Northeast Utilities v. FERC

USCA1 Opinion









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

No. 94-1948

NORTHEAST UTILITIES SERVICE COMPANY,

Petitioner,

v.

FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION,

Respondent.

____________________

ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF ORDER OF
THE FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION
____________________

Before

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

____________________

J.A. Bouknight, Jr., with whom David B. Raskin, Edward J. Twomey, ___________________ ________________ ________________
Newman, Bouknight & Edgar, P.C., and Frederic Lee Klein, Assistant ________________________________ ___________________
General Counsel, Northeast Utilities Service Company, were on brief
for petitioner.
Randolph Lee Elliott, Attorney, with whom Susan Tomasky, General ____________________ _____________
Counsel, and Jerome M. Feit, Solicitor, Federal Energy Regulatory ________________
Commission, were on brief for respondent.


____________________

May 23, 1995
____________________
























BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. The main issue in BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. _____________________

this case is whether the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

(FERC) complied with our mandate in Northeast Utilities ___________________

Service Co. v. FERC, 993 F.2d 937 (1st Cir. 1993) (Northeast ____________ ____ _________

I) and applied the "public interest" test in ordering the _

modification of a wholesale electric power contract.

In Northeast I we upheld FERC's decision ____________

conditionally approving the merger of Northeast Utilities

(NU) and the Public Service Company of New Hampshire (PSNH).

Before us also was the objection of Northeast Utilities

Service Company (NUSCO) to the Commission's modification of

the rate schedules filed by NUSCO. The rate schedules were

part of a wholesale electric power contract (the Seabrook

Power Contract) among NU, PSNH and the State of New

Hampshire. Under the contract each party waived its right to

file a complaint under 206(a) of the Federal Power Act

(FPA) concerning the specified rates. Each party also agreed

"that in any proceeding by the FERC under Section 206 the

FERC shall not change the rate charged under this Agreement

unless such rate is found to be contrary to the public

interest." FERC was not a party to the contract.

Section 206(a) of the FPA, 16 U.S.C. 824(e)

provides:

Whenever the Commission, after a
hearing had upon its own motion or upon
complaint, shall find that any rate,
charge, or classification, demanded,


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observed, charged, or collected by any
public utility for any transmission or
sale subject to the jurisdiction of the
Commission, or that any rule, regulation,
practice, or contract affecting such
rate, charge, or classification is
unjust, unreasonable, unduly
discriminatory or preferential, the
Commission shall determine the just and
reasonable rate, charge, classification,
rule, regulation, practice, or contract
to be thereafter observed and in force,
and shall fix the same by order.


Invoking its power under 206(a), the Commission

examined the terms and conditions of the Seabrook Power

contract. FERC found that the contract might unduly

discriminate against entities not parties to it and that

there was no genuine arms-length bargaining because the

agreement was negotiated at a time when NU and PSNH were

about to merge and assume identical interests. It ordered

NUSCO to make three changes in the contract to bring it

within the "just and reasonable" standard of 206(a): (1)

delete the automatically adjusting rate-of-return-on-equity

provision; (2) reduce the current rate-of-return-on-equity

used to derive the rate for Seabrook power; and (3) submit

for Commission review an initial estimate of the cost of

decommissioning the Seabrook Power Plant, which is an atomic

energy facility. The reduction order (2) on the current rate

of return in equity was not appealed.

After summarizing the Mobile-Sierra "public _____________

interest" doctrine as explicated in Papago Tribal Authority ________________________


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v. FERC, 723 F.2d 950, 953 (D.C. Cir. 1983), cert. denied, ____ _____ ______

467 U.S. 1241 (1984), we quoted the holding of the Commission

that it had

authority under the public interest
standard to modify a contract where: it __
may be unjust, unreasonable, unduly ________________________________
discriminatory or preferential to the
detriment of purchasers that are not
parties to the contract; it is not the _______________
result of arm's length bargaining; or it _________________________________________
reflects circumstances where the seller _________________________________________
has exercised market power over the _________________________________________
purchaser. __________

Northeast I, 993 F.2d at 961. We also pointed out the ____________

interpretation given to the holding by the Administrative Law

Judge ("ALJ"):

The Commission made clear that in the
particular circumstances surrounding the
Seabrook contract, it retains power--
through the "public interest" language--
to make modifications under the
traditional just and reasonable and
nondiscrimination standards.

