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SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON CO., Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
MICHAEL R. PEEVEY, as Commission President, etc., et al.,
Defendants and Respondents;
THE UTILITY REFORM NETWORK, Intervener and Appellant.
No. S110662
In the Supreme Court of California
COUNSEL
Robert E. Finkelstein; Strumwasser & Woocher, Michael
J. Strumwasser, Fredric D. Woocher, Johanna R. Shargel and Lea
Rappaport Geller for Intervener and Appellant.
Sutherland Asbill & Brennan, Steuart H. Thomsen,
James M. Cain, Keith R. McCrea, James M. Bushee and Alisa N.
Stein for The California Manufacturers & Technology Association
as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Intervener and Appellant.
Harvey Rosenfield and Pamela Pressley for The Foundation
for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights as Amicus Curiae on behalf of
Intervener and Appellant.
Stephen Pickett, Barbara Reeves, Kris G. Vyas; Munger,
Tolles & Olson, Ronald L. Olson, John W. Spiegel, Henry Weissmann
and Kelly M. Klaus for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Gary M. Cohen, Mary F. McKenzie, Harvey Y. Morris and
Carrie G. Pratt for Defendants and Respondents.
Barry P. Goode for Governor Gray Davis as Amicus Curiae
on behalf of Defendants and Respondents.
Smiland & Khachigian, William M. Smiland, Kenneth
L. Khachigian, Christopher G. Foster; Adams, Broadwell, Joseph
& Cardozo and Marc D. Joseph for California Chamber of Commerce,
California Small Business Roundtable, California Business Roundtable,
Consumers First, Consumers Coalition of California, Los Angeles
County Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO and the Coalition of California
Utility Employees as Amici Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and
Respondent and Defendants and Respondents.
Filed August 21, 2003
Southern California Edison Company (SCE) sued the Commissioners
of the California Public Utilities Commission (PUC) in the United
States District Court for the Central District of California,
claiming PUC's regulation of electricity rates violated federal
law in several respects. The parties later reached an agreement
settling the action, which became the basis for a stipulated
judgment proposed to the district court. The Utility Reform Network
(TURN), which had intervened in the action, opposed the stipulated
judgment, claiming, among other things, that PUC's agreement
to the settlement violated California law. The district court
approved the settlement as fair and entered the stipulated judgment
over these objections.
On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit discerned "a serious question" whether
the agreement violated California law in several respects, both
substantive and procedural. ( Southern California Edison Co.
v. Lynch (9th Cir. 2002) 307 F.3d 794, 809.) Because "as
a matter of federal law, state officials cannot enter into a
federally sanctioned consent decree beyond their authority under
state law," the federal court of appeals believed the resolution
of state law issues was essential to determining the validity
of the stipulated judgment. ( Id. at p. 812.) The court
of appeals therefore certified to this court (Cal. Rules of Court,
former rule 29.5; see id., rule 29.8) three questions
of California law. We accepted the certification request, modifying
one of the questions slightly. As accepted, the questions to
be answered are:
1. Did the Commissioners of the California Public Utilities
Commission have the authority to propose the stipulated judgment
in light of the provisions of Assembly Bill No. 1890 (1995-1996
Reg. Sess.) codified in Public Utilities Code sections 330-398.5
(Stats. 1996, ch. 854)?
2. Did the procedures employed in entering the stipulated
judgment violate the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Gov. Code,
§ § 11120-11132.5)?
3. Does the stipulated judgment violate section 454
of the Public Utilities Code by altering utility rates without
a public hearing and issuance of findings?
Having analyzed these questions, we conclude the settlement
did not violate California law in any of these three respects.
Background
The essential background of this case lies in California's
attempt, beginning in 1996, to move the system for provision
of electrical power from a regulated to a competitive market,
the crisis caused in mid-2000 to early 2001 by soaring prices
for electricity on the wholesale market, and the urgency legislation
enacted in January 2001 in response to that crisis.
Assembly Bill No. 1890 (1995-1996 Reg. Sess.) (hereafter
Assembly Bill 1890), which became law in 1996 (Stats. 1996, ch.
854), was intended to provide the legislative foundation for
"California's transition to a more competitive electricity
market structure." (Assem. Bill 1890, § 1, subd. (a).)
The new market structure included the creation of the California
Power Exchange (CalPX), which was to run an "efficient,
competitive auction" among electricity producers, and the
Independent System Operator, which would control the statewide
transmission grid. ( Id., § 1, subd. (c). ) The state's
main investor-owned electric utility companies (SCE, Pacific
Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), and San Diego Gas and Electric
Company (SDG&E); hereafter the utilities) were expected to
divest themselves of substantial parts of their generating assets,
while retaining others at least during the period of transition.
( Id. , § 10, adding Pub. Util. Code, former §
377.) Under the Assembly Bill 1890 scheme as implemented, all
generators, including the utilities, sold their power through
the CalPX; the utilities also bought, through that exchange,
the electricity they needed to supply their retail customers.
( Cal. Exchange Corp. v. FERC ( In re Cal. Power Exchange
Corp. )(9th Cir. 2001) 245 F.3d 1110, 1114-1115.)
Because this competition among producers was expected
to bring down wholesale prices, the utilities believed that some
of their generating assets, which they had built or improved
with PUC approval, would become "uneconomic," in that
the costs of generation (and of certain long-term contracts between
the utilities and other generators) would be higher than prevailing
wholesale rates would support. The costs associated with these
potentially uneconomic assets are also known as "stranded
costs" or "transition costs." The Legislature,
in Assembly Bill 1890, intended to allow for "[a]ccelerated,
equitable, nonbypassable recovery of transition costs" (Stats.
1996, ch. 854, § 1, subd. (b)(1)) and thereby to "provide
the investors in these electrical corporations with a fair opportunity
to fully recover the costs associated with commission approved
generation-related assets and obligations" (Pub. Util. Code,
§ 330, subd. (t)). The legislative scheme for doing so without
subjecting consumers to increased rates was complex, but consisted
in its essentials of the following:
Under Public Utilities Code section 367, [FOOTNOTE 1]
PUC was to identify and quantify potentially uneconomic costs
(i.e., the PUC-approved costs that "may become uneconomic
as a result of a competitive generating market" ). The identified
costs were to be recoverable through rates that would not exceed
"the levels in effect on June 10, 1996," and the recovery
was not to "extend beyond December 31, 2001." (§
367, subd. (a).) The component of rates dedicated to recovery
of transition costs was nonbypassable, i.e., it had to be paid
to the utility whether the consumer bought power from the utility,
from a generator in a single direct transaction, or from a generator
in an aggregated direct transaction with other consumers. (§
§ 365, subd. (b), 366, 370.)
Section 368 required each utility to propose, and PUC
to approve, a "cost recovery plan" for the costs identified
in section 367 that would set rates at June 10, 1996, levels,
with a 10 percent reduction for residential and small commercial
customers. Section 368, subdivision (a) continues: "These
rate levels . . . shall remain in effect until the earlier of
March 31, 2002, or the date on which the commission-authorized
costs for utility generation-related assets and obligations have
been fully recovered. The electrical corporation shall be at
risk for those costs not recovered during that time period."
PUC implemented this cost-recovery scheme in part by
creating, for each electric utility, a transition cost balancing
account (sometimes herein referred to as a TCBA), in which the
PUC-identified stranded costs were tracked. Transition costs
were not to be forecast, but rather entered in the transition
cost balancing account as the PUC determined them. Costs associated
with utility-retained generating assets were to be determined
by comparing the book value of the assets with their market valuations,
a process to be completed by the end of 2001. These uneconomic
generating costs were to be netted against the benefits of any
economic generating assets (those having higher market
than book value). The difference between rate revenue and the
utility's other (nongeneration-related) costs was designated
the utility's "headroom" and was to be credited against
the stranded costs in the transition cost balancing account.
The portion of each rate serving as headroom was designated the
competition transition charge. ( In re Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. (1997) 76 Cal. P.U.C.2d 627, 646-653, 740-744.)
In the first few years of the transition period, the
utilities recovered much of their stranded costs. SDG&E was
found to have recovered all its transition costs, ending the
rate freeze for that utility under section 368. SCE and PG&E,
however, were still subject to the rate freeze when, in the summer
of 2000, power procurement prices, and particularly prices on
the CalPX spot market, rose drastically. They incurred huge debts
buying electricity through the CalPX. ( Cal. Exchange Corp.
v. FERC ( In re Cal. Power Exchange Corp. ), supra ,
245 F.3d at p. 1115.)
In November 2000, as the wholesale price and supply
problems continued, SCE brought its federal action against PUC,
the subsequent settlement of which is the subject of this decision.
In essence, SCE claimed the rate freeze imposed by Assembly Bill
1890 was now depriving SCE of its right, under federal law, to
recover the costs of purchasing electricity for its customers.
More particularly, SCE claimed the freeze rates had become unconstitutionally
confiscatory and violated the federal "filed rate"
rule, which assertedly allows a utility to recover in state-regulated
retail rates the costs of purchases made under federally approved
tariffs.
PUC granted SCE and the other utilities emergency rate
relief in early 2001. Deeming the crisis one "that involves
not only utility solvency but the very liquidity of the system,"
PUC in January 2001 authorized a temporary surcharge of one cent
per kilowatt-hour. ( Application of Southern California
Edison Co. (2001) Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 01-01-018, pp. 1-4.) Two
months later, still finding that "SCE's and PG&E's continued
financial viability and ability to serve their customers has
been seriously compromised by the dramatic escalation in wholesale
prices," PUC made the January increase permanent and authorized
an additional three cents per kilowatt-hour increase. ( Application
of Southern California Edison Co. (2001) Cal. P.U.C. Dec.
No. 01-03-082, pp. 2-4.) PUC refers to these increases collectively
as the "four cent surcharge," a usage we adopt. (According
to SCE, the surcharge amounted to an average increase of 40 percent
in retail rates.) PUC's March 2001 decision, while authorizing
an increase to pay for ongoing power purchases, did "not
address recovery of past power purchase costs and other costs
claimed by the utilities." ( Id. , at p. 2.)
The Legislature also took action in January 2001, in
an extraordinary session called to address the power crisis.
In that session's Assembly Bill No. 1 (Stats. 2001, 1st Ex. Sess.,
ch. 4; hereafter Assembly Bill 1X), the Legislature authorized
the state Department of Water Resources to begin buying power
for customers of SCE and PG&E. ( Id. , § 4, adding
Wat. Code, § § 80100-80122.) In Assembly Bill No. 6
of that Session (Stats. 2001, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 2; hereafter
Assembly Bill 6X), the Legislature amended several provisions
of Assembly Bill 1890, halting at least temporarily the transition
to a competitive electricity market. In particular, Public Utilities
Code section 377, as first enacted by Assembly Bill 1890, had
provided that PUC would continue regulating the utilities' retained
nonnuclear generating assets "until those assets have been
subject to market valuation," after which they would be
sold off unless the utility convinced the PUC their retention
was in the public interest. (Stats. 1996, ch. 854, § 10.)
As amended by Assembly Bill 6X, section 377 provides that all
the remaining generating assets are subject to PUC regulation
and may not be sold until January 1, 2006, at the earliest.
