Bangor Gas Company, LLC v. H.Q. Energy Services (US) Inc. , 695 F.3d 181 ( 2012 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 12-1386
    BANGOR GAS COMPANY, LLC,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    H.Q. ENERGY SERVICES (U.S.) INC,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. Nancy Torresen, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Lynch, Chief Judge,
    Torruella and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
    Richard N. Selby, II with whom Dworken & Bernstein Co.,
    L.P.A., Adam R. Lee and Skelton, Taintor & Abbott were on brief for
    appellant.
    Linda M. Glover with whom Justin B. Whitley, John B. Rudolph,
    Winstead PC, Jotham D. Pierce, Jr., Nolan L. Reichl and Pierce
    Atwood LLP were on brief for appellee.
    September 26, 2012
    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.       A pipeline owner--Bangor Gas
    Company, LLC ("Bangor")--and a natural gas supplier--H.Q. Energy
    Services (U.S.) Inc. ("HQUS")--entered into a contract for the
    transportation of HQUS' natural gas.         The parties later became
    embroiled in a dispute and submitted their dispute to binding
    arbitration.   After the arbitrators issued a decision largely
    favorable to HQUS, Bangor sought to vacate the decision in the
    district court, failed, and has now brought this appeal.
    HQUS, a wholly owned American subsidiary of the Canadian
    government-owned   utility   Hydro-Quebec,    sells   natural   gas   and
    electricity in the United States. Bangor provides services related
    to the natural gas industry in Maine.   In 1999, Bangor entered into
    an agreement with HQUS (the "Agreement") to build and operate a
    Bangor pipeline, later named the Bucksport Pipeline, to deliver
    HQUS' natural gas from an international pipeline nine miles away
    called the Maritimes Pipeline, owned and operated by Maritimes &
    Northeast Pipeline, LLC ("Maritimes"), to the Bucksport Energy
    Facility (an energy plant that served a paper mill).
    The contract provided that HQUS' gas would be delivered
    over the Bucksport Pipeline for fifteen years for a fixed annual
    charge of $1,150,662, paid by HQUS in monthly installments.
    However, Bangor did not connect the origin end of the Bucksport
    Pipeline directly to the existing Maritimes Pipeline; instead,
    Bangor contracted to have Maritimes build a 410-foot lateral
    -2-
    pipeline (the "Lateral") that connected the Maritimes Pipeline to
    the Bucksport Pipeline and agreed that Bangor would pay Maritimes
    for the Lateral's use pursuant to a tariff filed by Maritimes with
    the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC").
    Bangor's expert later explained that this was done for
    technical reasons relating to proximity to electric power lines.
    Nonetheless, the Lateral was not mentioned in the Agreement, and
    the Agreement's    language   may   suggest   that   the   parties   to   it
    contemplated that the Bucksport Pipeline would directly connect to
    the Maritimes Pipeline.       It was apparently not until 2006, six
    years after the Bucksport Pipeline opened, that HQUS learned of the
    Lateral and that the Bucksport Pipeline did not connect directly to
    the Maritimes Pipeline.
    During this six-year period, HQUS paid the agreed upon
    rate to Bangor; Bangor in turn compensated Maritimes for the use of
    the short Lateral pipeline of whose existence HQUS was ignorant.
    This harmonious state of affairs began to dissolve when Bangor was
    itself acquired by a parent company which apparently concluded that
    Bangor's compensation of Maritimes might be in violation of rules
    or policies of the FERC, the federal agency which now regulates
    much of the traffic in natural gas in the United States.
    Under a FERC edict known as the "shipper-must-have-title"
    rule, a shipper of natural gas must hold title to the gas it is
    shipping.   The rule is not a codified regulation but was announced
    -3-
    by FERC in an adjudication of a specific dispute.1   The aim of the
    rule is to prevent big natural gas distributors from buying up
    pipeline capacity that they do not need for shipment of their own
    gas and leveraging their market power by selling the capacity to
    third parties at excessive prices.
