Hodgson & Sons, Inc. v. FERC

USCA1 Opinion












UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

Nos. 93-1503
94-1752
THOMAS HODGSON & SONS, INC.,

Petitioner,

v.

FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION,

Respondent.


____________________

ON PETITIONS FOR REVIEW OF ORDERS OF
THE FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION

____________________

Before

Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
and Cyr, Circuit Judge. _____________

____________________

Howard M. Moffett, with whom Orr & Reno, P.A. was on brief for __________________ _________________
petitioner.
Joel M. Cockrell, Attorney, with whom Susan Tomasky, General _________________ ______________
Counsel, and Jerome M. Feit, Solicitor, Federal Energy Regulatory ________________
Commission, were on brief for respondent.


____________________

March 13, 1995
____________________





















BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. Petitioner, Thomas BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. ____________________

Hodgson and Sons, Inc. (Hodgson), appeals from a second order

by respondent, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

(FERC), denying Hodgson a rehearing, and from FERC's finding

that the operation of Hodgson's China Mill hydroelectric

plant (China Mill) came under the licensing jurisdiction of

Section 23(b) of the Federal Power Act (FPA)21 pursuant to

____________________

1. Section 23(b) of the original Federal Power Act, ch.
285, 23(b), 41 Stat. 1075 (1920) has been amended and
codified under 16 U.S.C. 817(1) (1988) ("Projects not
affecting navigable waters; necessity for Federal license,
permit or right-of-way"). It provides:
Any person, association, corporation,
State, or municipality intending to
construct a dam or other project works
across, along, over, or in any stream or
part thereof, other than those defined in
this chapter as navigable waters, and
over which Congress has jurisdiction
under its authority to regulate commerce
with foreign nations and among the
several States shall before such
construction file declaration of such
intention with the Commission, whereupon
the Commission shall cause immediate
investigation of such proposed
construction to be made, and if upon
investigation it shall find that the
interests of interstate or foreign
commerce would be affected by such
proposed construction, such person,
association, corporation, State or
municipality shall not construct,
maintain, or operate such dam or other
project works until it shall have applied
for and shall have received a license
under the provisions of this chapter. If
the Commission shall not so find, and if
no public lands or reservations are
affected, permission is granted to
construct such dam or other project works
in such stream upon compliance with State

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FERC's "post-1935 construction" rule. FERC claims that for

purposes of Section 23(b), shutting down a hydroelectric

plant for twelve years after 1935 and powering it back up to

its former specifications constitutes post-1935 construction

without more. Hodgson, on the other hand, claims that

operating China Mill after maintaining it over the years

until its use became profitable, does not amount to such

construction, and that even if it does, FERC's terms in the

license were unreasonable. After reviewing the statute and

pertinent case law, we conclude that FERC erred in its

determination that it had jurisdiction over China Mill. I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND __________

The China Mill dam was constructed in the late

1860's as a grist mill in Merrimack County, New Hampshire, on

the Suncook River, which is not navigable. The site included

the dam, diversion canal, penstocks and turbine which were

installed prior to 1900. China Mill was converted from

hydromechanical to hydroelectric power before 1914. The

petitioner has owned China Mill since 1970.

Under a succession of owners, China Mill

continuously produced electricity until 1969 in its present

configuration. Power generation stopped for approximately

twelve years starting in 1969. The parties dispute the


____________________

laws.

We shall follow the lead of the parties and refer to the
statute as "Section 23(b)."

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nature of the stoppage. Petitioner alleges that a natural

disaster initially led to the stoppage. Respondent asserts

that the natural disaster was only a log that got caught in

the project's machinery and that the true reason for the

stoppage was purely economic. During the period of non-

generation, the production of power was apparently

uneconomical for China Mill. The cost of purchasing

electricity was low, and no market existed for selling excess

power. For reasons to be stated, the exact cause of the

hiatus in the production of electricity does not affect

FERC's jurisdiction.