(Assem. Bill 6X, § 3.) Similarly, as enacted by Assembly
Bill 1890, Public Utilities Code section 330, subdivision ( l)(2)
had provided that the generating assets "should be transitioned
from regulated status to unregulated status through means of
commission-approved market valuation mechanisms." (Stats.
1996, ch. 854, § 10.) Assembly Bill 6X deleted this language,
leaving only the general statement that "[g]eneration of
electricity should be open to competition." ( Id. ,
§ 2.) PUC subsequently issued decisions, based on Assembly
Bill 6X, reestablishing cost-based rate regulation of SCE's retained
generating assets and modifying restrictions on the use of the
four cent surcharge. (E.g., Application of Southern California
Edison Co. (2002) Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 02-04-016, p. 2; Applica
tion of Southern California Edison Co. (2002) Cal. P.U.C.
Dec. No. 02-11-026, pp. 11-16.)
In October 2001, SCE and PUC reached a settlement of
SCE's federal rate action. In the settlement's recitals, the
parties agreed that during the period of very high wholesale
power prices, SCE accumulated procurement-related liabilities
and indebtedness of about $6.355 billion, creating severe liquidity
and credit problems for the company. Conditions in 2001, including
the four cent surcharge, had allowed SCE to collect retail revenues
in excess of current costs. The settlement was intended to use
the opportunity thus provided to restore SCE's creditworthiness
and avoid further instability and uncertainty for the company
and consumers. (Settlement, Recitals D-F.)
PUC's principal substantive concession in the settlement
was its agreement to permit SCE to recover its past procurement
related costs by maintaining the existing rates until the end
of 2003, if necessary. The parties agreed to establish a procurement-related
obligations account (sometimes herein referred to as the PROACT),
the initial balance of which was SCE's procurement-related liabilities
less its cash on hand. (The parties estimated the initial balance
at about $3.3 billion.) (Settlement, § 2.1(a).) SCE agreed
to apply all its surplus (its revenue in excess of defined recoverable
costs), with some exceptions, to the account, gradually reducing
its balance. (Settlement, § 2.1(b).) The PUC agreed to maintain
the rates in effect on the settlement date (with some adjustments)
during the "rate repayment period," which was defined
to end when the PROACT was paid down to zero or on December 31,
2003, whichever came first. (Settlement, § § 1.1(p),
1.1(w), 2.2(a).) A potentially longer "recovery period"
was defined as ending when the account was completely paid down
or on December 31, 2005, whichever came first. (Settlement, §
1.1(q).) The parties agreed that, if necessary, any obligations
left in the PROACT at the end of the rate repayment period (i.e.,
at the end of 2003) would "be amortized in retail rates
ratably during all or a portion of the remainder of the Recovery
Period." (Settlement, § 2.2(b).) [FOOTNOTE 2]
Over TURN's objection, the federal district court entered
a stipulated judgment incorporating the terms of the settlement
agreement, finding the agreement "adequate and fair."
On TURN's appeal, the court of appeals resolved the federal law
issues in favor of SCE and PUC ( Southern California Edison
Co. v. Lynch, supra, 307 F.3d at pp. 802-809), but found that
the settlement and stipulated judgment appeared to violate California
law in certain respects and, following "principles of comity"
( id. at p. 812), tendered those state law questions to
this court and stayed further proceedings pending our response
( id. at p. 813). We proceed to decide the certified questions.
Question 1: Did the Commissioners of the California
Public Utilities Commission have the authority to propose
the stipulated judgment in light of the provisions of Assembly
Bill No. 1890 (1995-1996 Reg. Sess.) codified in Public Utilities
Code sections 330-398.5 (Stats. 1996, ch. 854)?
Answer: Yes.
PUC's authority derives not only from statute but from
the California Constitution, which creates the agency and expressly
gives it the power to fix rates for public utilities. (Cal. Const.
,art. XII, § § 1, 6.) Statutorily, PUC is authorized
to supervise and regulate public utilities and to "do all
things . . . which are necessary and convenient in the exercise
of such power and jurisdiction" (§ 701); this includes
the authority to determine and fix "just, reasonable [and]
sufficient rates" (§ 728) to be charged by the utilities.
Adverting to these provisions, we have described PUC as "'
a state agency of constitutional origin with far-reaching duties,
functions and powers' "whose "' power to fix rates
[and] establish rules' "has been "' liberally construed.'
"(San Diego Gas & Electric Co. v. Superior Court (1996)
13 Cal.4th 893, 914-915, quoting Consumers Lobby Against Monopolies
v. Public Utilities Com. (1979) 25 Cal.3d 891, 905.) If PUC lacked
substantive authority to propose and enter into the rate settlement
agreement at issue here, it was not for lack of inherent authority,
but because this rate agreement was barred by some specific statutory
limit on PUC's power to set rates. (See Assembly v. Public
Utilities Com. (1995) 12 Cal.4th 87, 103.)
TURN contends, first, that PUC's agreement to the settlement
violated a legislative directive in section 368, enacted as part
of Assembly Bill 1890, which froze rates at June 1996 levels
during the transition period. In particular, TURN argues the
settlement illegally "extend[ed]" the freeze period.
But TURN errs in assuming that section 368 requires that
rates be reduced at the end of the freeze period. In this respect,
section 368 provides only that the freeze rates "shall remain
in effect until the earlier of March 31, 2002, or the date on
which the commission-authorized costs for utility generation-related
assets and obligations have been fully recovered." Section
368 does not dictate that rates be reduced, or changed in any
way, at the end of the freeze period. True, section 330, subdivision
(a) recites the Legislature's "intent . . . that a cumulative
rate reduction of at least 20 percent be achieved" by April
1, 2002, but section 330 consists of findings and declarations
providing "guidance in carrying out" the provisions
of Assembly Bill 1890, not binding limitations on PUC authority.
While the Legislature certainly intended its Assembly Bill 1890
scheme to bring down retail rates through wholesale competition,
progress toward that result was delayed, to say the least, by
the unanticipated 2000-2001 rise in wholesale rates.
With more force, TURN contends the settlement allowed
SCE to recover in the postfreeze period, in violation of section
368, costs incurred during the freeze period. TURN relies on
the third sentence of section 368, subdivision (a), which provides:
"The electrical corporation shall be at risk for those costs
not recovered during that time period," i.e., the freeze
period ending March 31, 2002. After careful consideration, we
conclude, contrary to TURN's contentions, that after the enactment
of Assembly Bill 6X in 2001, which required electrical utilities
to retain their generating plants until at least 2006 and returned
retained generating asset rates to cost-based regulation, PUC
was authorized to approve rates allowing SCE to recover the costs
covered by the settlement agreement. While Assembly Bill 6X did
not repeal section 368 or reverse all aspects of electricity
deregulation, it constituted a major retrenchment from the competitive
price-reduction approach of Assembly Bill 1890, reemphasizing
instead PUC's duty and authority to guarantee that the electric
utilities would have the capacity and financial viability to
provide power to California consumers.
We first consider whether, the effect of Assembly Bill
6X aside, the costs slated for recovery by the settlement agreement
are uneconomic generating asset costs (i.e., stranded or transition
costs) restricted by section 368. On their face they are not:
the settlement agreement expressly provides for postfreeze recovery
of energy procurement , rather than generation, costs.
Under the settlement, PUC agrees to maintain the rates in force
at the time of the settlement until the earlier of December 2003
or the date the obligations recorded in the procurement-related
obligations account have been recovered. SCE's procurement-related
liabilities are tallied in schedule 1.1 of the settlement, and
include SCE's debts to banks, electricity generators, the CalPX
and Independent System Operator, and the Department of Water
Resources, which in January 2001 began purchasing electricity
for SCE customers. These liabilities resulted from "wholesale
electricity procurement costs" (Settlement, Recital D) rather
than from the "costs for generation-related assets and obligations"
referred to in section 367, the recovery of which sections 367
and 368 restrict to the freeze period.
PUC nevertheless maintains that the costs to be recovered
in retail sales under the settlement are not procurement costs
but rather SCE's "generation-related costs . . . which were
previously called stranded costs." PUC bases this characterization
on an accounting change it made in March 2001, at TURN's suggestion,
by which SCE's accumulated procurement liabilities were transferred
into its transition cost balancing account, which had previously
been used to track recovery only of stranded costs and which
was, according to SCE, "overcollected" (i.e., in the
black) at that time. [FOOTNOTE 3] As a result of this change,
PUC later determined that SCE had, at the time of the settlement,
a substantial amount of unrecovered transition costs. ( Application
of Southern California Edison Co., supra, Cal. P.U.C. Dec.
No. 01-03-082, pp. 26-32; see Cal. P.U.C. Res. E-3765 (Jan. 23,
2002), p. 13.) Thus, PUC explains, "the effect of the Settlement
is to recover the large stranded cost balance in the TCBA."
(Cal. P.U.C. Res. E-3765, supra , p. 13.)
Although PUC's position is consistent with its earlier
determination (in proceedings unrelated to this case) that costs
are fungible for purposes of Assembly Bill 1890's restrictions
on cost recovery, [FOOTNOTE 4] we do not fully accept for present
purposes PUC's equation of SCE's procurement liabilities accumulated
during the wholesale rate crisis with its unrecovered transition
costs. As discussed below, SCE's true unrecovered transition
costs appear indeterminable in light of PUC's failure, following
the changes wrought by Assembly Bill 6X, to complete the planned
transition by assigning market values to SCE's generating assets,
a step that would have reduced the transition cost balancing
account balance by an unknown but potentially significant amount.
But whatever the amount of SCE's unrecovered transition costs,
there is no reason to assume it was exactly equivalent to the
amount of the utility's unrecovered procurement costs. Even assuming
that when the March 2001 accounting change was made, some amount
of transition costs should have remained in SCE's transition
cost balancing account, neither PUC nor TURN endeavors to explain
why that amount would necessarily have been equal to the amount
of SCE's procurement costs (about $6.355 billion, according to
the settlement) and hence, why the settlement recovery figure
of $3.3 billion, calculated from SCE's outstanding procure
ment liabilities, should be deemed to represent instead the
exact amount of transition costs unrecovered at the time
of the settlement. While the March 2001 accounting change may
have been properly used to determine that the Assembly Bill 1890
rate freeze had not then ended (see fn. 2, ante ), it
should not bind us to a counterfactual characterization of all
the procurement costs at issue here.
The passage of Assembly Bill 6X in January 2001 introduced
additional grounds against deeming recovery of procurement liabilities
to be limited by section 368. Assembly Bill 6X eliminated Assembly
Bill 1890's requirement for market valuation of utility-retained
generating assets, required SCE to keep its remaining generating
assets until 2006, and allowed PUC to regulate the rates for
power so generated pursuant to ordinary "cost-of-service"
ratemaking. PUC was thus authorized to permit SCE such recovery
of past costs as necessary to render the utility financially
viable and to ensure SCE would be able to continue serving its
customers through electricity generated in its retained plants.
In a technical sense, moreover, Assembly Bill 6X largely eliminated
the category of "uneconomic" generating asset costs,
the only costs whose recovery is limited under section 368. Since
"uneconomic" costs are those that "may become
uneconomic as a result of a competitive generating market"
in that they "may not be recoverable in market prices in
a competitive market" (§ 367), and under Assembly Bill
6X the retained assets will not be included in a competitive
generating market until at least 2006, section 368, as PUC argues,
"no longer applies to the generation-related costs of the
utilities."
