In re Application of Griess ( 2020 )


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  •                    IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
    (Memorandum Web Opinion)
    IN RE APPLICATION OF GRIESS
    NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION
    AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).
    IN RE APPLICATION OF EUGENE E. GRIESS.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    IN RE APPLICATION OF KEVIN J. RAINFORTH.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    IN RE APPLICATION OF JUDY M. RAINFORTH.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    IN RE APPLICATION OF PATRICIA D. RAINFORTH.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    IN RE APPLICATION OF MATTHEW OMAN.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    IN RE APPLICATION OF LEVI K. OCHSNER.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    IN RE APPLICATION OF ADAM HAYMAN.
    WINDSTREAM COMMUNICATIONS, INC., APPELLANT,
    V.
    NEBRASKA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION ET AL., APPELLEES.
    -1-
    Filed March 10, 2020. Nos. A-19-599 through A-19-602,
    A-19-606, A-19-608, and A-19-609.
    Appeals from the Public Service Commission. Affirmed.
    Blake E. Johnson and Paul A. Lembrick, of Bruning Law Group, for appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and L. Jay Bartel for appellee Nebraska Public
    Service Commission.
    PIRTLE, ARTERBURN, and WELCH, Judges.
    WELCH, Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    Windstream Communications, Inc. (Windstream), appeals the decisions of the Nebraska
    Public Service Commission (PSC) granting the applications of seven residents, currently served
    by Windstream as their advanced communication provider, to replace Windstream with Hamilton
    Telephone Company (Hamilton) as their advanced communications provider. Due to their
    similarity, we consolidated these cases on appeal. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    Eugene E. Griess, Kevin J. Rainforth, Judy M. Rainforth, Patricia D. Rainforth, Matthew
    Oman, Levi K. Ochsner, and Adam Hayman (Applicants) were all parties residing in
    Windstream’s local exchange territory. Each of the Applicants filed applications seeking to change
    the local exchange territory of Windstream and replace Windstream with Hamilton as their
    advanced communications provider. The PSC held a hearing on the applications on April 24, 2019.
    In support of their applications, the Applicants argued that Windstream did not currently provide
    internet service and that Hamilton had recently installed a fiber optic line with which the
    Applicants could connect and obtain adequate internet service, and that the Applicants desired to
    do so. Hamilton agreed that it would provide the requested service to the Applicants at no
    additional cost to the Applicants.
    Windstream acknowledged that it did not provide adequate advanced telecommunications
    services to the Applicants at the time of the hearing; however, Windstream argued that it intended
    to provide that service as early as May 2019. Specifically, Brad Hendrick, Windstream’s president
    of operations for five states, including Nebraska, testified that Windstream intended to provide a
    fixed wireless product to the Applicants by affixing “RADWIN” equipment on 35-foot telephone
    poles at five locations near Sutton, Hansen, and Harvard, Nebraska. He stated this equipment
    would provide “line-of-sight” fixed wireless technology which would extend and provide service
    between four to five miles of each such location. He stated that although the product is
    predominantly a line-of-sight technology, Windstream’s vendor uses a “beamforming” that allows
    for some deviation from pure line-of-sight. He testified the technology will allow most customers
    to receive “100 Mbps” download speeds and better than “8 Mbps.” Hendrick testified that he
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    obtained his May service commencement timeframe from discussions with Windstream’s
    engineers.
    Hendrick testified that Windstream had been using the fixed wireless product on poles in
    Iowa obtaining good results. Hendrick testified that, as of May 2019, he believed Windstream
    would be able to start taking “qualifying customers and taking orders on that date.”
    Hendrick acknowledged that Windstream had not contacted the Applicants prior to the
    hearing and that the RADWIN equipment had not been installed nor tested as of the hearing date.
    Hendrick did not provide the specific locations for the poles and equipment, nor was there any
    evidence governing whether the wireless towers would work specifically for each Applicant based
    upon their specific topography and unique locations. He stated that if Windstream could not service
    a particular customer in the future, it would agree to release them.
    Following the hearing, the PSC entered separate orders governing each Applicant.