With the federal enactment of the Public Utility

Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA)2 and New Hampshire's passage

of the Limited Electrical Energy Producers Act (LEEPA),3

Hodgson decided that it would be again profitable to produce

power at China Mill. In 1981 Hodgson started to generate

power at China Mill and sold power to the Public Service

Company of New Hampshire. In September of 1989 FERC directed

Hodgson to show why China Mill should not be licensed under

the FPA. At first, Hodgson did not object to obtaining a

license and in fact voluntarily applied for one in March,

1990.



____________________

2. 16 U.S.C. 824 et seq. __ ___

3. N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. 362-A:3.

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Hodgson's spirit of cooperation was short lived.

In July, 1992, FERC issued Hodgson a license with conditions

that included, inter alia, a minimum water flow of fifty _____ ____

cubic feet per second (cfs), an historic resource management

plan, and aesthetic improvements to the mill building.

Thomas Hodgson and Sons, Inc., 60 F.E.R.C. 62,071 (1992) ______________________________

(Hodgson I). Hodgson objected to these conditions, __________

especially challenging the fifty cfs requirement which it

claims would result in an annual loss of over $68,000.

Unhappy with the terms of its license, Hodgson

withdrew its application4 and sought a rehearing contesting

both FERC's jurisdiction and the terms of the license.

Thomas Hodgson & Sons, Inc., 63 F.E.R.C. 61,068 (1993) _____________________________

(Hodgson II). Among its reasons for denying the rehearing, __________

FERC stated that the generating capacity of China Mill had

been increased, but that even if the capacity remained the

same, the project had been abandoned and, therefore, the

renewed operation constituted post-1935 construction. Id. at ___

61,293. Its determinative findings were as follows:

Hodgson does not dispute that the
Suncook River, a tributary of the
Merrimack River, is a Commerce Clause
water, or that the project affects
interstate commerce due to its
interconnection with the interstate

____________________


4. Hodgson claims it has the right to withdraw a voluntary
license application. FERC does not dispute this; so we do
not address it.

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electric grid. However, Hodgson disputes
that the development has undergone post-
1935 construction.

As noted above, the project's
generating capacity from 1934 through
1939 was 1,300 kW, but some time between
1939 and 1942 the generating capacity was
increased to 1,500 kW. The installation
after 1935 of additional generating
capacity constitutes post-1935
construction.

Even if the installed capacity of
the project were unchanged after 1935,
the project would still be required to be
licensed. Ordinary maintenance, repair,
and reconstruction activity with respect
to a project constructed before 1935 does
not constitute post-1935 construction for
purposes of Section 23(b)(1). However,
the pre-1935 construction exception
protects only operating projects. Where
a project has been abandoned, there is no
basis for a claim that the operator
retains operating rights, even if the
operator, after 1935, restores the
project to a condition identical to its
pre-abandonment status. As noted above, ________________
the China Mill Project was abandoned in _________________________________________
the 1960s and was not operated again _________________________________________
until 1981. Consequently, the renewed _________________________________________
operation constituted post-1935 _________________________________________
construction. In light of all of the _____________
above, we affirm the Director's finding
that the project is required to be
licensed.

Id. (emphasis added; footnotes omitted). A second petition ___

for rehearing followed.

During this time, Hodgson, asserting its right to

decline the license, petitioned this court for a stay and

review of the terms of the license. We determined that

Hodgson did not accept the license but declined to stay or



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further review the order until FERC considered Hodgson's

second petition for rehearing. Hodgson v. F.E.R.C., No. 93- _______ ________

1503 (1st Cir. May 14, 1993) (order denying stay of license

terms).

In the second petition for rehearing, Thomas ______

Hodgson & Sons, Inc., 67 F.E.R.C. 61,202 (1994) (Hodgson _____________________ _______

III), FERC again addressed the challenge to its jurisdiction. ___

We set forth FERC's pertinent findings:

Construction activity in the
maintenance and repair of existing,
continuously operating projects does not
constitute post-1935 construction within
the meaning of the FPA, so long as the
construction activity does not result in
such things as the enlargement of
generating capacity or of the physical
plant. However, construction activity
such as the construction or enlargement
of a dam or other project works,
including the enlargement of generating
capacity, constitutes post-1935
construction.

