Bell Canada v. Canada (Canadian Radio-Television and
Telecommunications Commission), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1722
The Canadian Radio‑Television
and
Telecommunications
Commission Appellant
v.
Bell Canada Respondent
and
The Attorney General of Canada,
the Consumers' Association of Canada,
the Canadian Business
Telecommunications
Alliance, CNCP Telecommunications and
the
National Anti‑Poverty
Organization Interveners
indexed as: bell canada v. canada (canadian
radio‑television and telecommunications commission)
File
No.: 20525.
1989:
February 21; 1989: June 22.
Present:
Lamer, Wilson, La Forest, L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier
and Cory JJ.
on
appeal from the federal court of appeal
Administrative
law ‑‑ CRTC jurisdiction ‑‑ CRTC ordering Bell Canada
to grant a one‑time credit to its customers ‑‑ Order to
remedy imposition of interim rates approved by CRTC in 1984 and 1985 and found
to be excessive in 1986 ‑‑ Whether CRTC had jurisdiction to make
such an order ‑‑ Whether CRTC's interim rate order may be reviewed
in a retrospective manner ‑‑ Whether CRTC's power to fix "just
and reasonable" rates for Bell Canada involves the regulation of its
revenues ‑‑ Railway Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. R‑3,
ss. 335(1), (2), (3), 340(5) ‑‑ National Transportation Act,
R.S.C., 1985, c. N‑20, 52, 60, 66, 68(1).
In
March 1984, Bell Canada filed an application with the CRTC for a general rate
increase. To prevent a serious deterioration in Bell Canada's financial
situation while awaiting the hearing and the final decision on the merits, the
CRTC granted Bell Canada an interim rate increase of 2 per cent effective
January 1, 1985. The interim rate increase was calculated on the basis of
financial information provided by Bell Canada. In its decision, however, the
CRTC clearly expressed the intention to review this interim rate increase in
its final decision on Bell Canada's application on the basis of complete
financial information for the years 1985 and 1986. In 1985, given Bell Canada's
improved financial situation, the CRTC ordered Bell Canada to file revised
tariffs effective as of September 1, 1985. As a result of this decision, Bell
Canada was forced to charge the rates effective before its application for a
rate increase filed in March 1984. These new rates too were interim in nature.
In October 1986, notwithstanding Bell Canada's request to withdraw its initial
application for a general rate increase, the CRTC reviewed Bell Canada's
financial situation and the appropriateness of its rates. The CRTC
established appropriate levels of profitability for Bell Canada on the basis of
its return on equity and found that, in 1985 and 1986, it had earned excess
revenues for a total of $206 million. Although Bell Canada always charged rates
approved by the CRTC, the latter decided that Bell Canada could not retain
these excess revenues and ordered it to distribute the excess revenues through
a one‑time credit to be granted to certain classes of customers. On
appeal, the Federal Court of Appeal quashed the CRTC's order. This appeal is
to determine (1) whether the CRTC had the legislative authority to review the
revenues made by Bell Canada during the period when interim rates were in
force; and (2) whether the CRTC had jurisdiction to make an order compelling
Bell Canada to grant a one‑time credit to its customers.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed.
The
CRTC's decisions are subject to appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal on
questions of law or jurisdiction by virtue of s. 68(1) of the National
Transportation Act. Although an appeal tribunal has the right to disagree
with the lower tribunal on issues which fall within the scope of the statutory
appeal, curial deference should be given to the opinion of the lower tribunal
on issues which fall squarely within its area of expertise. Here, Bell Canada
is challenging the CRTC's decision on a question of law and jurisdiction
involving the nature of interim decisions and the extent of the powers
conferred on the CRTC when it makes interim decisions. This question
cannot be solved without an analysis of the procedural scheme created by the Railway
Act and the National Transportation Act. The decision
impugned by Bell Canada is therefore not a decision which falls within the
CRTC's area of special expertise and is pursuant to s. 68(1) subject to
review in accordance with the principles governing appeals. Indeed, the
CRTC was not created for the purpose of interpreting the Railway
Act or the National Transportation Act but rather to
ensure, amongst other duties, that telephone rates are always "just and
reasonable".
The
fixing of tolls and tariffs that are "just and reasonable"
necessarily involves, albeit in a seemingly indirect manner, the regulation of
the revenues of the regulated entity as the administrative tribunal must
balance the interests of the customers with the necessity of ensuring that the
regulated entity is allowed to make sufficient revenues to finance the costs of
the services it sells to the public. In fixing fair and reasonable tolls
in this case, the CRTC had to take into consideration the level of revenues
needed by Bell Canada.
The
CRTC had the power to revisit the period during which interim rates were in
force. Such power is implied in the power to make interim orders within the
statutory scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act. It is inherent in the nature of interim orders that
their effect as well as any discrepancy between the interim order and the final
order may be reviewed and remedied by the final order. It is the interim nature
of the order which makes it subject to further retrospective directions.
The circumstances under which they are granted also explains and justifies
their being, unlike final orders, subject to retrospective review and remedial
orders. Interim rate orders dealing in an interlocutory manner with
issues which remain to be decided in a final decision are traditionally granted
for the purpose of relieving the applicant from the deleterious effects caused
by the length of the proceedings. Such decisions are made in an
expeditious manner on the basis of evidence which would often be insufficient
for the purposes of the final decision. To hold in this case that the interim
rates could not be reviewed would not only be contrary to the nature of interim
orders, it would also frustrate and subvert the CRTC's order approving interim
rates which clearly indicates its intention to review the rates charged for
1985 up to the date of the final decision.
There
should be no concern over the financial stability of regulated utility
companies where one deals with the power to revisit interim rates. The
very purpose of interim rates is to allay the prospect of financial instability
which can be caused by the duration of proceedings before a regulatory
tribunal. The added flexibility provided by the power to make interim orders
is meant to foster financial stability throughout the regulatory process.
The power to revisit the period during which interim rates were in force is a
necessary corollary of this power without which interim orders made in
emergency situations may cause irreparable harm and subvert the fundamental
purpose of ensuring that rates are just and reasonable.
Even
though Parliament has decided to adopt a positive approval regulatory scheme
for the regulation of telephone rates, the added flexibility provided by the
power to make interim orders indicates that the CRTC is empowered to make
orders as of the date at which the initial application was made or as of the
date the CRTC initiated the proceedings of its own motion. The power to make
interim orders necessarily implies the power to modify in its entirety the rate
structure previously established by final order. As a result, the rate review
process does not begin at the date of the final hearing; instead, the rate
review begins when the CRTC sets interim rates pending a final decision on the
merits.
Finally,
once it is decided that the CRTC has the power to revisit the period during
which interim rates were in force for the purpose of ascertaining whether they
were just and reasonable, it follows that it has the power to make a remedial
order where, in fact, these rates were not just and reasonable. In any event,
s. 340(5) of the Railway Act provides a
sufficient statutory basis for the power to make remedial orders including an
order to give a one‑time credit to certain classes of
customers. While the one‑time credit order will not necessarily
benefit the customers who were actually billed excessive rates, once it is
found that the CRTC has the power to make a remedial order, the nature and
extent of this order remain within its jurisdiction in the absence of any
specific statutory provision on this issue.
Cases
Cited
Approved: Re Coseka
Resources Ltd. and Saratoga Processing Co. (1981), 126 D.L.R.
(3d) 705; referred to: Canadian Union of Public Employees,
Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2 S.C.R.