    Although portions of the orders differed in relation to testimony provided by the individual
    Applicants, the PSC granted all of the Applicants’ applications finding that “based upon the
    evidence presented and arguments offered, that the Applicant is not receiving, and will not receive
    within a reasonable time, advanced telecommunications capability service from Windstream.” In
    granting the applications, the PSC noted, “given the utility and necessity of access to broadband
    internet in today’s world, even short delays may present significant inconveniences and challenges
    to Nebraska residents.”
    In support of its decision, the PSC noted the length of the pending applications, the fact
    that Windstream had not contacted the Applicants about the pending service while suggesting it
    intended to commence the provision of such services by May 2019, and the lack of specificity in
    the evidence that the service would work for the Applicants at their respective locations all
    supported a finding that, “Windstream’s testimony that it plans to provide advanced
    telecommunications service to this Applicant within a reasonable timeframe lacks sufficient
    credibility at this point.” Windstream appeals from these findings and orders.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    Windstream appeals contending that the PSC erred in determining that the Applicants
    would not receive reasonable advanced telecommunications capability service within a reasonable
    time absent a change in Windstream’s Sutton Exchange boundary.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 75-136(2) (Reissue 2018), an appellate court reviews an order of
    the PSC de novo on the record. In re Application No. B-1829, 
    293 Neb. 485
    , 
    880 N.W.2d 51
    (2016); In re Application No. C-4981, 
    27 Neb. Ct. App. 773
    , 
    936 N.W.2d 365
    (2019). In a review de
    novo on the record, an appellate court reappraises the evidence as presented by the record and
    reaches its own independent conclusions concerning the matters at issue. In re Application No.
    
    B-1829, supra
    ; In re Application No. 
    C-4981, supra
    .
    When an appellate court makes a de novo review, it does not mean that the court ignores
    the findings of fact made by the agency and the fact that the agency saw and heard the witnesses
    who appeared at its hearing. In re Application No. OP-0003, 
    303 Neb. 872
    , 
    932 N.W.2d 653
    (2019); In re Application No. 
    C-4981, supra
    . Where the evidence is in conflict, the appellate court
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    will consider and may give weight to the fact that the agency hearing examiner observed the
    witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another. In re Application No. 
    C-4981, supra
    .
    ANALYSIS
    These applications involve the Applicants’ collective requests to obtain advanced
    telecommunications services from a telecommunications company serving a “local exchange area”
    adjacent to the local exchange area in which the Applicants reside. The process stems from
    legislative authority originally codified in 1969 at Neb. Rev. Stat. § 75-612 to § 75-615 (Cum.
    Supp. 1969) which allowed telephone users to petition the PSC for a change in telephone service
    and to adjust boundaries of exchange service areas. The original purpose of the 1969 law was
    outlined by the Nebraska Supreme Court in Hartman v. Glenwood Tel. Membership Corp., 
    197 Neb. 359
    , 362, 
    249 N.W.2d 468
    , 471 (1977), where the court explained:
    The statutes involved in this appeal, and under which the application was filed,
    were enacted in 1969 as L.B. 906. The reason for the enactment of the statute was made
    clear by Senator Rick Budd, Chairman of the Committee on Public Works, in the statement
    of intent for L.B. 906, where he states: ‘Under the present law, a telephone user is not able
    to petition the State Railway Commission for telephone service of another exchange or for
    service of any exchange if he is not within any telephone company’s territory. The
    Nebraska Supreme Court has held that petitions of this kind under the present exchange
    territorial law may be made by telephone companies only. The telephone user, therefore,
    cannot have a ‘day in court’ and cannot have regulatory relief no matter what the merits of
    his situation will be. LB 906 will permit all telephone users, whether individuals,
    partnerships, corporations, or others, and whether they use residence service or business
    service to petition the Commission for a change of telephone service and to have hearings
    on their cases.
    In 2012, the Nebraska Legislature amended these statutes to expand the phrase “exchange
    telephone services” to “advanced telecommunications capability service” which the Legislature
    newly defined as “high-speed, broadband telecommunications capability provided by a local
    exchange carrier that enables users to originate and receive high quality voice, data, graphics, and
    video communications using any technology.” Neb. Rev. Stat. § 86-103.01 (Cum. Supp. 2012).
