Nuvox Communications, Inc. v. Sanford , 241 F. App'x 126 ( 2007 )


Menu:
  •                             UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 06-1312
    NUVOX COMMUNICATIONS, INCORPORATED,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    and
    NEWSOUTH COMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff,
    versus
    JO ANNE SANFORD, Chairman; J. RICHARD CONDER,
    Commissioner;    ROBERT   V.    OWENS,   JR.,
    Commissioner; SAM J. ERVIN, IV, Commissioner;
    LORINZO L. JOYNER, Commissioner; JAMES Y.
    KERR, II, Commissioner; MICHAEL F. WILKINS,
    Commissioner (in their official capacities as
    Commissioners of the North Carolina Utilities
    Commission);   BELLSOUTH  TELECOMMUNICATIONS,
    INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees,
    and
    NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION,
    Defendant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of North Carolina, at Raleigh. W. Earl Britt, Senior
    District Judge. (5:05-cv-00207-BR)
    Argued:   November 29, 2006                Decided:   July 12, 2007
    Before MICHAEL and SHEDD, Circuit Judges, and David A. FABER, Chief
    United States District Judge for the Southern District of West
    Virginia, sitting by designation.
    Judgment vacated and appeal dismissed as moot in part and not ripe
    in part by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: Robert Jeffery Aamoth, KELLEY, DRYE & WARREN, L.L.P.,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellant.    Karen Elizabeth Long, Special
    Deputy Attorney General, NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
    Raleigh, North Carolina; Edward Smoot Finley, Jr., HUNTON &
    WILLIAMS, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Henry
    J. Campen, Jr., Melanie Black Dubis, PARKER, POE, ADAMS &
    BERNSTEIN, L.L.P., Raleigh, North Carolina; John J. Heitmann,
    Stephanie A. Joyce, KELLEY, DRYE & WARREN, L.L.P., Washington,
    D.C., for Appellant. Roy Cooper, North Carolina Attorney General,
    Grayson G. Kelley, Chief Deputy Attorney General, NORTH CAROLINA
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellees,
    Commissioners. Christopher J. Ayers, HUNTON & WILLIAMS, Raleigh,
    North Carolina, for Appellee BellSouth Telecommunications,
    Incorporated.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    For the reasons explained below, we vacate the judgment
    of the district court and dismiss this appeal as moot in part and
    not ripe in part.
    I.
    This   case   involves       a   dispute   between   BellSouth
    Telecommunications, Inc. (BellSouth) and NuVox Communications, Inc.
    (NuVox) regarding the terms on which BellSouth can audit NuVox’s
    use of certain telephone network elements called Enhanced Extended
    Links (EELs).     NuVox uses EELs of BellSouth pursuant to two
    different interconnection agreements between the carriers.            (We
    will at times refer to one of the agreements as the NuVox Agreement
    and the other as the NewSouth Agreement.)         Both agreements allow
    NuVox to convert higher-cost special access circuits to lower-cost
    EELs provided that NuVox self-certify that it is using the circuits
    to provide a “significant amount of local exchange service” as
    defined by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).         J.A. 166,
    731.   When certain conditions are met, both the NuVox and NewSouth
    Agreements grant BellSouth the right to audit NuVox to ensure that
    it is complying with the local usage requirements.
    Plaintiff-appellant NuVox filed a verified complaint in
    the district court on March 28, 2005, against defendants-appellees
    BellSouth and the commissioners of the North Carolina Utility
    3
    Commission (NCUC) in their official capacities, seeking relief from
    three orders issued by the NCUC in 2004 and 2005.         In the first of
    the three orders at issue, the NCUC decided that BellSouth was
    entitled to conduct an audit (the NewSouth audit) of EELs use under
    the terms of the NewSouth Agreement.       In the Matter of BellSouth
    Telecomms.,   Inc.   v.   NewSouth   Commc’ns,   Corp.,   Order   Granting
    Summary Disposition and Allowing Audit, Docket No. P-772, Sub 7
    (Aug. 24, 2004).     In the second order the NCUC denied a motion to
    reconsider its order authorizing the NewSouth audit.          Id., Order
    Denying Motion for Reconsideration, Docket No. P-772, Sub 7 (Jan.
    20, 2005). The third order issued by the NCUC authorized BellSouth
    to conduct an audit (the NuVox audit) on EELs use under the NuVox
    Agreement. In the Matter of the Enforcement of Interconnection
    Agreement Between BellSouth Telecomms., Inc. and NuVox Telecomms.,
    Inc., Order Granting Motion for Summary Disposition and Allowing
    Audit, Docket No. P-913, Sub 7 (Feb. 21, 2005).
    In its complaint in the district court, NuVox sought
    declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to the three NCUC
    orders.   NuVox alleged that the NCUC had misinterpreted the terms
    of both interconnection agreements in authorizing the audits.
