DocketNumber: No. PC-2009-3537
Judges: VOGEL, J.
Filed Date: 11/18/2010
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
As of June 30, 2006, the Campus consisted of three parcels with four buildings erected thereon. (PUC Dec. at 3; see Hr'g Tr. at 42-44.) Three of the buildings sat on the first parcel: an office building, a research center and a partially completed data center. Id. The fourth building, a daycare center, was located on the second parcel. Id. The third parcel was vacant. Id. As of June 30, 2006, the first two parcels were owned by a single party, Plaintiff West Greenwich *Page 2 Technology Associates, L.P. ("WGTA" or "Plaintiff"), an affiliate of Plaintiff GTECH Corporation ("GTECH"). (Hr'g Tr. at 4:17-19, 43:14-16, 66:5-8, 78:13-18; GTECH Ex. 1 at ¶ 2.) GTECH owned the third parcel. Id.
One water line with a master water meter served all three of the completed buildings: the office building, the research center and the daycare center. (PUC Dec. at 3; Hr'g Tr. 46:15-22, 78:7-18.) On June 30, 2006, the Defendant, Kent County Water Authority ("KCWA"), granted approval for WGTA and GTECH to add the data center to that water line connection and master meter. (PUC Dec. at 3.)
Two pertinent events occurred in October 2006. First, GTECH transferred its interest in the third parcel to WGTA. (PUC Dec. at 4; see Hr'g Tr. at 42-44.) Next, WTGA subdivided the first parcel into three separate lots, A, B, and C.Id. The office building then sat on parcel A, the research center on parcel B, and the data center on parcel C. Id. The parcel that housed the daycare center became the fourth parcel, D, and the vacant parcel became the fifth parcel, E. Id.
WGTA subdivided the property in contemplation of a sale of four of the parcels to companies which were not affiliated with GTECH. (PUC Dec. at 3; Hr'g Tr. 46:15-22, 78:7-18.) WGTA planned to retain only parcel C, the data center. Id. Parcel A (with the office building) was to be transferred to West Greenwich Tech Park II; parcel B to West Greenwich Tech Park I (with the research center), and parcel D (with the daycare center) and parcel E were to be transferred to West Greenwich Tech Park, LLC. (Hr'g Tr. at 43:11-13.) All of the proposed transferees were companies affiliated with Condyne, LLC. Id. That sale was completed.Id.
After the aforementioned subdivision and sale of the parcels, the single water line and single master water meter serviced buildings that were no longer owned by a single company or *Page 3 affiliated companies. (PUC Dec. at 4.) The GTECH affiliate WGTA, which had no connection to Condyne, LLC, owned parcel C (with the data center).
When KCWA learned that parcels A, B, D, and E were transferred or were about to be transferred to companies having no connection to the owner of parcel C, it notified Plaintiffs that they would have to construct an additional water line to service the Data Center. KCWA advised Plaintiffs that its Regulations did not permit a single water line and master water meter to service property owned by separate and unrelated entities. Id.
In a letter dated December 14, 2006 from Paul A. Victor, Senior Real Estate Manager of GTECH Corporation, 1 to KCWA, Plaintiff conceded the issue and agreed to develop and implement a solution to the problem which complied with KCWA Regulations. (Hr'g Tr. at 1:15, 95:9, 60:17-24, 61:1-8; Ex. 1.) Based upon that assurance, KCWA continued to provide water service through the common water line and master meter arrangement temporarily until Plaintiff could bring the property into compliance with KCWA Regulations. (Hr'g Tr. at 20:1-13; Ex. 1.)2 A few months later, Plaintiff retracted its offer to implement a new system after reconsidering the issue and concluding that contrary to the position taken by KCWA, a master meter could serve separately owned parcels without violating KCWA Regulations. (PUC Dec. at 4, Ex. 1)
In November 2007, KCWA informed Plaintiff that it would terminate water service to the data center unless it complied with KCWA Regulations. (PUC Dec. at 5.) The parties discussed a possible settlement agreement whereby GTECH would be responsible for the water bills for the *Page 4 entire Campus, KCWA's typical liens would attach to all five parcels, and KCWA would have easements over all five parcels for maintenance. (PUC Dec. at 5-6.) In the end, KCWA rejected the proposal and opted not to enter into such an agreement. (PUC Dec. at 6.)
