PEGGY ZAHN, Appellant, v. NORTH AMERICAN POWER & GAS, LLC, Appellee (The People of the State of Illinois ex rel. Lisa Madigan, Attorney General of Illinois, Intervenor-Appellant).
120526
Supreme Court of Illinois
December 1, 2016
January 23, 2017
2016 IL 120526
Certified question from the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit; heard in that court on appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, the Hon. Michael S. Kanne, the Hon. Diane S. Sykes, and the Hon. J. Phil Gilbert, Judges, presiding.
Judgment: Certified question answered.
Counsel on Appeal: Douglas Gregory Blankinship, of Finkelstein, Blankinship, Frei-Pearson & Garber, LLP, of White Plains, New York, for appellant.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Springfield (Carolyn E. Shapiro and David L. Franklin, Solicitors General, and Brett E. Legner, Deputy Solicitor General, of Chicago, of counsel), for the People.
Thomas R. Stanton, Special Assistant Attorney General, of Chicago, for amicus curiae Illinois Commerce Commission.
Michael R. Strong, of Strong Legal & Regulatory Solutions, LLC, of Chicago, and Joshua M. Feagans, of Griffin Williams LLP, of Geneva, for amicus curiae Illinois Competitive Energy Association.
CHIEF JUSTICE KARMEIER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Freeman, Thomas, Kilbride, Garman, Burke, and Theis concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶ 1 The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has certified for instruction from this court the following question of Illinois law: Does the Illinois Commerce Commission have exclusive jurisdiction over a reparation claim, as defined in Sheffler v. Commonwealth Edison Co., 2011 IL 110166, brought by a residential consumer against an alternative retail electric supplier, as defined by
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 We take the facts as the Seventh Circuit has stated them in its certification ruling. They are simple and straightforward.
¶ 3 Peggy Zahn is a residential consumer of electric power. North American Power & Gas, LLC (NAPG), is an alternative retail electric supplier (ARES) within the meaning of
¶ 4 As defined by
¶ 5 In August 2012, Zahn decided to purchase her electricity from NAPG based on its promise of lower rates. NAPG sent Zahn a letter stating that she would receive its “New Customer Rate” of $0.0499 per kilowatt-hour during her first month of service and a “market based variable rate” thereafter. The company also sent her its “Electricity Sales Agreement Customer Disclosure Statement.” The statement indicated that the term of the agreement was month-to-month and that “[o]ther than fixed and/or introductory/promotional rates, all rates shall be calculated in response to market pricing, transportation, profit and other market price factors.” It also disclosed, under the heading “Open Price,” that its prices were “variable” based on “market prices for commodity, transportation, balancing fees, storage charges, [NAPG] fees, profit, [and] line losses ***. Your price may be higher or lower than your [local public utility] ***.”
¶ 6 Zahn never received the $0.0499 per kilowatt-hour “New Customer Rate” she was promised. During her first two months of service, September and October 2012, NAPG charged her $0.0599 per kilowatt-hour. Thereafter, from November 2012 through June 2014, the rate it charged her was always higher than what she would have been required to pay her local public utility, Commonwealth Edison (ComEd), had she not switched to NAPG. At times, NAPG‘s rate was nearly triple ComEd‘s.
¶ 7 Zahn objected to NAPG‘s higher charges and filed a class action against the company in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Zahn‘s complaint invoked the court‘s diversity jurisdiction (
¶ 8 In assessing whether the district court erred in dismissing Zahn‘s complaint, the Seventh Circuit has concluded that the dispositive threshold issue is whether an Illinois state court would have had subject-matter jurisdiction to hear plaintiff‘s claims or whether exclusive jurisdiction over those claims lies, instead, with the Illinois Commerce Commission. The
¶ 9 In Sheffler v. Commonwealth Edison Co., 2011 IL 110166, this court addressed the lines of demarcation between the jurisdiction of the Illinois Commerce Commission and the jurisdiction of the courts with respect to claims against public utilities. Citing
¶ 10 In the case before us, the Seventh Circuit has characterized Zahn‘s claims as being in the nature of “reparations” as that term is used in Sheffler. There is an important difference, however, between this case and Sheffler. Sheffler involved a claim against a conventional public utility. The claim asserted here is against an ARES. Under
¶ 11 Because NAPG is an ARES and ARESs are not utilities, the Seventh Circuit recognized that Sheffler does not resolve the question of whether claims against NAPG by customers seeking reparations for overbilling may only be brought before the Commerce Commission. Finding no other decision by this court directly on point, the Seventh Circuit looked to the legislature‘s stated and implied intent, the Rate Relief Law‘s consumer protection provisions and remedial measures, an unpublished order by our appellate court, an interim order by the Commerce Commission in an unrelated case, and a published decision by the appellate court involving a reparations claim against a telecommunications carrier in an attempt to estimate how we would decide the question if it came before us. The Seventh Circuit ultimately concluded that these sources failed to yield a definitive answer. It has therefore reached out to us directly here, through the mechanism of a certified question, for instruction.