    Specifically, NuVox asserted that federal law incorporated into the
    agreements requires:      (1) that BellSouth “demonstrate a concern”
    prior to being authorized to audit and (2) that NuVox be allowed to
    4
    challenge    the   independence   of   an   auditor   before   an   audit   is
    initiated.
    The district court did not reach the merits of the
    dispute because it concluded that NuVox’s complaint does not arise
    under federal law.     As a result, the court dismissed the complaint
    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
    NuVox appealed, arguing that a substantial question of federal law
    is raised by the issue of whether the NCUC’s interpretation of the
    interconnection agreements resulted in the denial of what NuVox
    asserts are federal rights.       NuVox argues in the alternative that
    the district court had subject matter jurisdiction under Section
    252(e)(6) of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-104,
    110 Stat. 56, codified at 47 U.S.C. § 251 et seq.
    On March 27, 2007, after the case had been argued before
    this court, NuVox submitted a Fed. R. App. P. 28(j) Notice of
    Supplemental Authority, informing us of an FCC decision issued the
    day before that bears on this appeal.         The FCC issued a Memorandum
    Opinion and Order on March 26, 2007, approving of the merger of
    BellSouth with AT&T.      FCC approval of the merger was contingent
    upon a number of conditions including the requirement that:
    AT&T/BellSouth shall cease all ongoing or threatened
    audits of compliance with the Commission’s EELs
    eligibility criteria (as set forth in the Supplemental
    Order Clarification’s significant local use requirement
    and related safe harbors, and the Triennial Review
    Order’s high capacity EEL eligibility criteria), and
    shall not initiate any new EELs audits.
    5
    In the Matter of AT&T Inc. and BellSouth Corp. Application for
    Transfer of Control, WC Docket No. 06-74, Memorandum Opinion and
    Order, Appendix F at 149 (Mar. 26, 2007) (FCC Merger Order).                In
    its Rule 28(j) notice NuVox asserted that this merger condition
    renders as moot the disputes surrounding both the NuVox audit and
    the   NewSouth   audit.     We    requested     and   received    supplemental
    briefing on the issues of mootness and ripeness from the parties,
    and we turn now to those issues.
    II.
    Federal   courts      have    no   jurisdiction   to   decide   moot
    questions.   Mellen v. Bunting, 
    327 F.3d 355
    , 363 (4th Cir. 2003).
    Because of the case or controversy requirement found in Article III
    of the Constitution, “federal courts are without power to decide
    questions that cannot affect the rights of litigants in the case
    before them.”     De Funis v. Odegaard, 
    416 U.S. 312
    , 316 (1979)
    (quoting North Carolina v. Rice, 
    404 U.S. 244
    , 246 (1971)).
    Both NuVox and BellSouth assert that the appeal of the
    NCUC’s February 21, 2005, order in Docket P-913 authorizing the
    NuVox audit is moot.      Although the NCUC authorized an audit under
    the NuVox Agreement more than two years ago, BellSouth never began
    the audit as a result of an injunction issued by the district court
    in this case.     As a result, on February 16, 2007, BellSouth and
    NuVox filed a joint motion in NCUC Docket P-913 requesting that the
    6
    NCUC vacate its February 2005 order.   BellSouth and NuVox stated
    the dispute arising from that order “is moot because BellSouth had
    neither commenced nor completed the audit it was allowed to conduct
    under the [Feb. 21, 2005] Order and the [FCC] merger condition bars
    BellSouth from proceeding with that audit.” In light of the fact
    that BellSouth no longer seeks to enforce the February 2005 order
    in NCUC Docket P-913, we agree that this appeal as it relates to
    that order has been mooted.
    While the parties agree that a portion of this appeal is
    moot, they contest the effect of the FCC Merger Order on the NCUC
    orders issued in Docket P-772 interpreting the NewSouth Agreement.
    In contrast to what occurred after the NCUC issued its ruling in
    Docket P-913, NuVox did not seek an injunction barring BellSouth
    from beginning the NewSouth audit authorized in Docket P-772.    As
    a result, the auditor contracted by BellSouth released its findings
    on the NewSouth audit on November 11, 2004.
    BellSouth contends that the NewSouth audit was concluded
    when the auditor released its findings.       NuVox argues that the
    record before us shows that the audit was never completed because
    the auditor’s report includes a “placeholder” exhibit for a letter
    needed from NuVox that NuVox has not supplied.         See NuVox’s
    Supplemental Br. at 14-15, Appendix E. According to NuVox, the
    letter could not be drafted because the auditor has never reviewed
    and verified the results found with NuVox. The dispute between the
    7
    parties over the significance of the missing letter and of the
    audit   verification      procedures     in   general    is   of   considerable