. . . .

. . . [T]he installation of a new
generator at the China Mill Project, of
itself, did not result in an increase in
generating capacity at the project.

Id. at 61,632-33 (footnotes omitted). ___

However, if a hydroelectric project
has been taken out of service for a
number of years, then the restoration of
generation at the project is the
equivalent of post-1935 construction,
even if the project has not been
enlarged, and irrespective of how much or
little reconstruction or refurbishment
was involved.



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Id. at 61,633 (footnote omitted). ___

In determining whether abandonment
has occurred for purposes of section
23(b)(1), the question is not . . .
whether the site has been literally
abandoned and left to fall into a state
of disrepair. Nor is the amount of
repair or reconstruction work needed to
put the project back into operation
relevant. Rather, abandonment for FPA
purposes means that the hydroelectric
generating function of the project has
been abandoned.

Id. (footnote omitted). ___

The new business here is Hodgson's
commencement of hydroelectric generation
in 1981. We therefore affirm our finding
that the China Mill Project is required
to be licensed pursuant to section
23(b)(1) of the FPA.

Id. at 61,634 (footnote omitted). This appeal followed. ___

We have jurisdiction pursuant to 16 U.S.C.

825l(b) which allows a party "aggrieved by an order issued by _

the Commission . . . [to] obtain a review of such order in

the United States court of appeals for any circuit wherein

the licensee . . . is located." In its petition, Hodgson

challenges FERC's jurisdiction and, in the alternative, asks

us to review the propriety of the requirements of the license

which it claims are unreasonable. Finding that FERC did not

have jurisdiction, we do not reach the merits of the license

requirements.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW II. STANDARD OF REVIEW __________________





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We review FERC's findings of fact for "substantial

evidence," and if so supported, such findings are conclusive.

Northeast Utils. Serv. Co. v. F.E.R.C., 993 F.2d 937, 944 ___________________________ ________

(1st Cir. 1993). On the other hand, "[p]ure legal errors

require no deference to agency expertise, and are reviewed de __

novo." Id.; see also Boston Edison Co. v. F.E.R.C., 856 F.2d ____ ___ ___ ____ _________________ ________

361, 363 (1st Cir. 1988).

FERC asserts that this court owes deference to its

finding of jurisdiction under Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural ____________________ _______

Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984). __________________________________

Chevron held: _______

When a challenge to an agency
construction of a statutory provision,
fairly conceptualized, really centers on
the wisdom of the agency's policy, rather
than whether it is a reasonable choice
within a gap left open by Congress, the
challenge must fail.

Id. at 866. FERC misplaces its reliance on Chevron for two ___ _______

reasons. First, in Chevron, the Supreme Court addressed the _______

issue of whether the Environmental Protection Agency based a

policy on a reasonable construction of the Clean Air Act.

Id. at 840. But here, FERC did not base its order on an ___

interpretation of the FPA, but rather on its reading of

judicial precedent. Chevron and its progeny mandate _______

deference "when a court is reviewing an agency decision based

on a statutory interpretation." National R.R. Passenger _________________________

Corp. v. Boston & Me. Corp., 112 S. Ct. 1394, 1401 (1992). _____ __________________



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Because FERC did not base its jurisdiction on an

interpretation of the statute but looked to case law, we owe

its finding of jurisdiction no more deference than we would

any lower court's analysis of law.

Second, deference to agency interpretations does

not give an agency the final word on statutory meaning. "The

judiciary is the final authority on issues of statutory

construction and must reject administrative constructions

which are contrary to clear congressional intent." Chevron, _______

467 U.S. at 843 n.9 (citations omitted). The Supreme Court

thus set out the rule:

If a court, employing traditional tools
of statutory construction, ascertains
that Congress had an intention on the
precise question at issue, that intention
is the law and must be given effect.

