United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
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No. 01-3782
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Alliant Energy; Aquila Power; *
Basin Electric Power Cooperative; *
British Columbia Hydropower *
Exchange; Citizen Power Sales, *
LLC; Dairyland Power *
Cooperative; GYN-SYS Energy; *
Great River Energy; Kansas City *
Power & Light Company; Lincoln *
Electric System; Mid American *
Energy Company; Minnesota *
Municipal Power Agency; *
Minnesota Power, Inc.; Minnkota *
Power Cooperative; Northern *
States Power Company; Omaha *
Public Power District; Otter Tail * Appeal from the United States
Power Company; Rainbow Energy * District Court for the District of
Marketing; Southern Minnesota * Minnesota.
Municipal Power Agency; St. *
Joseph Light & Power; Sunflower *
Electric Power Corporation; *
Tenaska Power Services *
Company; Utilicorp United, Inc.; *
Wisconsin Public Power, Inc., *
*
Plaintiffs - Appellees, *
*
United States of America, on *
behalf of the Western Area Power *
Administration, Department of *
Energy, *
Intervenor Plaintiffs - *
Appellee, *
*
v. *
*
Nebraska Public Power District, a *
public corporation and political *
subdivision of the State of *
Nebraska, *
*
Defendant - Appellant. *
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Submitted: January 16, 2003
Filed: October 24, 2003
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Before HANSEN,1 Chief Judge, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, and SMITH,
Circuit Judges.
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SMITH, Circuit Judge.
Members of the Mid-Continent Area Power Pool ("MAPP") and the Western
Area Power Administration ("WAPA") sued the Nebraska Public Power District
("NPPD") for breach of contract. NPPD–also a MAPP member–collected fees from
its customers under a special provision of the MAPP contract (the "Restated
Agreement"). Other MAPP members collected similar charges from their customers.
Later, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") declared some of these
1
The Honorable David R. Hansen stepped down as Chief Judge of the United
States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit at the close of business on March 31,
2003. He has been succeeded by the Honorable James B. Loken.
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fees discriminatory and ordered MAPP members to make refunds. Appellees made
refunds, but NPPD refused to do so. This suit then ensued. After the district court2
granted summary judgment in favor of Appellees, NPPD appealed. We affirm.
I.
MAPP is a voluntary, unincorporated association composed of energy
companies–including investor-owned, cooperative, and public utilities. MAPP was
established so that its members may pool resources to coordinate efficient, reliable
production and distribution of electric service within its geographic region.3 Each of
the parties in this case is a member of MAPP and signatory to the enabling
agreement–known as the Restated Agreement. The Restated Agreement sets forth the
contractual rights and obligations of all MAPP members.
MAPP has amended the Restated Agreement as the electric utility industry has
evolved. Once the bastion of large, integrated monopolies, the industry entered a
transitional phase during the 1990s, which incorporated some aspects of market
competition. The migration of the electric utility industry towards a competitive
economic model required changes in MAPP's operation. Hence, MAPP has
occasionally modified its Restated Agreement to address the changing economic and
regulatory environment. Specifically, in 1996, MAPP amended the Restated
Agreement to establish rates for transactions with non-MAPP members. The new
section–Section 2.4 of Schedule F–required MAPP members "to compensate [other]
Members for third party use of their systems in connection with [these] sales or
2
Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judge for the District
of Minnesota.
3
MAPP currently has over 100 members in the following states and provinces:
Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Wisconsin, Montana,
Iowa, South Dakota, Kansas, and Missouri. App. at 59, 444. NPPD, like many of
MAPP's members, is a public corporation and electric utility company. Id.
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purchases." After Section 2.4 was enacted, NPPD and the other MAPP members
began to collect tariffs for such third party use.4
However, in April, 1999, FERC issued a specific order requiring MAPP to
eliminate Section 2.4 due to unacceptable "inconsistent pricing."5 Enron Power
Mktg., Inc. v. Mid-Continent Area Power Pool, 87 Fed. Energy Reg. Comm'n Rep.