    Bangor concluded that, as the party who controlled the
    capacity of the Lateral by virtue of its lease, it would be deemed
    under FERC's nomenclature "the shipper" of gas traveling over the
    Lateral.    And, as HQUS owned gas traveling through the Lateral,
    Bangor might be deemed in violation of the shipper-must-have-title
    rule.    Bangor consulted with FERC with the result that, in 2007,
    FERC found that Bangor had violated the shipper-must-have-title
    rule with respect to the Lateral (as well as another pipeline), and
    approved a consent agreement by which Bangor paid a $1 million
    fine.    Bangor Gas Co., LLC, 118 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,186 (2007).
    Beginning in 2006, Bangor sought to comply with the rule
    by entering into "capacity releases" with HQUS in which HQUS would
    replace Bangor as the party who held capacity rights in the
    Lateral, and thus as the "shipper" on the Lateral.   In the earliest
    of these capacity releases HQUS did not pay the costs of using the
    Lateral; but HQUS began paying those costs in August 2009 after
    1
    Tex. E. Transmission Corp., 37 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,260, at 61,685
    (1986); see also Demarest, Gas Marketing by the Operator Under a
    JOA--Unrecognized Regulatory Risks and Practical Solutions, 
    64 Okla. L. Rev. 135
    , 136-38 (2012).
    -4-
    Bangor threatened to place its capacity rights on the Lateral up
    for competitive bidding. Whether HQUS should pay became one of the
    two main issues in the ensuing dispute between the two companies.
    The other dispute involved the costs for heater fuel to
    heat the gas at two points: at the connection between the Lateral
    and the start of Bucksport Pipeline, and at the end of the
    Bucksport Pipeline as the gas enters the energy plant.             The latter
    satisfied a contractual obligation of Bangor to deliver the gas at
    80EF or above.      The Agreement was silent on who was to pay for
    heating.   Bangor had been paying for the heater fuel since the
    inception of the agreement, but in 2009 Bangor asserted that HQUS
    should pay those costs.
    The Agreement provided that irreconcilable disputes would
    be   submitted     to   binding    arbitration,     and   Bangor   initiated
    arbitration   on    December      6,   2010.     Each   party   selected   one
    arbitrator, and those two arbitrators chose a third arbitrator; all
    three were experienced in the energy industry, and one was a former
    FERC Commissioner. Bangor sought to have HQUS pay both the Lateral
    costs and the heater fuel costs.             HQUS denied responsibility and
    counterclaimed for a reimbursement of payments it had made for the
    Lateral since 2009.2
    2
    The Agreement specified that Bangor was responsible for
    delivering gas from the point of receipt, defined as "[t]he outlet
    of the meter installed at the interconnection between the Maritimes
    Pipeline and the distribution facilities of [Bangor]." The meter
    is located at the connection between the Lateral and the Bucksport
    -5-
    The arbitration panel reviewed briefs, written testimony
    and documents submitted by the parties, and held a three-day
    hearing.   On September 1, 2011, the panel issued a written award
    that was largely favorable to HQUS, deciding that Bangor was
    responsible for paying Maritimes for use of the Lateral.               As to
    heater costs, the arbitrators placed the future cost burden for
    heating at the delivery end upon HQUS but declined to order it to
    pay for past heating.
    On the Lateral costs issue, the arbitrators noted that
    the   Agreement   contemplated   that    the   Bucksport    Pipeline   would
    connect to the Maritimes Pipeline, which meant that the parties
    thought that HQUS was purchasing for its original monthly payment
    transportation of gas all the way from the Maritimes Pipeline to
    the   energy   plant.   The    panel    inferred   from    Bangor   internal
    documents that the contract rate in Bangor's bid to HQUS already
    accounted for the cost of transporting gas on the 410 feet that
    comprised the Lateral and the cost of the junction point meter
    installed by Maritimes.       Thus, forcing HQUS to pay Maritimes in
    addition to paying Bangor would unjustly require HQUS to pay twice
    for the transportation and meter.