TURN concedes that Assembly Bill 6X returned to cost-of-service
regulation those generating assets SCE still owned when the law
was enacted. [FOOTNOTE 5] The January 2001 measure, TURN further
concedes, meant that PUC would be able to ensure, by rate regulation,
that SCE "would be given an opportunity, in the future,
to earn a return on [its] investment in those plants" and
that, consequently, "[t]he remaining book-value of utility-retained
generation is not any part of the unrecovered stranded costs."
But TURN argues Assembly Bill 6X did not affect section 368's
mandate that SCE be "at risk" for what TURN calls "the
stranded costs represented by the plants it did sell, or by the
depreciation expense already recorded on its retained plants
during the rate freeze." The stranded costs accumulated
by January 2001 were, TURN argues, unrecoverable under section
368 after the freeze period ended in March 2002.
We are not persuaded the settlement violates section
368 as TURN claims, even if the settlement is regarded as permitting
recovery of some generation-related costs rather than, as indicated
on its face, only procurement costs. SCE's transition cost balancing
account, designed to track its transition costs, was overcollected
at the beginning of 2001. Even if, as TURN claims, the January
2001 account balance understated SCE's transition costs, SCE
persuasively argues it also overstated such costs because
it did not reflect the increased market value of SCE's retained
generating assets in an environment of higher wholesale prices.
The process of selling, appraising, or otherwise placing
a market value on the utilities' generation assets, to be completed
by December 31, 2001 (§ 367, subd. (b)), was essential to
the Assembly Bill 1890 scheme, since the true stranded cost of
an asset depended in part on its market value. (See In re
Pacific Gas & Electric Co., supra , 76 Cal. P.U.C.2d
at pp. 674-675.) Each utility's transition cost balancing account
tracked not only its generating assets' amortized book values
and its competition transition charge revenues, but also any
"market valuation credits." ( Id. at p. 674.)
The utilities thus expected to "adjust the transition cost
balancing account when assets are sold or market-valued."
( Id. at p. 675.) But according to SCE, PUC "had
never rendered a decision assigning market values to SCE's generation
assets-assets that became extremely valuable in a market in which
prices had risen dramatically." The passage of Assembly
Bill 6X, which ended the sale of generating assets and returned
them to traditional PUC rate regulation, removed the rationale
and opportunity for market valuation, thus preventing the transition
cost balancing account from serving as a complete or accurate
record of transition costs.
Finally, we note that the Legislature, in section 367,
gave PUC the authority to identify uneconomic costs. Pursuant
to that authority the agency has determined that after passage
of Assembly Bill 6X, generation-related costs are, for the reasons
already stated, no longer "uneconomic" within the meaning
of section 367. ( Application of Southern California Edison
Co., supra, Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 02-11-026, p. 14.) Cognizant
of the principle that PUC's interpretation of the Public Utility
Code "should not be disturbed unless it fails to bear a
reasonable relation to statutory purposes and language"
( Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Public Utilities Com. (1968)
68 Cal.2d 406, 410-411), we are unable to reach a different conclusion
here.
Whether we regard the costs to be recovered under the
PUC-SCE settlement as procurement costs or as generation-related
costs, therefore, they were not uneconomic costs restricted
in recovery by section 368. Consequently, PUC's agreement to
the settlement was not in violation of Assembly Bill 1890.
Question 2: Did the procedures employed in entering
the stipulated judgment violate the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting
Act (Gov. Code, § § 11120-11132.5)?
Answer: No
The Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (the Bagley-Keene
Act) applies to most state boards and commissions, including
PUC. (See Gov. Code, § § 11121, 11121.1, 11126, subd.
(d).) The purpose of the law, stated in Government Code section
11120, is to ensure that "actions of state agencies be taken
openly and that their deliberation be conducted openly."
The Bagley-Keene Act implements this policy by mandating that
"[a]ll meetings of a state body shall be open and public
. . ." (Gov. Code, § 11123), by requiring advance public
notice of meetings ( id. , § 11125), by authorizing
legal actions to prevent threatened violations of the act or
declare its applicability to past or threatened future "actions"
of a body ( id. , § 11130), and to declare null and
void an "action taken" in violation of Government Code
sections 11123 or 11125 ( id. , § 11130.3). "Action
taken" is defined broadly to include "a
collective decision" of the members and "a collective
commitment or promise . . . to make a positive or negative decision."
( Id. , § 11122.)
The October 2001 settlement, which the subsequent stipulated
judgment implemented, was signed by the five PUC commissioners
and was both a collective decision of the commissioners and a
collective commitment or promise to take further actions. It
was thus an "action taken" by PUC and subject, under
the above provisions, to the Bagley-Keene Act. The parties, moreover,
agree this action was taken in a meeting, to wit, the closed
or executive session of the regularly scheduled PUC meeting of
October 2, 2001. The published agenda for the October 2 meeting
listed, in the closed session section, this item: "FEX-2:
Conference with Legal Counsel-Existing . . . Litigation. Case
name unspecified. (Disclosure of case name would jeopardize existing
settlement negotiations.) (Gov. Code Sec. 11126(e)(2)(A).)"
According to PUC, the commissioners unanimously approved the
settlement during the closed session, then reconvened in public
session to announce their action. This is confirmed by the published
PUC results sheet for the October 2 meeting, which lists this
item: "FEX-2: SCE Settlement. Approved Staff Recommendation
as Modified 5-0. Reconvened in Public Session at 1:30 p.m. to
announce the action taken in Executive Session."
PUC contends taking this action in closed session did
not violate the Bagley-Keene Act, but, rather, was permitted
under an exception to the law's open meeting requirement, Government
Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1), which provides as follows:
"Nothing in this article shall be construed to prevent a
state body, based on the advice of its legal counsel, from holding
a closed session to confer with, or receive advice from, its
legal counsel regarding pending litigation when discussion in
open session concerning those matters would prejudice the position
of the state body in the litigation." We agree. On its face,
subdivision (e)(1) permits a body only to "confer with"
and "receive advice from" its attorney regarding litigation.
But subdivision (e)(1) must be read in light of its purposes
and in consonance with a closely related provision of the Bagley-Keene
Act, Government Code section 11126.3, subdivision (a), which
allows a body to withhold the identity of litigation to be considered
in closed session if to identify it would "jeopardize its
ability to conclude existing settlement negotiations to
its advantage." (Italics added.) Read in light of its purposes
and in that statutory context, Government Code section 11126,
subdivision (e)(1) was, as will be seen below, clearly intended
to permit the body not only to deliberate with counsel regarding
a settlement, but actually to settle the litigation in a closed
session when closure is deemed necessary to avoid prejudice to
a favorable settlement.
Settlement discussions with counsel are obviously an
aspect of litigation particularly vulnerable to prejudice through
public exposure and are thus one of the areas Government Code
section 11126, subdivision (e)(1) was centrally intended to shelter
from public revelation. In Sacramento Newspaper Guild v. Sacramento
County Board of Supervisors (1968) 263 Cal.App.2d 41, the court
held that the enactment of the Ralph M. Brown Act (Gov. Code,
§ § 54950-54962; hereafter Brown Act), the open meeting
law applicable to local public entities, was not intended to
remove protection of the attorney-client privilege from local
government bodies' deliberations with their attorneys concerning
litigation. Public entities have as great a need for confidential
counsel from their attorneys as private litigants and should
not be put at a disadvantage in litigation by depriving them
of that essential assistance. ( Sacramento Newspaper Guild,
supra , at p. 55.) In particular, the court explained, a
public entity's discussion with counsel about possible settlement
must occur in private, for such conferences require a frank evaluation
of the case's strengths and weaknesses, and "[i]f the public's
' right to know' compelled admission of an audience, the ringside
seats would be occupied by the government's adversary, delighted
to capitalize on every revelation of weakness." ( Id.
at p. 56; accord, Roberts v. City of Palmdale (1993) 5 Cal.4th
363, 373-374.) The Legislature subsequently added protective
provisions to both the Bagley-Keene and Brown Acts, vindicating
the view expounded in Sacramento Newspaper Guild. Both
new provisions were phrased in the language of current Government
Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1). (See Stats. 1981, ch.
968, § 12, p. 3690, adding former subd. (q) to Gov. Code,
§ 11126; Stats. 1984, ch. 1126, § 3, p. 3802, adding
Gov. Code, § 54956.9.)
In 1992, the California Attorney General's Office construed
Government Code section 54956.9, the Brown Act provision paralleling
Government Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1), as authorizing
a public entity to act on a settlement proposal, as well
as deliberate on it, in closed session with its counsel. (75
Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 14 (1992).) The Attorney General noted, first,
that the Brown Act's "personnel exception" (Gov. Code,
§ 54957) has been construed to permit closed-session action
on appointments and dismissals (see Lucas v. Board of Trustees
(1971) 18 Cal.App.3d 988, 991), even though on its face the statute
authorizes only a closed session to "consider" such
personnel matters. "The parallel between section 54957 ('
to consider' ) and section 54956.9 (' to confer' ) warrants similar
treatment." (75 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra , at p.
19.)
The same parallel may be drawn between the corresponding
provisions of the Bagley-Keene Act. Subdivision (a)(1) of Government
Code section 11126 permits closed sessions "to consider"
personnel matters. Though case law has not yet addressed the
point, we note that the immediately following provision, subdivision
(a)(2), refers to "any disciplinary or other action taken
against any employee at the closed session," indicating
that the Legislature intended, in the Bagley-Keene Act as (according
to the Attorney General) in the Brown Act, that the government
body could not only deliberate, but act, in closed session. The
language used in Government Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1),
permitting a body "to confer" with counsel on settlement
of pending litigation, is not so dissimilar to that in subdivision
(a)(1) ("to consider" ) as to warrant a different interpretation.
Interpreting the Brown Act counsel provision, the Attorney
General also reasoned that consultation with counsel in the course
of litigation often focuses on possible action-e.g., whether
to file a suit or countersuit, what claims and defenses to plead,
what parties to join. Conferring with counsel on these matters
necessarily includes deciding on a course of action and instructing
or authorizing counsel to pursue it. The same applies to settlement
discussions. "Unless a local agency is to be a ' second
class citizen' with its opponents ' filling the ringside seats'
(Sacramento Newspaper Guild v. Sacramento County Bd. of Suprs.
, supra, 263 Cal.App.2d at p. 56), it must be able to
confer with its attorney and then decide in private such matters
as the upper and lower limits with respect to settlement, whether
to accept a settlement or make a counter offer, or even whether
to settle at all. These are matters which will depend upon the
strength and weakness of the individual case as developed from
conferring with counsel. A local agency of necessity must be
able to decide and instruct its counsel with respect to these
matters in private." (75 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra ,
at pp. 19-20.)
This reasoning is equally applicable to state bodies
governed by the Bagley-Keene Act. In providing (in Gov. Code,
§ 11126, subd. (e)(1)) for private conferences with counsel
regarding pending litigation, the Legislature must have intended
the scope of privacy to be broad enough to include the bodies'
instructions to their attorneys as to how to proceed, including
whether and with what limits to negotiate settlement. The legislative
purpose of placing public agencies on a roughly equal footing
with private parties in litigation would otherwise be defeated.
