This opinion is subject to revision before final
publication in the Pacific Reporter.
2014 UT 52
IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
———————
ELLIS-HALL CONSULTANTS, LLC,
Petitioner,
v.
PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF UTAH; PACIFICORP;
BLUE MOUNTAIN POWER PARTNERS, LLC; LATIGO WIND PARK, LLC;
and UTAH CLEAN ENERGY,
Respondents.
———————
No. 20131146
Filed November 21, 2014
———————
Original Proceeding in this Court
———————
Attorneys:
Mary Anne Q. Wood, Stephen Q. Wood, Salt Lake City,
for petitioner
Jordan White, R. Jeff Richards, Daniel E. Solander, Gary A. Dodge,
Phillip J. Russell, Gary G. Sackett, Jessica W. Wilde,
Stephen K. Christiansen, Salt Lake City, for respondents
———————
JUSTICE LEE authored the opinion of the court, in which
CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING,
JUSTICE DURHAM, and JUSTICE PARRISH joined.
———————
JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the court:
¶1 In 2013, the Utah Public Service Commission approved
power purchase agreements between PacifiCorp and two small
power producers, Latigo Wind Park and Blue Mountain Power
Partners. Under these agreements, PacifiCorp’s Rocky Mountain
Power division would become obligated to purchase all power
produced by the producers’ clean energy wind projects in South-
eastern Utah. This is an appeal by Ellis-Hall Consultants, a com-
petitor of Latigo and Blue Mountain. Ellis-Hall intervened in the
PSC proceedings below and sought to challenge the Latigo and
ELLIS-HALL CONSULTANTS v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
Opinion of the Court
Blue Mountain agreements. In so doing, Ellis-Hall asserted that
the PSC had unlawfully excused Latigo and Blue Mountain from
compliance with the terms of an applicable regulatory tariff, re-
ferred to as Schedule 38. It also claimed discrimination by Pacifi-
Corp—in requiring Ellis-Hall to comply with the regulatory re-
quirements from which Latigo and Blue Mountain had been ex-
cused. And it asserted that the power purchase agreements were
too vague to be enforceable, and should be disapproved on that
basis.
¶2 In light of the time-sensitive nature of this matter, we ex-
pedited this case for briefing and oral argument. And after oral
argument we issued an order affirming the PSC’s decision, with
an opinion explaining our analysis to follow. The opinion below
describes the bases for our decision. We hold that the cited terms
of Schedule 38 were not contravened by the Latigo and Blue
Mountain power purchase agreements, and that the “public inter-
est” inquiry the PSC is charged with does not implicate the dis-
crimination or vagueness concerns Ellis-Hall identifies.
I
¶3 Ellis-Hall, Blue Mountain, and Latigo are involved in the
development of wind power generation projects in San Juan
County. The end goal for each is to sell the power generated by
those projects (known as qualifying facilities or “QFs”) to Pacifi-
Corp through its Rocky Mountain Power division—with that
power then being transmitted along PacifiCorp’s interstate trans-
mission system via a local interconnection point.
¶4 A QF seeking to sell its generated power must enter into
two distinct contractual arrangements, each subject to PSC ap-
proval. One is called a large generation interconnection agree-
ment. This contract governs the QFs’ use of PacifiCorp’s transmis-
sion system. The other required contract is a power purchase
agreement with Rocky Mountain Power. This latter agreement,
governed by Utah Code section 54-12-2 and Rocky Mountain
Power Electric Service Schedule No. 38, 1 controls Rocky Mountain
1 Schedule 38 is an element of Tariff No. 49, a regulatory provi-
sion approved by the Utah Public Service Commission in October
of 2012 and amended from time to time thereafter.
2
Cite as: 2014 UT 52
Opinion of the Court
Power’s obligation to purchase power from the QF, prescribing
price, quantity, and duration.
¶5 In 2012 Latigo and Blue Mountain began negotiating the
terms of a power purchase agreement with Rocky Mountain Pow-
er. They also began to pursue interconnection agreements with
PacifiCorp for use of its local transmission point. Before finalizing
their interconnection agreements, both Latigo and Blue Mountain
executed power purchase agreements with Rocky Mountain Pow-
er and then submitted their agreements to the PSC for approval.
¶6 During this same time period, Ellis-Hall was also pursuing
its own interconnection and power purchase agreements. When
the Latigo and Blue Mountain power purchase agreements went
before the PSC, Ellis-Hall had not yet secured a power purchase
agreement. It was instead involved in negotiations over the terms
of an interconnection agreement.