Id. ___

We found that the standard enunciated by the

Commission and applied by the ALJ, "conflates the 'just and

reasonable' and 'public interest' standards, thereby

circumventing the Mobile-Sierra doctrine." Id. We stated _____________ ___

that

the Commission was bound to follow the
Mobile-Sierra doctrine as explicated by _____________
Papago, and therefore should have ______
evaluated the SPC under the public
interest standard, not the just and
reasonable standard.



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Id. We remanded the issue "for reconsideration by FERC under ___

the public interest standard." Id. at 962. ___

It is FERC's position that on remand it

reconsidered its previously ordered modifications of the

Seabrook Power contract under the public interest standard

and affirmed the orders previously issued under that

standard.

NUSCO contends that FERC did not comply with our

mandate but instead created a wholly new version of the

public interest standard which is more flexible and less

stringent than the judicially adopted public interest

standard.

Standard of Review Standard of Review __________________

Not surprisingly, the parties differ on the

standard of review to be followed. FERC urges that we follow

the same deferential standard as we did in our prior case:

On review, we give great deference to the
Commission's decision. U.S. Dep't of ______________
Interior v. FERC, 952 F.2d 538, 543 (D.C. ________ ____
Cir. 1992). FERC's findings of fact are
reviewed under the "substantial evidence"
standard of review. 16 U.S.C. 825l
("The finding of the Commission as to the
facts, if supported by substantial
evidence, shall be conclusive.").

. . . .

"Pure" legal errors require no deference
to agency expertise, and are reviewed de __
novo. Questions involving an ____
interpretation of the FPA involve a de __
novo determination by the court of ____
Congressional intent; if that intent is


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ambiguous, FERC's conclusion will only be
rejected if it is unreasonable. Chevron _______
USA v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ___ _________________________________
467 U.S. 837, 842-56, 104 S. Ct. 2778,
2781-83, 81 L.Ed. 2d 694 (1984); Boston ______
Edison Co. v. FERC, 856 F.2d 361, 363 ___________ ____
(1st Cir. 1988).

Northeast I, 993 F.2d at 943-44. ___________

NUSCO, on the other hand, plumps for the "law of

the case" doctrine, arguing that we issued a mandate that had

to be strictly construed and followed.

In this circuit the "law of the case" doctrine has

not been construed as an inflexible straitjacket that

invariably requires rigid compliance with the terms of the

mandate. In United States v. Connell, 6 F.3d 27, 31 (1st _____________ _______

Cir. 1993), we noted:

To be sure, neither the law of the case
doctrine nor its kissing cousin, the so-
called "mandate rule," is designed to
function as a straitjacket. Rather,
these are discretion-guiding principles,
generally thought to be subject to
exceptions in the interests of justice.

So also we said in United States v. Bell, 988 F.2d 247, 251 _____________ ____

(1st Cir. 1993):

After all, the so-called "mandate rule,"
generally requiring conformity with the
commands of a superior court on remand,
is simply a specific application of the
law of the case doctrine and, as such, is
a discretion-guiding rule subject to an
occasional exception in the interests of
justice.

In Doe v. Anrig, 728 F.2d 30, 31 (1st Cir. 1984), ___ _____

Justice Breyer, then circuit judge, reached back to Judge


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Learned Hand and Justice Holmes for an explanation of the

meaning of the law of the case doctrine:

That doctrine "does not rigidly bind a
court to its former decisions, but is
only addressed to its good sense."
Higgins v. California Prune & Apricot _______ ____________________________
Grower, Inc., 3 F.2d 896, 898 (2d Cir. ____________
1924) (L. Hand, J.). See Messenger v. ___ _________
Anderson, 225 U.S. 436, 444, 32 S. Ct. ________
739, 740, 56 L. Ed. 1152 (1912) (Holmes,
J.) ("the phrase, law of the case, as
applied to the effect of previous orders
on the later action of the court
rendering them in the same case, merely
expresses the practice of courts
generally to refuse to reopen what has
been decided, not a limit to their
power"). (Other citations omitted.)