227; Douglas Aircraft Co. of Canada Ltd. v. McConnell, [1980]
1 S.C.R. 245; Alberta Union of Provincial Employees v. Board of
Governors of Olds College, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 923; Re Ontario Public
Service Employees Union and Forer (1985), 52 O.R. (2d) 705; Re City of
Ottawa and Ottawa Professional Firefighters' Association, Local 162 (1987),
58 O.R. (2d) 685; Greyhound Lines of Canada Ltd. v. Canadian Human Rights
Commission (1987), 78 N.R. 192; Canadian Pacific Ltd.
v. Canadian Transport Commission (1987), 79 N.R. 13; British
Columbia Electric Railway Co. v. Public Utilities Commission of British
Columbia, [1960] S.C.R. 837; Northwestern
Utilities Ltd. v. City of Edmonton, [1929] S.C.R. 186; City of
Calgary v. Madison Natural Gas Co. (1959), 19 D.L.R. (2d) 655; United
States v. Fulton, 475 U.S. 657 (1986); Trans Alaska Pipeline
Rate Cases, 436 U.S. 631 (1978); Regina v. Board of
Commissioners of Public Utilities (1966), 60 D.L.R. (2d) 703; Re Eurocan
Pulp & Paper Co. and British Columbia Energy Commission (1978),
87 D.L.R. (3d) 727; Nova v. Amoco Canada Petroleum Co., [1981]
2 S.C.R. 437.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
CRTC Telecommunications Rules of Procedure, SOR/79‑554,
Parts III, VII.
National Energy Board Act,
R.S.C., 1985, c. N‑7, s. 64 .
National Transportation Act,
R.S.C., 1985, c. N‑20, ss. 49, 52, 60(2), 61, 66, 68(1).
Railway Act,
R.S.C., 1985, c. R‑3, ss. 334 to 340.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal, [1988] 1 F.C. 296, 43
D.L.R. (4th) 30, 78 N.R. 58, quashing an order of the CRTC. Appeal
allowed.
Raynold
Langlois, Q.C., Greg Van Koughnett, and Luc Huppé, for
the appellant.
Gérald
R. Tremblay, Q.C., and Michel Racicot, for
the respondent.
Graham
Garton, for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
Janet
Yale, for the intervener the Consumer's Association of
Canada.
Kenneth
G. Engelhart, for the intervener the Canadian Business
Telecommunications Alliance.
Michael
Ryan, for the intervener CNCP Telecommunications.
Andrew
Roman and Robert Horwood, for the
intervener the National Anti-Poverty Organization.
//Gonthier J.//
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
GONTHIER J. --
The present case is an appeal against a decision of the Federal Court of Appeal
which quashed one of the orders made by the appellant in Telecom Decision CRTC
86-17 ("Decision 86-17"). The impugned order compelled the
respondent to distribute $206 million in excess revenues earned in the years
1985 and 1986 through a one-time credit to be granted to certain classes of
customers. The respondent does not contest the factual findings on which
Decision 86-17 is based nor does it claim that this order would unduly
prejudice its financial position. None of the other orders made in Decision
86-17 are challenged.
The
appellant claims that the purpose of the challenged order was to provide telephone
users with a remedy against interim rates which turned out to be excessive on
the basis of the findings of fact made by the appellant following a final
hearing held in the summer of 1986 for the purpose of setting rates to be
charged by the respondent in the years 1985 and following. These findings of
fact are reported in Decision 86-17. Since this case turns on the proper
characterization of the one-time credit order made in Decision 86-17, it is
important to describe the procedural history of the administrative proceedings
which led to the order now contested by the respondent.
I - The
facts
On
March 28, 1984, the respondent applied for a general rate increase under Part
VII of the CRTC Telecommunications Rules of Procedure,
SOR/79-554, which provides for a summary public process to deal with special
applications. The respondent claimed that the Canadian Government's restraint
program restricting rate increases of federally regulated utilities to 5 per
cent and 6 per cent was sufficient justification to dispense with the normal
procedure for general rate increase applications set out in Part III of the CRTC
Telecommunications Rules of Procedure. In Telecom
Decision CRTC 84-15, the appellant rejected this application on the ground that
the respondent had failed to use the appropriate procedure set out in Part III
of these rules. However, the appellant indicated that if the respondent was to
suffer financial prejudice as a result of the delays involved in preparing for
the more complex procedure set out in Part III, it could always apply for
interim relief pending a hearing and a decision on the merits (at
pp. 8-9):
The
Commission recognizes that, in 1985 and beyond, in the absence of rate relief,
a deterioration in the Company's financial position could occur. In this
regard, if the Company should find it necessary to file an application for a
general rate increase under Part III of the Rules, the Commission would be
prepared to schedule a public hearing on such an application in the fall of
1985. Should Bell consider it necessary to seek rate increases to come into
effect earlier in 1985 than this schedule would allow, it may of course apply
for interim relief. In the event Bell were to seek such interim relief, it
would be open to the Company to suggest that the Commission's traditional test
for determining interim rate applications is overly restrictive in light of the
Commission hearing schedule and to put forward proposals for an alternative
test for consideration. [Emphasis added.]
On
September 4, 1984, the respondent filed an application for a general rate
increase based on 1985 financial data which would come into effect on
January 1, 1986. At the same time, the respondent applied for an interim
rate increase of 3.6 per cent.
In
Telecom Decision CRTC 84-28 ("Decision 84-28") rendered on December
19, 1984, the appellant set out the following policy previously adopted in
Telecom Decision CRTC 80-7 with respect to the granting of interim rate
increases (at pp. 8-9):
The Commission's policy concerning interim rate
increases, enunciated in Decision 80-7, is as follows:
The
Commission considers that, as a rule, general rate increases should only be
granted following the full public process contemplated by Part III of its
Telecommunications Rules of Procedure. In the absence of such a process,
general rate increases should not in the Commission's view be granted, even on
an interim basis, except where special circumstances can be demonstrated. Such
circumstances would include lengthy delays in dealing with an application that
could result in a serious deterioration in the financial condition of an
applicant absent a general interim increase. [Emphasis added.]
The
respondent argued that its financial situation warranted an interim rate
increase and did not question the reasonableness of this policy. The appellant
agreed with the respondent's submission that, in the absence of interim rate
increases, it might suffer from serious financial deterioration and awarded an
interim rate increase of 2 per cent. In this decision, the appellant required
the respondent to prepare for a hearing to be held in the fall of 1985 for the
purpose of assessing the respondent's application for a final order increasing
its rates on the basis of two test years, 1985 and 1986. Decision 84-28 also
states at p. 10 the reasons why the interim rate increase was set at 2 per
cent:
In determining the amount of interim rate increases
required under the circumstances, the Commission has taken into account the
following factors:
1) While the company stated that an interest coverage
ratio of 4.0 times is required, the Commission regards the maintenance of the
coverage ratio of 3.8 times, projected by the Company for 1984, as sufficient
for the purposes of this interim decision.
2) With regard to the level of ROE ["return on
equity"], the Commission is of the view that, for 1985, and subject to
review in the course of its consideration of the Company's general rate
increase application in the fall of 1985, 13.7% is appropriate for
determining the amount of rate increases to be permitted pursuant to this
interim increase application.
3) With regard to the Company's 1985 expense forecasts,
the Commission notes that the inflation factor used by the Company is higher
than the current consensus forecast of the inflation rate for 1985 and
considers that Bell's forecast of its 1985 Operating Expenses could be
overestimated by approximately $25 million.
Taking
the above factors into account, the Commission has decided that an interim rate
increase of 2% for all services in respect of which rate increases were
requested by the Company in the interim application is appropriate at this
time. This increase is expected to generate additional revenues of $65 million
from 1 January 1985 to 31 December 1985. To permit the review of the
Company's 1985 revenue requirement by the Commission at the fall 1985 public
hearing, Bell is directed to file its 4 June 1985 general rate increase
application on the basis of two test years, 1985 and 1986. [Emphasis
added.]
The
reasons set out in the appellant's decision indicate that the interim rate
increase was calculated on the basis of financial information provided by the
respondent without placing this information under the scrutiny normally
associated with hearings made under Part III of the CRTC
Telecommunications Rules of Procedure. Furthermore, the
appellant clearly expressed the intention to review this interim rate increase
in its final decision on the respondent's application for a general rate
increase on the basis of financial information for the years 1985 and 1986.
