Summary
holding that the failure to raise an issue in exceptions after raising it at the hearing resulted in a failure to preserve because "the appellant did not give the commission an opportunity to correct any alleged errors."
Summary of this case from Dep't of Licensing & Regulatory Affairs v. Kirk David Duncan, L.P.C.Opinion
Docket No. 71163.
Decided June 12, 1984.
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Louis J. Caruso, Solicitor General, and Hugh B. Anderson, Assistant Attorney General, for the Attorney General.
Don L. Keskey and R. Philip Brown, Assistants Attorney General, for the Public Service Commission.
Foster, Swift, Collins Coey, P.C. (by Webb A. Smith and William K. Fahey), and David P. Van Note and Daniel L. Schiffer, for Michigan Consolidated Gas Company.
The Attorney General appeals from an April 6, 1983, opinion and April 22, 1983, order of the Ingham County Circuit Court. In the opinion and the order, the trial judge affirmed a January 30, 1981, order of appellee Michigan Public Service Commission (PSC). The case was before the court for judicial review, pursuant to MCL 462.26; MSA 22.45, of the PSC's order granting certain rate relief to appellee Michigan Consolidated Gas Company.
The PSC's order authorized a continuation of an "Other Operations and Maintenance Expense Indexing System". The Other O M System is a formula which operates to increase the rate component for other operations and maintenance expense by a percentage equal to the change in the consumer price index for the 12-month period ending the preceding August. Other Operations and Maintenance expense is a category of expenses that makes up approximately 10%-12% of Michigan Consolidated's total cost of operations. The trial judge declined to rule on the Attorney General's claims of error with respect to approval of the Other O M System, because the portion of the Attorney General's exceptions addressing the Other O M System was not timely filed with the PSC.
The other issue on appeal concerns selection of a proper cost of gas purchased by Michigan Consolidated. The PSC had before it recommendations, made at the hearing before the hearing officer, that the December, 1979, level be used (from the Attorney General); that the April, 1980, level be used (from the PSC staff); and that the latest possible monthly rate be used (from Michigan Consolidated). After the evidentiary hearing was closed, Michigan Consolidated submitted, shortly before the PSC's decision, the cost of the gas purchased as of November, 1980. No party had a chance to cross-examine as to this amount, although it was taken from regularly reported figures for the cost of purchased gas, just as were the amounts urged by the PSC staff and the Attorney General for the earlier dates.
The issues as stated by appellant are:
I. "Where the State Public Service Commission, in its January 30, 1981, rate order in Re Michigan Consolidated Gas Co, Case No. U-6372, continued and readopted an "Other Operations and Maintenance Expense Indexing System", was the circuit court precluded, as a matter of law, from determining the lawfulness of such indexing system, under the circumstances of this case, solely on the basis that the Attorney General's exceptions to the hearing officer's recommendation had been filed several days late?"
II. "Did the PSC act unlawfully in continuing and readopting, in its January 30, 1981, order in Case U-6372, an "Other Operations and Maintenance Expense Indexing System", whereby gas rates would be adjusted annually based solely upon the percentage change in a consumer price index?"
III. "Did the PSC act unlawfully in its January 30, 1981, order in Case U-6372, in determining the cost of gas purchased by Michigan Consolidated to be $3.014/Mcf (thousand cubic feet), based solely upon a document prepared and delivered by [Michigan Consolidated] to the Commission after the evidentiary record had been closed, and without notice to the parties that the Commission intended to take official notice of such document; when the highest cost of gas supported by record evidence was $2.4497/mcf?"
I
The trial judge stated:
"The Attorney General claims the MPSC erred in again adopting the `other operation and maintenance expense indexing system'. This system had previously been adopted in rate Case No. U-5955. [Michigan] Consolidated claims the Attorney General did not properly preserve this issue for appeal.
"During the hearings the Attorney General objected to any plan to index expenses. But these arguments were not raised in the Attorney General's exceptions to the proposal for decision. The only objections raised were made in a proposed set of exceptions submitted after the deadline set by the administrative law judge. The Attorney General's motion for an extension of time was denied. The commission also refused to consider the proposed exceptions. After review of the record, this court concludes that the Attorney General's motion to extend the deadline was properly denied.
"Failure by a party to file exceptions to the proposal for decision in a timely manner constitutes a waiver of any objections not raised. MCL 24.281; MSA 3.560(181). Robertson v Transit Union, 91 Mich. App. 429; 283 N.W.2d 766 (1979).[1] Appellant's objections to indexing were not raised in the exceptions to the proposal for decision. By not timely raising any objections, the appellant did not give the commission an opportunity to correct any alleged errors. Therefore, these issues have not been preserved for appeal.
"[1] Although the Court's opinion in Robertson refers only to the Public Employment Relations Act, MCL 423.216(b); MSA 17.455(16)(b), the same rationale applies to § 81 of the Administrative Procedures Act, MCL 24.281; MSA 3.560(181)."
We agree with the trial judge.
In addition, the "Other Operations and Maintenance Expense Indexing System" was upheld in Attorney General v Public Service Comm, 133 Mich. App. 719; 349 N.W.2d 539 (1984). We agree with that decision.
II
This issue was decided in Attorney General v Public Service Commission, supra, upholding the validity of the Other O M System.
III
The Attorney General claims the PSC erred in using the November, 1980, cost of gas in calculating the base rate for lost and unaccounted-for gas. The basis of appellant's objection is that the November figure was not a part of the PSC record.
The cost figure, as well as the alternative cost figure favored by the Attorney General, was taken from Michigan Consolidated's purchased gas adjustment report. No objections have been raised as to the accuracy of the report in question.
The Supreme Court in Ishpeming v Public Service Comm, 370 Mich. 293, 314; 121 N.W.2d 462 (1963), stated the facts of that case as follows:
"`The record in this case is clear that the appellant well knew the official reports of the company were studied and relied upon by the commission and its staff; appellant had full and adequate opportunities to investigate the data and information contained in such reports; appellant made no objections to commission staff conclusions and testimony based upon such official reports; appellant has never claimed the information contained in said reports is untrue or unreliable or that such information has been in any manner misinterpreted; and there is no claim of resulting prejudice from the commission and its staff relying upon the facts and information contained in said reports. Appellant merely says the commission had no legal right to take judicial notice of these official reports and acted arbitrarily and unlawfully in so doing.'"
As in Ishpeming, the appellant in this case does not dispute the accuracy or materiality of the cost figure itself. The only dispute is over whether the PSC could take judicial notice of a cost figure in an official report of the company. These reports, like those in Ishpeming, were available to appellant for examination and investigation. In Ishpeming the Supreme Court found that the appellant was not prejudiced by the failure to introduce official reports into evidence. It is the opinion of this Court that the appellant in this case is likewise not prejudiced by the PSC's adoption of a cost figure from a report that was not formally introduced into evidence, at least where, as here, the figure itself is not in dispute.
Affirmed.