    importance because those questions may determine whether or not the
    FCC Merger Order moots any dispute about the audit authorized in
    Docket P-772.
    As a result of this dispute, we conclude that the issues
    in this appeal relating to the NCUC’s August 2004 and January 2005
    orders in Docket P-772 are not ripe for review.               Drawn from both
    Article III limitations and prudential considerations, ripeness is
    a justiciability doctrine designed “to prevent the courts, through
    premature   adjudication     from      entangling    themselves    in   abstract
    disagreements.”        Thomas v. Union Carbide Agric. Prods. Co., 
    473 U.S. 568
    , 580 (1985).       “To determine whether the case is ripe, we
    balance the fitness of the issues for judicial decision with the
    hardship    to   the   parties    of   withholding    court   consideration.”
    Miller v. Brown, 
    462 F.3d 312
    , 319 (4th Cir. 2006) (internal
    quotation omitted).
    We have previously explained that a case “is fit for
    judicial decision where the issues to be considered are purely
    legal ones and where the agency rule or action giving rise to the
    controversy is final and not dependent upon future uncertainties or
    intervening agency rulings.”           Charter Fed. Sav. Bank v. Office of
    Thrift Supervision, 
    976 F.2d 203
    , 208 (4th Cir. 1992).              This is not
    the   situation   here.      To   determine    whether    there    is   still   a
    8
    justiciable controversy between the parties, we would first have to
    decide whether the NewSouth audit has already been completed.
    Underlying this question are several disputed factual and legal
    issues.     It is not within our province, however, to settle the
    factual disputes surrounding the audit verification procedures.
    Furthermore, the considerations that favor withholding
    review are not outweighed by any hardship that dismissing the
    appeal may cause the parties.          Significantly, we conclude that
    dismissal for lack of ripeness will not prevent NuVox from raising
    the same issues in the future should the appropriate trier of fact
    determine    that   there   remains   a   live   dispute   surrounding   the
    NewSouth audit. Another proceeding involving the NewSouth audit is
    currently pending before the NCUC in its Docket P-1341, Sub 1.            On
    September 22, 2006, BellSouth filed a complaint under that docket
    number asserting that the audit report released on November 11,
    2004, shows that NuVox has breached the local usage requirements in
    the NewSouth Agreement. The complaint in Docket P-1341 is based on
    the NewSouth audit authorized by the NCUC in Docket P-772.         Just as
    it has before this court, NuVox has argued to the NCUC that the
    NewSouth audit has never been completed. Thus, NuVox has urged the
    NCUC to determine that the FCC Merger Order moots BellSouth’s
    complaint in Docket P-1341.       For its part, BellSouth has argued
    that the Merger Order is inapplicable to the proceeding in Docket
    P-1341 and that NuVox’s argument to the contrary must first be
    9
    adjudicated by the FCC and not the NCUC.                 This is so, BellSouth
    argues, because the FCC retains exclusive jurisdiction to interpret
    and enforce conditions contained in the Merger Order. The NCUC has
    not ruled on these questions and has placed the proceedings in
    Docket P-1341 in abeyance pending the outcome of this appeal.
    We take no position at this point on whether the FCC or
    the NCUC is the appropriate agency to determine these matters in
    the   first    instance.        At   any    rate,     only   after   a     threshold
    determination has been made as to whether the NewSouth audit was
    completed, or is instead ongoing or threatened, will it be clear
    whether BellSouth can maintain its complaint in Docket P-1341.                   If
    the FCC Merger Order has mooted the proceedings in Docket P-1341,
    NuVox would have no need to seek any sort of relief from the
    federal courts in relation to the NewSouth audit. If, however, the
    FCC Merger Order has not mooted the proceedings in Docket P-1341,
    and the NCUC ultimately rules in favor of BellSouth/AT&T, NuVox
    could challenge that decision in federal court on the same grounds
    that it challenged the orders issued in Docket P-772. Accordingly,
    we vacate the district court’s judgment that NuVox’s complaint in
    this case does not raise a federal question, and we then dismiss
    the present appeal.        In   vacating        the   judgment of    the    district
    10
    court,   we   are   offering   no   opinion   on   the   merits   of   the
    jurisdictional questions that were raised and may again be raised
    in a future action.
    JUDGMENT VACATED AND
    APPEAL DISMISSED AS MOOT IN PART
    AND NOT RIPE IN PART
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-1312

Citation Numbers: 241 F. App'x 126

Judges: Michael, Shedd, Faber, Southern, Virginia

Filed Date: 7/12/2007

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024