Given the content of the appellant's final decision, it is also important to
note that the 2 per cent interim rate increase was calculated on the assumption
that the respondent's return on equity for 1985 should be 13.7 per cent,
subject to review in the final decision.
The
respondent's financial situation later improved thereby reducing the necessity
to proceed with an early hearing for the purpose of obtaining a general and
final rate increase. By letter dated March 20, 1985, the respondent asked for
this hearing to be postponed to February 10, 1986, suggesting however that the
2 per cent interim increase be given immediate final approval. In CRTC Telecom
Public Notice 1985-30 dated April 16, 1985, the appellant granted the
postponement but refused to grant the final approval requested by the respondent
without further investigation into this matter. The Commission added that it
would monitor the respondent's financial situation on a monthly basis and
ordered the filing of monthly statements (at p. 4):
In view of the improving trend in the Company's
financial performance, the Commission further directs as follows:
Bell Canada is to provide to the Commission for the
balance of 1985, within 30 days after the end of each month, commencing with
April 1985, a full year forecast of revenues and expenses on a regulated basis
for the year 1985, together with the estimated financial ratios including the
projected regulated return on common equity.
The
Commission will monitor the Company's financial performance during 1985, in
order to determine whether any further rate action may be necessary.
[Emphasis added.]
Again,
the appellant clearly expressed its intention to prevent abuse of interim rate
increases.
After
a review of the July financial information filing ordered in CRTC Telecom
Public Notice 1985-30, the appellant asked the respondent to provide reasons
why the interim rate increase of 2 per cent should remain in force given its
improved financial situation. The respondent was unable to convince the
appellant that this interim increase remained necessary to avoid financial
deterioration and was accordingly ordered to file revised tariffs effective as
of September 1, 1985, at pp. 4-5 of Telecom Decision CRTC 85-18:
In view of the improving trend in Bell's financial
performance, the Commission is satisfied that the company no longer needs the
2% interim increases which were awarded in Decision 84-28 in order to avoid
serious financial deterioration in 1985. Accordingly, Bell is directed to
file revised tariffs forthwith, with an effective date of 1 September
1985, to suspend these increases.
In arriving at its decision the Commission has estimated
that, with interim rates in effect for the complete year, the company
would earn an ROE ["return on equity"] of approximately 14.5% in
1985, a return well in excess of the 13.7% considered appropriate for
determining the 2% interim rate increases. The Commission also projected
that interest coverage would be approximately 3.9 times. This would improve on
the actual 1984 coverage of 3.8 times. These estimates are not significantly
different from Bell's current expectation of its 1985 results.
The
Commission will make its final determination of Bell's revenue requirement for
the year 1985 in the general rate proceeding currently scheduled to commence
with an application to be filed on 10 February 1986. [Emphasis added.]
As a
result of this decision, the respondent was forced to charge the rates
effective before its application for a rate increase filed on March 28, 1984.
However, even though the rates effective as of September 1, 1985, were
numerically identical to the rates in force under the previous final decision
prior to the interim increase, these new rates remained interim in nature. In
fact, the appellant reiterated its intention to review the rates actually
charged during 1985 and 1986.
On
October 31, 1985, the respondent decided not to proceed with its application
for a general rate increase and requested that its procedures be withdrawn. In
CRTC Telecom Public Notice 1985-85, the appellant decided to review the
respondent's financial situation and therefore the appropriateness of its rates
notwithstanding its request to withdraw its initial application for a general
rate increase (at pp. 3-4):
In light of these forecasts and the degree to which the
company's rate structure is expected to be considered in separate proceedings,
Bell stated that it wished to refrain from proceeding with the application
scheduled to be filed on 10 February 1986. Accordingly, the
company requested the withdrawal of the amended Directions on Procedure issued
by the Commission in Public Notice 1985-30.
...
The
Commission notes that the appropriate rate of return for Bell has not been
reviewed in an oral hearing since the proceeding which culminated in Bell
Canada - General Increase in Rates, Telecom Decision CRTC 81-15, 20
September 1981 (Decision 81-15). The Commission considers that, given
Bell's current forecasts, it would be appropriate to review the company's cost
of equity for the years 1985, 1986 and 1987 in the proceeding scheduled for
1986. Such a review would allow consideration of the changing financial
and economic conditions since Decision 81-15 and the impact of Bell's corporate
reorganization on its rate of return. The Commission notes that other issues
arising from the reorganization would also be addressed in the 1986
proceeding. [Emphasis added.]
This
interim decision indicates that the appellant wished to continue the original
rate review procedure initiated by the respondent in March of 1984. Thus, the
rates in force as of January 1, 1985 until the final decision now challenged by
the respondent were interim rates subject to review.
The
hearing which led to the final decision lasted from June 2 to July 16, 1986 and
this final decision, Decision 86-17, was rendered on October 14, 1986. In
this decision, the appellant first established appropriate levels of
profitability for the respondent on the basis of its return on equity. The
appellant then calculated the amount of excess revenues earned by the
respondent in 1985 and 1986 along with the necessary reduction in forecasted
revenues for 1987. It was found that the respondent had earned excess revenues
of $63 million in 1985 and $143 million in 1986 for a total of
$206 million (at p. 93):
After
making further adjustments for the compensation for temporarily transferred
employees and including the regulatory treatment for non-integral subsidiary
and associated companies, the Commission has determined that a revenue
requirement reduction of $234 million would provide the company with a 12.75%
ROE ["return on equity"] on a regulated basis in 1987. Similarly,
the Commission has determined that $143 million is the required revenue
reduction to achieve the upper end of the permissible ROE on a regulated basis
in 1986, 13.25%. With respect to 1985, after making the adjustments set out in
this decision, the Commission has determined that Bell earned excess revenues
in the amount of $63 million, the deduction of which would provide 13.75%, the
upper end of the permissible ROE on a regulated basis.
It is
important to note that the evidence and the arguments presented by the
interested parties as well as interveners were carefully scrutinized by the
appellant at pp. 77 to 92 of Decision 86-17. It is for all practical purposes
impossible to engage in such a meticulous and painstaking analysis of all
relevant facts when faced with an application for interim relief. Finally, it
is also useful to note that the permissible return on equity of 13.7 per cent
allowed by the appellant in its interim decision, Decision 84-28, was increased
to 13.75 per cent in Decision 86-17. Thus, the appellant realized that the
interim rates approved for 1985 yielded greater rates of return than initially
anticipated and that the rate of return actually recorded for that year even
exceeded the greater allowable rate of return fixed in the final decision,
Decision 86-17. Such differences between projected and actual rates of return
are common and certainly call for a high level of flexibility in the exercise of
the appellant's regulatory duties.
The
Commission decided that the respondent could not retain excess revenues earned
on the basis of interim rates and issued the order now challenged by the
respondent in order to provide a remedy for this situation. This order reads
as follows, at pp. 95-96:
Concerning the excess revenues for the years 1985 and
1986, the Commission directs that the required adjustments be made by means of
a one-time credit to subscribers of record, as of the date of this decision, of
the following local services: residence and business individual,
two-party and four-party line services; PBX trunk services; centrex lines;
enhanced exchange-wide dial lines; exchange radio-telephone service;
service-system service and information system access line service. The
Commission directs that the credit to each subscriber be determined by
pro-rating the sum of the excess revenues for 1985 and 1986 of $206 million in
relation to the subscriber's monthly recurring billing for the specified local
services provided as of the date of this decision. The Commission further
directs that the work necessary to implement the above directives be commenced
immediately and that the billing adjustments be completed by no later than
31 January 1987. Finally, the Commission directs the company to file
a report detailing the implementation of the credit by no later than 16
February 1987.
The
Commission considers that 1987 excess revenues are best dealt with through rate
reductions to be effective 1 January 1987. [Emphasis
added.]