ANALYSIS
¶ 12 As set forth above, the viability of Zahn‘s state law claims against NAPG in her federal diversity action turns on whether an Illinois state court would have had subject-matter jurisdiction to hear them or whether, under Illinois law, she would have been limited to pursuing those claims in an administrative proceeding before the Commerce Commission. The general principles governing this inquiry were recently discussed by our court in J&J Ventures Gaming, LLC v. Wild, Inc., 2016 IL 119870. As we noted there, subject-matter jurisdiction
¶ 14 In this case, there is no issue as to justiciability, and the matter is not one that falls within this court‘s original and exclusive jurisdiction. The only reason there is any doubt as to whether an Illinois circuit court would have jurisdiction to consider plaintiff‘s claims is that there is a line of Illinois authority holding that our General Assembly may vest original jurisdiction in an administrative agency rather than the courts when it enacts a comprehensive statutory scheme that creates rights and duties that have no counterpart in common law or equity. J&J Ventures Gaming, LLC, 2016 IL 119870, ¶ 23.2 Even if one puts aside the question of whether the claims asserted by Zahn in this case can properly be said to involve rights or duties unknown in common law or equity, we do not believe that exception is applicable.
¶ 15 If the legislature intends for exclusive original jurisdiction to lie with the agency rather than with the circuit courts when it has enacted such a comprehensive statutory scheme, it must make that intention explicit. Id. ¶¶ 23-24. It has not done so here. While
¶ 16 NAPG argues that
¶ 17 The Rate Relief Law, which created ARESs, is a component of the
¶ 18 The rate-making process is a complicated one. See, e.g., Ameren Illinois Co. v. Illinois Commerce Comm‘n, 2012 IL App (4th) 100962, ¶¶ 8-13 (describing how the Commerce Commission establishes the rates a public utility may charge its customers). The legislature‘s decision to place responsibility for that process on the Commerce Commission is a reflection of that complexity. In creating the Commerce Commission, the legislature understood that insuring that a public utility‘s rates are just and reasonable and that its services are adequate would require consideration of complex technological and scientific data and expert opinion, and it determined that such matters are best addressed by a tribunal that is itself capable of passing upon complex data. See Sheffler, 2011 IL 110166, ¶ 40.
¶ 19 When the legislature established the regulatory structure for public utilities under the Public Utilities Act and then conferred on the Commerce Commission responsibility for determining whether rates charged by those utilities are just and reasonable, it also vested exclusive jurisdiction in the Commerce Commission to consider complaints that a utility has charged an amount for its product, commodity, or service that is excessive or unjust. Id. ¶ 41;
¶ 20 Such considerations are not present, however, when it comes to ARESs. ARESs were not part of the traditional regulatory system established to govern public utilities. They were introduced under the Rate Relief Law as part of an effort to partially deregulate Illinois‘s electricity market (Zahn, 815 F.3d at 1084-85). As we have already pointed out, ARESs are expressly excluded from the definition of “public utility” under the
¶ 21 NAPG correctly points out that ARESs are subject to numerous statutory requirements that are under authority of the Commerce Commission. For example, there are provisions obligating ARESs to obtain certificates of service authority from the Commerce Commission before serving residential customers (
¶ 22 Zahn, the State, and the Commerce Commission differ somewhat in their assessment of the significance of these additional provisions. In the State‘s view, they should be read as permitting claims such as those asserted by Zahn to be heard and disposed of by the Commerce Commission if an aggrieved residential consumer elects to pursue them in that forum. The Commerce Commission itself suggests that, at the most, its jurisdiction extends only to claims that an ARES‘s rates or services are impermissible because they contravene the particular factors set forth in
¶ 23 We express no view on the relative merits of these respective positions, for it is unnecessary for us to do so. Whatever the precise scope of the Commerce Commission‘s authority to consider claims asserted by residential consumers against ARESs, it is clear that nothing in the additional sections of the Public Utilities Act, including the provisions of the Rate Relief Law cited by NAPG, can fairly be read as expressing an explicit intention by the legislature that the Commerce Commission has exclusive original jurisdiction over those claims. Where the General Assembly has intended to confer exclusive jurisdiction on the Commerce Commission regarding a particular issue, it has said so specifically. See, e.g.,
CONCLUSION
¶ 24 For the foregoing reasons, we answer the certified question “Does the Illinois Commerce Commission have exclusive jurisdiction over a reparation claim, as defined in Sheffler v. Commonwealth Edison Company, 2011 IL 110166, brought by a residential consumer against an alternative retail electric supplier, as defined by
¶ 25 Certified question answered.