(CCH) ¶ 61,075 (Apr. 15, 1999). The FERC order required MAPP to remove Section
2.4 from Schedule F of the Restated Agreement and to refund the charges to these
customers. The order applied retroactively to March 1, 1997. On November 1, 1999,
MAPP's board of directors complied. Accordingly, MAPP's members refunded their
portion of excess charges that they received under the discriminatory tariff. NPPD,
however, refused. As a result, Appellees sued NPPD for breach of contract. In the
suit, Appellees requested a refund of the excess charges, which were calculated to be
$2,396,578.63, that NPPD collected under the invalidated section.
After the suit was filed, Appellees moved for summary judgment. In its order,
the district court found that the Restated Agreement obligated all members–including
NPPD–to refund the charges that FERC found discriminatory. The court thus granted
Appellees' motion and ordered NPPD to refund the excess charges. On appeal, NPPD
4
Prior to 1994, the Restated Agreement required MAPP members to provide
free, reciprocal transmission service over their transmission facilities. In 1994, the
Restated Agreement was amended; MAPP titled this amendment "Schedule F." After
Schedule F was enacted, MAPP members were permitted to charge each other a fee
for transmission service over their transmission facilities. However, Schedule F set
this fee at a discounted, distance-based rate rather than at the usual individual
transmitting members' tariff rates. MAPP then collected and pooled the transmission
charges and paid the members of MAPP for the use of their system from the pooled
funds.
5
The FERC order was appealed and the United States Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia affirmed FERC's ruling. Alliant Energy Corp. v. FERC, 253
F.3d 748, 750 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
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argues that (1) the Restated Agreement contains no express provisions which require
NPPD to refund the excess charges; and that (2) FERC has no jurisdiction over state
entities like NPPD. We disagree and hold that these arguments fail to encompass
NPPD's full contractual liability under that Restated Agreement.
II.
"We review de novo a grant of summary judgment, applying the same standard
as the district court." Forrest v. Kraft Foods, Inc., 285 F.3d 688, 691 (8th Cir. 2002)
(citation omitted). "Summary judgment is proper if the evidence, viewed in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party, demonstrates that no genuine issue of
material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
Thomas v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 308 F.3d 891, 893 (8th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted).
In this diversity case, we also review the district court's interpretation of Minnesota
law de novo. Walk v. Starkey Mach., Inc., 180 F.3d 937, 939 (8th Cir. 1999) (citations
omitted).6
A.
NPPD first notes that when MAPP amended the Restated Agreement, MAPP
failed to insert an express provision that required NPPD to retroactively refund the
tariffs. Because the Restated Agreement provides no such provision and because the
FERC orders cannot directly apply to NPPD, NPPD reasons that it is not required to
retroactively reimburse the discriminatory tariffs. However, we find such an argument
unpersuasive.
Admittedly, MAPP did not insert an express provision, which would have
required NPPD to retroactively refund the discriminatory tariffs. However, MAPP did
not have to. When a contract provides that its terms are subject to a regulatory body,
6
Article 13.8 of the Restated Agreement provides that the laws of
Minnesota control the obligations and procedures of the Agreement.
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all parties to that contract are bound by the actions of the regulatory body. Inter-City
Gas Corp. v. Boise Cascade Corp., 845 F.2d 184, 187 (8th Cir. 1988) (holding that
parties to a contract, which provided that its rates "may be approved, ordered or set
by any valid law, order, rule or regulation of any . . . regulatory authority . . . having
jurisdiction," were bound by a FERC determination, even though they were not
directly subject to FERC's jurisdiction); Holbein v. Austral Oil Co., 609 F.2d 206, 208
& n.3 (5th Cir. 1980) (holding that all parties to a gas purchase contract, which was
"subject to all present and future . . . lawful orders of all regulatory bodies . . . having
jurisdiction[,]" had to follow the mandates of FERC's predecessor–whether they were
subject to the agency's jurisdiction or not). As a result, we are not enforcing the FERC
order; instead, we are enforcing an agreement, which NPPD freely entered.