    The entire statutory construct was transferred, as amended, to Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 86-135 to
    86-138 (Cum. Supp. 2018). Following its amendment, § 86-135(1) provided: “Any person may
    file an application with the commission to obtain advanced telecommunications capability service
    furnished by a telecommunications company in the local exchange area adjacent to the local
    exchange area in which the applicant resides.”
    Once an application is filed, if the affected telecommunications companies do not consent
    to the application, the PSC serves the affected telecommunications companies with a notice of
    hearing. See § 86-135(2) (Reissue 2014). The statute then sets forth the PSC’s authority to grant
    the application in providing, in relevant part to this appeal:
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    Upon the completion of the hearing on such an application made pursuant to section
    86-135, if a hearing is required, [PSC] may grant the application, in whole or in part, if the
    evidence establishes the following:
    (1) That such applicant is not receiving, and will not within a reasonable time
    receive, reasonable advanced telecommunications capability service from the
    telecommunications company which furnishes telecommunications service in the local
    exchange area in which the applicant resides;
    § 86-136 (Reissue 2014).
    We note that § 86-136(1) was recently amended effective September 1, 2019, to provide
    that the PSC may grant an application if an applicant is not receiving advanced
    telecommunications service at the time of the application while dropping the requirement of
    showing the applicant will not receive the service within a reasonable period of time. See Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 86-136 (Cum. Supp. 2019). Because this amendment was not in effect at the time the
    PSC acted on the Applicants’ applications, all discussion herein relates to the prior version of the
    statute.
    Windstream simply argues that the PSC erred in determining the Applicants would not
    receive reasonable advanced telecommunications capability service within a reasonable period of
    time. In furtherance of their assignment, Windstream points to the testimony of Hendrick who
    stated that as soon as May 6, 2019, Windstream intended to provide a fixed wireless product to the
    Applicants by affixing RADWIN equipment on 35-foot posts at sites near Sutton, Hansen, and
    Harvard and that the equipment should provide adequate advanced telecommunications service to
    the Applicants.
    In determining whether the evidence supports Windstream’s claim that it presented
    sufficient evidence that it would provide the Applicants advanced telecommunications service
    within a reasonable period of time, we first note our recent statement in In re Application No.
    C-4981, 
    27 Neb. Ct. App. 773
    , 
    936 N.W.2d 365
    (2019), governing the same subject matter. Therein,
    we held:
    While the legislative materials for L.B. 715 do not provide insight about the phrase
    “within a reasonable time” under § 86-136(1), the phrase remaining intact shows that, at
    least at that time, the Legislature preferred to leave the matter to the PSC’s discretion to
    analyze on a case-by-case basis. See, also, In re Application No. OP-0003, 
    303 Neb. 872
    ,
    
    932 N.W.2d 653
    (2019) (even under de novo standard of review, it is appropriate to adhere
    to common practice among appellate courts to afford appropriate deference to findings of
    agency before which record was created). In its order in the present case, the PSC stated,
    “given the utility and necessity of access to broadband internet in today’s world, even short
    delays may present significant inconveniences and challenges to Nebraska residents.” The
    PSC related that the length of time it would consider to be reasonable within the context of
    §§ 86-135 to 86-138 was “relatively short” and “certainly shorter than the nearly eight
    months [Toben’s] docket [had] been pending.”
    In re Application No. 
    C-4981, 27 Neb. Ct. App. at 785-86
    , 936 N.W.2d at 374.
    -5-
    We next note that Windstream does not dispute that, as to all Applicants, at the time of the
    applications and April 24, 2019, hearing, Windstream was not providing reasonable advanced
    telecommunications service to the Applicants. As such, the sole issue in this case was whether
    Windstream provided sufficient evidence that it would provide reasonable advanced
    telecommunications capability service to Applicants’ residences within a reasonable period of
    time. As the Nebraska Supreme Court held in Waste Connections of Neb. v. City of Lincoln, 
    269 Neb. 855
    , 
    697 N.W.2d 256
    (2005), as an advocate for the affirmative issue to be proved, the burden
    of proof rested with Windstream to make this showing.