¶7 Ellis-Hall moved to intervene in the Latigo and Blue Moun-
tain PSC proceedings. The PSC granted Ellis-Hall’s motions. Ellis-
Hall then filed formal objections to the approval of the Latigo and
Blue Mountain power purchase agreements. First, Ellis-Hall
claimed that PacifiCorp/Rocky Mountain Power had discriminat-
ed against Ellis-Hall in its pursuit of a power purchase agreement
in violation of both state and federal law—subjecting Ellis-Hall to
mandatory compliance with the terms of Schedule 38 but taking a
more permissive, liberal approach with Latigo and Blue Moun-
tain. Second, Ellis-Hall asserted that Latigo, Blue Mountain, and
PacifiCorp had colluded in the negotiation of the power purchase
agreements in a manner contravening the terms of Schedule 38
and the public interest element of federal and state law. Third, El-
lis-Hall challenged the enforceability of the Latigo and Blue
Mountain power purchase agreements, asserting that they were
too vague to be enforceable. And finally, Ellis-Hall requested dis-
covery of material related to its various claims.
¶8 During a hearing on these matters, the PSC determined
that the public interest analysis was limited to whether the rates in
the power purchase agreements were “just and reasonable.” Ac-
cordingly, the PSC denied Ellis-Hall’s discovery requests and mo-
tions to compel, concluding that the discovery went to matters not
relevant to the public interest inquiry.
3
ELLIS-HALL CONSULTANTS v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
Opinion of the Court
¶9 After holding the hearing and reviewing the evidence, the
PSC issued an order approving the Blue Mountain and Latigo
power purchase agreements. The PSC first rejected Ellis-Hall’s ar-
gument that the “public interest” standard for approval of power
purchase agreements goes beyond an inquiry into “just and rea-
sonable” rates. Thus, because the power purchase agreements
were consistent with the approved method for calculating the
rates to be paid to QFs and because they contained terms and
conditions that adequately protected ratepayers (consumers) from
risk, the PSC determined that they were in the public interest.
¶10 The PSC then rejected both of Ellis-Hall’s contentions re-
garding Schedule 38—that it mandated the procedures PacifiCorp
had to follow and that PacifiCorp had discriminated against Ellis-
Hall by permitting Latigo and Blue Mountain to secure power
purchase agreements without having first secured interconnection
agreements. As to the former argument, the PSC held that
“Schedule 38 does not prescribe the due diligence that PacifiCorp
must perform but rather acts as a check on the due diligence Pacif-
iCorp may perform.” And as to the latter, the PSC held that dis-
crimination claims are “outside the scope of our consideration,”
and accordingly rejected that argument. Ellis-Hall now seeks re-
view of the PSC’s order.
¶11 We have jurisdiction under Utah Code section 78A-3-
102(3)(e)(i), and review the PSC’s decision under the terms of the
Utah Administrative Procedures Act, UTAH CODE sections 63G-4-
101 to -601. Our review of the PSC’s factual determinations is def-
erential; we may reverse the agency’s findings only if they are ar-
bitrary, capricious, or “beyond the tolerable limits of reason.”
Utah Chapter of the Sierra Club v. Utah Air Quality Bd., 2006 UT 74,
¶ 9, 148 P.3d 960 (internal quotation marks omitted). As to thresh-
old legal questions, however, our review is nondeferential—de
novo. See Manzanares v. Byington (In re Baby B), 2012 UT 35, ¶ 41,
308 P.3d 382.
II
¶12 Ellis-Hall challenges the PSC’s approval of the Latigo and
Blue Mountain power purchase agreements on three grounds:
(a) the PSC failed to require strict compliance with the terms of
Schedule 38, which Ellis-Hall views as nondiscretionary; (b) Pacif-
iCorp engaged in discrimination in its application of the terms of
4
Cite as: 2014 UT 52
Opinion of the Court
Schedule 38—applying them leniently to Latigo and Blue Moun-
tain but strictly to Ellis-Hall—in a manner inconsistent with the
“public interest”; and (c) the terms of the Latigo and Blue Moun-
tain power purchase agreements were too vague to be enforcea-
ble. We reject all three arguments and accordingly affirm.