Although
the respondent always charged rates approved by the appellant, the appellant
found it necessary to make sure that its assessment of allowable revenues for
1985 and 1986 would be complied with. The appellant argues that the order now
challenged by the respondent was the most efficient way of redistributing these
excess revenues to the respondent's customers even though they would not
necessarily be refunded to those who actually had to pay the rates in force
during that period.
It
is therefore obvious that the appellant only allowed interim rates to be
charged after January 1, 1985 on the assumption that it would review these
rates in a hearing to be held in order to deal with an application for a
general rate increase. Every interim decision which led to Decision 86-17
confirmed the appellant's intention to review the interim rates at the final
hearing. Finally, the interim rates were ordered for the purpose of preventing
any serious deterioration in the respondent's financial situation while
awaiting for a final decision on the merits. Of necessity, these interim rates
were determined on the basis of incomplete evidence presented by the
respondent. It cannot be said that the purpose of the interim rate increase
ordered by the appellant was to serve as a temporary final decision.
II - The
Issue and the Arguments Raised by the Parties
In
this Court as well as in the Federal Court of Appeal, the parties have agreed
that the only issue arising out of the facts of this case is whether the
appellant had jurisdiction to order the respondent to grant a one-time credit
to its customers. The appellant's findings of fact, its determination with
respect to the respondent's revenue requirements for 1985 and 1986 and its
computation of the amount of excess revenues earned during this period are not
contested by the respondent. In my opinion, this issue can be divided in two
subquestions:
1-whether the appellant had the legislative authority to
review the revenues made by the respondent during the period when interim rates
were in force;
2-whether the appellant had jurisdiction to make an
order compelling the respondent to grant a one-time credit to its customers.
The
main arguments raised by the appellant can be summarized as follows:
1-the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act grant the appellant the power to review the period
during which a regulated entity was allowed to charge interim rates for the
purpose of comparing the revenues earned during this period to the appropriate
level of revenues set in the final decision;
2-the power to make a one-time credit order is
necessarily ancillary to the power to review the period during which interim
rates were charged and the appellant has jurisdiction to determine the most efficient
method of providing a remedy in cases where excess revenues were made.
The
main arguments raised by the respondent can be summarized as follows:
1-the power to set tolls and tariffs does not include
the power to review and make orders with respect to the respondent's level of
revenues;
2-the appellant has no power to make a one-time credit
order with respect to revenues earned as a result of having charged rates which
the respondent, by virtue of the Railway Act, was obliged to
charge, whether these rates were set by interim order or by a final order.
Counsel
for the National Anti-Poverty Organization ("NAPO") has also argued
that the appellant's decisions concerning the interpretation of statutes which
grant them jurisdiction to deal with certain matters are entitled to curial
deference and cannot be reviewed unless they are patently unreasonable. This
argument raises the issue of the scope of review allowed by s. 68(1) of the National
Transportation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. N-20, (now the National
Telecommunications Powers and Procedures Act), and must be
dealt with prior to any analysis of the relevant statutory provisions claimed
to be the source of the appellant's jurisdiction to make the one-time credit
order found in Decision 86-17.
The
present case raises difficult questions of statutory interpretation and it will
therefore be necessary to examine the relevant provisions of the Railway
Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. R-3, and the National
Transportation Act before moving to a detailed analysis of the decision of
the Federal Court of Appeal and the arguments raised by the parties.
III - Relevant
Legislative Provisions
The
appellant derives its power to regulate the telephone industry from ss. 334 to
340 of the Railway Act ("Provisions
Governing Telegraphs and Telephones") and from
ss. 47 et seq. of the National Transportation Act
("General Jurisdiction and Powers in Respect of Railways"). The Railway
Act sets out the general criteria concerning the setting of rates and
tariffs to be charged by telephone utility companies whereas the National
Transportation Act sets out the appellant's procedural powers in the
context of decisions concerning, amongst other matters, telephone rates and
tariffs.
Sections
335(1), 335(2) and 335(3) of the Railway Act (formerly
ss. 320(2) and 320(3)) state the principle upon which the appellant's
regulatory authority rests, namely that telephone rates and tariffs are subject
to approval by the appellant, cannot be changed without its prior authorization
and may be revised at any time by the appellant:
335. (1)
Notwithstanding anything in any other Act, all telegraph and telephone tolls to
be charged by a company, other than a toll for the transmission of a message
intended for reception by the general public and charged by a company licensed
under the Broadcasting Act, are subject to
the approval of the Commission, and may be revised by the Commission from time
to time.
(2) The company shall file with the
Commission tariffs of any telegraph or telephone tolls to be charged, and the
tariffs shall be in such form, size and style, and give such information,
particulars and details, as the Commission by regulation or in any particular
case prescribes.
(3)
Except with the approval of the Commission, the company shall not charge and
is not entitled to charge any telegraph or telephone toll in respect of which
there is default in filing under subsection (2), or which is disallowed by the
Commission ... [Emphasis added.]
The most
important requirement governing the appellant's power to set telephone rates is
found in s. 340(1) of the Railway Act which provides
that all such rates must be "just and reasonable":
340. (1) All
tolls shall be just and reasonable and shall always, under substantially
similar circumstances and conditions with respect to all traffic of the same
description carried over the same route, be charged equally to all persons at
the same rate. [Emphasis added.]
Section
340 also prohibits discriminatory telephone rates and gives the appellant the
power to suspend, postpone, or disallow a tariff of tolls which is contrary to
ss. 335 to 340 and substitute a satisfactory tariff of tolls in lieu thereof.
Finally,
s. 340(5) of the Railway Act gives the
appellant the power to make orders with respect to traffic, tolls and tariffs
in all matters not expressly covered by s. 340:
340. ...
(5)
In all other matters not expressly provided for in this section, the Commission
may make orders with respect to all matters relating to traffic, tolls and
tariffs or any of them.
Although
the power granted by s. 340(5) could be construed restrictively by the
application of the ejusdem generis rule, I do not
think that such an interpretation is warranted. Section 340(5) is but one
indication of the legislator's intention to give the appellant all the powers
necessary to ensure that the principle set out in s. 340(1), namely that all
rates should be just and reasonable, be observed at all times.
Sections
47 et seq. of the National Transportation Act set
out, from a procedural point of view, the appellant's jurisdiction with respect
to the powers granted by the Railway Act. Section 49(1)
gives the appellant jurisdiction over all complaints concerning compliance with
the Act while s. 49(3) gives the appellant jurisdiction over all matters
of fact or law for the purposes of the Railway Act and of
ss. 47 et seq. of the National Transportation Act.
However, s. 68(1) provides an appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal, with
leave, on any question of law or jurisdiction and it is under this provision
that the respondent has challenged Decision 86-17.
In
many respects, ss. 47 et seq. of the National
Transportation Act have been designed to further the policy objectives and
the regulatory scheme set out in the Railway Act
governing the approval of telephone rates and tariffs. Thus, s. 52 of the National
Transportation Act gives the appellant the power to inquire into, hear or
determine, of its own motion or upon request from the Minister, any matter
which it has the right to inquire into, hear or determine under the Railway
Act:
52. The
Commission may, of its own motion, or shall, on the request of the Minister,
inquire into, hear and determine any matter or thing that, under this part or
the Railway Act, it may inquire into, hear and determine upon
application or complaint, and with respect thereto has the same powers as, on
any application or complaint, are vested in it by this Act.
Section
52 is therefore the corollary of the appellant's power to "revise [tolls]
... from time to time" found in s. 335(1) of the Railway
Act. Thus, the appellant has the power to review, from time to time, its
own final decisions on a proprio motu basis. Similarly,
s. 61 provides that the appellant is not bound by the wording of any complaint
or application it hears and may make orders which would otherwise offend the ultra
petita rule:
61. On any
application made to the Commission, the Commission may make an order granting
the whole or part only of the application, or may grant such further or other
relief, in addition to or in substitution for that applied for, as to the
Commission may seem just and proper, as fully in all respects as if the
application had been for that partial, other or further relief.
