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New Mexico Compilation
Commission, Santa Fe, NM
'00'04- 08:53:12 2017.10.26
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
Opinion Number: 2017-NMSC-028
Filing Date: September 18, 2017
Docket No. S-1-SC-36169
ALBUQUERQUE CAB COMPANY, INC.,
Appellant,
v.
NEW MEXICO PUBLIC REGULATION COMMISSION,
Appellee,
and
Q CAB, LLC,
Intervener-Appellee,
CONSOLIDATED WITH
Docket No. S-1-SC-36174
YELLOW-CHECKER CAB COMPANY, INC.,
Appellant,
v.
NEW MEXICO PUBLIC REGULATION COMMISSION,
Appellee,
and
Q CAB, LLC,
Intervener-Appellee.
1
APPEAL FROM THE NEW MEXICO PUBLIC REGULATION COMMISSION
Cadigan Law Firm, P.C.
Michael J. Cadigan
Albuquerque, NM
for Appellant Albuquerque Cab Company, Inc.
Sanchez, Mowrer & Desiderio, P.C.
Armand Damacio Huertaz
Raymond G. Sanchez
Albuquerque, NM
for Appellant Yellow-Checker Cab Company, Inc.
Judith Ellen Amer
Santa Fe, NM
for Appellee
Jason Marks Law, LLC
Jason A. Marks
Albuquerque, NM
for Intervener
OPINION
DANIELS, Justice.
{1} This is a direct appeal from a final order of the New Mexico Public Regulation
Commission (PRC) granting a taxicab certificate to Q Cab for a new taxicab service in
Albuquerque. This Court consolidated two separate appeals of that order by two preexisting
Bernalillo County taxicab companies, Albuquerque Cab Company (Albuquerque Cab) and
Yellow-Checker Cab Company (Yellow Cab).
{2} This case came before the PRC under recently amended portions of the Motor Carrier
Act, NMSA 1978, § 65-2A-1 to -41 (2003, as amended through 2017). The 2013
amendments created separate designations for “municipal” and “general” taxicab services,
see § 65-2A-3(T)(3), (U)(2) (2013), and added a definition of fitness, Section 65-2A-3(R)
(2013), which a candidate taxicab company must show and the PRC must find before an
applicant may operate, see § 65-2A-8(B)(1). The parties ask this Court to interpret the Motor
Carrier Act with respect to both the parameters of fitness and the privileges and
responsibilities of existing municipal taxicabs when they protest new taxicab applications.
2
I. BACKGROUND
{3} On December 28, 2015, Q Cab, LLC applied to the PRC for a certificate to provide
general taxicab services on a small scale within Bernalillo County. On January 13, 2016,
Yellow Cab filed a protest and motion to intervene. Yellow Cab is a municipal taxicab
company operating in Bernalillo and Sandoval counties. On January 19, 2016, Albuquerque
Cab filed a protest of and objection to Q Cab’s application. Albuquerque Cab is also a
municipal taxicab company operating in Albuquerque and surrounding areas. Both protesting
companies had territories that overlapped with the territory Q Cab had proposed for its
operation.
{4} The PRC designated a hearing examiner to consider Q Cab’s application along with
the protests and to draft a recommended decision for the PRC. The hearing examiner
conducted a public hearing on May 9 and 10, 2016. On August 15, 2016, the hearing
examiner recommended that the PRC reject arguments of Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab
that they are municipal taxicab companies statutorily protected against Q Cab’s entry into
the market. The hearing examiner also found that Q Cab was not fit and able to provide
general taxicab service and that granting its application would be contrary to the public
interest. The hearing examiner recommended that the PRC deny Q Cab’s application. On
August 29, 2016, Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab each filed exceptions to the
recommended decision relating to their protected status, and Q Cab and PRC Transportation
Division staff filed joint exceptions relating to the issue of Q Cab’s fitness. On October 5,
2016, the PRC voted to adopt the recommendation of the hearing examiner denying
Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab the claimed statutory protection and to adopt the joint
exceptions filed by Q Cab and PRC Transportation Division staff and thereby reject the
recommended finding that Q Cab was unfit to operate. The PRC approved Q Cab’s
application.