    The panel acknowledged that the shipper-must-have-title
    rule posed difficulties but the panel adopted a two-part solution:
    Pipeline, so Bangor argued that it should not be responsible for
    paying for transportation on the Lateral, which occurs before the
    gas reaches the meter.
    -6-
    (1) Bangor would continue to release its capacity on the Lateral to
    HQUS, and HQUS would pay Maritimes for use of the Lateral, but (2)
    Bangor would reimburse HQUS for the Lateral costs in the form of a
    comparably reduced rate for use of the Bucksport Pipeline.                  In
    addition, the panel ordered Bangor to reimburse HQUS for costs that
    HQUS (under threat) had already paid to Maritimes.
    On the heater fuel issue, the panel decided that HQUS
    should pay for the fuel for the heater at the site of the energy
    plant, later making clear that Bangor would pay for heating at the
    origin   end.      The    panel   stated    that    under   standard   industry
    practice, the customer ordinarily paid for the heater fuel required
    to meet a customer-specific need and it viewed this to be the basis
    for the heating at the delivery point.
    The panel decided to make the award as to the heater fuel
    prospective and not retroactive, citing a number of equitable
    factors: (1) that the issue is "a close question that is not
    directly addressed in the Agreement"; (2) that Bangor's history of
    paying for the fuel led HQUS to legitimately expect continued
    payment; and (3) that documenting and calculating past heater fuel
    costs would be "difficult and contentious."                   HQUS ultimately
    accepted this disposition of the heating cost issue; Bangor did
    not.
    After    the    award,   both    sides    sought   clarification.
    Pertinently, Bangor expressed concern that the panel's capacity
    -7-
    release   and   reimbursement   solution   could   still   violate   FERC
    regulations, and that Bangor could end up paying further large
    penalties.      Bangor asked the panel to stay the award until it
    received a response to a letter Bangor had sent to FERC staff
    seeking assurance against a FERC enforcement action.          The panel
    denied the request, stating that it was "not at all likely" that
    FERC would find the arrangement illegal.      However, the panel
    direct[ed] that HQUS promptly provide to
    Bangor written confirmation that it will
    return any reimbursement amounts it receives
    from Bangor, and will repay any capacity
    release payment amounts it credits against
    payments otherwise due under the Bangor/HQUS
    service agreement, to the extent necessary to
    comply with any finding by the FERC that the
    reimbursement and crediting arrangements are
    not consistent with FERC policy.
    HQUS subsequently provided Bangor with the written commitment.
    On November 10, 2011, FERC's General Counsel and Director
    of the Office of Enforcement denied Bangor's request that FERC
    staff issue a "No-Action Letter" promising that enforcement actions
    would not be brought against Bangor for implementing the panel's
    reimbursement remedy.    Instead, the staff expressed its view that
    "[t]he Panel's remedy . . . would violate the Commission's posting
    and bidding regulations," which state that a capacity release must
    be posted for competitive bidding, unless it is done at the maximum
    applicable rate under the pipeline's tariff filed with FERC.          
    18 C.F.R. § 284.8
    (c)-(e), (h)(1) (2012).
    -8-
    Although Bangor's release of capacity on the Lateral to
    HQUS in terms required HQUS to pay the maximum rate, the FERC staff
    stated that the reduced Bucksport Pipeline charges accepted by
    Bangor      amounted   to   a   discount   on     the    Lateral    payments     that
    triggered the competitive bidding requirements.                    The staff noted
    that "this response only expresses Staff's position on enforcement
    action and does not express any legal conclusions on the questions
    presented," and that it "is not binding on the Commission."                      In a
    subsequent letter to HQUS, the same FERC staff reiterated that its
    previous letter was not binding, stating that if "HQ Energy or
    Bangor wants a definitive answer from the Commission, it may file
    for a declaratory order, as the Commission speaks through its
    orders."