A. Schedule 38
¶13 Ellis-Hall first claims error in the PSC’s failure to insist on
strict compliance with the terms of Schedule 38. This claim rests
specifically on the Schedule 38 provision regarding interconnec-
tion agreements. Ellis-Hall reads this provision to require an in-
terconnection agreement as a prerequisite to the approval of a
power purchase agreement, and charges the PSC with reversible
error for not holding Latigo and Blue Mountain to strict compli-
ance with this provision.
¶14 We view Schedule 38’s terms differently. Granted, this
document contemplates that owners of QFs above a certain capac-
ity “will be required to enter into written power purchase and in-
terconnection agreements” with PacifiCorp/Rocky Mountain
Power, under the terms and conditions of the Schedule. Rocky
Mountain Power Elec. Serv. Schedule No. 38, at 38.1 (Sept. 1,
2014), available at https://www.rockymountainpower.net/about/
rar/uri.html. And, as Ellis-Hall indicates, the PSC has sometimes
referred to the terms of Schedule 38 as “the steps required to ob-
tain” a viable power purchase agreement. But that does not trans-
form every term and condition of Schedule 38 into a hard-and-fast
prerequisite. Instead, the nature and extent of the requirements of
Schedule 38 are dictated by its terms. And the document speaks
directly and unambiguously to Ellis-Hall’s argument: It “reserves
the right to condition execution of the power purchase agreement
upon simultaneous execution of an interconnection agreement be-
tween the owner and the Company’s power delivery function.” Id.
at 38.5.
¶15 That proviso is incompatible with Ellis-Hall’s position. Far
from requiring an interconnection agreement as a prerequisite to a
purchase agreement, Schedule 38 deems this a discretionary mat-
ter. This is confirmed by the surrounding terms of the document,
which simply state that “in addition to negotiating a power pur-
chase agreement,” QFs “are also required to enter into an inter-
connection agreement,” and that “[i]t is recommended that [the QF]
5
ELLIS-HALL CONSULTANTS v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
Opinion of the Court
initiate its request for interconnection as early in the planning
process as possible” to ensure that the interconnection agreement
and purchase agreement negotiations proceed “in a timely man-
ner on a parallel track.” Id. (emphasis added). Under the section
prescribing the procedures for finalizing a power purchase
agreement, moreover, Schedule 38 merely requires a QF to pro-
vide a written statement of the “status of interconnection ar-
rangements.” Id. at 38.2 (emphasis added); see also id. at 38.3–38.4
(noting that if a QF wishes for Rocky Mountain Power to draft a
proposed power purchase agreement, the QF “may” be required
to provide “evidence that any necessary interconnection studies
have been completed and assurance that the necessary intercon-
nection arrangements are being made in accordance with Part II”
(emphasis added)).
¶16 Nowhere does Schedule 38 make an interconnection
agreement a prerequisite to a power purchase agreement. It in-
stead treats this as a matter of discretion. And in any event the
document nowhere prescribes any timing requirement. Again it
treats this as discretionary—recommending interconnection re-
quests “as early in the planning process as possible,” but nowhere
dictating that the matter be finalized before the purchase agree-
ment is entered into.
¶17 We affirm the Public Service Commission on this basis. We
agree with the PSC that as to interconnection agreements,
“Schedule 38 does not prescribe the due diligence that PacifiCorp
must perform but rather acts as a check on the due diligence Pacif-
iCorp may perform.”
B. The “Public Interest” and Alleged Discrimination
¶18 Ellis-Hall’s next claim of error implicates its allegation of
discrimination in the application of the terms of Schedule 38. Here
the argument is one of differential treatment—that Latigo and
Blue Mountain were given wide latitude as to the timing of an in-
terconnection agreement, but Ellis-Hall has not been afforded
such leniency. And Ellis-Hall asserts that this alleged discrimina-
tion calls into question the key determination for the PSC—
whether the Latigo and Blue Mountain power purchase agree-
ments were in the “public interest.”
¶19 This argument implicates a threshold legal question—of
the meaning of “public interest” in the terms of the governing
6
Cite as: 2014 UT 52
Opinion of the Court
federal and state laws to be applied by the PSC. To sustain its
challenge to the PSC’s approval of the Latigo and Blue Mountain
power purchase agreements, Ellis-Hall would first have to estab-
lish that its concerns regarding discrimination are implicated by
the “public interest” standard that the PSC is charged with apply-
ing. We affirm on the ground that Ellis-Hall has failed to carry
that burden.