In this case, of course, PUC went beyond instructing
counsel in the closed meeting of October 2, 2001; it actually
concluded the settlement , unanimously voting to accept
the proposed agreement with SCE, and reconvened in public session
only to announce the action taken. Theoretically, the PUC commissioners
could instead have deliberated in private on this step, then
reconvened in public session (at the same or a later meeting)
to actually vote. But such a procedure could serve the purposes
of the Bagley-Keene Act only if the body announced, before the
public session, the identity of the litigation proposed for settlement,
for only then could the public possibly be informed of, and comment
on, the substance of the proposed action. (See Gov. Code, §
11125.7, subds. (a), (g) [state bodies, specifically including
PUC, to provide opportunity for public comment during consideration
of each agenda item]; id. , subd. (d) [requirement does
not apply to closed session items].) To convene publicly simply
to vote on an unidentified and undescribed litigation proposal,
without the opportunity for meaningful public comment, would
be an empty gesture, which we will not assume the Legislature
intended to require.
The question, then, is whether the Bagley-Keene Act
requires a state body, after deliberating on a proposed settlement
in closed session pursuant to Government Code section 11126,
subdivision (e)(1), to announce its proposed decision in public
session- identifying the litigation involved- and accept
public comment on the proposed settlement before voting on it.
To this question we think Government Code section 11126.3, subdivision
(a) dictates a negative answer.
Government Code section 11126.3 sets forth the required
procedures for closed sessions. Subdivision (a) mandates public
disclosure of the "general nature" of each closed session
item by, for example, a listing on the public agenda. The last
sentence of subdivision (a) provides: "If the session is
closed pursuant to subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subdivision
(e) of Section 11126 [pending litigation or administrative adjudications],
the state body shall state the title of, or otherwise identify,
the litigation to be discussed unless the body states
that to do so would jeopardize the body's ability to effectuate
service of process upon one or more unserved parties, or that
to do so would jeopardize its ability to conclude existing settlement
negotiations to its advantage." (Italics added.)
Under the quoted provision, a body may decline to identify
the litigation under discussion in closed session if the body
states that to identify it would jeopardize the conclusion of
an advantageous settlement. Were the body required, after its
closed-session deliberations but before actually con cluding
the settlement, to announce publicly the proposed settlement
and the name of the litigation, the protective purpose of Government
Code section 11126.3, subdivision (a) would be defeated. The
Legislature clearly intended, in enacting Government Code section
11126.3, subdivision (a), that a state body be able to keep private
the identity of litigation it is considering settling until it
has "conclude[d]" the settlement (assuming the body
believes privacy is strategically necessary to the settlement
negotiations). Construing the closely related provisions of Government
Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1) to require a public identification
of the proposed settlement before it has been concluded,
would defeat that purpose and could not have been the legislative
intent. [FOOTNOTE 6]
In this case PUC strictly followed the procedure mandated
in Government Code section 11126.3, subdivision (a), noting in
the closed-session agenda item, "Case name unspecified.
(Disclosure of case name would jeopardize existing settlement
negotiations.) (Gov. Code Sec. 11126(e)(2)(A).)" To require
PUC, under Government Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1),
to reconvene in open session and publicly announce it was considering
settling SCE's federal litigation would subject PUC to the potential
loss of the very negotiating equality that Government Code section
11126.3, subdivision (a) was designed to preserve. Reading Government
Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(1) in statutory context,
therefore, we conclude it authorized PUC not only to discuss,
but also to conclude the settlement in closed session.
TURN contends that even if Government Code section 11126,
subdivision (e)(1) generally permits state bodies to take action
on a settlement in closed session, another provision of that
section, subdivision (d)(1), specifically required this settlement
agreement to be acted on in public session because the settlement
raised electricity rates. Government Code section 11126, subdivision
(d)(1) provides: "Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, any meeting of the Public Utilities Commission at which
the rates of entities under the commission's jurisdiction are
changed shall be open and public."
We agree, however, with PUC and SCE that by agreeing
to the settlement PUC did not "change[]" the "rates"
(Gov. Code, § 11126, subd. (d)(1)) that SCE could charge
for electricity. The central commitment PUC made in the settlement
was to maintain the then existing rates for an agreed
period. (Settlement, § 2.2(a).)
According to TURN, the settlement agreement changed
rates by making regulatory concessions to SCE that (TURN asserts)
will lead to future rates higher than would otherwise
obtain. Government Code section 11126, subdivision (d)(1), TURN
argues, applies to "any PUC decision that results in customers
paying higher rates than they would absent the action."
We reject this interpretation of the statute as establishing
a standard impossible to apply, because it depends on the unknowable
course of future events under hypothetical conditions. Had PUC
not settled SCE's federal lawsuit, SCE might have won its case
and rates might have been raised even higher or been kept in
place longer; had SCE lost or continued in protracted litigation,
it might have gone into bankruptcy and the bankruptcy court might
have approved higher rates. This court, moreover, cannot know
whether at some time in the future PUC would or would not have
ordered rate reductions, customer refunds, or cost-accounting
changes that might indirectly have resulted in lower rates. Under
TURN's interpretation, virtually any regulatory
action would be a change in rates because PUC could have tak
en some other action potentially leading to lower rates in
the future. (See Toward Utility Rate Normalization v. Public
Utilities Com. (1988) 44 Cal.3d 870, 873 [PUC "authorized
no changes in rates" in adopting accounting procedure that
prevented otherwise automatic rate reduction].)
In this case, for example, TURN asserts the settlement
agreement deprived customers of refunds they would otherwise
have been entitled to receive for overcollection of the four
cent surcharge, that is, for any collections of the surcharge
not needed for current power purchases, as was the originally
stated purpose of the surcharge. But TURN cannot show PUC would,
absent the settlement, have ordered refund of surcharge revenues
used to pay procurement debts incurred during the crisis. While
the March 2001 PUC decision allowing the surcharge stated that
the surcharge's purpose was to pay for ongoing power purchases
and that surcharge revenues were "subject to refund if,
at a later date, we determine that the utilities failed to use
the funds to pay for future power purchases," that decision
explicitly did "not address recovery of past power purchase
costs and other costs claimed by the utilities." ( Application
of Southern Cal ifornia Edison Co., supra, Cal. P.U.C. Dec.
No. 01-03-082, pp. 2, 60.) Later, the PUC explicitly permitted
use of the surcharge revenues to pay utilities' past power purchase
debts. ( Application of Southern California Edison Co., supra
, Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 02-11-026, pp. 2, 4, 15-16.) [FOOTNOTE
7] Given PUC's stated concern with restoring SCE to "reasonable
financial health" in order that it be able to reliably provide
electric power to its customers ( Application of Southern
California Edison Co., supra, at p. 4), we cannot assume
PUC would have taken a different regulatory course absent the
settlement. [FOOTNOTE 8]
TURN also cites legislative history documents indicating
that the 1975 amendment adding the language in Government Code
section 11126, subdivision (d)(1) was intended to require that
meetings for any PUC "deliberation on rate proceedings"
or "at which rates of entities under PUC jurisdiction are
considered" be open and public. (Legis. Analyst, analysis
of Sen. Bill No. 1 (1975-1976 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 24,
1975, p. 1; Assem. Ways & Means Com., staff analysis of Sen.
Bill No. 1 (1975-1976 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 24, 1975, p.
2.) The cited history, however, does not indicate an intent to
apply Government Code section 11126, subdivision (d)(1) to regulatory
decisions other than rate changes. As the language of subdivision
(d)(1) reflects, the primary legislative concern was with decisions
to change rates; decisions leaving rates un changed, but
taking regulatory action that results in rates remaining at current
levels longer than they otherwise might-the most that can be
said about the settlement agreement's effect-are not clearly
within the legislative purpose. For this reason, and because
we have earlier found a clear legislative intent, expressed in
Government Code sections 11126, subdivision (e)(1) and 11126.3,
subdivision (a), to allow settlement of pending litigation without
a public meeting, we conclude PUC's agreement to the settlement
was not a meeting "at which the rates of entities under
the commission's jurisdiction are changed" for purposes
of Government Code section 11126, subdivision (d)(1).
Question 3: Does the stipulated judgment violate
sec tion 454 of the Public Utilities Code by altering utility
rates without a public hearing and issuance of findings?
Answer: No
Section 454, subdivision (a) provides that "no
public utility shall change any rate or so alter any classification,
contract, practice, or rule as to result in any new rate, except
upon a showing before the commission and a finding by the commission
that the new rate is justified." Contrary to the premise
of the certified question, section 454 does not require PUC to
hold a "public hearing" before allowing a change in
rates. Indeed, the statute provides that PUC may adopt rules
governing "the nature of the showing required" and
"the form and manner of the presentation of the showing,
with or without a hearing ." (§ 454, subd. (b),
italics added; see also Wood v. Public Utilities Commission
(1971) 4 Cal.3d 288, 292 ["The Public Utility Code does
not require public hearings before rate increases or rule changes
resulting in rate increases may be authorized" ].)
Section 454 contemplates an "application"
for a rate change by the utility and requires a "showing"
in support of the application and a "finding" by PUC
that the change is justified. How the statutory requirements
of a showing and finding might be applied to a settlement agreement,
rather than an application, is unclear. But the problem in applying
section 454 is more fundamental still: SCE submitted no ap
plication for a change in rates. If, as appears from section
454, a major rate change may be made only by application (see
Pacific Bell v. Public Utilities Com. (2000) 79 Cal.App.4th 269,
274 [under § 454 and PUC's implementing regulations, a utility
may raise rates significantly only through the process of a formal
application to PUC]), then a settlement agreement like that in
dispute here, which resolved a federal court suit rather than
an application before the commission, could not include a change
in rates. We need not decide whether such a reading of section
454 is correct, however, because the settlement agreement effected
no rate change subject to section 454. [FOOTNOTE 9]
As discussed in relation to the second certified question,
PUC agreed, in the settlement, to maintain SCE's approved
rates for a specified period, rather than to change them; nor
did the other regulatory actions promised in the agreement change
rates. TURN suggests that by allowing the current rates, including
the surcharge, to be used for past procurement debts, the settlement
established a "new rate" within the meaning of section
454. The premise of TURN's argument is that, absent the settlement,
rates would have been reduced when the freeze ended in March
2002 and wholesale prices dropped, making the surcharge unnecessary
for current power purchases. In answering the first certified
question, however, we explained that nothing in Assembly Bill
1890 required freeze rates to be changed after March 2002, and
in answering the second question we noted that the original restriction
on use of the surcharge revenue could have been, and was, eventually
removed on grounds independent of the settlement. Again, to assert
PUC would have reduced rates at any particular time, if not bound
by the settlement to maintain them, would be to speculate. TURN's
effort to transmute a continuing rate into a new rate therefore
fails.
Section 454, moreover, contemplates a formal application
for a "change" in rates or for alteration of some condition
of service so as to create a "new rate." That a utility
would formally apply merely to maintain a rate appears
not within the statute's contemplation. The setting of a future
rate to be the same as the present rate, as here, is thus not
within the purview of section 454, which focuses more narrowly
on changed or new rates, which must be pursued by application.
For these reasons, we conclude PUC's agreement to the
settlement did not violate section 454's requirement that a rate
change or new rate be justified by a showing and finding.
