WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC., Plaintiff,
v.
MASSACHUSETTS MUNICIPAL WHOLESALE ELECTRIC CO., Defendant-Appellee,
Green Mountain Power Corp., Village of Hardwick; Village of
Ludlow; Village of Swanton; Village of
Morrisville; Village of Lyndonville;
and Village of Stowe, Trustee/Defendants,
State of Vermont Department of Public Service,
Plaintiff-Intervenor-Appellant.
No. 112, Docket 90-7333.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Sept. 13, 1990.
Decided Dec. 18, 1990.
William Griffin, Chief Asst. Atty. Gen., Montpelier, Vt. (Jeffrey L. Amestoy, Atty. Gen. for the State of Vt., Montpelier, Vt., of counsel) for plaintiff-intervenor-appellant.
Gerald J. Caruso, Boston, Mass. (Nicholas J. Scobbo, Jr., Ann Ryan-Small, Geraldine M. Corrado, Ferriter, Scobbo, Sikora, Caruso & Rodophele, Boston, Mass., and John Parker, Parker & Ankuda, Springfield, Vt., of counsel) for defendant-appellee.
Before LUMBARD, WINTER and MINER, Circuit Judges.
MINER, Circuit Judge:
The Vermont Department of Public Service ("VDPS") appeals from the denial of its motion to intervene as a plaintiff in a suit filed by the Washington Electric Cooperative, Inc. ("WEC") against the Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company ("MMWEC"). In the underlying action, WEC sought to recover $924,208.71 paid to MMWEC under a Power Sales Agreement previously declared void by the Vermont Supreme Court. Vermont Dep't of Pub. Serv. v. Massachusetts Mun. Wholesale Elec. Co.,
We hold that VDPS has the capacity under Vermont law to intervene in this action, but has failed to satisfy the criteria for intervention as of right or by permission under Fed.R.Civ.P. 24. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court denying VDPS's motion to intervene is affirmed.
BACKGROUND
VDPS is a Vermont state agency created to "supervise and direct the execution of all laws relating to ... [the] [s]upervision and regulation of the organization and operation of electric cooperatives...." Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. 30, Sec. 2(a)(12) (1986). WEC is an electrical cooperative, being authorized to "generate, manufacture, purchase, acquire, accumulate and transmit electric energy; and to distribute, sell, supply and dispose of electric energy to its members, to governmental agencies and political subdivisions...." Id. Sec. 3002(4).
MMWEC is a public corporation and a political subdivision of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 164, app. Sec. 1-1 et seq. (West 1980). It functions as a joint planning and action agency through which member and nonmember utilities may acquire supplies of energy. Thirty-one Massachusetts municipalities presently are members of MMWEC. Since 1976, MMWEC has made energy supplies available through its ownership interests in various electric power facilities. Each ownership interest, as well as the separate planning and financing process through which it is acquired, is known as a "project." Member and non-member utilities contract with MMWEC to acquire a share of a project's power-generating capability by executing Power Sales Agreements with MMWEC. The revenues derived from these agreements are used in turn to finance further acquisitions of ownership interests by MMWEC.
In 1979, four Vermont municipalities (the Villages of Ludlow, Lyndonville, Morrisville and Northfield) and two non-profit electric cooperatives (WEC and the Vermont Electrical Cooperative) (all hereafter referred to as "the Vermont participants"), contracted with MMWEC for shares of the power-generating capability of its Project No. 6.1 Project No. 6 was the title given to MMWEC's 6.001 percent ownership interest in a nuclear power plant that was to be built in Seabrook, New Hampshire. Under the agreements, each Vermont participant obtained the right to a portion of "the amounts of electrical capacity and energy ... which the Project is capable of producing at any particular time."