By
virtue of s. 60(2) of the National Transportation Act, the appellant
also has the power to make interim orders:
60. ...
(2)
The Commission may, instead of making an order final in the first instance,
make an interim order and reserve further directions either for an adjourned
hearing of the matter or for further application.
Finally,
by virtue of s. 66 of the National Transportation Act, the appellant has
the power to review any of its past decisions whether they are final or
interim:
66. The
Commission may review, rescind, change, alter or vary any order or decision
made by it or may re-hear any application before deciding it.
It
is obvious from the legislative scheme set out in the Railway
Act and the National Transportation Act that the appellant
has been given broad powers for the purpose of ensuring that telephone rates
and tariffs are, at all times, just and reasonable. The appellant may revise
rates at any time, either of its own motion or in the context of an application
made by an interested party. The appellant is not even bound by the relief
sought by such applications and may make any order related thereto provided
that the parties have received adequate notice of the issues to be dealt with
at the hearing. Were it not for the fact that the appellant has the power to
make interim orders, one might say that the appellant's powers in this area are
limited only by the time it takes to process applications, prepare for hearings
and analyse all the evidence. However, the appellant does have the power to
make interim orders and this power must be interpreted in light of the
legislator's intention to provide the appellant with flexible and versatile
powers for the purpose of ensuring that telephone rates are always just and
reasonable.
The
question before this Court is whether the appellant has the statutory authority
to make a one-time credit order for the purpose of remedying a situation where,
after a final hearing dealing with the reasonableness of telephone rates
charged during the years under review, it finds that interim rates in force
during that period were not just and reasonable. Since there is no clear
provision on this subject in the Railway Act or in the National
Transportation Act, it will be necessary to determine whether this power
is derived by necessary implication from the regulatory schemes set out in
these statutes.
IV - The
Decision of the Court Below
In
the Federal Court of Appeal, the respondent in this Court argued that in order
to find statutory authority for the power to make a one-time credit order, it
was necessary to find that s. 66 (power to "review, rescind, change, alter
or vary" previous decisions) or s. 60(2) (power to make interim orders) of
the National Transportation Act provide powers to
make retroactive orders. Of course, the respondent argued that these
provisions did not grant such a power and the majority of the Federal Court of
Appeal composed of Marceau and Pratte JJ. agreed with this argument, Hugessen
J. dissenting.
Marceau
J. held that the appellant in this Court only had the power to fix telephone
tolls and tariffs and that it has no statutory authority to deal with excess
revenues or deficiencies in revenues arising as a result of a discrepancy
between the rate of return yielded from the interim rates in force prior to the
final decision and the permissible rate of return fixed by this final
decision. Marceau J. was of the opinion that the wording of s. 66 of the National
Transportation Act is neutral with respect to retroactivity and that the
presumption against retroactivity should therefore operate. Marceau J. added
that the power to make interim orders does not carry with it the power to
remedy any discrepancy between interim and final orders because the respondent
could not be forced to reimburse revenues earned by charging rates approved by
the appellant. Thus, according to Marceau J., the regulatory scheme set out in
the Railway Act and the National Transportation Act is
prospective in nature and, in the context of such a scheme, the power to make
interim orders only involves the power to make orders "for the time
being".
Pratte
J., who concurred in the result with Marceau J., rejected all arguments based
on the retroactive nature of the powers granted by ss. 60(2) and 66 of the National
Transportation Act. Pratte J. was of the opinion that the impugned order
was not retroactive in nature since its effect was to force the respondent to
grant a credit in the future rather than change the rates charged in the past
in a retroactive manner. Pratte J. then stated that if legislative authority
existed for Decision 86-17, it must be found in s. 60(2) of the National
Transportation Act which provides for "further directions" to be
made at a later date following an interim decision. However, Pratte J. was of
the opinion that any "further direction" must be in the nature of an
order which can be made under s. 60(2) in the first place. It follows
from that reasoning that if no one-time credit order can be made by interim
order, no "further direction" to that effect can be made under
s. 60(2). Pratte J. then agreed with Marceau J. that the respondent could
not be forced to reimburse revenues made by charging rates approved by the
appellant whether by interim order or by a "further direction" made
in a final order.
Hugessen
J. dissented on the basis that, within the statutory framework set out in the Railway
Act and the National Transportation Act, all orders
whether final or interim can, by virtue of ss. 60(2) and 66 of the National
Transportation Act, be modified by a further prospective order; thus, the
proposed rule that interim orders can only be modified by a further prospective
order would, in Hugessen J.'s opinion, effectively eliminate any distinction
between final and interim orders and defeat the legislator's intention to
provide the appellant with a distinct and independent power to make interim
orders. In order to differentiate interim orders from final orders, Hugessen
J. was of the opinion that the appellant in this Court must have the power to
fix just and reasonable rates as of the date at which interim rates came into
effect. Thus, only interim rates can be modified in a retrospective manner by
a final order. Hugessen J. then stated that the interim rates in force in 1985
and 1986 must not be divided into the previous rate and the interim rate
increase of 2 per cent: the resulting rate must be viewed as interim in its
entirety because all the rates charged after January 1, 1985 were
authorized by interim orders. Finally, Hugessen J. stated that the one-time
credit order was a valid exercise of the power to set just and reasonable rates
as of January 1, 1985 and that the choice of the appropriate remedy was an
"`administrative matter' properly left for the Commission's
determination". Hugessen J. also noted that the appellant's order was in
substance though not in form a "matter relating to tolls and tariffs"
within the meaning of s. 340(5) of the Railway Act.
V - Analysis
(A) Curial
Deference Towards the Decisions of the CRTC
NAPO
argues that the appellant's decisions are entitled to "curial
deference" because of their national importance and that these decisions
should not be overturned unless they are patently unreasonable. NAPO cites the
following cases as authority for this proposition: Canadian Union of
Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979]
2 S.C.R. 227 ("CUPE"); Douglas Aircraft Co. of Canada Ltd. v.
McConnell, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 245; Alberta Union of
Provincial Employees v. Board of Governors of Olds College, [1982]
1 S.C.R. 923; Re Ontario Public Service Employees Union and Forer (1985),
52 O.R. (2d) 705 (C.A.); Re City of Ottawa and Ottawa
Professional Firefighters' Association, Local 162 (1987), 58 O.R.
(2d) 685 (C.A.); Greyhound Lines of Canada Ltd. v. Canadian Human Rights
Commission (1987), 78 N.R. 192 (F.C.A.); and Canadian
Pacific Ltd. v. Canadian Transport Commission (1987), 79 N.R. 13
(F.C.A.) ("Canadian Pacific").
With
the exception of the Canadian Pacific case, all these
cases involved judicial review of decisions which were either protected by a
privative clause or by a provision stating that no appeal lies therefrom.
Where the legislator has clearly stated that the decision of an administrative
tribunal is final and binding, courts of original jurisdiction cannot interfere
with such decisions unless the tribunal has committed an error which goes to
its jurisdiction. Thus, this Court has decided in the CUPE case
that judicial review cannot be completely excluded by statute and that courts
of original jurisdiction can always quash a decision if it is "so patently
unreasonable that its construction cannot be rationally supported by the
relevant legislation and demands intervention by the court upon review"
(p. 237). Decisions which are so protected are, in that sense, entitled to a
non-discretionary form of deference because the legislator intended them to be
final and conclusive and, in turn, this intention arises out of the desire to
leave the resolution of some issues in the hands of a specialized tribunal. In
the CUPE case, Dickson J., as he then was, described the
legislator's intention as follows, at pp. 235-36:
Section
101 constitutes a clear statutory direction on the part of the Legislature that
public sector labour matters be promptly and finally decided by the Board.