Conclusion
In response to the court of appeals' certified questions,
we conclude that PUC's agreement to the settlement and stipulated
judgment did not violate the provisions of Assembly Bill 1890
and that the procedures employed in entering the stipulated judgment
did not violate either the Bagley-Keene Act or Public Utilities
Code section 454.
WERDEGAR, J.
WE CONCUR: GEORGE, C. J., KENNARD, J., BROWN, J., MORENO,
J., RUSHING, J. [FOOTNOTE *]
CONCURRING AND DISSENTING OPINION BY BAXTER, J.
I accept the majority's conclusion that the terms of
the settlement between the Public Utilities Commission (PUC or
Commission) and Southern California Edison Company (SCE), which
became the basis for a stipulated judgment in federal district
court, did not exceed the Commission's authority under Assembly
Bill No. 1890 (1995-1996 Reg. Sess.) (Assembly Bill No. 1890),
as codified in Public Utilities Code sections 330-396. (Stats.
1996, ch. 854, § 10.) Unlike the majority, however, I believe
the process by which the PUC entered the settlement violated
two other important statutes.
First, the PUC contravened the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting
Act. (Act or Bagley-Keene Act; Gov. Code, § 11120 et seq.)
The Commission misused an exception in the Act, intended to permit
closed meetings to "confer with, or receive advice from,
. . . counsel" about pending litigation ( id., §
11126, subd. (e)(1)), to approve in secret a legal settlement
in which it guaranteed SCE billions of dollars in past and prospective
rate relief, and thus "changed" the rates to be paid
by SCE's customers ( id. , § 11126, subd. (d)(1)).
Second, the PUC acted illegally under the Public Utilities
Code, by so "chang[ing]" SCE's rates, through a secretly
approved settlement, without any " showing before
the [C]ommission and a finding by the [C]ommission that
the new rate [was] justified." (Pub. Util. Code, §
454, subd. (a), italics added.)
The Bagley-Keene Act was adopted to require state agencies
to exercise their essential regulatory authority through public
deliberations and decisions, subject to direct scrutiny and comment
from the citizens whose daily lives these decisions affect. Because
the PUC's power over utility rates is especially crucial, the
Legislature added specific provisions, in both the Bagley-Keene
Act and the Public Utilities Code, requiring the Commission to
make its rate decisions openly, and to follow formalities designed
to ensure its determination that the approved rates are in the
public interest.
The majority's holding that the PUC could bypass these
protections if it did so to settle litigation opens the door
to a widespread danger of secret "government by lawsuit,"
in which state agencies conduct their most important regulatory
business in private, through the device of settling litigation
between themselves and the entities they regulate. By the same
device, the majority allow the PUC to engage in significant ratemaking
decisions without showings or findings that the rates thereby
set are just and reasonable. I cannot accept such a conclusion.
I therefore respectfully dissent from the majority's answers
to questions 2 and 3 certified by the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals.
I address the two critical statutes in turn.
A. Bagley-Keene Act.
The majority correctly note the general outlines of
the Bagley-Keene Act, adopted in 1967 (Stats. 1967, ch. 1656,
§ 122, p. 4026) and often amended thereafter. The Act states
"[i]t is the public policy of this state that . . . the
proceedings of [covered state] agencies be conducted openly,"
and declares the intent of the statute to be "that actions
of state agencies be taken openly and that their deliberation
be conducted openly." (Gov. Code, § 11120, italics
added.)
Accordingly, the Act mandates that, except as otherwise
specifically provided, a covered "state body" (Gov.
Code, § 11121.1) must (1) conduct its "meetings . .
. open[ly] and public[ly]" ( id. , § 11123,
subd. (a)), (2) provide advance public notice and an agenda for
each such meeting ( id. , § 11125); (3) allow members
of the public to address the body on each agenda item ( id.
, § 11125.7, subd. (a)); and (4) permit public criticism
of the body's policies or actions ( id. , § 11125.7,
subd. (c)). The Attorney General, a district attorney, or an
interested person may sue to prevent future violations of the
Act, or to determine the applicability of the Act to past or
threatened future conduct by a state body. ( Id. , §
11130, subd. (a).) An interested person may also sue to obtain
a judicial determination that an "action taken" in
violation of the open-meeting requirements is null and void.
( Id. , § 11130.3, subd. (a).) Any member of a state
body who attends a meeting of that body in violation of the Act,
with intent to deprive the public of information to which the
member knows or has reason to know the public is entitled under
the Act, is guilty of a misdemeanor. ( Id. , § 11130.7.)
"Except as expressly provided by [the Act], no closed session
may be held by any state body." ( Id. , § 11132.)
A "meeting" includes "any congregation
of a majority of the members of a state body at the same time
and place to hear, discuss, or deliberate upon any item
that is within the subject matter jurisdiction of the state body
to which it pertains." (Gov. Code, § 11122.5, subd.
(a), italics added.) An "action taken" includes "a
collective decision " of the members and any "collective
commitment or promise . . . to make a positive or negative decision."
( Id. , § 11122, italics added.)
Thus, except as otherwise specified, the Act (1) directly
prohibits closed or secret meetings of state bodies to discuss
or deliberate on public business, and (2) separately provides
for nullification of the actions and decisions taken at such
illegal meetings.
As the majority indicate, all agree that the PUC's decision
to approve the SCE settlement was an "action taken"
at a "meeting" that did not conform to the open and
public requirements of the Bagley-Keene Act. The PUC's published
agenda for the regularly scheduled commissioners' meeting of
October 2, 2001, listed "Conference with Legal Counsel-Existing
. . . Litigation. Case name unspecified" as a matter to
be discussed in closed session. As suggested by the official
minutes of the October 2 meeting, the commissioners unanimously
approved the "SCE [s]ettlement" during the closed discussion,
then reconvened in public session to announce their action.
To validate the "action taken" at this closed
meeting, the PUC, SCE, and the majority invoke an exception to
the open meeting requirements, set forth in subdivision (e)(1)
of Government Code section 11126. Subdivision (e)(1) states that
"[n]othing in [the Act] shall be construed to prevent a
state body, based on the advice of its legal counsel, from holding
a closed session to confer with, or receive advice from
, its le gal counsel regarding pending litigation when
discussion in open session concerning these matters would prejudice
the position of the state body in the litigation." (Italics
added.) But neither the plain meaning of this language-whether
read in isolation or in the overall statutory context-nor its
legislative history supports the majority's conclusion that the
limited right to confer with counsel in closed session connotes
the additional right to take final action in secret on the matter
discussed.
The majority concede that "[o]n its face, subdivision
(e)(1) permits a [state] body only to ' confer with' and ' receive
advice from' its attorney regarding litigation." (Maj.
opn., ante, at p. 17, italics added.) Indeed, subdivision
(e)(1) uses more restrictive language in this regard than the
several other open-meeting exceptions contained in Government
Code section 11126. These variously allow the state body, meeting
in closed session, to "consider," "discuss,"
"deliberate on," or even "give instructions"
concerning the subject matter addressed. (See, e.g., id. ,
subds. (a)(1) [state body may "consider" employee personnel
matters], (c)(3) [state body may "deliberate on" quasi-judicial
decision under Administrative Procedure Act], (4) [state body
may "consider[ ]" term, parole, or release of prisoner
if public disclosure of subject matter is prohibited by statute],
(5) [state body may "consider" conferring of honorary
degrees, or gifts, donations, or bequests, where donor desires
confidentiality], (7)(A) [state body may "give instructions
to" negotiator regarding purchase, sale, exchange, or lease
of real property], (7)(E) [state body may "discuss[ ]"
eminent domain proceedings], (8) [California Postsecondary Education
Commission may "consider" appointment or termination
of commission's director], (9) [Council for Private Postsecondary
and Vocational Education may "consider" appointment
or termination of council's executive director], (10) [Franchise
Tax Board may "consider[ ]" appointment or termination
of board's executive officer], (16) [appropriate state body may
"consider[ ]" investment decisions for retirement or
pension funds], (17) [state body may hold closed sessions when
"discharging responsibilities" with regard to labor
negotiations], (18) [state body may "consider" matters
posing criminal or terrorist threats to its personnel or property],
(d)(2) [PUC may "deliberate" on disciplinary actions
against any person or entity under its jurisdiction].)
Moreover, Government Code section 11126, subdivision
(e) makes clear that the "confer with counsel" exception
is not intended to grant state bodies a general license to decide
in secret whether to enter settlements. Instead, the purpose
of subdivision (e) is merely to preserve for a state agency,
in the context of actual, threatened, or proposed litigation
(see id. , subd. (e)(2)(A)-(C)), a limited form
of the privilege available to private litigants for confidential
communica tions between lawyer and client. Subdivision (e)(2)
specifies that "[f]or purposes of [the Act], all expressions
of the law yer-client privilege other than those provided
in this subdivision are hereby abrogated . This subdivision
is the exclusive expression of the lawyer-client privilege
for purposes of conducting closed session meetings pursuant
to [the Act]." (Italics added.)
The legislative history of subdivision (e) of Government
Code section 11126 confirms that a state body's privilege to
confer privately with counsel about pending litigation should
be construed narrowly, to cover only lawyer-client consultation
and advice. As originally adopted, neither the Bagley-Keene Act
nor its local-agency counterpart, the Ralph M. Brown Act (Brown
Act; Gov. Code, § 54950 et seq.), included any reference
to an agency's right to meet in private to consult with its counsel
or discuss litigation. A subsequent Court of Appeal decision,
Sacramento Newspaper Guild v. Sacramento County Bd. of Suprs.
(1968) 263 Cal.App.2d 41 ( Sacramento Newspaper Guild ),
addressed whether the public-meeting provision of the Brown Act
"abrogates by implication the statutory policy [of Evidence
Code sections 950-952] assuring opportunity for private legal
consultation by public agency clients." (Sacramento
Newspaper Guild, supra, at p. 55, italics added.) The Court of
Appeal concluded that public agencies involved in actual or pending
litigation, facing the same stakes and realities as private litigants,
should have the same privilege as their private counterparts
to "' the effective aid of legal counsel ,' "and
thus to the "' opportunity for confidential legal advice.'
"(Id. at p. 56, italics added.)
The court reasoned that "[s]ettlement and avoidance
of litigation are particularly sensitive activities, whose conduct
would be grossly confounded, often made impossible, by undiscriminating
insistence on open lawyer-client confer ences. In settlement
advice, the attorney's professional task is to provide his client
a frank appraisal of strength and weakness, gains and risks,
hopes and fears. If the public's ' right to know' compelled admission
of an audience, the ringside seats would be occupied by the government's
adversary, delighted to capitalize on every revelation of weakness."
( Sacramento Newspaper Guild, supra , 263 Cal.App.2d 41,
56, italics added, fn. omitted.)
The Legislature later codified this principle in the
Bagley-Keene Act by adding former subdivision (q) to section
11126. (Stats. 1981, ch. 968, § 12, p. 3690.) As adopted
in 1981, former subdivision (q) simply provided that "[n]othing
in [the Act] shall be construed to prevent a state body from
holding a closed session to confer with legal counsel regarding
pending litigation when discussion in open session concerning
those matters would adversely affect or be detrimental to the
public interest."
In 1987, however, the Legislature tightened and refined
the Act's provision for private conferences with counsel concerning
pending litigation. (Stats. 1987, ch. 1320, § 2, p. 4762.)