In 1985 VDPS filed a complaint in Vermont Superior Court against MMWEC and the Vermont participants, seeking to declare void the sales agreements involving Project No. 6 on the ground that the Vermont participants were without authority to enter into such agreements. The Superior Court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. On appeal, the Vermont Supreme Court reversed the decision, ruling that the Vermont participants lacked the authority to enter into the broad delegations of responsibility contained in the sales agreements and declaring the agreements void ab initio. Vermont Dep't of Pub. Serv. v. Massachusetts Mun. Wholesale Elec. Co.,
Before the Power Sales Agreements were declared void, WEC and the other Vermont participants had paid MMWEC a total of $6,200,733.71 due under the agreements. WEC's share of this amount was $924,208.71. It paid its share from revenues received from its customers.
After the Vermont Supreme Court ruling, WEC filed a complaint in Vermont Superior Court in March, 1989, seeking recovery of the money it had paid under the sales agreement. In the complaint, WEC prayed for a judgment of $924,208.71 against MMWEC and for the issuance of trustee process for the purpose of reaching any part of that sum that might be found in the hands of the other Vermont participants as a result of their dealings with MMWEC. On March 27, 1989, MMWEC removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Vermont. On October 30, 1989, VDPS filed a motion for intervention on behalf of the Vermont participants' ratepayers. Through this device, it sought on behalf of the ratepayers not only the money paid by WEC to MMWEC, but also the money paid by the other six Vermont participants in Project No. 6. The district court denied VDPS's motion, finding that the Vermont statute did not confer upon it the capacity to intervene in an action brought against an out-of-state wholesale supplier of electricity and that, in any event, it did not satisfy the prerequisites for intervention in a federal action. In response to the decision, Vermont enacted into law Senate Bill No. 379, which expressly authorizes VDPS to represent the interests of the state and Vermont ratepayers in this action. S. Bill 379, 60th Leg., 2d Sess., 1989 Vt. Laws 42 ("Bill No. 379").
DISCUSSION
I. VDPS's Capacity to Sue MMWEC for Monetary Damages
We disagree with the district court's determination that VDPS had no statutory authority to sue an out-of-state electrical wholesaler for money damages and, consequently, lacked the authority to intervene in this action.
VDPS has the statutory duty to supervise Vermont electric cooperatives. Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. 30, Sec. 2(a)(12). Municipal and investor-owned utilities also are subject to VDPS's supervision. Id. Secs. 201(a), 203. VDPS supervises the utilities by reviewing proposed changes in rate schedules and by representing the consuming public before the Vermont Public Service Board ("Board"). Id. Sec. 2(a)(6). VDPS may investigate and prosecute the complaints of ratepayers before the Board, id. Sec. 208, as well as bring proceedings to enjoin violations of state law by public service corporations. Id. Sec. 32. Although the Board is the final arbiter of the reasonableness of utility rates, id. Secs. 218(a), 226(a), (b), 227, VDPS, as advocate for the ratepayer, may challenge the actions and rates of the utilities. Id. Secs. 2(a)(6), 217. Finally, VDPS may exercise its jurisdiction over electrical cooperatives and other such public service corporations "so far as may be necessary to enable [it] to perform the duties and exercise the powers conferred upon [it] by law." Id. Sec. 203.
Under Vermont law, an administrative agency "has only such powers as are expressly conferred upon it by the legislature, together with such incidental powers expressly granted or necessarily implied as are necessary to the full exercise of those granted." Trybulski v. Bellows Falls Hydro-Elec. Corp.,
Furthermore, since the district court's finding of no capacity, the Vermont legislature has passed and signed into law Bill No. 379 "to clarify existing law to expressly authorize the department of public service to represent the ratepayers of this state in legal proceedings." Bill No. 379 provides:Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary the department of public service is authorized to represent the interests of the state and Vermont ratepayers in a certain pending legal proceeding in the United States District Court for the District of Vermont entitled, Washington Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company, Civil Action No. 89-94, or in any other legal proceeding arising out of the Project No. 6 Sales Agreements.