{5} Additional facts are set forth below as they pertain to each issue.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
{6} The New Mexico Supreme Court has jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to Section
65-2A-35(A) and Rule 12-102(A)(2) NMRA of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
{7} In reviewing orders of the PRC, the Supreme Court must determine whether the PRC
decision is “arbitrary and capricious, not supported by substantial evidence, outside the
scope of the agency’s authority, or otherwise inconsistent with law.” Att’y Gen. of N.M. v.
N.M. Pub. Regulation Comm’n, 2011-NMSC-034, ¶ 9, 150 N.M. 174, 258 P.3d 453; see §
65-2A-35(C).
{8} “‘[A]n agency’s action is arbitrary and capricious if it provides no rational
3
connection between the facts found and the choices made, or entirely omits consideration
of relevant factors or important aspects of the problem at hand.’” Colonias Dev. Council v.
Rhino Envtl. Servs. Inc., 2005-NMSC-024, ¶ 41, 138 N.M. 133, 117 P.3d 939 (alteration in
original) (citation omitted). “An agency abuses its discretion when its decision is not in
accord with legal procedure or supported by its findings, or when the evidence does not
support its findings.” Oil Transp. Co. v. N.M. State Corp. Comm’n, 1990-NMSC-072, ¶ 25,
110 N.M. 568, 798 P.2d 169. “[S]ubstantial evidence means such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion,” Toltec Int’l, Inc. v.
Village of Ruidoso, 1980-NMSC-115, ¶ 3, 95 N.M. 82, 619 P.2d 186, “‘and we neither
reweigh the evidence nor replace the fact finder’s conclusions with our own,’” Albuquerque
Bernalillo Cty. Water Util. Auth. v. N.M. Pub. Regulation Comm’n, 2010-NMSC-013, ¶ 18,
148 N.M. 21, 229 P.3d 494 (citation omitted).
{9} When a final order turns on an agency’s determination of matters within its special
expertise, this Court gives heightened deference to the agency’s determination. See
Morningstar Water Users Ass’n v. N.M. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 1995-NMSC-062, ¶ 11, 120
N.M. 579, 904 P.2d 28. However, “we apply a de novo standard of review to the PRC’s
rulings regarding statutory construction.” Albuquerque Bernalillo Cty. Water Util. Auth.,
2010-NMSC-013, ¶ 50. We read related statutes in harmony and give effect to all provisions.
El Paso Elec. Co. v. N.M. Pub. Regulation Comm’n, 2010-NMSC-048, ¶ 7, 149 N.M. 174,
246 P.3d 443.
B. Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab Are Not Statutorily Protected from
Competing Applicants
{10} As providers of municipal taxicab services, Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab hold
certificates under the amended Motor Carrier Act, issued by the PRC soon after the 2013
amendments took effect. They argue that these certificates protect them from Q Cab’s entry
into their full-service territories under Section 65-2A-13(D)(2), which specifies that the PRC
“shall not grant an application . . . for a new certificate for general taxicab service within the
full-service territory of a protesting municipal taxicab service carrier.”
{11} General and municipal taxicab companies are regulated differently. A municipal
taxicab service is one
that deploys vehicles at all times of the day and year, is centrally dispatched
and reasonably responds to all calls for service within its endorsed full-
service territory regardless of profitability of the individual trip, in addition
to the transportation service provided by a general taxicab service.
Section 65-2A-3(GGG)(1) (2013). A general taxicab service is one
that need not be dispatched, that may pick up on-demand passengers through
flagging or at a taxicab stand or queue, that need not deploy vehicles in any
4
particular manner and that may charge for trips to destination points or places
outside of the taxicab service’s certificated territories on the basis of a set
fare.
Section 65-2A-3(GGG)(2) (2013).
{12} The version of 18.3.2.9 NMAC in effect in October 2016 when the PRC issued the
Final Order specified that both municipal taxicab services and general taxicab services
(1) may not provide ambulance service, scheduled or general shuttle
service, specialized passenger service, or household goods service;
(2) shall charge rates based on one charge for the first person and an
additional small fixed charge for each additional person;
(3) shall grant exclusive direction to the first person engaging the taxicab
service;
(4) may provide one-way transportation of passengers;
(5) may solicit business on the streets or may prearrange to provide
service; [and]
(6) may not use chauffeur-driven luxury motor vehicles to provide
taxicab service.