    On November 30, 2011, Bangor Gas filed a motion with the
    district court under the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 
    9 U.S.C. §§ 1-16
        (2006),   to    vacate   in   part    and    confirm    in   part   the
    arbitration award.          The request to vacate aimed at the panel's
    imposition of Lateral costs on Bangor and at the panel's refusal to
    require repayment by HQUS of past destination-end heater costs
    incurred by Bangor.         Bangor also argued that the FERC staff letter
    triggered HQUS' commitment to refund past Lateral reimbursements to
    Bangor.     Ultimately, the district court denied Bangor's motion and
    granted HQUS' motion to confirm the award.
    -9-
    We review the district court's decision de novo, but our
    review of the arbitration award itself is "extremely narrow and
    exceedingly deferential."    Bull HN Info. Sys., Inc. v. Hutson, 
    229 F.3d 321
    , 330 (1st Cir. 2000) (quoting Wheelabrator Envirotech
    Operating Servs. Inc. v. Mass. Laborers Dist. Council Local 1144,
    
    88 F.3d 40
    , 43 (1st Cir. 1996)).           The FAA "embodies a national
    policy   favoring   arbitration,"    Buckeye   Check   Cashing,   Inc.   v.
    Cardegna, 
    546 U.S. 440
    , 443 (2006), and provides only a narrow set
    of statutory grounds for a federal court to vacate an award:
    (1)   where  the   award   was  procured         by
    corruption, fraud, or undue means;
    (2) where there was evident partiality or
    corruption in the arbitrators, or either of
    them;
    (3) where the arbitrators were guilty of
    misconduct in refusing to postpone the
    hearing, upon sufficient cause shown, or in
    refusing to hear evidence pertinent and
    material to the controversy; or of any other
    misbehavior by which the rights of any party
    have been prejudiced; or
    (4) where the arbitrators exceeded their
    powers, or so imperfectly executed them that a
    mutual, final, and definite award upon the
    subject matter submitted was not made.
    
    9 U.S.C. § 10
    (a).
    In addition, this court in the past recognized a common
    law ground for vacating arbitration awards that are in "manifest
    disregard of the law," McCarthy v. Citigroup Global Mkts. Inc., 
    463 F.3d 87
    , 91 (1st Cir. 2006) (quoting Wonderland Greyhound Park,
    -10-
    Inc. v. Autotote Sys., Inc., 
    274 F.3d 34
    , 35 (1st Cir. 2001), while
    limiting this notion primarily to cases where the award conflicts
    with the plain language of the contract or where "the arbitrator
    recognized the applicable law, but ignored it."     Gupta v. Cisco
    Sys., Inc., 
    274 F.3d 1
    , 3 (1st Cir. 2001).
    The manifest-disregard doctrine has been thrown into
    doubt by Hall Street Associates, L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., 
    552 U.S. 576
     (2008), where the Supreme Court "h[e]ld that [
    9 U.S.C. § 10
    ] .
    . . provide[s] the FAA's exclusive grounds for expedited vacatur."
    Id. at 584 (emphasis added).    This has caused a circuit split,3
    with this court saying (albeit in dicta) that "manifest disregard
    of the law is not a valid ground for vacating or modifying an
    arbitral award in cases brought under the Federal Arbitration Act,"
    Ramos-Santiago v. United Parcel Serv., 
    524 F.3d 120
    , 124 n.3 (1st
    Cir. 2008).
    Even if the manifest-disregard doctrine were assumed to
    survive and were applied in this case, the award neither conflicts
    3
    Compare Wachovia Secs., LLC v. Brand, 
    671 F.3d 472
    , 480 (4th
    Cir. 2012) (recognizing continuing validity of manifest disregard
    doctrine), Johnson v. Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc., 
    635 F.3d 401
    , 415 n.11 (9th Cir. 2011) (same), Stolt-Nielsen SA v.