In July 2008, Plaintiffs brought a complaint against KCWA with the PUC pursuant to G.L. 1956 §
*Page 5[t]he court shall not substitute its judgment for that of the agency as to the weight of the evidence on questions of fact. The court may affirm the decision of the agency or remand the case for further proceedings, or it may reverse or modify the decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions are:
(1) In violation of constitutional or statutory provisions;
(2) In excess of the statutory authority of the agency;
(3) Made upon unlawful procedure;
(4) Affected by other error of law;
(5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record; or
(6) Arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion. Section
42-35-15 (g).
The scope of Superior Court review of an agency decision has been characterized as "an extension of the administrative process."Rhode Island Public Telecommunications Authority v. Rhode IslandState Labor Relations Board,
Deference is due to an agency's interpretation of its own rules and regulations. Gonzales v. Oregon,
West Greenwich Technology Associates, L.P. properly brings this appeal because of its continued property interest in Parcel C of the GTECH Commercial Campus. See Cortellesso,
KCWA has the authority to "make bylaws for the management and regulation of its affairs." Sections
unjust, unreasonable, insufficient, preferential, unjustly discriminatory, or otherwise in violation of any of the provisions of chapters 1-5 [of Title 39 of the General Laws] or that any service of any such public utility is inadequate or that any service which can be reasonably demanded cannot be obtained, the division shall have power to substitute therefore such other [R]egulations, measurements, practices, service, or acts, and to make such order respecting, and such changes in the [R]egulations, measurements, practices, service, or acts, as shall be just and reasonable[.] Section
39-4-10 .
The PUC's power to reverse or alter KCWA's acts and practices on these grounds is tantamount to a power to interpret KCWA's Regulations. Id. Its broad power to change a public utility's Regulations becomes even more expansive if the PUC finds that the regulation is a threat to the public safety.See §
The lynchpin of Plaintiff's argument is § 2.5.6.2 of KCWA Regulations, which reads: "[i]n no case shall two separate buildings occupied by different owners or tenants be supplied by one service or meter unless such service meets all of the requirements of master metering." Rules and Regulations of the Kent County Water Authority ("KCWA Regulations") § 2.5.6.2. In Plaintiff's view, this section of the Regulations is an implicit acknowledgement that parcels under different ownership may be served by master meters. Plaintiff further relies on language contained in § 2.5.4.1, which states: "[m]ultiple occupancy commercial, industrial and residential developments such as condominiums, apartment complexes, strip malls, large mills, and all other private type complexes shall be master metered unless determined not to require a master meter under section 2.5.3." Plaintiff reads the examples of developments in this section as a non-exhaustive list that includes "occupancies in different ownership." (Pl.'s Mem. 9.) In support of their argument, Plaintiff further cites § 2.2.14.1, which reads: "[i]n no case shall two or more separate buildings or multi unit condominiums in which each unit or building is owned by different owners be supplied by one meter except by a master meter connection system, as approved by Kent County Water Authority." Plaintiff argues that KCWA clearly envisioned master metering of separately owned parcels when it drafted this regulation. Furthermore, Plaintiff contends that the Regulations do not define master metering in terms of property ownership; rather, the Regulations state that master meters serve "more than one user, tenant, or facility[.]" KCWA Regulations § 2.5.4.2. *Page 10
The PUC, reading KCWA Regulations as a whole, adopted KCWA's interpretation of its Regulations — that the Regulations allow master metering only for real estate parcels with ownership in common. (PUC Dec. at 10, 14.) The PUC found "that Sections 1.13.1, 1.13.2, 2.3.1.8, 3.1.2, 2.5.1.1, 2.5.6.2, 2.5.6.6, 2.2.14.1, 2.2.14.2, 2.3.4.1, 2.3.4.5, 2.5.4.1, 2.5.4.2, 2.5.6.1, [and] 2.5.6.2 sufficiently manifest a prohibition against multiple land owners drawing water from a single water line, through a master meter." (PUC Dec. at 15.) The PUC accepted the position of KCWA and found that the Regulations described above recognize "a distinction between ``customers' and ``owners'[,] on the one hand, and ``occupants' on the other." (PUC Dec. at 15.) It harmonized §§ 2.5.6.2 and 2.2.14.1 with § 2.2.14.2 and other Regulations that manifest a prohibition on master metering for separately owned parcels by finding that the "different owners" referred to in §§ 2.5.6.2 and 2.2.14.1 means owners of property, such as condominiums or apartment complexes, where an individual may own a unit in a development or building, but the realty upon which the structures sit is owned by another entity such as a condominium association. (PUC Dec. at 15-16.) The PUC rejected the argument of Plaintiff in favor of the position of KCWA by interpreting the Regulations to mean that the kinds of properties suitable for master metering in § 2.5.4.1 — "[m]ultiple occupancy commercial, industrial or residential developments such as condominiums, apartment complexes, strip malls, large mills, and all other private type complexes" — must have a common thread of ownership, such as ownership by a condominium association. (PUC Dec. at 16.)