    Here, the evidence governing the advanced telecommunications service and time to
    provide that service was provided solely by Hedrick. In doing so, Hedrick described that the
    service to be provided was a fixed, wireless product which would provide “line-of-sight”
    technology to customers within 4 to 5 miles of the equipment, which equipment would be affixed
    on 35-foot poles. Although the technology was “line-of-sight,” Hedrick described it included some
    “beamforming” which allows for some deviation from line-of-sight. Hedrick went on to describe
    the speed at which the technology is designed to work within the 4- to 5-mile radius and that
    Windstream had achieved levels of success with the product in Iowa. Hedrick stated that in
    discussing the matter with company engineers, Windstream intended to commence offering the
    service at five sites located near Hansen, Sutton, and Harvard, by May 6, 2019.
    Notwithstanding Hedrick’s general recitations of the product and its capability, he never
    offered any specific evidence of the locations of the wireless product or whether Windstream had
    any impediments left which could hinder or delay providing their technology at those locations.
    Hedrick readily admitted the equipment was not currently in place and had not been tested.
    Accordingly, assuming that the specific locations for the technology were available for installing
    the technology, and assuming Windstream could arrange for its contractors to install the
    technology without delays (neither of which conclusion is supported by the record), there was no
    evidence in the record to establish that the technology would work for the specific Applicants at
    their residences. By not providing greater specifics about where the technology would be located
    and when, by not having tested the equipment, and specifically by not showing that this
    line-of-sight technology, when eventually installed, would work for these specific Applicants in
    relation to their individual topography and locations, the PSC held that Hedrick’s proposed May
    2019 commencement date was lacking in credibility. We have held that when conducting de novo
    review, this court may consider the fact that an agency, sitting as the trier of fact, saw and heard
    the witnesses and observed their demeanors while testifying and may give weight to the agency’s
    judgment of credibility. See Abay, L.L.C. v. Nebraska Liquor Control Comm., 
    303 Neb. 214
    , 
    927 N.W.2d 780
    (2019). After reviewing the record here, and in giving some weight to the PSC’s
    determination of credibility, we cannot say that the PSC erred in finding Windstream failed to
    meet its burden to show it would provide advanced telecommunications service within a
    reasonable period of time to these specific Applicants.
    In so finding, we note that even though each Applicant testified and spoke about their
    specific location and topography and need for advanced telecommunications service, the overall
    issue remained the same as to all such Applicants. That is, in order to avoid losing these customers
    based upon previously failing to provide them with advanced telecommunications service,
    Windstream bore the burden to show it would provide the Applicants with that service within a
    -6-
    reasonable period of time. The Applicants’ applications varied as to the time each was filed, but
    each application was filed long before the April 24, 2019, hearing date and Windstream had
    admittedly not provided that service as of the hearing date, nor communicated with any of the
    Applicants about Windstream’s intent to service the Applicants prior to the hearing.
    As to Windstream’s broad, unsupported statement at the hearing that it intended to
    commence offering the service in the area by May 6, 2019, the record is simply devoid of any
    specific evidence which would suggest that is even a realistic possibility. When confronted with
    an application under these circumstances, it is incumbent upon the telecommunications company
    to present legally sufficient evidence of which the trier of fact, in this case the PSC, could conclude
    that the customer was likely to receive the requisite service within a reasonable period of time.
    Windstream’s nonspecific evidence did not provide that level of sufficiency here and, after
    reviewing the record, we hold the PSC did not err in finding that Windstream’s representations
    made at the hearing were lacking in credibility.
    CONCLUSION
    Under our de novo review, we affirm the PSC’s orders granting the Applicants’
    applications to replace Windstream with Hamilton as their advanced telecommunications provider.
    AFFIRMED.
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Document Info

Docket Number: A-19-599 through A-19-602, A-19-606, A-19-608 and A-19-609

Filed Date: 3/10/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/10/2020