    AnimalFeeds Int'l Corp., 
    548 F.3d 85
    , 94 (2d Cir. 2008), rev'd on
    other grounds, 
    130 S. Ct. 1758
     (2010) (same), and Coffee Beanery,
    Ltd. v. WW, L.L.C., 300 Fed. App'x 415, 418 (6th Cir. 2008)
    (unpublished opinion) (same), with Frazier v. CitiFinancial Corp.,
    
    604 F.3d 1313
    , 1324 (11th Cir. 2010) (rejecting manifest disregard
    doctrine as invalid), Citigroup Global Mkts., Inc. v. Bacon, 
    562 F.3d 349
    , 350 (5th Cir. 2009) (same), and Crawford Grp., Inc. v.
    Holekamp, 
    543 F.3d 971
    , 976 (8th Cir. 2008) (same).
    -11-
    with the plain language of the Agreement nor did the arbitrators
    recognize the applicable law but ignore it.         The panel resolved
    what is at best an argument about how a contract of questionable
    meaning should be read and harmonized with a FERC doctrine on
    leasing capacity.   Under settled precedent, an FAA award cannot be
    overturned based on mere disagreement by the court with the panel
    on a debatable issue, Advest, Inc. v. McCarthy, 
    914 F.2d 6
    , 9 (1st
    Cir. 1990); and in this instance the panel's decision is in our
    view entirely reasonable.
    The Lateral Issue.       Bangor argues that the panel's
    decision to make Bangor pay for the Lateral costs was in manifest
    disregard of the law on two grounds: that the panel's ruling
    contravenes the clear language of the Agreement by making Bangor
    responsible for Maritimes' charges for the Lateral's use, and that
    the panel's remedy results in a violation of FERC regulations (and
    by extension, a principle of Maine contract law that disfavors the
    enforcement of illegal contracts).      Both claims are that the panel
    ignored the law, but in two quite different ways.
    The   first   claim,   resting   on   interpretation   of   the
    Agreement, is hopeless.     The better reading of the Agreement is
    that HQUS' ongoing monthly payments to Bangor already compensate
    Bangor for moving the gas from Maritimes' main line to HQUS'
    customer; indeed, Bangor seemingly calculated the monthly charge on
    that assumption.    In commissioning the Lateral, Bangor chose to
    -12-
    hand off part of its obligation to Maritimes, and is now trying to
    make HQUS shoulder the cost a second time over.            Nothing in the
    Agreement mentions the Lateral, let alone obliges HQUS to pay
    separately for its use.
    Admittedly, the Agreement requires Bangor to start paying
    at the "Point of Receipt," which is defined as the meter that is
    located at the origin end of the Lateral; but it was Bangor's own
    undisclosed choice to make the connection with Maritimes--and thus
    to locate the junction meter--at a point 400 feet away from where
    HQUS reasonably expected it to be.       The Agreement, by contrast,
    contemplated   a   pipeline   "between   the   Maritimes   and   Northeast
    Pipeline and the Energy Plant."          Bangor's claim based on the
    Agreement is plainly wrong.
    More difficult is Bangor's argument that the panel's
    remedy of capacity releases and reimbursements places Bangor in
    violation of FERC requirements.     There is, it should be stressed,
    no basis for claiming the Agreement itself violated the FERC's
    governing statute or its pertinent rules or regulations: had Bangor
    built its Bucksport Pipeline to run from Maritimes' main line as
    was contemplated, no Lateral line would have been required.
    Bangor's difficulties with FERC ensued afterwards and from Bangor's
    unilateral action in commissioning the Lateral.
    But FERC rules and regulations are, so far as they are
    valid, in the nature of sovereign commands representing a public
    -13-
    purpose; and we will assume (arguendo but with some confidence)
    that an arbitration award would be vulnerable to the extent that it
    directed one or both of the parties clearly to violate a such a
    mandate.     Yet there is nothing clear-cut about FERC's actual
    intentions, ample reason to think a reasonable agency would stay
    its hand, and fair precautions adopted by the panel if FERC acts
    otherwise.