Plaintiff cannot prevail in this appeal unless it proves that KCWA's interpretation of its own Regulations was unreasonable. The Court does not substitute its interpretation of the Regulations for that advanced by KCWA and accepted by the PUC so long as their interpretation is not unreasonable. Both the PUC and KCWA, the author of the Regulations with clear *Page 11
policymaking authority under §
This Court applies a different standard when interpreting Regulations regarding water use from the standard it employs when construing zoning ordinances. Where a zoning ordinance is ambiguous, the Court has been willing to construe the ambiguity in favor of the landowner because such restrictions are in derogation of the property owner's common-law right to use her property as she wishes.See Denomme v. Mowry,
This Court examines the pertinent sections of the Regulations mindful of this standard. Section 2.2.14.2 states that "[s]eparately owned premises or property shall have a separate service with separate shut off and meter. In the case of private, commercial or combined developments, a master meter is required. . . ." Implicit in this section is the assumption that the category of "private, commercial or combined developments" does not include "separately owned premises or property[.]" KCWA Regulations § 2.2.14.2. Similarly, § 1.13.1 states that a service pipe between the curb and the structures served by the water connection "is owned and maintained by the property owner." This provision arguably requires a single property owner per water line. Otherwise, multiple property owners served by a single water line and master meter would be faced with the problem of having to co-own a piece of pipe (by operation of law, not by agreement) which might require maintenance.
Furthermore, under the Regulations, water bills "constitute a lien on the real estate of the owner . . .; when more than one customer in the same building is supplied from the same service, the bill for the whole supply furnished through such service will be rendered to the owner of the property." KCWA Regulations § 2.3.1.8. If properties owned by multiple different owners were served by a master meter and received only one water bill, KCWA and the public would be faced with the conundrum of determining which properties are encumbered with liens and which are not. These sections, read together, reveal an intent on the part of the drafters that master meters would not serve separately owned parcels of land.
After reviewing the Regulations in their entirety, the Court finds that the interpretation advanced by KCWA and accepted by the PUC on review is not unreasonable. Since the PUC *Page 13
and KCWA agree in their interpretations of the Regulations, the Court defers to the PUC's interpretation. See id. As such, the PUC's interpretation of the Regulations as precluding master metering for separately owned parcels of realty is neither clearly erroneous nor an abuse of discretion and is not in excess of statutory authority. Therefore, the Court accepts KCWA's interpretation of the regulations whose administration and enforcement is entrusted to it. Auto Body Association of RhodeIsland,
RI Pub. Tel. Auth. v. RI Labor Rel. Bd. ( 1994 )
Monforte v. Zoning Bd. of Review of East Providence ( 1962 )
Pawtucket Power Associates Ltd. v. City of Pawtucket ( 1993 )
In Re Kent County Water Authority Change Rate Schedules ( 2010 )
Citizens Savings Bank v. Bell ( 1985 )
Rhode Island Higher Education Assistance Authority v. ... ( 1991 )
Environmental Scientific Corp. v. Durfee ( 1993 )
Blackstone Valley Chamber of Commerce v. Public Utilities ... ( 1982 )
Providence Gas Co. v. Burke ( 1980 )
Auto Body Ass'n of Rhode Island v. State, Department of ... ( 2010 )
Cortellesso v. TOWN OF SMITHFIELD ZONING BOARD OF REVIEW. ( 2005 )