Under the circumstances, we will review the actions

of FERC under the usual deferential standard, but always

keeping in mind the restraints imposed on FERC by the terms

of our mandate and the "law of the case" doctrine.

The Case Law The Case Law ____________

We think it necessary to revisit the Mobile-Sierra _____________

doctrine, which represents the Supreme Court's attempt to

strike a balance between private contractual rights and the

regulatory power to modify contracts when necessary to

protect the public interest. We start with United Gas Co. v. ______________

Mobile Gas Corp., 350 U.S. 332 (1956). The issue in Mobile ________________ ______

was, "whether under the Natural Gas Act . . . a regulated

natural gas company furnishing gas to a distributing company

under a long-term contract may, without the consent of the

distributing company, change the rate specified in the


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contract simply by filing a new rate schedule with the

Federal Power Commission." Id. at 333-34 (statutory citation ___

omitted). The facts can be summarized as follows. Mobile

Gas Service (Mobile) was a distributor of natural gas to

users (domestic and industrial) in Mobile, Alabama. Mobile

obtained its gas from United Gas Co. (United). In 1946 the

Ideal Cement Company (Ideal) decided to build a cement plant

in the city if it could be assured gas supplied at a

sufficiently low rate. Mobile agreed to supply Ideal with

gas for ten years at 12 cents per MCF (thousand cubic feet).

Before entering into the contract with Ideal, Mobile obtained

from United a ten-year contract to supply gas to Mobile for

resale to Ideal at the rate of 10.7 cents per MCF. This was

a substantially lower rate than other gas furnished by

United. This contract was filed with the Federal Power

Commission and with its approval, became a part of United's

filed schedule of rates and contracts. In June of 1953,

United, without the consent of Mobile, filed new rate

schedules with the Commission purporting to increase the rate

on gas to be sold by Mobile to Ideal to 14.5 cents per MCF.

Id. at 335-36. ___

The Court held that the Natural Gas Act did not

give natural gas companies the right to change their rate

contracts unilaterally. Id. at 337. The Court noted that ___

the Act "evinces no purpose to abrogate private rate



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contracts as such." Id. at 338. It pointed out that the ___

public interest was protected by the supervision of the

individual rate contracts filed with the Commission. Id. at ___

339. The Court explained its rationale as follows:

Our conclusion that the Natural Gas
Act does not empower natural gas
companies unilaterally to change their
contracts fully promotes the purposes of
the Act. By preserving the integrity of
contracts, it permits the stability of
supply arrangements which all agree is
essential to the health of the natural
gas industry. Conversion by consumers,
particularly industrial users, to the use
of natural gas may frequently require
substantial investments which the
consumer would be unwilling to make
without long-term commitments from the
distributor, and the distributor can
hardly make such commitments if its
supply contracts are subject to
unilateral change by the natural gas
company whenever its interests so
dictate. The history of the Ideal
contract furnishes a case in point. On
the other hand, denying to natural gas _______________________
companies the power unilaterally to _________________________________________
change their contracts in no way impairs _________________________________________
the regulatory powers of the Commission, _________________________________________
for the contracts remain fully subject to _________________________________________
the paramount power of the Commission to _________________________________________
modify them when necessary in the public _________________________________________
interest. The Act thus affords a ________
reasonable accommodation between the
conflicting interests of contract
stability on the one hand and public
regulation on the other.

Id. at 344 (emphasis added). ___

We make two observations. First, the obvious, that

the facts of Mobile are quite different from those in the ______

case at bar. The issue here is not whether one party to a



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rate contract filed with FERC can effect a rate change

unilaterally, but the standard to be used by FERC in

examining electric power contracts filed with it. Our second

observation is that nowhere in the Supreme Court opinion is

the term "public interest" defined. Indeed, the Court seems

to assume that the Commission decides what circumstances give

rise to the public interest.