S. Bill 379, 60th Leg., 2d Sess., 1989 Vt. Laws 42. At the very least, Bill No. 379 ratifies VDPS's interpretation of its own statutory powers, and, in any event, provides a clear legislative mandate for the courts to follow. See In re Spencer,
Contrary to MMWEC's contention, Bill No. 379 does not conflict with existing law. See Cambridge v. Underhill,
Similarly, MMWEC argues mistakenly that Bill No. 379 violates federal and state constitutional principles that prohibit legislative impairment of contracts and unequal treatment under the law. Because we find that VDPS had the capacity to sue MMWEC on the contract before its passage, Bill No. 379 does not retroactively impair the obligation of contracts in violation of article 1, section 10 of the United States Constitution. Furthermore, Bill No. 379 deals only with a procedural matter and would not affect the substantive rights of any party to the sales agreement. Also, Bill No. 379 presents no equal protection problems under either the fourteenth amendment or chapter 1, article 7 of the Vermont Constitution because it reinforces VDPS's ability to advocate the rights of all energy consumers in the state.
II. VDPS's Right to Intervene Under Rule 24(a)(2)
The denial of a motion to intervene under Rule 24(a)(2) is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. United States v. Hooker Chems. & Plastics Corp.,
Rule 24(a)(2) provides a four part test for intervention as of right:
Upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action ... when the applicant claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action and the applicant is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede the applicant's ability to protect that interest, unless the applicant's interest is adequately represented by existing parties.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a)(2); see also Farmland Dairies v. Commissioner of New York Dep't of Agric.,
The first of the remaining requirements, that the putative intervenor have an interest in the proceeding, requires that that interest be direct, substantial, and legally protectable. Donaldson v. United States,
Moreover, the "property or transaction which is the subject of the action" in which VDPS seeks to intervene is the payment made by WEC to MMWEC under the Project No. 6 sales agreement. Yet, if VDPS's motion were granted, the present case would be changed radically. The nature of the action would be transformed from one in which one party sues another on a contractual claim for damages in the sum of $924,208.71, to one in which the original plaintiff is joined by another purporting to represent six other signatories to the contract and in which the recovery sought is $6,200,733.71. Intervenors must take the pleadings in a case as they find them. General Ins. Co. of Am. v. Hercules Constr. Co.,
The purpose of the rule allowing intervention is to prevent a multiplicity of suits where common questions of law or fact are involved. Reich v. Webb,
If VDPS were permitted to intervene, the district court would no longer preside over a conventional contractual dispute between two parties, but, in addition, would have to determine both the rights of the other signatories as urged by their self-appointed representative and how much (if anything) should be returned to the energy consumers of Vermont. Intervention cannot be used as a means to inject collateral issues into an existing action. See Sierra Club,
Appellant cites Gulf States Utilities Co. v. Alabama Power Co.,
As noted previously, intervention as of right requires a showing that disposition of the proceeding without the involvement of the putative intervenor would impair the intervenor's ability to protect its interest. In the action initiated by WEC, the sole issue is whether WEC may recover from MMWEC payments made on a contract that has been nullified. However, VDPS here seeks to protect the rights of WEC ratepayers, as well as those of the customers of the other six participants. Disposition of the instant proceeding without the participation of VDPS therefore will not operate to bar under the doctrines of res judicata or collateral estoppel any future attempts by VDPS to pursue these concerns. See Ionian Shipping Co. v. British Law Ins. Co.,
Finally, VDPS has not shown that there will be inadequate representation of its rights unless it is allowed to intervene. While the burden of showing such inadequacy may be minimal, Trbovich v. United Mine Workers,
Where there is an identity of interest between a putative intervenor and a party, adequate representation is assured. See Ionian Shipping Co.,
III. VDPS's Motion for Permissive Intervention Under Rule 24(b)
Reversal of a denial of permissive intervention is only appropriate where the district court exceeds its broad discretion. Natural Resources Defense Council,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
Another Vermont municipality, the Village of Stowe, purchased a share of the Project No. 6 capability by contracting with the Village of Morrisville for a share of its entitlement under the Power Sales Agreement. For the purposes of this opinion, Stowe will be considered a direct participant in the Project since it has been treated as such throughout the course of these proceedings