    Here, the panel considered FERC rules and regulations and
    structured its award in a way that it "believe[d] . . . [would be]
    fully consistent with FERC policy."     In its initial decision, the
    panel sought to accommodate the shipper-must-have-title rule by
    having Bangor release its capacity to HQUS, which would thereby
    become the shipper as well as the owner of the gas.           Thus, as a
    formal matter, HQUS would become responsible to pay Maritimes for
    the capacity,   albeit   compensated   by   a   reduced   charge   on   the
    Bucksport Pipeline, the monthly payment for which already covered
    the transportation of gas from Maritimes' main pipeline onward.4
    4
    Under the panel's arrangement, HQUS acquired usage rights to
    the Lateral capacity and thus became "the shipper"; and, as it was
    also the owner of the gas, the shipper-must-have-title was
    satisfied--as it had not been when Bangor held the usage rights and
    was heavily fined by FERC in the earlier consent order. The FERC
    staff's problem with the panel's remedy does not concern the
    shipper-must-have-title rule; rather, it concerns the separate
    regulation dictating that capacity releases (such as Bangor's
    release to HQUS on the Lateral) must be posted for competitive
    bidding unless they are at the maximum FERC tariff rate. See 
    18 C.F.R. § 284.8
    (c)-(e), (h)(1).
    -14-
    True enough, the FERC staff thereafter said that the
    release of capacity by Bangor without competitive bidding could be
    viewed as charging the required "maximum rate" in form, while in
    substance reducing that price through the reimbursements Bangor
    paid HQUS for transportation on the Bucksport Pipeline.              But, as
    the staff admitted, FERC is not obliged to take this view.
    Alternatively, FERC could accept the staff position but (in our
    view) reasonably waive its maximum-rate regulations in the peculiar
    circumstances of this case.
    The shipper-must-have-title rule was designed to deal
    with a problem perceived by FERC as the agency sought to create a
    competitive market in pipeline capacity as part of a long-term
    effort to (in some measure) deregulate the industry.                Pipelines
    potentially possess market power over gas transportation, but the
    agency provided incentives and later mandates for the pipelines to
    make       capacity   available   on     a    market   basis   to   competing
    intermediaries; the aim to create and maintain that competitive
    market in transportation capacity is the premise of the rules and
    regulations of concern here.5
    5
    Order No. 436, Regulation of Natural Gas Pipelines After
    Partial Wellhead Decontrol, 
    50 Fed. Reg. 42,408
    , 42,413, 42,424
    (Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n Oct. 18, 1985) (providing incentives
    for pipelines to offer unbundled transportation services); Order
    No. 636, Pipeline Service Obligations and Revisions to Regulations
    Governing Self-Implementing Transportation; and Regulation of
    Natural Gas Pipelines After Partial Wellhead Decontrol, 
    57 Fed. Reg. 13,267
    , 13,270 (Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n Apr. 16, 1992)
    (mandating that pipelines offer unbundled transportation services
    -15-
    But maintaining a competitive market in pipeline capacity
    transfers is primarily important in large capacity pipes that might
    be used by multiple shippers and often for multiple destinations;
    in that situation, if one "customer" or a small group were able to
    buy up capacity beyond their own needs, they might forestall
    competition by charging excessive prices for re-releases to others
    or   impose     discriminatory   policies   that   disadvantage    smaller
    competitors.       This is the expressed explanation for both the
    shipper-must-have-title rule and the bidding regulation.          See note
    4, above.
    But the present 410-foot Lateral was designed simply to
    serve the Bucksport Pipeline, which was itself aimed to send gas a
    mere nine miles from the main Maritimes Pipeline to a single
    customer, and Bangor had already committed the Bucksport Pipeline
    to carry HQUS gas to the energy plant at the far end.             In these
    circumstances, the rationale for the shipper-must-have-title rule
    and maximum-tariff-rate regulations seems minimal; and imposed
    bidding for the Lateral capacity would be of benefit only to a
    spoiler who might aim to hold up Bangor and HQUS alike.