We next examine the other leg of the Mobile-Sierra _____________

doctrine, FPC v. Sierra Pacific Power Co., 350 U.S. 348 ___ __________________________

(1956), which came down on the same day as Mobile and was ______

also written by Justice Harlan. In Sierra, the Court, for ______

the reasons given in Mobile, held that the filing of a new ______

rate by an electric power utility (Pacific Power Gas &

Electric Company) and the finding of the Federal Power

Commission that such new rate was not unlawful, could not

change Pacific Gas' contract rate for supplying electricity

to Sierra Pacific Power Co. Id. at 352-53. ___

The Court addressed a second question, not present

in Mobile, which directly involved the "public interest" ______

doctrine. In its decision finding that the new rate was

lawful, the Commission held that the old contract rate was

unreasonable solely "because it yields less than a fair

return on the net invested capital." Id. at 354-55. The ___

Court held:

But, while it may be that the Commission
may not normally impose upon a public ______


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utility a rate which would produce less
than a fair return, it does not follow
that the public utility may not itself
agree by contract to a rate affording
less than a fair return or that, if it
does so, it is entitled to be relieved of
its improvident bargain. In such circum- _______________
stances the sole concern of the _________________________________________
Commission would seem to be whether the _________________________________________
rate is so low as to adversely affect the _________________________________________
public interest -- as where it might _________________________________________
impair the financial ability of the _________________________________________
public utility to continue its service, _________________________________________
cast upon other consumers an excessive _________________________________________
burden, or be unduly discriminatory. _________________________________________
That the purpose of the power given the
Commission by 206(a) is the protection
of the public interest, as distinguished
from the private interests of the
utilities, is evidenced by the recital in
201 of the Act that the scheme of
regulation imposed "is necessary in the
public interest." When 206 (a) is read
in the light of this purpose, it is clear
that a contract may not be said to be
either "unjust" or "unreasonable" simply
because it is unprofitable to the public
utility.

Id. at 355 (citation omitted) (emphasis added). ___

The holding of Sierra is clear; what justifies ______

protective action in the public interest by the Commission

when it is considering whether a contract rate is too low is __________________________________________________________

where the rate might impair the financial ability of the

utility to continue to supply electricity, force electricity

consumers to bear an excessive burden, or be unduly

discriminatory. This definition of what is necessary in the

public interest was formulated in the context of a low-rate ________

case. It was not and could not be an across-the-board

definition of what constitutes the public interest in other


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types of cases. One of the orders at issue in the case at

bar is the submission by NUSCO to FERC of the cost of

decommissioning the Seabrook Power Plant. The other order

had to do with changing the rate of return-in-equity formula.

Neither were low-rateissues inthe context ofMobile andSierra. ______ ______

The next case directly implicated in our remand

order is Papago Tribal Authority v. FERC, 723 F.2d 950 (D.C. _______________________ ____

Cir. 1983), cert. denied, 467 U.S. 1241 (1984). This was _____ ______

also a low-rate case. The facts may be summarized as

follows. The Commission approved an increase in electric

rates paid to the Arizona Public Service Company. The Papago

Tribal Utility Authority objected on the ground, inter alia, _____ ____

that its contract with Arizona did not permit unilaterally

proposed rate changes under 205 of the Federal Power Act,

16 U.S.C. 824(d). Id. at 951-52. At issue was the ___

interpretation of the contract between Arizona and Papago and

the authority of the Commission to modify it. The contract

provided in pertinent part:

The rates hereinabove set out in this
Section 3 . . . are to remain in effect
for the initial one (1) year of the term
of this contract and thereafter unless
and until changed by the Federal Power
Commission or other lawful regulatory
authority, with either party hereto to be
free unilaterally to take appropriate
action before the Federal Power
Commission or other lawful regulatory
authority in connection with changes
which may be desired by such party.