Id. ___

III. ANALYSIS III. ANALYSIS ________

Jurisdiction Under the FPA Jurisdiction Under the FPA __________________________

The FPA provides FERC with broad but not ubiquitous

power over hydroelectric facilities. Originally, Section 23

of the FPA only provided that persons intending to construct

projects5 on nonnavigable waters6 could file a declaration




____________________

5. By "project" the FPA "means complete unit of improvement
or development, consisting of a power house, all water
conduits, all dams and appurtenant works and structures
. . . ." See 16 U.S.C 796(11). ___

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of intent at their discretion. Farmington River Power Co. v. __________________________

Federal Power Comm'n, 455 F.2d 86, 88 (2d Cir. 1972). The _____________________

Federal Power Commission (FPC), FERC's predecessor, could

then require a license before any construction continued.

Id. If a person intending to construct a project on ___

nonnavigable waters did not file a declaration, the FPC had

no power to require a license. Id. at 89. ___

Congress amended the FPA in 1935, expanding the

FPC's licensing jurisdiction to require that persons

"intending to construct a dam or other project works"7 on ______________________

nonnavigable streams obtain a license. 16 U.S.C. 817(1)

(emphasis added). "These words quite clearly indicate a

prospective view." Farmington River Power Co., 455 F.2d at __________________________

90; Aquenergy Systs., Inc. v. F.E.R.C., 857 F.2d 227, 229 _______________________ ________

(4th Cir. 1988) (same); see also Puget Sound Power & Light ___ ____ __________________________

Co. v. Federal Power Comm'n, 557 F.2d 1311, 1315 (9th Cir. ___ ____________________

1977) ("the statute is to apply only to projects begun after _____

the effective date in 1935"). It is the post-1935

construction of a project that triggers the licensing

jurisdiction of Section 23(b).



____________________

6. The FPA does not define "nonnavigable waters" but
"navigable waters," inter alia, "means those parts of . . . _____ ____
bodies of water over which Congress has jurisdiction under
its authority to regulate commerce." See 16 U.S.C 796(8). ___

7. By "project works" the FPA "means the physical
structures of a project." 16 U.S.C. 796(12).

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All construction after 1935, however, does not

translate into jurisdictional construction under the FPA

merely because it post-dates the act. Supplemental building

after 1935 generally is not post-1935 construction if the

work only maintains or restores a project to its former

specifications. Puget Sound, 557 F.2d at 1315. Nor do ____________

"repairs - even those of substantial nature - . . . confer

jurisdiction over an otherwise exempt facility." Id. at ___

1316.

An exception to this rule arises where a project

has been abandoned. After the complete abandonment of a

project, an owner no longer retains pre-1935 operating

rights. Aquenergy, 857 F.2d at 230. In Aquenergy, the court _________ _________

determined that such abandonment occurred after more than

thirty years of disuse and neglect which resulted in the

project works being reduced to ruin. Id. at 229. Because ___

the owner in Aquenergy abandoned the project, it no longer _________

retained its pre-1935 operating rights. Id. at 230. ___

Although Aquenergy creates an exception to Puget Sound, the _________ ___________

court emphasized the lack of licensing jurisdiction under

Section 23(b) for repairs and reconstruction without a

finding of abandonment. Citing the general rule for Section

23(b) the court stated, "[a] project is not brought within

the Commission's jurisdiction if work done in the name of





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repair does not so alter the project that it is no longer

what was there before 1935." Aquenergy, 857 F.2d at 229. _________

Both Hodgson and FERC rely on Puget Sound and ___________

Aquenergy. The parties do not argue that either case is in _________

error; rather, they urge that either case controls in the

alternative. We, however, read Aquenergy to be an exception _________

to Puget Sound rather than an independent rule. The holding ___________

in Aquenergy makes this clear: _________

Aquenergy puts great reliance upon
Puget Sound, but it does not help them, ___________
for we take no issue with the proposition
that the magnitude of the work is not
controlling or even relevant. The
relative magnitude of the work in Puget _____
Sound may have been comparable to that _____
involved here, but the owner had never
abandoned the project. It had moved
rather promptly to put the project back
into partial operation and in full
operation when demand for its output
justified it.
In great contrast, here, J.P Stevens
simply abandoned the project. The entire
thing was closed down. The turbine was
apparently removed, but the rest was left
for deterioration to take its toll and
nature to heal her wounds. After such
complete abandonment over a period of
more than 30 years, there is no basis for
a claim that the owner retained operating
rights. The statute was designed to keep
in operation projects existing in 1935,
but not to restore abandoned rights.