At that time, former subdivision (q) of Government Code section
11126 was rewritten in language roughly equivalent to that of
current subdivision (e). The 1987 amendment removed permission
for state bodies to meet with counsel in closed session about
pending litigation whenever public discussion would adversely
affect the "public interest." Under the amendment,
a closed-session consultation was allowed only when public discussion
"would prejudice the position of the state body in the litigation."
(Gov. Code, § 11126, subd. (e)(1); see id. , former
subd. (q).) The amendment added the further proviso that, for
purposes of the Act, the section is the "exclusive"
expression of the lawyer-client privilege, which is otherwise
"abrogated." ( Ibid. )
The 1987 amendment also included the extensive discussion,
now contained in Government Code section 11126, subdivision (e)(2),
of when "litigation shall be considered pending" for
purposes of the privilege to confer in private with counsel.
This requires that (1) an adjudicatory proceeding before a court,
an administrative body, a hearing officer, or an arbitrator,
to which proceeding the state body is a party, has already been
initiated; (2) existing facts and circumstances have persuaded
the state body, based on counsel's advice, that it faces significant
exposure to litigation; or (3) based on existing facts and circumstances,
the state body has decided to initiate, or is deciding whether
to initiate, litigation. (Gov. Code, § 11126, subd. (e)(2)(A),
(B)(i), (C)(i); see id. , former subd. (q)(1), (2)(A),
(3).)
Finally, the 1987 amendment added the requirement, still
in effect, that counsel prepare and submit to the state body,
prior to the closed session if possible, but in no event more
than a week thereafter, a memorandum stating "the specific
reasons and legal authority for the closed session." This
memorandum must include, in the case of litigation not yet formally
initiated, "the facts and circumstances" justifying
a belief that the body faces a significant exposure to litigation,
or should decide whether to initiate such proceedings. (Gov.
Code, § 11126, subd. (e)(C)(ii); see id. , former
subd. (q).)
The source of the 1987 legislation was Senate Bill No.
200 (1987-1988 Reg. Sess.) (Senate Bill No. 200). The bill was
described as "codif[ying] the exclusive use of the attor
ney-client privilege for the purpose of conducting closed
sessions," and as allowing "[c]losed sessions . . .
to seek the advice of legal counsel with regard to ' pending
litigation' if discussion with legal counsel in open session
would ' prejudice the position' of the public entity." (Assem.
Subcom. on Admin. of Justice, Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 200,
as amended May 4, 1987, p. 1, italics added.)
Urging passage of Senate Bill No. 200 in the Assembly,
the California Attorney General explained the concerns that had
prompted the proposed legislation (which made conforming amendments
to both the Brown and Bagley-Keene Acts): "Briefly, the
problem is this: Several years ago the courts ruled that, absent
specific legislation to the contrary, the Brown Act will not
be construed to limit the availability of the traditional attorney-client
privilege to local governmental bodies. [Citations.] This leaves
. . . public agencies with broad freedom to go into executive
session for confi dential attorney-client discussion of
virtually any issue which may involve ' pending litigation' or
the ' avoidance of litigation.' [¶ ] [Senate Bill No.] 200
will eliminate this loophole by placing clear and reasonable
limitations upon when . . . governmental agencies may hold closed
meetings to discuss legal issues. It protects the legitimate
need of public officials to obtain confidential legal advice
on issues which may end up in litigation but does not sacrifice
the public's right to open meetings. In short, the bill strikes
an appropriate balance between two important but often conflicting
principles of public policy." (Atty. Gen. John K. Van de
Kamp, letter to Assembly Member Lloyd G. Connelly, re Sen. Bill
No. 200, July 10, 1987, italics added.)
The 1987 amendments, and the accompanying analyses and
comments, do not directly address whether, during a closed lawyer-client
litigation conference, a state body may make its final decision
on how to resolve the pending proceeding. However, the amendments
do confirm these general principles: First, Government Code section
11126, subdivision (e) defines, and strictly limits, a state
agency's exercise of its attorney-client privilege under the
Bagley-Keene Act. (See Roberts v. City of Palmdale (1993)
5 Cal.4th 363, 373-381 [construing parallel provisions of the
Brown Act].) Second, this privilege has been statutorily narrowed
over time, and is not coextensive with a private party's rights
to maintain secrecy in litigation matters. Third, the scope of
the privilege has been carefully calibrated to allow the state
body to conduct necessary private consultations with its counsel
about pending litigation, while still maintaining, to the maximum
possible extent, the Act's overall requirement of public deliberation
and decision. All these circumstances suggest that the privilege
must be narrowly, not broadly, construed, where final decisionmaking
by the agency is at stake.
The majority's expansive interpretation of the privilege
contravenes these tenets. The majority imply, on the basis of
obsolete authority, that the public and private attorney-client
privileges are coextensive. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 18, citing
Sacramento Newspaper Guild, supra, 263 Cal.App.2d 41, 55.)
More importantly, the majority's construction far exceeds a public
agency's need for attorney-client confidentiality, while
unduly restricting the right of the people to public decisionmaking
by state agencies.
As major support for their conclusion that the closed-session
provision extends beyond the limited privilege to confer with
counsel, and encompasses a final decision by the state body to
accept a proposed settlement, the majority cite another provision
of the Bagley-Keene Act, Government Code section 11126.3, subdivision
(a). Under this provision, a state body that intends to consult
its counsel in closed session about already existing litigation
must publicly identify, by name or other specific means, the
litigation to be discussed "unless the body states that
to do so would jeopardize . . . its ability to conclude existing
settlement negotiations to its advantage." ( Ibid., italics
added.) The PUC availed itself of the privilege not to identify
the SCE settlement as the subject of its closed session on October
2, 2001, stating in its public agenda that "([d]isclosure
of case name would jeopardize existing settlement negotiations)."
Focusing on the single word "conclude" in
Government Code section 11126.3, subdivision (a), the majority
reason broadly that this must mean the state body can use the
cloak of confidentiality, not only to discuss the pros and cons
of settlement with its counsel, but also to "conclude"
the settlement. But this is a thin reed for the majority to grasp.
Just as the inability to confer with counsel in private might
compromise the agency's strategy and jeopardize its ability to
"conclude" a settlement to its advantage, a requirement
that the agency prematurely identify the matter to be discussed
in such a conference may also do so. But however confidential
such preliminary legal discussions and negotiations may be, nothing
in section 11126.3, subdivision (a) states or implies that the
agency may actually resolve pending litigation in a regulatory
matter without warning that a settlement of the particular case
is imminent, explaining in public the proposed settlement terms,
and allowing public response, at a public meeting, before making
its final decision.
Certainly a state body may frankly discuss with its
counsel, in private, the progress of ongoing settlement negotiations,
including a candid assessment of the agency's negotiating strategy,
the "strength and weakness" of the agency's position,
and the "gains and risks, hopes and fears" a settlement
entails, without affording its opponents "ringside seats"
at these preliminary discussions. ( Sacramento Newspaper
Guild, supra, 263 Cal.App.2d 41, 56.) No doubt the agency may
privately instruct its counsel, negotiating on its behalf, concerning
terms it is inclined to accept. [FOOTNOTE 1] Moreover,
it may well be that in subsequent public consideration of the
matter, the state body need not fully disclose the litigation-related
concerns that it discussed privately with its counsel under cover
of the attorney-agency privilege, even if this means the public
is less than fully informed about all the reasons the agency
is tentatively prepared to accept a resolution on particular
terms.
But none of this implies that a final regulatory decision,
framed as the settlement of a pending lawsuit, itself can be
undertaken without any public scrutiny or input, as occurred
here. Government Code sections 11126, subdivision (e) and 11126.3,
subdivision (a) were not intended to provide state agencies conducting
the public's business with the same right private litigants may
have to resolve their disputes entirely away from the public's
prying eyes. Where significant regulatory decisions are at stake,
parties involved in litigation with a state agency must understand
that this is so. Whatever incidental litigation disadvantage
this may impose on state agencies in the conduct of their regulatory
business, as opposed to individuals and organizations in the
conduct of their private affairs, is a necessary corollary to
the express statutory policy of public decisionmaking.
To this extent, I am not persuaded by the California
Attorney General's construction of Government Code section 54956.9,
the Brown Act analog to section 11126, subdivision (e)(1). (75
Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 14 (1992).) The Attorney General reasoned that
the language of section 54956.9 (a local governmental body may
meet in closed session to "confer with, or receive advice
from, its legal counsel regarding pending litigation" )
allows a local government body not simply to consult and confer
in private on litigation matters, but also to take final action
to settle a lawsuit.
For this conclusion, the Attorney General first cited
language in the Brown Act's "personnel" exception,
now contained in subdivision (b)(1) of Government Code section
54957, which permits closed meetings "to consider the
appointment, employment, evaluation of performance, discipline,
or dismissal of a public employee . . . ." (Italics added;
see Gov. Code, § 11126, subd. (a)(1) [parallel Bagley-Keene
Act personnel exception].) Noting that several Court of Appeal
decisions had construed the personnel exception to permit not
only deliberation, but final action, the Attorney General asserted
that the operative word "consider" in the personnel
exception, and the operative word "confer" in the pending-litigation
exception, were enough alike to dictate a similar interpretation
of the latter provision. (75 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen., supra ,
at p. 19.)
The Attorney General also reasoned that a public agency's
right to confer with counsel in secret about confidential litigation
and settlement strategy necessarily implies the further right
to decide, in confidence, what course to take. Otherwise, the
Attorney General cautioned, an agency's litigation adversaries
would have "' ringside seats' "for its decisions, and
public litigants would be
"' second-class citizen[s],' "at a disadvantage
compared to their private counterparts. (75 Cal.Ops.Atty.Gen.,
supra, at p. 19, quoting Sacramento Newspaper Guild, supra,
263 Cal.App.2d 41, 56.)
For reasons I have already discussed at length, I believe
these conclusions are flawed. The words of the pending-litigation
and personnel exceptions, respectively, are materially
different. The former permits the public entity only to "confer
with, or receive advice from, its counsel" in private (Gov.
Code, § 11126, subd. (e)(1)), while the latter, by its use
of the broader word "consider" ( id. , subd.
(a)(1)), specifically allows active deliberation on the issue
under discussion. In light of the 1987 narrowing of the pending-litigation
privilege, and given the overall statutory policy of open deliberations
and actions, these linguistic distinctions should not be conflated
to allow a broad right of agencies to settle regulatory litigation
in private.
Moreover, as we have seen, the current pending-litigation
exception is not intended to afford public agencies litigation
privacy entirely equivalent to that enjoyed by private parties.
Instead, the statutory exception seeks to balance competing policies
by providing a limited, and exclusive, form of attorney-client
confidentiality for public agencies, while interfering as little
as possible with the fundamental requirement that the collective
actions of such agencies be taken in public. Thus, the pending-litigation
exception does not imply a loophole allowing agencies covered
by the Bagley-Keene Act to meet in secret to make final decisions
on matters of significant regulatory interest.
In this age of high-stakes litigation, the majority's
contrary conclusion opens the door to secret "government
by lawsuit," allowing governmental bodies to exercise significant
portions of their regulatory authority in private by the device
of settling lawsuits between themselves and the entities they
regulate. I cannot accept such a weakening of the clear purposes
of the Bagley-Keene Act. I conclude that subdivision (e) of Government
Code section 11126 did not permit the PUC to act in secret to
finally approve a settlement of its litigation with SCE.