¶20 Ellis-Hall cites generally to provisions of state and federal
law that protect power producers from discriminatory business
practices. 2 But none of these provisions are properly implicated in
this proceeding. In considering the parties’ power purchase
agreements for approval, the PSC is tasked with a narrow, specific
inquiry—to approve the agreed-upon power purchase rates as
consistent with the “public interest.” That inquiry does not impli-
cate the broader discrimination concerns identified by Ellis-Hall,
and we affirm on that basis, as explained below.
¶21 The PSC administers state and federal laws requiring Pacif-
iCorp to purchase wholesale power from QFs. Its jurisdiction over
QF rates and the public interest originate in federal law. Under
the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA), Pub.
L. No. 95-617, 92 Stat. 3117, the Federal Energy Regulatory Com-
mission (FERC) is required to set rates for purchases from QFs
that are “just and reasonable to the electric consumers of the elec-
tric utility and [are] in the public interest.” 16 U.S.C. § 824a-
3(b)(1). And PURPA also “requires each state regulatory authori-
2 See 18 C.F.R. § 292.304(a)(1)(ii) (2014) (prohibiting discrimina-
tion “against qualifying cogeneration and small power production
facilities”); id. § 358.4(a)–(c) (requiring “strict” enforcement of “all
tariff provisions relating to the sale or purchase of open access
transmission service, if the tariff provisions do not permit the use
of discretion”); UTAH CODE § 54-3-7 (prohibiting public utilities
from “extend[ing] to any person any form of contract or agree-
ment, or any rule or regulation, or any facility or privilege except
such as are regularly and uniformly extended to all corporations
and persons”); id. § 54-3-8(1)(a) (prohibiting public utilities from
“mak[ing] or grant[ing] any preference or advantage to any per-
son” with regard to any “rates, charges, service, facilities or in any
other respect”).
7
ELLIS-HALL CONSULTANTS v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
Opinion of the Court
ty . . . to implement FERC’s rules.” FERC v. Mississippi, 456 U.S.
742, 751 (1982) (citing 16 U.S.C. § 824a-3(f)). Thus, PURPA gives
FERC, and by extension the PSC, “a statutory mandate to set a
rate that is in the public interest.” Am. Paper Inst., Inc. v. Am. Elec.
Power Serv. Corp., 461 U.S. 402, 417 (1983) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
¶22 The “public interest,” in this legal context, does not encom-
pass any and all considerations of interest to the public—such as
the nondiscrimination principles cited by Ellis-Hall. Instead “the
words ‘public interest’ in a regulatory statute . . . take meaning
from the purposes of the regulatory legislation” in question.
NAACP v. Fed. Power Comm’n, 425 U.S. 662, 669 (1976). And here
those purposes are limited—focusing on the setting of “reasonable
prices,” id. at 670, and on establishing incentives for the increased
production of QF facilities “to reduce reliance on fossil fuels.” Am.
Paper Inst., 461 U.S. at 417; see also UTAH CODE § 54-12-1(2) (“[T]he
policy of this state [is] to . . . promote a diverse array of economi-
cal and permanently sustainable energy resources in an environ-
mentally acceptable manner”); id. § 54-12-2(2) (“The commission
shall establish reasonable rates, terms, and conditions for the pur-
chase or sale of electricity. . . .”).
¶23 Both federal and state law balance these objectives by re-
quiring public utilities to purchase power from QFs at, or in some
cases below, a utility’s “full avoided cost.” 18 C.F.R.
§ 292.304(a)(2), (b)(2)–(3) (2014); UTAH CODE § 54-12-2(2). 3 Avoided
cost is “the incremental cost[] to an electric utility of electric ener-
gy or capacity or both which, but for the purchase from the quali-
fying facility or qualifying facilities, such utility would generate
itself or purchase from another source.” 18 C.F.R. § 292.101(b)(6).
In plain English, this means that public utilities purchase QF
3 See also Steven R. Miles, Note, Full-Avoided Cost Pricing Under
the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act: “Just and Reasonable” to
Electric Consumers?, 69 CORNELL L. REV. 1267, 1277 n.66 (1984)
(discussing the public interest requirement and the purposes of
PURPA and explaining that “[b]y establishing the price for pur-
chases from qualifying facilities at the statutory ceiling, the full-
avoided cost rule fulfills [the] purpose [of PURPA] to the maxi-
mum extent permissible”).