857 F.2d at 230. Accordingly, unless the abandonment

exception applies, FERC has no jurisdiction over China Mill.

In Hodgson II and III, FERC ruled that the ___________ ___

abandonment of power production alone and without



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construction or physical abandonment gave it jurisdiction

under Section 23(a) of the FPA when a project resumed power

production. FERC stated its jurisdictional rationale as

follows:

In determining whether abandonment has
occurred for purposes of section
23(b)(1), the question is not . . .
whether the site has been literally
abandoned and left to fall into a state
of disrepair. Nor is the amount of
repair or reconstruction work needed to
put the project back into operation
relevant. Rather, abandonment for FPA ____________________
purposes means that the hydroelectric _________________________________________
generating function of the project has _________________________________________
been abandoned. ______________

Hodgson III, 67 F.E.R.C. at 61,633 (emphasis added; footnote ___________

omitted). We disagree for the following reasons.

First, FERC completely misunderstands the relevance

of work to a finding of post-1935 construction. Aquenergy _________

does state, "the magnitude of the work is not controlling," _________

857 F.2d at 229 (emphasis added), but at no time does the

court there espouse the notion that the existence of work _________

itself is unnecessary for jurisdiction. To the contrary the

court states:

One must look to the nature of the work
and the purpose of the owner. Major
repairs may involve much construction
activity, but the project is not brought
within the Commissions's jurisdiction if
work done in the name of repair does not
so alter the project that it is no longer
what was there before 1935.

Id. ___



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Second, FERC's order underestimates the importance

of the physical act needed to support a finding of

abandonment. The heart of the error in Hodgson II and ___________

Hodgson III is that there was in fact no abandonment as that ___________

word is generally understood. Abandonment is a question

wholly separate from the statutory language of the FPA. In

no place does the FPA define or refer to the term "abandon"

or "abandonment." Aquenergy goes to great pains to stress _________

the physical abandonment that occurred in that case. As the

court observed, "there was no activity at the project, not

even minimal maintenance"; "[t]he powerhouse . . .

disintegrated or was torn down"; "trees had reestablished

themselves"; and "nothing was done during those 30 years to

impede nature's reclamation of what had been her own." 857

F.2d at 229. Additionally, in its two and one-half page

opinion the court in Aquenergy notes the period of the _________

abandonment, "30 years," at least seven times, thus stressing

the importance of physical desertion as a factor in

abandonment. See id. at 229-30. ___ ___

The facts show that China Mill was not "abandoned"

in the Aquenergy sense. Workers performed general cleaning _________

and maintenance during the shutdown period, and the project

required only minimal work to restart. Moreover, China Mill

still operated in some manner during the shutdown. Although

not producing its own power, China Mill was used to control



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and monitor external power to the factory through its

generator control panel, and workers checked that panel

monthly.8 FERC does not assert that these or any activities

constituted construction, and even if they did, we believe

that they show the project was not abandoned within the

meaning of Aquenergy. We believe the facts here are _________

analogous to those of Puget Sound, which we find controlling. ___________

In Puget Sound, a landslide destroyed a pre-1935 project, and ___________

when the owner commenced the extensive work to reconstruct

the project, the FPC claimed it needed a license. 557 F.2d

at 1312. The court disagreed and found that reconstruction

did not give the FPC jurisdiction. It found that, because

the repairs "merely restored the [project] to its original

specifications and configuration," "[t]here was no new

'construction'." Id. at 1316. Even though five years passed ___


____________________

8. Hodgson III stated: ___________
Hodgson submitted the affidavits of three
men who worked at China Mill at various
times during the 1960's, 1970's, and
early 1980's. According to the
affidavits, mud and silt were removed
from the power canal; the penstocks,
turbines, and draft tubes were inspected
annually; the gates at the upper and
lower end of the power canal were checked
and cleaned annually; and the generator
control panel was checked at least
monthly because it controlled the voltage
coming into the manufacturing mill from
the transmission lines of Public Service
Company of New Hampshire.