Privative clauses of this type are typically found in labour relations
legislation. The rationale for protection of a labour board's decisions within
jurisdiction is straightforward and compelling. The labour board is a
specialized tribunal which administers a comprehensive statute regulating
labour relations. In the administration of that regime, a board is called upon
not only to find facts and decide questions of law, but also to exercise its
understanding of the body of jurisprudence that has developed around the
collective bargaining system, as understood in Canada, and its labour relations
sense acquired from accumulated experience in the area.
However,
it is important to stress the fact that the decision of an administrative
tribunal can only be entitled to such deference if the legislator has clearly
expressed his intention to protect such decisions through the use of privative
clauses or clauses which state that the decision is final and without appeal.
As formulated, NAPO's argument on curial deference must therefore be rejected
because it fails to recognize the basic difference between appellate review and
judicial review of decisions which do not fall within the jurisdiction of the
lower tribunal.
Although
s. 49(3) of the National Transportation Act provides that the
appellant has full jurisdiction to hear and determine all matters whether of
law or fact for the purposes of the Railway Act and of Part IV of
the National Transportation Act, the appellant's
decisions are subject to appeal, with leave, to the Federal Court of Appeal on
questions of law or jurisdiction by virtue of s. 68(1) which reads as follows:
68. (1) An
appeal lies from the Commission to the Federal Court of Appeal on a question of
law or a question of jurisdiction on leave therefor being obtained from that
Court on application made within one month after the making of the order,
decision, rule or regulation sought to be appealed from or within such further
time as a judge of that Court under special circumstances allows, and on notice
to the parties and the Commission, and on hearing such of them as appear and
desire to be heard.
It is
trite to say that the jurisdiction of a court on appeal is much broader than
the jurisdiction of a court on judicial review. In principle, a court is
entitled, on appeal, to disagree with the reasoning of the lower tribunal.
However,
within the context of a statutory appeal from an administrative tribunal,
additional consideration must be given to the principle of specialization of
duties. Although an appeal tribunal has the right to disagree with the lower
tribunal on issues which fall within the scope of the statutory appeal, curial
deference should be given to the opinion of the lower tribunal on issues which
fall squarely within its area of expertise. The Canadian Pacific case is
an example of a situation where curial deference towards a decision of the
Canadian Transport Commission involving the interpretation of a tariff was
appropriate. The decision of the Canadian Transport Commission was appealed to
a review committee and then to the Federal Court of Appeal. Urie J. held that
the decision of the review committee must not be reversed unless it is
unreasonable or clearly wrong, at pp. 16-17:
On
the appeal from that decision to this court, the appellant advanced essentially
the same grounds and arguments which it had submitted to the RTC. As to the
first ground, I am of the opinion that the RTC correctly interpreted the two
items from the tariff and since its view was confirmed by the Review Committee,
that committee did not commit an error in construction. No useful purpose
would be served by my restating the reasons of the R.T.C. for interpreting the
items as they did and I respectfully adopt them as my own. This Court
should not interfere with an interpretation made by bodies having the expertise
of the R.T.C. and the Review Committee in an area within their jurisdiction,
unless their interpretation is not reasonable or is clearly wrong. Neither
situation prevails in this case. [Emphasis added.]
Although
the very purpose of the review committee is to interpret the tariff and
although such questions of interpretation fall within the Review Committee's
area of special expertise, it does not follow that its decisions can only be
reviewed if they are unreasonable. However the principle of specialization of
duties justifies curial deference in such circumstances.
In
this case, the respondent is challenging the appellant's decision on a question
of law and jurisdiction involving the nature of interim decisions and the
extent of the powers conferred on the appellant when it makes interim
decisions. This question cannot be solved without an analysis of the
procedural scheme created by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act. It is a question of law which is clearly subject to
appeal under s. 68(1) of the National Transportation Act. It is also a
question of jurisdiction because it involves an inquiry into whether the
appellant had the power to make a one-time credit order.
Except
as regards the choice, amongst remedies available to the appellant, of the most
appropriate remedy to achieve the goal of just and reasonable rates throughout
the interim period, the decision impugned by the respondent is not a decision
which falls within the appellant's area of special expertise and is therefore
pursuant to s. 68(1) subject to review in accordance with the principles
governing appeals. Indeed, the appellant was not created for the purpose of
interpreting the Railway Act or the National
Transportation Act but rather to ensure, amongst other duties, that
telephone rates are always just and reasonable.
(B) The Power
to Regulate Bell Canada's Revenues
The
respondent argues that the appellant only has jurisdiction to regulate tolls
and tariffs and that this power does not include the power to regulate its
level of revenues or its return on equity.
The
fixing of tolls and tariffs that are just and reasonable necessarily involves
the regulation of the revenues of the regulated entity. This has been
recognized by this Court interpreting provisions similar to s. 340(1) of
the Railway Act which prescribe that "[a]ll tolls shall be just
and reasonable". In British Columbia Electric Railway Co. v. Public
Utilities Commission of British Columbia, [1960] S.C.R.
837, Locke J. said the following about para. 16(1)(b) of the Public
Utilities Act, R.S.B.C. 1948, c. 277, which provided that in fixing a
rate the Public Utility Commission of British Columbia should take into
consideration the "fair and reasonable return upon the appraised value of
the property of the public utility used ... to enable the public utility to
furnish the service" (at p. 848):
I
do not think it is possible to define what constitutes a fair return upon the
property of utilities in a manner applicable to all cases or that it is
expedient to attempt to do so. It is a continuing obligation that rests upon
such a utility to provide what the Commission regards as adequate service in
supplying not only electricity but transportation and gas, to maintain its
properties in a satisfactory state to render adequate service and to provide
extensions to these services when, in the opinion of the Commission, such are
necessary. In coming to its conclusion as to what constituted a fair return to
be allowed to the appellant these matters as well as the undoubted fact that
the earnings must be sufficient, if the company was to discharge these
statutory duties, to enable it to pay reasonable dividends and attract capital,
either by the sale of shares or securities, were of necessity considered.
Once that decision was made it was, in my opinion, the duty of the Commission
imposed by the statute to approve rates which would enable the company to earn
such a return or such lesser return as it might decide to ask. [Emphasis
added.]
In
Northwestern Utilities Ltd. v. City of Edmonton, [1929] S.C.R.
186, Lamont J. described the relevant factors in the determination of what are
just and reasonable rates as follows (at p. 190):
In
order to fix just and reasonable rates, which it was the duty of the Board to
fix, the Board had to consider certain elements which must always be taken into
account in fixing a rate which is fair and reasonable to the consumer and to
the company. One of these is the rate base, by which is meant the amount which
the Board considers the owner of the utility has invested in the enterprise and
on which he is entitled to a fair return. Another is the percentage to be allowed
as a fair return.
Such
provisions require the administrative tribunal to balance the interests of the
customers with the necessity of ensuring that the regulated entity is allowed
to make sufficient revenues to finance the costs of the services it sells to
the public.
Thus,
it is trite to say that in fixing fair and reasonable tolls the appellant must
take into consideration the level of revenues needed by the respondent. In
fact, the respondent would be the first to complain if its financial situation
was not taken into consideration when tolls are fixed. By so doing, the
appellant regulates the respondent's revenues albeit in a seemingly indirect
manner. I would therefore dismiss this argument.
(C) The Power
to Revisit the Period During Which Interim Rates Were in Force
(i) Introduction
As
indicated above, the appellant has examined the period during which interim
rates were in force, i.e. from January 1, 1985 to October 14, 1986,
for the purpose of ascertaining whether these interim rates were in fact just
and reasonable. Following a factual finding that these rates were not just and
reasonable, the one-time credit order now contested before this Court was made
in order to remedy this situation. Thus, the effect of Decision 86-17 was not
retroactive in nature since it does not seek to establish rates to replace or
be substituted to those which were charged during that period. The one-time
credit order is, however, retrospective in the sense that its purpose is to
remedy the imposition of rates approved in the past and found in the final
analysis to be excessive. Thus, the question before this Court is whether the
appellant has jurisdiction to make orders for the purpose of remedying the
inappropriateness of rates which were approved by it in a previous interim
decision.