8
Cite as: 2014 UT 52
Opinion of the Court
power at the same rate the utility would have paid in acquiring or
producing the same power through other means.
¶24 This concept of avoided cost is incorporated in the Latigo
and Blue Mountain power purchase agreements. These contracts
prescribe PacifiCorp’s avoided cost as the rate to be paid for QF
power produced by Latigo and Blue Mountain. And the decision
before us in this case is the PSC’s approval of that rate as con-
sistent with the public interest.
¶25 We affirm that decision. Ellis-Hall has nowhere contested
the PSC’s conclusion that an avoided cost rate is in the public in-
terest. Nor could it. As the above-cited standards indicate, avoid-
ed cost rates are a safe-harbor of reasonableness in advancing the
public’s interest in protecting ratepayers.
¶26 We likewise reject Ellis-Hall’s attempt to inject broader
nondiscrimination principles into the PSC’s approval of the QF
rates agreed to in the Latigo and Blue Mountain power purchase
agreements. 4 Those principles were not the domain of the PSC in
this proceeding. Its role was simply to approve the agreed-upon
rates as consistent with the statutory and regulatory concept of
the public interest. And because that concept is limited to the rea-
4 It is worth mentioning that some of the federal anti-
discrimination provisions Ellis-Hall cites cut decidedly against the
substance of its discrimination argument. For instance, the Code
of Federal Regulations requires “strict[]” enforcement of “all tariff
provisions relating to the sale or purchase of open access trans-
mission service, if the tariff provisions do not permit the use of discre-
tion.” 18 C.F.R. § 358.4(a) (emphasis added). In other words, the
federal anti-discrimination regulations clearly contemplate some
discretion and leniency in the process. See also id. § 358.4(b)–(c)
(prohibiting the application of tariff provisions in any “unduly
discriminatory manner, if the tariff provisions permit the use of discre-
tion” and prohibiting the giving of any “undue preference . . . relat-
ing to the sale or purchase of transmission service” (emphasis
added)).
9
ELLIS-HALL CONSULTANTS v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
Opinion of the Court
sonableness of the rates in question, Ellis-Hall’s argument fails as
a matter of law. 5
¶27 Ellis-Hall’s challenge to the denial of its discovery requests
fails on the same ground. Ellis-Hall sought discovery on the na-
ture and extent of any differential treatment by PacifiCorp/Rocky
Mountain Power. Because those issues were irrelevant to the
PSC’s assessment of the power rates set forth in the Latigo and
Blue Mountain agreements, the PSC was right to deny Ellis-Hall’s
requests for discovery. We therefore also affirm the PSC’s denial
of Ellis-Hall’s requests for discovery.
C. Enforceability of Power Purchase Agreements
¶28 Ellis-Hall’s final claim touches on the enforceability of the
Latigo and Blue Mountain power purchase agreements. The ar-
gument here is that certain terms of these agreements—such as
the type of turbine to be utilized by these QFs—are too vague to
be enforceable.
¶29 This claim falters on grounds set forth above. Again, the
PSC’s role in approving a QF power purchase agreement is to
confirm that the rates agreed to are in the “public interest.” See su-
pra ¶¶ 20–26. And that question is resolved conclusively—and in
favor of affirmance—by the avoided-cost terms of the Latigo and
Blue Mountain power purchase agreements.
5 Ultimately, Ellis-Hall’s assertion of discrimination turns on the
concern that the terms of Schedule 38 have been applied leniently
to Latigo and Blue Mountain. Even if that concern were properly
presented, it would not sustain a finding of discrimination
“against qualifying cogeneration and small power production fa-
cilities,” 18 C.F.R. § 292.304(a)(1)(ii)—much less a remedy of more
restrictive treatment of Latigo and Blue Mountain. An alternative
remedy would be to confer similar leniency on Ellis-Hall. And un-
less and until such treatment is withheld (in Ellis-Hall’s pursuit of
its own power purchase agreement), any claim of discrimination
is unripe.
10
Cite as: 2014 UT 52
Opinion of the Court
¶30 Once that determination was (properly) made, there was
no work left for the PSC to do. Thus, the PSC was not thereafter
tasked to assess the vagueness or enforceability of the Latigo or
Blue Mountain agreements. This final claim of error accordingly
fails regardless of whether the terms of the contract are too vague
to be enforceable.
——————
11