67 F.E.R.C. at 61,633 n.11.

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before the defendant repaired and put into service two of the

four preexisting generators, the court found no jurisdiction

under the FPA. Id. at 1313. The court held that repair and ___

maintenance construction on even a large scale do not amount

to post-1935 construction if the scope of the work remains

within the original specification of the project. Id. at ___

1315.

Puget Sound applies directly here. There was "[n]o ___________

project enlargement . . . in capacity, diversion, or physical

plant," no reconfiguration since 1935 of "[t]he original

sites for the power house, the dam and the flume," and no

change in the electrical generating capacity since 1935. Id. ___

at 1316. There was, therefore, just as here, no post-1935

construction, and so no jurisdiction in FERC.

We have reviewed FERC's own cases addressing post-

1935 construction, none of which were subject to appellate

review, and they do not lend support to FERC's claim of

jurisdiction. The cases either contradict FERC's current

position, contradict each other or err for the same reasons

we have stated. See McRay Energy Inc., 57 F.E.R.C. 61,061 ___ _________________

(1991) (no jurisdiction over project after six-year period of

"abandonment" and reinstallation of same generator and

minimal repairs to return to service because actual

construction is an essential element of Section 23(b)

jurisdiction); Yankee Hydro Corp., 52 F.E.R.C. 61,074 ____________________



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(1990) (ten-year cessation of generation at flooded project

where same generator was removed and later replaced was

abandonment and required a license); Theodore A. and Holly S. ________________________

Keck, 51 F.E.R.C. 61,018 (1990) (after owners installed ____

generator of greater capacity, abandonment of project

incurred Section 23(b) jurisdiction); North American Hydro, ______________________

Inc., 46 F.E.R.C. 62,175 (1989) (project brought back to ____

original capacity after it was unused for fifteen years

required license where owner surrendered the license and

dismantled the facility); Pacific Power & Light Co., 10 ____________________________

F.E.R.C. 62,209 (1980) (no post-1935 construction despite

replacement of wooden diversion structure with concrete

structure because Section 23(b) jurisdiction requires that

"construction must increase the project's . . . generating

capacity . . . or otherwise significantly modify the

project's pre-1935 design or operation").9

We point out that the one case cited in FERC's

brief as being contrary to circuit precedent contains, in our

view, a correct assessment of the commission's jurisdiction.

In McRay Energy Inc., 57 F.E.R.C. 61,061, FERC recognized __________________

that the resumption of power production at a pre-1935 project

____________________

9. Only one of FERC's recent Section 23(b) cases faced
appellate review, but that order was based and affirmed on
other grounds. In Habersham Mills v. F.E.R.C., 976 F.2d 1381 _______________ ________
(11th Cir. 1992), the Eleventh Circuit did not address post-
1935 construction because the petitioner only questioned
FERC's determination that the project affected interstate
commerce.

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did not give rise to Section 23(b) jurisdiction absent actual

physical construction. In reaching its holding FERC

accurately noted, "actual construction or reconstruction of

facilities is an essential element of the 'post-1935

construction' prong of section 23(b) jurisdiction, even when

the project has been abandoned and restarted after 1935."

Id. at 61,234. At China Mill not only was there no ___

abandonment, there was no finding of any construction by

FERC.

IV. CONCLUSION IV. CONCLUSION __________

The order of FERC assuming jurisdiction over China

Mill is reversed with directions to dismiss the license

application.

Costs awarded to petitioner.

Concurrence follows. Concurrence follows.