In this case at least two sections in the Restated Agreement subject NPPD to
regulatory authority. For instance, Article 13.9 of the Restated Agreement provides
that it "is subject to the regulation of any regulatory body or governmental agency
having jurisdiction thereof."7 In addition, Article 14.1 of the Restated Agreement
makes the entire contract subject to FERC approval. Thus NPPD, when it signed the
Restated Agreement, bound itself to any FERC-ordered modification of the Restated
Agreement–despite the fact that FERC normally would not be able to order NPPD to
do anything.
In this instance, FERC declared Section 2.4 to Schedule F discriminatory. It
therefore ordered the MAPP members over which it had jurisdiction to remove the
Section and required them to refund any such tariffs retroactively to March 1, 1997.
MAPP's board complied, revised the Restated Agreement to be consistent with
FERC's order, and ordered that members refund the tariffs retroactively. Thus,
7
NPPD offers an interpretation of Article 13.9 that "regulatory body" means
NPPD's board rather than FERC because only its board has authority over it. This
construction is strained and ignores that the Article refers to the jurisdiction over the
Agreement rather than the parties to it.
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FERC's amendment to terms of the agreement modified the obligations of all parties
to the agreement, including NPPD. Or, in other words, because NPPD is a member
of MAPP and a signatory to the Restated Agreement, it too is contractually required
to refund the tariffs imposed under Section 2.4–regardless of whether the contract
expressly provides for it.8
B.
NPPD also argues that as a subdivision of the State of Nebraska, it has a
"special status" under the Restated Agreement and thus is not subject to FERC
jurisdiction. Notably, NPPD points to Article 13.15 of the Restated Agreement. That
Article provides in pertinent part:
[N]otwithstanding any other provision of this Restated Agreement, no
Member shall be required to take any action . . . that (a) it is not
permitted by law to undertake or that is prohibited in whole or in part by
any law or regulation applicable to such Member, or (b) would require
such Member to violate a provision of such law or regulation in order to
comply with this Restated Agreement.
NPPD then points to Nebraska Revised Statutes § 70-655, which requires NPPD to
establish NPPD's own rates. Thus, concludes NPPD, an order that requires another
body to establish a rate for it would violate Nebraska law. This in turn, urges NPPD,
would violate Article 13.15 of the Restated Agreement.
However, a contract is to be interpreted so as to give meaning to all of its
provisions. Brookfield Trade Ctr., Inc. v. County of Ramsey, 584 N.W.2d 390, 394
(Minn. 1998); see also Nebraska Pub. Power Dist. v. MidAmerican Energy Co., 234
8
As noted previously, every other MAPP member has complied with the
FERC refund requirements–including the Omaha Public Power District, which like
NPPD is a public corporation and public subdivision of the State of Nebraska.
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F.3d 1032, 1042 (8th Cir. 2000) (holding that the law "forbids a party to pick and
choose among favorable contract clauses, but rather requires each clause to be read
in light of the entire contract"). By solely focusing on a narrow section of Article
13.15, NPPD misses the Restated Agreement's larger purpose, which is to provide
nondiscriminatory transmission services in accordance with FERC policies. This plan
is found throughout the Restated Agreement, including Articles 13.9 and 14.1. Thus,
despite the language of Article 13.15, the Restated Agreement as a whole provides
that NPPD and every other signatory to the Restated Agreement are to follow FERC
mandates.
Moreover, even if we were to ignore the purpose of the Restated Agreement
and only follow the language of Article 13.15, the terms of Article 13.15 require that
NPPD seek a waiver from the other provisions of the Restated Agreement.
Immediately following the portion that NPPD has highlighted, Article 13.15 provides
that "[e]ach Member shall seek such approvals . . . as may be necessary to comply
with this Restated Agreement. . . ." However, NPPD has not done this. As a result,
NPPD's second argument also fails.
III.
Thus, for the reasons stated above, we affirm the district court.
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