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Id. at 953. Papago, like the case before us, was an appeal ___ ______

after a remand. In the first appeal the court held that the

contract did not permit unilaterally effected rate increases

under 205 of the Act. The Federal Power Commission held in

its Order on Remand that after its first year, the contract _______________

permitted changes under 206 of the Act on the basis of a

just and reasonable standard. The court agreed and

interpreted the contract as follows: "the restriction

envisioned during the first year of the contract must allow

rate changes required by the public interest. The scheme to

be in effect 'thereafter' -- obviously intended to be less

restrictive -- must therefore permit changes that are just

and reasonable." Papago, 723 F.2d at 954. ______

During the course of its opinion the court quoted

the "public interest" standard from Sierra, 350 U.S. at 355. ______

Papago, 723 F.2d at 953. The court then went on to say in ______

dictum:

[S]pecific acknowledgment of the
possibility of future rate change is
virtually meaningless unless it envisions
a just-and-reasonable standard. The
public interest standard is practically
insurmountable; the Commission itself is
unaware of any case granting relief under
it. Future rate changes would be a dim
prospect, hardly worthy of recognition,
if the parties did not intend the just-
and-reasonable standard to govern.

Id. at 954 (citation omitted). ___





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Papago has unfortunately been identified with the ______

notion that the "public interest" standard of review is

"practically insurmountable," regardless of the circumstances

of the case. This is the misreading that NUSCO presses upon

us as the law of the case. We do not think that Papago, read ______

in context, means that the "public interest" standard is

practically insurmountable in all circumstances. It all

depends on whose ox is gored and how the public interest is

affected.

It should be noted that neither Mobile nor Sierra ______ ______

stated or intimated that the "public interest" doctrine was

"practically insurmountable." This was a gloss that the

court in Papago put on it. In Northeast I we said that the ______ ___________

"public interest" standard was "a more difficult standard for

the Commission to meet than the statutory 'unjust and

unreasonable' standard," 993 F.2d at 960. We, however, did

not characterize the public interest standard as "practically

insurmountable."1

____________________

1. Contrary to NUSCO's suggestion at oral argument, Boston ______
Edison v. FERC, 856 F.2d 361 (1st Cir. 1988) is not ______ ____
controlling here. In Boston Edison, we relied in part on the _____________
Mobile-Sierra doctrine to enforce a claims limitation clause _____________
of a rate contract against customers who failed to timely
protest an overcharge. We found nothing "unconscionable,
overweening, or otherwise unreasonable" about the clause,
even with respect to the parties to the contract. Id. at 372 ___
(noting that the clause "enhances economic equilibrium by
bringing certainty to the parties' dealings . . . ."). FERC
and the customers did not, and clearly could not, argue that
the claims limitation clause was contrary to the public
interest. See id. at 372 n.12 ("we leave for another day the ___ ___

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Our opinion also recognized that "[t]he most

attractive case for affording additional protection [under

the public interest standard], despite the presence of a

contract, is where the protection is intended to safeguard

the interests of third parties . . . ." Northeast I, 993 ___________

F.2d at 961. As we explained, the Mobile-Sierra doctrine _____________

allows FERC to modify the terms of a private contract when

third parties are threatened by possible "undu[e]

discrimination" or the imposition of an "excessive burden."

Id. We invited FERC to demonstrate such a threat upon ___

remand. See id. at 961-62 (assuming without deciding that ___ ___

FERC's premise facts were correct, but remanding for

evaluation of the contract under the public interest

standard.)

Although our opinion questioned the significance of

the seller's market power and the lack of arms-length

bargaining, id. at 961, it left open the possibility that ___

these factors may so affect third parties as to warrant

intervention even under the public interest standard. See ___

id. ("there would seem to be little justification for the ___

Commission stepping in on behalf of the disfavored subsidiary

absent some threat to the public interest") (emphasis added). _________________________________________

For all of these reasons, we reject NUSCO's argument that


____________________

contours of any . . . exception" to claims limitation clauses
based upon "public necessity").

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under the law of the case the public interest standard should

be considered "practically insurmountable" in all

circumstances.

The Order on Remand The Order on Remand ___________________

We turn to FERC's explanation of how it applied the

"public interest" doctrine on remand.