But even if Government Code section 11126, subdivision
(e) generally allowed state bodies to approve regulatory settlements
in closed session, respondent The Utility Reform Network (TURN)
correctly urges that the PUC's approval of this particular settlement
nonetheless violated the Bagley-Keene Act. TURN points to another
portion of section 11126-subdivision (d)(1)-that deals specifically
with this agency and the subject matter of this settlement
. Section 11126, subdivision (d)(1) provides that "[n]otwithstanding
any other provision of law, any meeting of the Public Utilities
Commission at which the rates of entities under the [C]ommission's
jurisdiction are changed shall be open and public."
(Italics added.) By any common understanding, the PUC's agreement
to entry of the stipulated judgment in SCE's federal action constituted
the Commission's commitment to "change[ ]" the electricity
rates SCE could charge.
As the majority indicate, the parties to the October
2001 settlement agreed that, because of falling wholesale electricity
prices during 2001, SCE's existing rates "had allowed SCE
to collect retail revenues in excess of current costs."
(Maj. opn., ante , at p. 7.) Among other components, these
rates included emergency surcharges, totaling four cents per
kilowatt-hour, which the PUC had granted to SCE, and to Pacific
Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), in early 2001, at a time
of very high wholesale power prices. When the PUC granted these
surcharges, it had restricted their application to future
power purchases, not past liabilities, and had made surcharge
revenues refundable to ratepayers to the extent not used
for this limited purpose. ( Application of South ern California
Edison Co. (2001) Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 01-01-018, pp. 2-3, 10-17,
24; Application of Southern Califor nia Edison Co. (2001)
Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 01-03-082, pp. 16-18, 60-61.)
In the settlement, however, the PUC agreed, as its "principal
substantive concession" (maj. opn., ante , at p.
8), to permit SCE to recover certain past costs by (1) applying
the overcollections already in SCE's coffers-i.e., its "cash
on hand" ( ibid. )- to this purpose and (2) "maintaining
[SCE' s] existing rates until the end of 2003 , if necessary,"
to allow further such recovery ( ibid. , italics added).
The settlement called for the establishment of a tracking account,
known as PROACT, that would record SCE's progress toward recouping
these costs. ( Ibid. ) PROACT's initial balance would
be the gross amount of SCE's accumulated past liabilities subject
to recovery-an amount the parties agreed to be about $6.355 billion-less
the surplus SCE had already collected. ( Id ., at pp.
7-8.) Under this formula, the initial PROACT balance was estimated
at some $3.3 billion. ( Id. , at p. 8.) The settlement
rates would remain in effect until "the PROACT [account]
was paid down to zero or . . . December 31, 2003, whichever came
first. [Citation.]" ( Ibid. )
The settlement thus authorized three fundamental "change[s]"
in SCE's rates. First, it either provided, or extended, a guaranteed
duration to the rates in existence at the time of the settlement.
[FOOTNOTE 2] Second, it cancelled, nunc pro tunc, ratepayers'
rights to refunds of amounts SCE had already collected under
the 2001 surcharges, but had not used for ongoing power purchases
as the terms of those surcharges originally required. Third,
it removed, for the future, the original limitation on SCE's
use of the surcharges. That allowed SCE to continue to assess
the surcharges, and to retain the revenues therefrom, under circumstances
not permitted by the original terms and conditions of these special
rates.
The majority insist the PUC did not agree in the settlement
to
"' change[ ]' "SCE's rates, but only made
a "commitment . . . to maintain the then existing rates
for an agreed period." (Maj. opn., ante , at
p. 23.) This pinched and hypertechnical analysis ascribes too
narrow a meaning to the broad statutory phrase "rates .
. . are changed." (Gov. Code, § 11126, subd. (d)(1).)
Surely it does not comport with the legislative purpose to ensure
that the PUC's core ratemaking decisions be open and public.
The complex and crucial task of ratemaking does not
simply set the amount of money a utility may charge for a unit
of service at any particular moment. It also necessarily establishes
the terms and conditions attached to the authorized charge.
When, as here, the PUC agrees to grant or extend a rate freeze,
or alters the circumstances under which a rate may be charged
or its revenues retained, it "change[s]" the rate.
The majority reject TURN's argument that the settlement
"changed" rates because it will lead to higher future
rates than customers would otherwise have paid. This is an impossible
standard to apply, the majority reason, because "it depends
on the unknowable course of future events under hypothetical
conditions." (Maj. opn., ante , at p. 24.) In other
words, the majority explain, for all we know, events other than
the settlement, whether regulatory, legal, or economic, would
have produced those same future rates.
This rationale misses the point. The settlement's effect
was to (1) provide, or extend, the guaranteed duration of a rate,
(2) allow SCE to retain past and future surcharge revenues that
would otherwise have been subject to refund, and (3) thereby
narrow the opportunity for electricity customers to obtain rebates,
or to enjoy lower future rates, based on the conditions that
might then prevail. In making these fundamental alterations in
the structure of SCE's existing rates, the settlement "changed"
the rates. And the effect on SCE's ratepayers was hardly minimal.
The settlement's avowed purpose was to enable SCE to secure from
its customers billions of dollars in excess of current operational
costs that were deemed necessary to restore SCE to financial
health. [FOOTNOTE 3]
The Legislature cannot have meant to allow ratemaking
decisions with such significant effect on the public to escape
the open-meeting requirement set forth in subdivision (d)(1)
of Government Code section 11126. Indeed, this is confirmed by
the legislative history of subdivision (d)(1), a factor discounted
by the majority. The substance of present subdivision (d)(1)
was adopted in 1975 as part of former subdivision (p). (Stats.
1975, ch. 959, § 5, p. 2238.) Legislative analyses of this
provision, as enacted by Senate Bill No. 1 (1975-1976 Reg. Sess.)
(Senate Bill No. 1), frequently described its effect as prohibiting
the PUC from holding closed sessions for "deliberation on
rate proceedings" (Legis. Analyst, analysis of Sen. Bill
No. 1, as amended Apr. 24, 1975, p. 1; see also Assem. Of. of
Research, Dig. for Assem. 3d reading of Sen. Bill No. 1, as amended
Aug. 12, 1975, p. 1), and as requiring any PUC meeting where
"rates . . . are considered" to be open and public
(Assem. Ways & Means Com., Staff Analysis of Sen. Bill No.
1, as amended June 24, 1975, p. 2).
The PUC urges that even if its initial acceptance of
the settlement in closed session violated the Bagley-Keene Act's
open-meeting requirement, the Commission "cure[d]"
or "correct[ed]" the violation (Gov. Code, § 11130.3,
subd. (a)) by two subsequent actions taken in public meetings.
But the two actions the PUC cites merely implemented the terms
of a settlement, and the resulting stipulated judgment, already
reached in violation of the Act.
By P.U.C. Resolution No. E-3765 (2002), the Commission
simply granted, with minor modifications, SCE's request to establish
the PROACT account called for by the settlement. (Cal. P.U.C.
Res. No. E-3765, p. 37.) Indeed, in the resolution, the PUC rebuffed
an argument by the California Manufacturers & Technology
Association that granting SCE's request would impermissibly change
certain prior Commission decisions. According to the PUC, "this
. . . issue argue[d] the legality of the [s]ettlement, which
[was] beyond the scope of" the proceeding then before the
Commission. ( Id., at p. 35.)
The PUC also points to its Decision No. 02-11-026, which
modified Application of Southern California Edison, supra,
Cal. P.U.C. Decision No. 01-03-082. As indicated above, Decision
No. 01-03-082, issued in March 2001, had granted both PG&E
and SCE a three-cent surcharge (and had also made "permanent"
an additional one-cent surcharge granted to those utilities in
January 2001), but had restricted use of these surcharges to
ongoing power procurement and made them otherwise refundable.
Decision No. 02-11-026 relaxed this restriction by allowing the
2001 surcharges to be used both for future power purchases
and for the more general purpose of "returning
each utility to financial health." ( Application of Southern
California Edison Co. (2002) Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 02-11-026,
p. 2.)
But Decision No. 02-11-026 neither mentioned the SCE
settlement nor reflected any effort to reconsider its terms.
Moreover, as applied to SCE, repeal of prior restrictions on
use of the four-cent surcharge had already occurred by virtue
of the settlement, and was required in any event by the resulting
stipulated judgment in the federal action, entered October 5,
2001. Nothing in Decision No. 02-11-026 indicates it was a sincere
and effectual attempt by the Commission to reassess the SCE
settlement itself in an open and public meeting. [FOOTNOTE
4]
For all these reasons, I would answer "yes"
to the Ninth Circuit's question whether the PUC's approval of
the SCE settlement in a closed session violated the Bagley-Keene
Act.
B. Public Utilities Code section 454.
As indicated above, the Public Utilities Code separately
provides, in pertinent part, that "no public utility shall
change any rate or so alter any classification, contract,
practice, or rule as to result in any new rate, except upon
a show ing before the [C]ommission and a finding by
the [C]ommission that the new rate is justified. . . ."
(Pub. Util. Code, § 454, subd. (a) (section 454(a)), italics
added.) The obvious purpose of the statute is to require a demonstration
by the utility, and a resulting determination by the Commission,
that the rate change is just and reasonable.
As discussed above, the settlement between the PUC and
SCE constituted their agreement to a "change" in SCE's
rates. The settlement either froze rates or extended a freeze
already in effect. It eliminated, for both past and future purposes,
prior restrictions on SCE's use of the 2001 surcharges. It cancelled
ratepayers' rights, both past and future, to refunds of surcharge
amounts overcollected by SCE under the terms and conditions originally
applicable to these rates. It thus afforded SCE the opportunity
to recover from its ratepayers some $6.355 billion in liabilities
already accrued by SCE, with approximately $3.3 billion of that
amount to appear on their future electricity bills. Insofar as
the PUC accepted this "change" without resort to the
requirements of Public Utilities Code section 454(a), it acted
illegally. [FOOTNOTE 5]
SCE and the PUC argue that even if the settlement did
authorize a change in SCE's rates, Public Utilities Code section
454(a) has no relevance here. According to SCE and the PUC, the
statute and its implementing regulations are concerned solely
with the procedures by which a utility may seek the Commission's
approval to change the utility's "tariff," or published
schedule of rates (see, e.g., Pub. Util. Code, § §
489, subd. (a), 491; Cal. P.U.C. Gen. Order No. 96-A (1996) §
§ I.B, III.C, VI; Pacific Bell v. Public Utilities Com.
(2000) 79 Cal.App.4th 269, 274)-procedures that simply do not
pertain to a settlement and stipulated judgment in a lawsuit.
(See also maj. opn., ante , at p. 27.)
Moreover, SCE and the PUC insist, a utility may change
its rates only through the formal alteration of its tariff. (See
Pub. Util. Code, § § 489, subd. (a), 491, 532; Cal.
P.U.C. Gen. Order No. 96-A, supra, § VI; see also Transmix
Corp. v. Southern Pacific Co. (1960) 187 Cal.App.2d 257, 265.)
As SCE and the PUC observe, any modification of SCE's tariff
did not occur directly by virtue of the settlement and stipulated
judgment, but only through implementing decisions, such as P.U.C.
