative purposes rather than to Sancom's tariff as well.
. The date of Gene DeJordy’s signature is not clearly discernable.
. The court’s original order is found at Docket 234, The court granted the parties’ joint motion to amend a factual matter contained in the background section of the opinion. See Docket 247. The substance of the order is unchanged.
. Traditionally, telephone calls are placed over what is known as the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). "Voice over Internet Protocol” communications, or "VoIP” calls, are calls placed over the Internet. The phrase "VoIP-PSTN traffic” refers to a speeific kind of VoIP traffic that the FCC has defined generally as “traffic exchanged over PSTN facilities that originates and/or terminates in IP format.” In the Matter of Connect America Fund, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd. 17663, ¶ 940 (Nov. 18, 2011).
.The court's original order is found at Docket 243. The court granted the parties’ joint motion to amend a factual matter contained in the background section of the opinion. See Docket 247. The substance of the order is unchanged.
. NAT also recasts Sprint's complaint to stand for the proposition that Sprint has "asserted only two grounds to justify its refusal to pay charges billed by NAT.” Docket 213 at 1. While Sprint’s complaint alleges that NAT is in violation of the law, its answer to NAT’s amended counterclaim is where Sprint articulated a number of denials and affirmative defenses to NAT’s attempt to enforce its tariffs. Docket 238. The court nonetheless construes NAT's motion for summary judgment as attempting to negate those claims that Sprint has made against NAT in its complaint, rather than the defenses alleged in Sprint’s answer.
. The court notes that the parties have also invoked diversity jurisdiction. ■ See, e.g., Docket 1 at 5; Docket 172 at 3, If the case was solely before the court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction, the court would apply the principles of issue preclusion as dictated by the South Dakota Supreme Court. Royal Ins. Co. of Am. v. Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine, Inc.,