We conclude that if the Commission is
to comply with both the Mobile-Sierra _____________
imperative to respect private contractual
arrangements, on the one hand, and our
statutory mandate to protect the public
interest and ensure that rates are just
and reasonable and not unduly
discriminatory or preferential, on the
other, the "public interest" standard of
review under the Mobile-Sierra doctrine _____________
cannot be "practically insurmountable" in
all cases. In the "classic" Mobile- _______
Sierra situation, for example -- when a ______
seller utility unilaterally seeks an
increase from a fixed-rate contract
already on file with the Commission --
the public interest (as opposed to the
private interest of the party seeking the
rate increase) only rarely is served by
making the requested change (that is,
granting the requested increase), and a
strict standard is appropriate. In other
situations, however -- when, for example,
as here, the Commission is presented with
an agreement for the first time and
concludes that certain modifications to
material rate provisions are necessary to
protect the interests of non-parties --
the public interest is served by making
the modifications, and a more flexible
standard is therefore appropriate. Based
upon that understanding of the public
interest standard of review under the
Mobile-Sierra doctrine, we confirm our _____________
previously ordered modifications to the
Seabrook Power Contract.

66 F.E.R.C. 61,332 at 62,076 (1994) (footnotes omitted).


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In its order on remand, FERC has responded to our

concerns by explaining how the disputed contractual terms may

harm third parties to the contract. It no longer relies so

heavily upon the possibility that the contract may favor one

party over another. For example, the Commission found the

automatic rate-of-return-on-equity adjustment provision

unacceptable because third parties may ultimately bear the _____________

burden of a rate component that does not reflect actual

capital market conditions. Likewise, the "blank check" given

owners of the power plant to determine the decommissioning

costs for themselves under New Hampshire law is impermissible

because it may be cashed at the expense of non-parties to the

contract. See 66 F.E.R.C. 61,332 at 62,090-91. This new ___

emphasis on harm to third parties suggests that FERC has done

more on remand than simply substitute the words "public

interest" for the forbidden phrase "just and reasonable."

We end by noting the decision in Mississippi Indus. __________________

v. FERC, 808 F.2d 1525 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied 484 U.S. 985 ____ _____ ______

(1987), a post-Papago case similar to the case at bar, which ______

shows that even the court that authored Papago does not take ______

an unduly restrictive view of the public interest standard.

FERC had ordered that the four electric power companies

comprising the Middle South Utilities System share the cost

of the system's investment in nuclear energy in proportion to

their relative demand for energy generated by the system as a



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whole. FERC reallocated responsibility for investment costs

"associated with the catastrophically uneconomical Grand Gulf

I nuclear plant." Id. at 1528. The court turned back a ___

jurisdictional challenge based, inter alia, on the Mobile- __________ _______

Sierra doctrine. It held, ______

that, in the instant case, this doctrine
does not bar the exercise of FERC's power
under section 206 of the FPA to reform a
practice or contract affecting a rate
charged by a public utility for wholesale
service in interstate commerce.

Id. at 1551. The court's discussion of the sweep of the ___

Mobile-Sierra doctrine is instructive. _____________

Finally, even if the contracts fall
within the scope of the Mobile-Sierra _____________
decisions, the Supreme Court has
emphasized that the relevant agency, here
FERC, may always reform a contract found
to be "unlawful" or "contrary to the
public interest," i.e., that "contracts ____
remain fully subject to the paramount
power of the Commission to modify them
when necessary in the public interest."
The Court stated in Sierra that the ______
Commission "has undoubted power under
206(a) to prescribe a change in contract
rates whenever it determines such rates
to be unlawful" and indicated three
circumstances under which the Commission
might conclude that a rate or a contract
term affecting a rate could be found
contrary to the public interest and
therefore subject to revision: "where it
might impair the financial ability of the
public utility to continue its service,
cast upon consumers an excessive burden,
or be unduly discriminatory." Here FERC
expressly adopted the findings of ALJ
Liebman who found the level of
discrimination in the [contract]
"profound" and agreed that its impact on
customers in Louisiana and Mississippi


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would be "dramatic[]." The Commission's
specific determination of unlawfulness
provides the "unequivocal public
necessity" for reformation of the
[contract] under section 206 of the FPA.

Id. at 1553 (footnotes omitted). ___

We conclude that under the circumstances of this

case FERC, on remand, gave thoughtful consideration to the

public interest in reviewing its previously ordered

modification of the Seabrook Power contract. We, therefore,

deny NUSCO's petition for review and affirm FERC's order. We

go no further. Specifically, we are not in any way

suggesting the parameters of or limitations on the authority

of FERC to change the contract in future rate proceedings.





























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