    Further, while Bangor might perhaps have been properly
    sanctioned for a naked (albeit seemingly harmless) violation of the
    on nondiscriminatory terms); see also U.S. Gen. Accounting Office,
    GAO/RCED-87-133BR, Natural Gas Regulation: Pipeline Transportation
    Under FERC Order 436, at 13-14 (1987); McGrew, 
    FERC 118
    -19 (2d ed.
    2009).
    -16-
    shipper-must-have-title rule by its original decision to outsource
    its obligations, forbidding the panel remedy would merely give
    Bangor   an    unjustified   (and   probably   temporary)   advantage   by
    transferring costs to HQUS--the innocent party--for which Bangor
    was contractually responsible and for no obvious public end.
    Assuming a court would permit FERC to so act, it is hard to see why
    FERC would care to do so.
    It is hardly surprising that the staff felt unable to
    provide assurance against such a risk or that it felt compelled to
    point out the formal danger posed by the panel's remedy; this
    follows both from bureaucratic imperatives familiar to anyone who
    has served in government and from a due regard for the comparative
    authority of the staff vis-à-vis the commissioners.         But the staff
    itself pointed out that the ultimate decision as to the meaning of
    its requirements belonged to the commissioners (as does the power
    to waive regulations).
    Bangor claims that the staff's statement that "[t]he
    Panel's remedy . . . would violate the Commission's posting and
    bidding regulations" itself triggers HQUS' commitment to pay a
    refund of $297,547.50 to Bangor; this is supposedly based on the
    written assurance HQUS gave that it would return any reimbursements
    it received from Bangor for the Lateral costs "to the extent
    necessary to comply with any finding by FERC that the reimbursement
    and crediting arrangements are not consistent with FERC policy."
    -17-
    But   the    statements    by    FERC    officials   are    not   FERC
    findings. On the contrary, the FERC staff made abundantly clear in
    two letters that their statements were not definitive and were not
    binding on FERC.      FERC itself has warned that parties cannot rely
    on non-binding opinions from FERC staff because "[t]he Commission
    speaks through its orders."         Indianapolis Power & Light Co., 48
    F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,040, at 61,203 (1989).                Finally, FERC has the
    authority to grant waivers from its shipper-must-have-title rule
    and its capacity release regulations.            See Atlanta Gas Light Co.,
    85 F.E.R.C. ¶ 61,102 (1998).
    In sum, there is no clear indication that FERC will seek
    to undo the reimbursement remedy crafted by the panel which has
    been tailored to        avoid any direct affront to FERC rules or
    regulations, requirements whose underlying purpose seems hardly
    implicated by the peculiar circumstances of this case: a 410-foot
    pipeline dedicated to connect to a single-customer spur pipeline.
    And, if   the   premise that    FERC      will    tolerate   this    reasonable
    improvisation proves false, the panel has made provision for this
    contingency as well.
    Heater Fuel Cost Retroactivity.             As already explained,
    the panel imposed destination-end heating costs on HQUS for the
    future but declined to make this ruling retroactive, and Bangor
    terms this refusal a "compromise" that violated the Agreement's "no
    compromise" clause. Bangor says that the panel called the heating-
    -18-
    cost issue a "close question" and, by imposing only the going
    forward costs on HQUS, must have been compromising the matter.
    This is a misreading of the "no compromise" clause, which states:
    In the event that the arbitration requires a
    decision (I) as to the allocation or payment
    of any monetary amounts or valuations to be
    reduced to monetary amounts, or (ii) the
    methodology or accuracy of any calculation
    related thereto, the arbitrators shall select
    the   position  of   that Party    which   the
    arbitrator believes most appropriate under the
    circumstances. No "compromise" determination
    or alternate calculations shall be made by the
    arbitrator who is bound to adopt the position
    of one Party to the exclusion of the other on
    such matters.