18.3.2.9(G), (H) NMAC (02/13/2015). And these regulations imposed the additional
requirements that municipal taxicab services
(7) must respond to 95% of all pre-arranged calls for service within eight
minutes of the time agreed upon for the taxicab to be at the customer’s
location;
(8) must respond to 85% of all calls for immediate service within 30
minutes of receiving the request for service; and
(9) except for hailed or for pre-arranged service []hereby defined as “any
call requesting service made 30 minutes or longer before service is required”
may only respond to calls for service that are dispatched by the taxicab
service; in determining if the requirements of Paragraphs (7) and (8) above
are met, the commission may examine a municipal taxicab service’s response
times based on six-month rolling average.
18.3.2.9(G) NMAC (02/13/2015).
{13} Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab view these additional regulatory requirements as
one side of a trade-off where, “[i]n exchange for operating under these extra burdens, the
PRC is obligated to ensure that full-service providers have the ability to perform at optimal
levels and are not impaired or damaged by unfit or unnecessary additional providers being
allowed into the market.” Albuquerque Cab argues that it has not been adequately protected
from competition and that this case follows a trend wherein the PRC has been “stretching,
5
bending, and in some cases, breaking the Motor Carrier Act in the interest of free enterprise
and allowing new companies into the market without regard for the Act.”
{14} But Q Cab argues, the hearing examiner determined, and the PRC concluded that the
protection is not automatic and that Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab both failed to meet
their obligation under Section 65-2A-13(C)(2) that “a protesting carrier has the burden of
proving all matters of fact pertaining to its full-service operation within its certificated full-
service territory.”
{15} We agree with Q Cab. Reading Sections 65-2A-13(D)(2) and 65-2A-13(C)(2) in
harmony means that protestants (1) must be PRC-certified providers of municipal taxicab
service for the relevant full-service territory under Subsection (D)(2) and (2) must prove “all
matters of fact pertaining to [their] full-service operation within [the] certificated full-service
territory” under Subsection (C)(2).
{16} Although they maintain that their certificates automatically protect them under
Section 65-2A-13(D)(2), Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab did provide some evidence
below about their provision of full-service taxicab operations within their territories.
Albuquerque Cab testified that its dispatchers record the time of a call and that drivers record
the time of the pickup in response to the call. Administrative staff members review the
drivers’ “trip sheets” after each day’s activity and compare them to the dispatchers’ records
of when calls were received. Albuquerque Cab testified that it is periodically audited by
Bernalillo County and the City of Albuquerque through contract programs to determine
whether it meets prescribed response times. The company claims to have complied with
regulations based on not having received an auditor’s “letter [of] findings in several years.”
But Albuquerque Cab presented no audit results during the administrative proceedings, nor
could it confirm that recent audits had evaluated response times for relevant calls within any
time period pertinent to the proceedings. Yellow Cab offered a printout of response times
for approximately two hundred calls on February 1, 2016, and argued that this set of calls
demonstrated its regulatory compliance. The hearing examiner was unimpressed, calling the
submission “flawed raw data . . . from one day that contained no analysis.”
{17} We hold that Section 65-2A-13(D)(2) does not automatically protect municipal
taxicab companies from new entrants and that Section 65-2A-13(C)(2) requires protesting
municipal taxicab companies to demonstrate that they are providing full-service taxicab
operation within their certificated territories. Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab did not meet
their statutory burden of proof, and we affirm the PRC on this issue.
{18} On a related point specific to this case, the PRC order for its Transportation Division
staff to reissue municipal taxicab certificates to operating carriers as of the July 1 effective
date of the 2013 amendments required that any carrier with a reissued certificate “bears the
burden of proving that it provides adequate service in any case involving an application for
a new authority.” NMPRC Case No. 13-00209-TRM, June 26, 2013, PRC Order on Staff’s
Petition at 6-7; see also § 65-2A-3(M)(1) (2013) (requiring, “for full-service carriers,
6
reasonably continuous availability . . . of transportation services . . . which are reasonably
adequate to serve the entire full-service territory authorized in the certificate”). Albuquerque
Cab and Yellow Cab were among those original certificate holders, and at the time of these
proceedings neither company had yet borne its burden of proof. Both companies were on
notice that they must prove their full-service operations, which both companies failed to do
below.
C. Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab Both Failed to Demonstrate Impairment
{19} Although Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab did not sufficiently prove “all matters
of fact pertaining to [their] full-service operation,” § 65-2A-13(C)(2), this Court could still
reverse the Final Order if the PRC should have found that Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab
demonstrated Q Cab’s entrance into their territories would impair passenger service. Section
65-2A-13(D)(3) provides that the PRC shall not approve a taxicab application if doing so
“presents a reasonable potential to impair, diminish or otherwise adversely affect the existing
provision of full-service passenger service to the public in the full-service territory or if the
application is otherwise contrary to the public interest in the full-service territory.” The
provision further specifies that “[d]iversion of revenue or traffic from an existing motor
carrier shall not . . . be sufficient grounds for denying the application without a showing that
the diversion presents a reasonable potential to affect the provision of full-service passenger
service to the community,” id., qualifying the statutory intent as not for protecting municipal
taxicab business interests but for assuring the availability of transportation to the public. The
PRC must conduct hearings on any protests to applications, see § 65-2A-13(B), during which
a protesting carrier has “the burden of proving the potential impairment or adverse impact
on its existing full-service operation,” § 65-2A-13(C)(2), and for which “all parties . . . may
base their demonstration and proof on business data, experienced persons and mathematical
calculations,” § 65-2A-13(C)(4).
{20} Applicant Fitsum Tesfa, Q Cab founder and owner, was the only driver at the time
of the Q Cab application. Tesfa testified that Q Cab consisted of one vehicle ready to
operate, a 2003 Lincoln Town Car. Q Cab intended to put a second and a third vehicle into
operation, both not ready at the time of the application, and eventually to add a fourth.
Throughout these proceedings, the position of Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab was that
they had already experienced impairment of profits by the emergence of ride-share
businesses like Uber and Lyft and could not withstand the addition of “even a very small
competitor.”
{21} Albuquerque Cab testified below that it had dropped from sixty-five to forty-five
drivers between 2014 and 2016, that it had experienced a 20 percent drop in revenue
between 2013 and 2015, and that the company was essentially “‘operating in the red.’”
Albuquerque Cab reported a drop in gross income of approximately 33 percent between
2008 and 2015, including a 17 percent drop between 2014 and 2015. Yellow Cab reported
below that “in the last couple of years” it decreased the number of operating taxicabs from
sixty-five to fifty-five in 2015 and “took 12 more off the road” in 2016. In 2014, Yellow Cab
7
had approximately 14,000 calls per month, but calls dropped to about 13,000 per month in
2015. In March 2016 Yellow Cab reported a 24 percent decline in gross revenue in the
previous five years, including losses of $10,000 for 2014-15 and $125,000 for 2015-16.
{22} Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab testified that if Q Cab were allowed to enter the
market, their business could be crippled.1 The accountant for Yellow Cab testified, in
response to a hypothetical question, that if Yellow Cab faced a loss of 5 to 10 percent of its
existing call volume to another competitor, the company “would lose additional drivers and
would soon reach the point where they would have to close their doors as there would not
be enough revenues to cover the fixed costs of doing business.” A PRC Transportation
Division staff economist disputed that statement, noting that no financial statements
supported the reported revenue losses and testifying that, despite the declining revenues,
“Yellow Checker Cab Company still show[s] a gross profit of 21 percent as of March 2016.”
{23} Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab argue in this Court that their misfortunes are
further compounded by the service they must provide, “regardless of profitability of any
individual trip,” by virtue of their designations as municipal taxicab companies, while a
general taxicab company like Q Cab “will be able to cherry pick profitable rides, leaving
municipal taxis to take the unprofitable ones.” But Q Cab observed that the cab companies
offered no particularized evidence that Q Cab’s entry into the market would affect service,
noting that both Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab “testified that they provided high quality
levels of service, despite the pressures of competition from . . . companies . . . like Uber” and
stating for example that “Albuquerque Cab presented . . . evidence of business pressures
accruing from . . . competition to-date, but did not introduce evidence that Q Cab’s entry
would cause it to go out of business or stop providing full service.”