Resolution No. E-3765 (see discussion ,ante), that resulted
from formal Commission proceedings. Hence, these parties conclude,
the settlement itself did not violate Public Utilities Code section
454(a).
Neither SCE nor the PUC cites authority holding that
the Commission may authorize a utility rate change, by
means of a legal settlement, without complying with the basic
requirements of Public Utilities Code section 454(a). The majority
in this case deliberately avoid that issue by concluding, erroneously
in my view, that the instant settlement involved no "change"
in SCE's rates. (Maj. opn., ante , at pp. 27-28.)
In any event, the technical arguments advanced by SCE
and the PUC obscure the fundamental purpose of the scheme for
public utility regulation. Such utilities are subject to control
by the Legislature (Cal. Const., art. XII, § 3), which has
mandated in the Public Utilities Act that their rates be "just
and reasonable" (Pub. Util. Code, § 451). Regulatory
authority over the rates of public utilities is vested in the
Commission (Cal. Const., art. XII, § § 1, 4, 6), which
is responsible, through specified procedures, to assure that
these rates meet the "just and reasonable" standard
required by law (Pub. Util. Code, § § 454(a), 728).
Allowing the Commission to use a legal settlement to grant a
significant change in a utility's rates, without resort to a
showing and finding that the change is just and reasonable, fundamentally
undermines this regulatory structure. It invites such utility
litigation as a means of "end-running" the established
regulatory process.
As TURN suggests, the contention by SCE and the PUC
that rates are "change[d]," for purposes of Public
Utilities Code section 454(a), only upon completion of the tariff-setting
process unduly elevates the ministerial act of imple menting
rate changes already mandated, in essential outline, by a prior
Commission decision. Section 454(a) is superfluous unless it
means that the fundamental determination whether a proposed change
in rates is to be allowed at all can be made only upon
a showing and finding, under normal regulatory procedures, that
the change is just and reasonable.
I recognize that the regulatory process for approving
rate changes is not readily compatible with the practicalities
of settling lawsuits. My conclusion that Public Utilities Code
section 454(a) nonetheless applies may well mean that the Commission
simply cannot engage in significant ratemaking by such means.
But any disadvantage this may ascribe to the Commission, or to
a financially distressed utility, in a particular case is outweighed
by the overarching regulatory policy of assuring that the rates
paid by California's utility customers are just and reasonable.
For all these reasons, I would answer "yes"
to the Ninth Circuit's question whether the settlement and stipulated
judgment between SCE and the PUC violated Public Utilities Code
section 454.
BAXTER, J.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: FOOTNOTE(S):::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FN1. All further statutory references are to the Public
Utilities Code unless otherwise specified.
FN2. In a July 10, 2003, decision, PUC approved SCE's
application to substantially reduce electricity rates upon completion
of the PROACT pay-down, an event SCE anticipated would occur
by July 2003. Effective August 1, 2003, PUC ordered SCE's rates
reduced by about $1.25 billion over the subsequent 12 months.
( Application of Southern California Edison Co. (2003)
Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 03-07-029, pp. 2, 5, 12, 16-17, 22.)
FN3. Under section 368, the freeze on SCE's retail
rates would have ended had PUC agreed that SCE's transition cost
balancing account was fully recovered.
FN4. See Application of Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. (1999) Cal. P.U.C. Dec. No. 99-10-057, pages 18-20; Application
of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (2000) Cal. P.U.C. Dec.
No. 00-03-058, pages 18-19. Under that view, permitting recovery
of any authorized transition period cost to be postponed
until after the transition period had ended would violate sections
367 and 368, because it would increase the "headroom"
available for recovery of transition costs.
FN5. TURN asserts SCE sold almost two-thirds of its
1996 generating capacity during the transition period. PUC responds
that SCE retained its nuclear power capacity and its above-market
power contracts with certain facilities, which together were
the main source of the stranded costs dealt with by Assembly
Bill 1890, and which are now again recoverable under cost-of-service
ratemaking. (See In re Pacific Gas & Electric Co., supra
, 76 Cal. P.U.C.2d at p. 647 ["Costs related to nuclear
generating assets and above-market contracts with Qualifying
Facilities (QFs) account for the majority of estimated transition
costs" ].)
FN6. Justice Baxter argues that allowing an agency
to agree to a settlement in closed session when, as here, "significant
regulatory decisions are at stake" in the litigation, is
inconsistent with the Bagley-Keene Act's fundamental policy of
public decisionmaking. (Conc. & dis. opn. of Baxter, J.,
post , at p. 12.) Our conclusion that such closed sessions
are permitted rests on the operative language of the law, in
particular Government Code sections 11126, subdivision (e)(1)
and 11126.3, subdivision (a), which makes no such distinction
among the types of litigation. If we have misjudged the legislative
intent, however, the error may be readily corrected by the insertion
of an express requirement that any settlement of litigation involving
regulatory decisions take place in an open meeting.
FN7. Both the March 2001 establishment of the surcharge
rates and the November 2002 modification in use of surcharge
revenue were decided at open PUC meetings. (Cal. P.U.C., Pub.
Agenda 3099 (Nov. 7, 2002) item H-9; id ., Pub. Agenda
3060 (Mar. 27, 2001) item 5b.)
FN8. TURN, quoting the federal court of appeals, identifies
several other aspects of the settlement that assertedly will
result in higher rates, but we reject the characterization of
these promises, as well, as rate changes. PUC promised not to
unreasonably withhold consent to any future request by SCE to
pay its common stock shareholders a dividend, but only after
the end of the rate repayment period (Dec. 31, 2003); until
that time, surplus revenue was, under the settlement, to be used
to reduce the procurement-related obligations account, and SCE
promised to declare and pay no dividend. (Settlement, §
2.5.) Any effect of these reciprocal promises on rates is speculative.
The dividend provision, moreover, may not have been a change
at all since, as far as the briefing indicates, PUC had no prior
duty or commitment, or even any authority, to unreasonably deny
such dividend requests. Similarly, PUC's commitment to implement
its "capital structure" requirements so as not to reduce
the revenues available for procurement debt recovery, and not
to penalize SCE for any noncompliance with those requirements
(Settlement, § 2.3), may not have been a change at all,
since the briefing does not indicate PUC was under a duty to
implement its capital structure requirements in a manner disadvantageous
to SCE's debt recovery or to penalize SCE for any noncompliance.
With respect to SCE's and PUC's legal claims against wholesalers,
SCE agreed to cooperate and coordinate litigation strategies
with PUC and the Attorney General of California, to notify PUC
of any settlement reached by SCE prior to March 1, 2002, and
not to settle any claim without PUC's permission after March
1, 2002. (Settlement, § § 3.1, 3.2.) Any effect of
this agreement on rates is, to say the least, unclear. Finally,
even to the extent any of these promises may affect future
rates-itself a tenuous and speculative result-they are not themselves
rate changes.
FN9. This is not to say that no formal PUC process
was contemplated or undertaken to implement the settlement. The
settlement itself (§ § 2.1(a), 2.9) contemplated that
PUC would adopt the decisions or orders needed for implementation,
and in particular that PUC would issue an order establishing
the procurement-related obligations account. SCE sought such
an order by Advice Letter (see Cal. P.U.C., Gen. Order No. 96-A,
as amended Sept. 28, 1988, § § III, V), and that request
was granted, after consideration of various objections and protests,
in a PUC resolution setting forth the accounting structure and
procedures under which the PROACT agreement would be implemented.
(Cal. P.U.C. Res. E-3765, supra , pp. 1-2.)
FN*. Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Sixth
Appellate District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
FN1. I note, however, that subdivision (e)(1) of Government
Code section 11126, allowing a state body, in closed session,
to "confer with, or receive advice from, its legal counsel"
concerning pending litigation, does not grant secret negotiating
authority parallel to that expressly provided in subdivision
(c)(7)(A) of the same section, which, in significantly different
words, empowers a state body to "hold[ ] closed sessions
with its negotiator prior to the purchase, sale, exchange, or
lease of real property by or for the state body to give instructions
to its negotiator regarding the price and terms of payment
for the purchase, sale, exchange, or lease." (Italics added.)
FN2. There is considerable confusion about whether
the 1996 rate freeze, as authorized by Assembly Bill No. 1890,
had ended, with respect to SCE, by the time SCE and the PUC entered
the settlement at issue here. As of this writing, it appears
the PUC has not finally resolved that issue. If the 1996 rate
freeze was still in effect, the settlement "changed"
that component of SCE's then existing rates by extending the
maximum duration of the freeze from March 31, 2002 (see Pub.
Util. Code, § 368, subd. (a)), to December 31, 2003. If
the 1996 rate freeze had ended, the settlement nonetheless "changed"
SCE's rates by placing a guaranteed duration on rates
otherwise subject to alteration or fluctuation.
FN3. I am aware that, as the majority indicate, the
PUC recently approved SCE's application to reduce its rates,
effective August 1, 2003, upon completion of the PROACT pay-down.
( Application of Southern California Edison Co. , Cal.
P.U.C. Dec. No. 03-07-029, pp. 2, 5, 12, 16-17, 22.)
FN4. In a final thrust, the PUC urges that even if
its closed-session approval of the settlement violated the Bagley-Keene
Act, and even if this violation was not cured or corrected by
the Commission's later actions, the settlement, and the resulting
stipulated judgment, must nonetheless be upheld under Government
Code section 11130.3, subdivision (b), which provides that "[a]n
action [governed by the Act] shall not be determined to be null
and void if . . . : [¶ ] . . . [¶ ] (2) The action
taken gave rise to a contractual obligation upon which a party
has, in good faith, detrimentally relied." The Commission
asserts that SCE has placed good-faith detrimental reliance on
the settlement by using resulting rate revenues to pay its creditors.
But the quoted language appears to refer to the Act's special
procedures, also set forth in section 11130.3, by which an "interested
person," acting within a specified time, may sue to "obtain[
] a judicial determination that an action taken by a state body
in violation of [the Act] is null and void under this section."
(Id. , subd. (a), italics added.) Here, the legality of the
PUC-SCE settlement, and the resulting stipulated judgment, is
at issue, not by collateral attack from an outsider under section
11130.3, but on appeal from the stipulated judgment itself. SCE,
a party to the stipulated judgment, and presumably aware at all
times that it was subject to reversal on appeal, cannot be said
to have detrimentally relied "in good faith" on its
terms, in the sense meant by section 11130.3, subdivision (b)(2).
FN5. Before 1988, Public Utilities Code section 454(a)
had provided that "no public utility shall raise any
rate or so alter any classification, contract, practice, or rule
as to result in any increase in any rate" except
upon a showing and finding of justification. (Pub. Util. Code,
§ 454, former subd. (a), italics added.) In that year, the
statute was amended to refer more broadly to "change[s]"
in rates and "new" rates. (Stats. 1988, ch. 108, §
1, p. 446.) On the other hand, section 454(a) states that its
procedures shall apply "[e]xcept as provided in [s]ection
455." Section 455 deals with filed utility rate schedules
"not increasing or resulting in an increase in any rate."
Whatever the interplay between sections 454(a) and 455, the SCE-PUC
settlement, by providing a guaranteed future rate structure designed
to allow SCE to recover billions of dollars in past costs, appears
to have effectively authorized an "increase" in SCE's
rates. No party or amicus curiae has invoked section 455 to argue
that the settlement was exempt from section 454(a).
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