    This provision, governing a class of amount-related
    controversies that might arise in arbitrated disputes, requires the
    panel to pick the better position as between the conflicting ones
    offered by each side on how to read or implement the Agreement on
    each particular point, rather than merely adopt some intermediate
    compromise position and thereby split the difference.            But the
    panel in this case was deciding two different issues and each was,
    in substance, decided on the merits.
    The first question was whether to impose liability for
    the disputed costs on HQUS or Bangor: the contract did not address
    the   question;   Bangor   had   itself   apparently   assumed   it   was
    responsible for six years which is hardly surprising since the
    Agreement required it to deliver the gas at the specified minimum
    temperature; but industry practice allegedly favored imposing the
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    cost on HQUS so the panel adopted Bangor's position.        It did not
    say, as a compromise might, that each side should pay half the
    cost.
    The panel then faced the second question whether HQUS
    should now compensate Bangor for past costs it had voluntarily
    borne since the start of the contract.       The Agreement was equally
    silent on this issue; and the panel cited prudential considerations
    in rejecting backward-looking compensation, deciding for HQUS on
    the issue.    That the panel decides one issue on the merits for one
    side and another on the merits for the other, giving reasons for
    each, is hardly what the no compromise clause aimed to forbid.
    Bangor assumes that by some principle the forward-looking
    solution invincibly entails a remedy that tries to make the past
    conform to the future but this is mistaken.           In fact, courts,
    usually having less freedom than we associate with arbitration,
    regularly treat issues of retroactivity as distinct from rules
    crafted to meet the future.       See, e.g., Johnson v. New Jersey, 
    384 U.S. 719
    , 726-32 (1966) (declining to apply the rule of Miranda v.
    Arizona retroactively).
    Disputed Exhibits.    Bangor's final argument is that the
    arbitrators committed "misconduct," justifying vacating the award
    under section 10(a)(3) of the FAA, by considering in its decision
    two documents (Attachments 1 and 2) among the three that the panel
    attached to its written decision.          Two of these had not been
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    submitted by the parties but were taken from filings that Maritimes
    had submitted in public FERC filings.
    Attachment 1 contained budgetary figures for Maritimes'
    provision of the Lateral, which revealed that over ninety percent
    of the cost arose from the meter facility, and less than ten
    percent arose from the pipeline itself.         Attachment 2 was an
    excerpt from a general statement of Maritimes' policies, revealing
    that Maritimes requires customers to pay for connecting pipelines
    and   associated   facilities   (such   as   meters)   constructed   by
    Maritimes.   Attachment 3 (submitted by both sides and plainly part
    of the record), indicated that Bangor's bid included the cost for
    the meter.
    Considering these documents together, the panel concluded
    that Bangor's fixed charge to HQUS specified in the Agreement at
    the outset already accounted for the meter, which formed the vast
    majority of the cost of the Lateral.    Such a fact was unhelpful to
    Bangor's overall attempt to now shift the Lateral's costs to HQUS;
    but given that the agreed charge was all that HQUS had ever agreed
    to pay for what Bangor appeared to have promised, showing that
    Bangor had built in these costs to the monthly charge was mere
    frosting.
    So even if we were to assume dubitante that consideration
    of these two additional documents was "misconduct" under the FAA,
    it could not have been prejudicial, a requirement for vacating an
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    award under section 10(a)(3).    Hoteles Condado Beach, La Concha &
    Convention Ctr. v. Union de Tronquistas Local 901, 
    763 F.2d 34
    , 40
    (1st Cir. 1985).   Bangor says that it was unjustly deprived of the
    opportunity to respond to the documents and the arbitrators'
    assumptions but does not explain what it would have said if allowed
    to do so.
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed. HQUS has
    asked that we order Bangor to pay double HQUS' costs and attorneys'
    fees for filing a frivolous appeal, Fed. R. App. P. 38; although we
    find Bangor's appeal to fail on the merits, its positions are not
    so weak as to be deemed frivolous, and HQUS' request for sanctions
    is denied, although it is entitled to the usual costs of the
    appeal.
    So ordered.
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