{24} The hearing examiner ultimately determined that “there was not sufficient credible
evidence that the entry of this Applicant taxicab would reasonably lead to the Protestors’
current service to the public being discontinued or adversely [a]ffected in any way” and
recommended a finding that Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab had failed to demonstrate
impairment under 65-2A-13(D)(3). The PRC adopted this recommendation.
{25} We uphold the PRC determination on this point. The protests against the Q Cab
application amounted to the distress of Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab about then-
existing competition and their speculation about the effect of the entry of Q Cab. Neither
Albuquerque Cab nor Yellow Cab provided evidence that allowing Q Cab to operate would
cause actual impairment of either their businesses or the passenger service within their
1
Albuquerque Cab has since exited the market and filed for a voluntary suspension
of its certificate. On April 20, 2017, in response to an application stating that “Albuquerque
Cab, in its current form, cannot continue to operate as a municipal taxi service with the
attendant regulatory requirements which demand significant dedication of revenue,” the PRC
Transportation Division granted the requested one-year suspension.
8
territories.
D. The PRC Determination That Q Cab Is Fit to Operate Is Supported by
Substantial Evidence and Is Within Its Discretion
{26} Section 65-2A-8(B) specifies in relevant part that “the commission shall issue a
certificate . . . if: (1) the applicant is fit and able to provide the transportation service to be
authorized by the certificate” and “(2) the applicant is in compliance with the safety and
financial responsibility requirements of the Motor Carrier Act, the rules of the commission
and other applicable federal and state laws and rules.” The Motor Carrier Act qualifies an
applicant as fit to provide transportation service if the “applicant . . . complies with state law
as provided in the Motor Carrier Act or by rule of the commission.” Section 65-2A-3(R)
(2013). This Court in Bernalillo Cty. Health Care Corp. v. N.M. Pub. Regulation Comm’n,
2014-NMSC-008, ¶¶ 24-25, 319 P.3d 1284, overturned a PRC-approved ambulance
certificate as arbitrary and capricious because of a litany of noncompliant practices by the
applicant who
failed to pay its gross receipt taxes, failed to comply with [a state motor
carrier regulation] (requiring a “notarized oath of the applicant attesting that
all statements in the application are true and correct”) by providing false
statements regarding its balance sheets, and failed to have a consultant
pharmacist as required by [the state licensing regulation]. Evidence was
presented that [the applicant] had been billing at rates other than its tariff rate
for scheduled transports in violation of Section 65-2A-20(C) [(2003)]. . . .
[P]ast violations included: operating without an appropriate authority from
the Commission, for which it received a $1,000 fine[, and] responding to
emergencies with only one EMT in violation of [a state motor carrier
regulation that] requires a minimum of two EMTs.
Bernalillo Cty. Health Care, 2014-NMSC-008, ¶ 24.
{27} This Court viewed these offenses as “material violations of laws and regulations
directly bearing on a company’s financial integrity” and therefore pertinent under Section
65-2A-8(B)(2) (2003). Bernalillo Cty. Health Care, 2014-NMSC-008, ¶ 25. But we
cautioned that, “it would be unreasonable to conclude that the Legislature intended that an
applicant be denied a certificate for violating any statute or rule.” Id.
{28} Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab argue for a broad reading of the definition of
fitness in Section 65-2A-3(R) (2013) to include not only violations of law but also generally
misleading behavior that they allege occurred here. A chief complaint of Albuquerque Cab
and Yellow Cab centers on photographs Tesfa posted on a Facebook page for his business
before it was certified. The photos showed the car that he planned to use for Q Cab taxicab
service, adorned with signage indicating the name of his business, a made-up PRC permit
number, and logos for credit card companies. Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab analogize
9
to Bernalillo Cty. Health Care. Albuquerque Cab argues that the premature signage
amounted to a “rather explosive finding of fraud.”