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CYR, Circuit Judge (concurring). As the CYR, Circuit Judge (concurring). ______________

fallacy in relying on Puget Sound and Aquenergy for FERC's ___________ _________

misinterpretation of the statutory term "[post-1935] con-

struction" is plainly exposed in the majority opinion, it is

neither necessary nor provident for the panel to embrace

these decisions as First Circuit precedent, see supra at p. ___ _____

16 ("[W]e find [Puget Sound] controlling."), in the context ___________

of this case.

The issue on appeal is straightforward:

whether the plain language of FPA 23(b) requiring FERC

licensure of a "grandfathered" facility only in the event

there has been "[post-1935] construct[ion]" encompasses

circumstances in which no such construction has occurred, and __ ____ ____________ ___ ________

the owner merely reopens intact physical structures following

a period of closure? If, as I respectfully submit, this

question clearly must be answered in the negative, FERC's

plea for Chevron deference is precluded, see Estey v. Commis- _______ ___ _____ _______

sioner of Maine Dep't of Human Servs., 21 F.3d 1198, 1201 _______________________________________

(1st Cir. 1994), and the court ought not venture further.

The majority opinion accedes to FERC's invita-

tion to extend its licensure authority based on the reasoning

in Puget Sound and Aquenergy. In Puget Sound, however, the ___________ _________ ___________

putative licensee unquestionably had "constructed" physical

structures anew at the "grandfathered" power facility follow-

ing a devastating natural disaster. Based on its unexplained



19













assumption that Congress could not have intended to divest

innocent owners of their "grandfathered" power-plant operat-

ing rights merely for restoring to its original configuration

a facility damaged in a natural disaster, the Ninth Circuit

resorted to an equitable exception in interpreting the plain

language of the FPA as precluding the agency's licensure

jurisdiction. See Puget Sound Power & Light Co., 557 F.2d at ___ _____________________________

1315. The Ninth Circuit panel pointed to no statutory lan-

guage or legislative history remotely supportive of its

strained interpretation of the statutory term "construct."

See id. (merely noting, without citation to legislative ___ ___

history, "[w]e think Congress intended no such result").

As if to illustrate the maxim that hard cases

beget bad law, the Fourth Circuit later extended the error

propounded in Puget Sound. See Aquenergy Systs., 857 F.2d at ___________ ___ ________________

227. Aquenergy Systems' actions clearly came under FERC _______

jurisdiction for the simple reason that it had "constructed"

anew, from the ground up, disintegrated structures (including

an entire powerhouse) following a voluntary closure of the

facility lasting thirty years. Eschewing this plain language

approach, the Aquenergy court attempted to accommodate the _________

Puget Sound rationale by engaging in an "abandonment" analy- ___________

sis which overlooked the fact that the FPA contains not one ___ ___

word suggesting that Congress intended FERC licensure to turn ____

on the licensee's (or predecessor's) "abandonment" of "grand-



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fathered" pre-1935 "operating rights." Id. at 230 (merely ___

concluding, without citation to legislative history, that

"[t]he [FPA] was designed to keep in operation projects

existing in 1935, but not to restore abandoned rights").

Quite the contrary, FPA 23(b) focuses unambiguously and _____________

exclusively on a specific event the "construction" of ___________

physical structures at the "grandfathered" generating site. ________ __________

Although I wholeheartedly concur in the result

reached by the court in the instant case, I cannot endorse

its gratuitous adoption of the fallacious position advocated

by FERC, that Aquenergy and Puget Sound are "controlling." _________ ___________

Although those decisions apparently control FERC in the

Fourth and Ninth Circuits, respectively, neither FERC nor the

majority opinion suggests a sound reason for reaching out in

obiter dicta to embrace the problematic FPA interpretations ______ _____

propounded in Puget Sound and Aquenergy. Indeed, it is ___________ _________

particularly ironic that we should strain to embrace them

even though FERC itself has not seen fit to do so. See McRay ___ _____

Energy, Inc., 57 F.E.R.C. 61,061 (1991) (no FERC jurisdic- ____________

tion over project even after six-year "abandonment," where

facility reopened but no "construction" of facilities oc-

curred).









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