This
question involves a determination of whether rates approved by interim order
are inherently contingent as well as provisional or whether the statutory
scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act is so prospective in nature that it precludes such a
retrospective review of interim rates approved by the appellant. Finally, it
is also necessary to determine whether the appellant has jurisdiction to order
the reimbursement of amounts which exceed the revenues actually collected as a
direct result of the interim rates.
(ii) The Distinction Between Interim and Final Orders
The
respondent argues that the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act establish a regulatory regime which is exclusively
prospective in nature because all rates, whether interim or final, must be just
and reasonable. Thus, if interim rates have been approved on the basis that
they are just and reasonable, no excessive revenues can be earned by charging
such rates; interim rates, by reason only of their approval by the appellant,
are presumed to be just and reasonable until they are modified by a subsequent
order. According to the respondent, interim orders are therefore orders made
"for the time being" until a more permanent order is made.
In
his dissenting reasons, Hugessen J. points out quite accurately that if interim
orders are simply orders made "for the time being", it will be
impossible to distinguish final orders from interim orders within the statutory
scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act since all final orders may be revised by the appellant
of its own motion and at any time: s. 335(1) of the Railway Act and s.
52 of the National Transportation Act. It is therefore
impossible to say that final orders made under these statutes are final in the
sense that they may never be reconsidered. The on-going nature of the
appellant's regulatory activities necessarily entails a continuous review of
past decisions concerning tolls and tariffs. Thus, all orders, whether final
or interim, would be orders "for the time being" within the statutory
scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act.
Both
the appellant and Hugessen J. rely heavily on Re Coseka Resources
Ltd. and Saratoga Processing Co. (1981), 126 D.L.R. (3d) 705 (Alta.
C.A.) for the proposition that interim decisions must be distinguished from
final decisions in that they may be reviewed in a retrospective manner. This
distinction is based on the fact that interim decisions are made subject to
"further direction" as prescribed by s. 60(2) of the National
Transportation Act which, for convenience, I cite again:
60. ...
(2)
The Commission may, instead of making an order final in the first instance,
make an interim order and reserve further directions either for an
adjourned hearing of the matter or for further application. [Emphasis added.]
The
statutory scheme analysed by the Alberta Court of Appeal in Re Coseka is
substantially similar to though more clearly prospective than the statutory
scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act. Furthermore, s. 52(2) of the Public
Utilities Board Act, R.S.A. 1970, c. 302, is identical in wording to s.
60(2) of the National Transportation Act.
Laycraft J.A., as he then was, cited with approval by Hugessen J., wrote
the following with respect to the possibility of revisiting the period during
which interim rates were in force for the purpose of deciding whether those
interim rates were in fact just and reasonable, at pp. 717-18:
In my view, to say that an interim
order may not be replaced by a final order is to attribute virtually no
additional powers to the Board from s. 52 beyond those already contained in
either the Gas Utilities Act or the Public
Utilities Board Act to make final orders. The Board is by other provisions
of the statute empowered by order to fix rates either on application or on its own
motion. An interim order would be the same, and have the same effect, as a
final order unless the "further direction" which the statute
contemplates includes the power to change the interim order. On that
construction of the section the interim order would be a "final"
order in all but name. The Board would need no further legislative
authority to issue a further "final" order since it may fix rates
under s. 27 on its own motion without a further application. The provision for
an interim order was intended to permit rates to be fixed subject to correction
to be made when the hearing is subsequently completed.
It
was urged during argument that s. 52(2) was merely intended to enable the Board
to achieve "rough justice" during the period of its operation until a
final order is issued. However, the Board is required to fix "just and
reasonable rates" not "roughly just and reasonable rates". The
words "reserve for further direction", in my view, contemplate
changes as soon as the Board is able to determine those just and reasonable
rates. [Emphasis added.]
I
agree with Hugessen J. and with the reasons of Laycraft J.A. in
Re Coseka where he made a careful review of previous cases. The
statutory scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act is such that one of the differences between interim and
final orders must be that interim decisions may be reviewed and modified in a
retrospective manner by a final decision. It is inherent in the nature of
interim orders that their effect as well as any discrepancy between the interim
order and the final order may be reviewed and remedied by the final order. I
hasten to add that the words "further directions" do not have any
magical, retrospective content. Under the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act, final orders are subject to "further
[prospective] directions" as well. It is the interim nature of the order
which makes it subject to further retrospective directions.
The
importance of distinguishing final orders from interim orders is illustrated by
the case of City of Calgary v. Madison Natural Gas Co. (1959),
19 D.L.R. (2d) 655 (Alta. C.A.). In Madison, the
Public Utility Board (the "Board") was faced with an application by
the City of Calgary for the reimbursement of amounts earned in excess of the
rates of return allowed in orders 34 and 41 for the sale of natural gas. The
Board had allowed a rate of return of 7 per cent but, due to its lack of useful
information to predict the effect of rates on the actual financial performance
of the regulated entity, the rates per volume fixed by the Board actually
yielded greater profits than anticipated. The Board refused to grant the
demands made in the application because it felt it had no jurisdiction to
revisit periods during which rates approved in a final decision were in force.
This decision was confirmed by the Court of Appeal on the basis that, contrary
to arguments made by the City of Calgary, orders 34 and 41 were final orders
not governed by s. 35a(3) of the Natural Gas Utilities Act, which
read as follows:
35a -- ...
(3) The Board is hereby authorized,
empowered and directed, on the final hearing, to give consideration to the
effect of the operation of such interim or temporary order and in the final
order to make, allow or provide for such adjustments, allowances or other
factors, as to the Board may seem just and reasonable.
Order 34
provided that the price was set at 9 cents per mcf and that "if it should
turn out that there is a surplus, it can be dealt with when the time
arrives" which led to the argument that this order was in fact an interim
order. Johnson J.A. dismissed this argument in the following terms, at
pp. 662-63:
It
is the submission of the appellants that O. 34 and O. 41 are interim or
temporary orders and the Board can now deal with these surpluses in accordance
with s-s (3). As I have mentioned, orders fixing interim prices were made
while the Board was hearing the application and considering its report. These,
of course, were superseded by the order now under consideration. Orders 34 and
41 are, of course, not final orders in the sense that judgments are final. The
Act contemplates that subsequent applications will be made to change the price
fixed by these orders. They are nonetheless final so far as each application
is concerned.
It is
useful to note that the respondent relies heavily on the Madison case
for the proposition that a regulated entity cannot be forced to disgorge
profits legally earned by charging rates approved by the relevant regulatory
authority on the basis that they are just and reasonable. Since the City of
Calgary sought to obtain the reimbursement of profits earned by charging rates
approved by final order, this case does not support the respondent's position.
A
consideration of the nature of interim orders and the circumstances under which
they are granted further explains and justifies their being, unlike final
decisions, subject to retrospective review and remedial orders. The appellant
may make a wide variety of interim orders dealing with hearings, notices and, in
general, all matters concerning the administration of proceedings before the
appellant. Such orders are obviously interim in nature. However, this is less
obvious when an interim order deals with a matter which is to be dealt with in
the final decision, as was the case with the interim rate increase ordered in
Decision 84-28. If interim rate increases are awarded on the basis of the same
criteria as those applied in the final decision, the interim decision would
serve as a preliminary decision on the merits as far as the rate increase is
concerned. This, however, is not the purpose of interim rate orders.
Traditionally,
such interim rate orders dealing in an interlocutory manner with issues which
remain to be decided in a final decision are granted for the purpose of
relieving the applicant from the deleterious effects caused by the length of
the proceedings. Such decisions are made in an expeditious manner on the basis
of evidence which would often be insufficient for the purposes of the final
decision. The fact that an order does not make any decision on the merits of
an issue to be settled in a final decision and the fact that its purpose is to
provide temporary relief against the deleterious effects of the duration of the
proceedings are essential characteristics of an interim rate order.