{29} Counsel for Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab also criticize Tesfa’s initial lack of
understanding of the rules governing his proposed business. Albuquerque Cab and Yellow
Cab complained that Tesfa repeated, “I will ask my lawyer” in his testimony when
questioned about various rules, procedures, and practices. The hearing examiner was
suspicious of Tesfa’s claims not to understand English and thought that some of Tesfa’s
misrepresentations—including signing a statement that he had read the Motor Carrier Act
before he actually had—could not be attributed to language difficulties. The hearing
examiner also believed Tesfa had lied about market research, claiming at his deposition to
have talked to people and watched people taking taxis when on cross-examination it came
to light that he had only read online reviews on Yelp.
{30} The PRC and Q Cab characterize the same behaviors very differently, attributing
them to honest mistakes and Tesfa’s difficulty understanding English, and point out that
Tesfa has since remedied any shortcomings in his application. Tesfa explained that he did
not understand the significance of the numbers when he photographed them on his car but
had seen similar numbers on other taxicabs, that he wanted to show his friends how his
taxicab would look, and that all signage was removed from his taxicab before the hearing.
Tesfa and the PRC Transportation Division staff maintain that by the time of the hearing,
Tesfa had undertaken “a course of action to get each [regulatory] requirement met” without
regard to expense, had utilized legal services to compensate for the language barrier, “had
met all requirements for certification, [and] was compliant with state law . . . and compliant
with the [statutory] fitness requirements.” At the hearing on May 9, 2016, Tesfa testified that
he had read and understood the applicable regulations.
{31} The PRC could have reasonably found either for or against Q Cab on the issue of
fitness to operate, but substantial evidence supports the determination of fitness that the PRC
made. It is not necessary to decide whether legal but false representations need to be
considered in an evaluation of fitness under Section 65-2A-3(R) (2013) because the PRC
determined that Tesfa’s misrepresentations were innocent, not sinister, and that he had cured
them. This was a highly fact-based finding within PRC discretion, and we defer to it.
{32} We also reject the suggestion by Albuquerque Cab and Yellow Cab that the PRC
unlawfully declined to follow the findings of the hearing examiner on the issue of fitness.
Albuquerque Cab argues that PRC “regulations require that PRC decisions state reasons for
deviating from a hearing officer’s findings and conclusions,” in reliance on 1.2.2.37(A)(3)
NMAC: “The commission may issue an order which makes reference to the recommended
decision and indicate disagreements with the hearing examiner and the commission may
make further or modified findings and conclusions based on the record.” Contrary to the
argument of Albuquerque Cab, the permissive wording of that regulatory provision allows
for discretion in the scope and content of final PRC orders when the PRC disagrees with a
hearing examiner’s findings.
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{33} An agency need not expressly articulate reasoning for a decision as long as the record
contains sufficient support for it. See Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. N.M. Water Quality
Control Comm’n, 2004-NMCA-073, ¶¶ 13-14, 136 N.M. 45, 94 P.3d 788 (describing the
requirement to articulate its reasoning as “unduly onerous for the [c]ommission and
unnecessary for the purposes of appellate review” where a sufficient record exists); see also
Bass Enters. Prod. Co. v. Mosaic Potash Carlsbad Inc., 2010-NMCA-065, ¶ 48, 148 N.M.
516, 238 P.3d 885 (requiring “a rational connection between the facts found and choices
made” by the PRC in its order). While it would have been more helpful to this Court if the
PRC included in the record an explanation of the reasoning underlying its Final Order, we
cannot hold that it was unlawful for the PRC to omit it.
E. It is Unnecessary to Reach Q Cab’s Constitutionality Argument
{34} Q Cab argues that Section 65-2A-13(D)(2), if its intent is to serve as a de facto bar
on general taxicab applicants in municipal taxicab territory, improperly “allows incumbents
to immunize themselves from price competition under color of law.” Because we decide this
case on other grounds, we decline to reach this constitutional issue.
III. CONCLUSION
{35} We affirm the Final Order of the PRC in this case.
{36} IT IS SO ORDERED.
____________________________________
CHARLES W. DANIELS, Justice
WE CONCUR:
____________________________________
JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Chief Justice
____________________________________
PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice
____________________________________
EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
____________________________________
BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
11