In
Decision 84-28, the appellant granted the respondent an interim rate increase
on the basis of the following criteria which, for convenience, I cite again (at
p. 9):
The
Commission considers that, as a rule, general rate increases should only be
granted following the full public process contemplated by Part III of its
Telecommunications Rules of Procedure. In the absence of such a process,
general rate increases should not in the Commission's view be granted, even on
an interim basis, except where special circumstances can be demonstrated. Such
circumstances would include lengthy delays in dealing with an application that
could result in a serious deterioration in the financial condition of an
applicant absent a general interim increase.
Decision
84-28 was truly an interim decision since it did not seek to decide in a
preliminary manner an issue which would be dealt with in the final decision.
Instead, the appellant granted the interim rate increase on the basis that such
an increase was necessary in order to prevent the respondent from having
serious financial difficulties.
Furthermore,
the appellant consistently reiterated throughout the procedures which led to
Decision 86-17 its intention to review the rates charged for the test year 1985
and up to the date of the final decision. Holding that the interim rates in
force during that period cannot be reviewed would not only be contrary to the
nature of interim orders, it would also frustrate and subvert the appellant's
order approving interim rates.
It
is true, as the respondent argues, that all telephone rates approved by the
appellant must be just and reasonable whether these rates are approved by
interim or final order; no other conclusion can be derived from s. 340(1)
of the Railway Act. However, interim rates must be just and reasonable on
the basis of the evidence filed by the applicant at the hearing or otherwise
available for the interim decision. It would be useless to order a final
hearing if the appellant was bound by the evidence filed at the
interim hearing. Furthermore, the interim rate increase was granted on
the basis that the length of the proceedings could cause a serious
deterioration in the financial condition of the respondent. Only once such an
emergency situation was found to exist did the appellant ask itself what rate
increase would be just and reasonable on the basis of the available evidence
and for the purpose of preventing such a financial deterioration. The inherent
differences between a decision made on an interim basis and a decision made on
a final basis clearly justify the power to revisit the period during which
interim rates were in force.
The
respondent argues that the power to revisit the period during which interim
rates were in force cannot exist within the statutory scheme established by the Railway
Act and the National Transportation Act because these
statutes do not grant such a power explicitly, unlike s. 64 of the National
Energy Board Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. N-7 . The powers of any
administrative tribunal must of course be stated in its enabling statute but
they may also exist by necessary implication from the wording of the act, its
structure and its purpose. Although courts must refrain from unduly broadening
the powers of such regulatory authorities through judicial law-making, they
must also avoid sterilizing these powers through overly technical
interpretations of enabling statutes. I have found that, within the statutory
scheme established by the Railway Act and the National
Transportation Act, the power to make interim orders necessarily implies
the power to revisit the period during which interim rates were in force. The
fact that this power is provided explicitly in other statutes cannot modify
this conclusion based as it is on the interpretation of these two statutes as a
whole.
I
am bolstered in my opinion by the fact that the regulatory scheme established
by the Railway Act and the National Transportation Act gives
the appellant very broad procedural powers for the purpose of ensuring that
telephone rates and tariffs are, at all times, just and reasonable. Within
this regulatory framework, the power to make appropriate orders for the purpose
of remedying interim rates which are not just and reasonable is a necessary
adjunct to the power to make interim orders.
It
is interesting to note that, in the context of statutory schemes which did not
provide any power to set interim rates, the United States Supreme Court has
held that regulatory agencies have both the power to impose interim rates and
the power to make reimbursement orders where the interim rates are found to be
excessive in the final order: United States v. Fulton, 475
U.S. 657 (1986), at pp. 669-71; Trans Alaska Pipeline Rate Cases, 436
U.S. 631 (1978), where Brennan J. wrote the following comments at pp. 654-56:
Finally, petitioners contend that
the Commission has no power to subject them to an obligation to account for and
refund amounts collected under the interim rates in effect during the
suspension period and the initial rates which would become effective at the end
of such a period.... In response, we note first that we have already
recognized in Chessie that the Commission does have powers
"ancillary" to its suspension power which do not depend on an express
statutory grant of authority. We had no occasion in Chessie to
consider what the full range of such powers might be, but we did indicate that
the touchstone of ancillary power was a "direc(t) relat(ionship)"
between the power asserted and the Commission's "mandate to assess the
reasonableness of ... rates and to suspend them pending investigation if there
is a question as to their legality." 426 U.S., at 514.
...
Thus,
here as in Chessie, the Commission's refund conditions
are a "legitimate, reasonable, and direct adjunct to the Commission's
explicit statutory power to suspend rates pending investigation," in that
they allow the Commission, in exercising its suspension power, to pursue
"a more measured course" and to "offe(r) an alternative tailored
far more precisely to the particular circumstances" of these cases.
Since, again as in Chessie, the measured course adopted here is
necessary to strike a proper balance between the interests of carriers and the
public, we think the Interstate Commerce Act should be construed to confer on
the Commission the authority to enter on this course unless language in the Act
plainly requires a contrary result.
This
approach to the interpretation of statutes conferring regulatory authority over
rates and tariffs is only the expression of the wider rule that the court must
not stifle the legislator's intention by reason only of the fact that a power
has not been explicitly provided for.
The
appellant has also argued that the power to "vary" a previous
decision, whether interim or final, found in s. 66 of the National
Transportation Act, includes the power to vary these decisions in a
retroactive manner. Given my conclusion based on the inherent nature of
interim orders, it is unnecessary for me to deal with this argument.
(iii)The
Relevance of the Distinction Between Positive Approval and Negative Disallowance
Schemes of Rate Regulation
Much
was said in argument about the difference between positive approval schemes and
negative disallowance schemes with respect to the power to act
retrospectively. The first category includes schemes which provide that the
administrative agency is the only body having statutory authority to approve or
fix tolls payable to utility companies; these schemes generally stipulate that
tolls shall be "just and reasonable" and that the administrative
agency has the power to review these tolls on a proprio motu basis
or upon application by an interested party. The second category includes
schemes which grant utility companies the right to fix tolls as they wish but
also grant users the right to complain before an administrative agency which
has the power to vary those tolls if it finds that they are not "just and
reasonable". It has generally been found that negative disallowance
schemes provide the power to make orders which are retroactive to the date of
the application by the ratepayer who claims that the rates are not "just
and reasonable". On the other hand, positive approval schemes have been
found to be exclusively prospective in nature and not to allow orders
applicable to periods prior to the final decision itself. A full discussion of
this issue was made by Estey J. in Nova v. Amoco Canada
Petroleum Co., [1981] 2 S.C.R. 437, at pp. 450-51, and I do not
propose to repeat or to criticize what was said in that case with respect to
the power to review rates approved by a previous final order. I am of the
opinion that the regulatory scheme established by the Railway
Act and the National Transportation Act is a positive
approval scheme inasmuch as the respondent's rates are subject to approval by
the appellant. However, the Nova case only dealt with the power to
review rates approved in a previous final decision and, as I have said before,
entirely different considerations apply when interim rates are reviewed.
It
has often been said that the power to review its own previous final decision on
the fairness and the reasonableness of rates would threaten the stability of
the regulated entity's financial situation. In Regina v. Board of
Commissioners of Public Utilities (1966), 60 D.L.R. (2d) 703,
Ritchie J.A., wrote the following comments on this issue, at p. 729:
The distributor contends that in the
absence of any express limitation or restriction or an express provision as to
the effective date of any order made by the board, the jurisdiction conferred
on the board by the Legislature includes jurisdiction to make orders with
retrospective effect. Reliance is placed on Bakery and
Confectionery Workers International Union of America, Local 468 v. Salmi, White
Lunch Ltd. v. Labour Relations Board of British Columbia,
56 D.L.R. (2d) 193, [1966] S.C.R. 282, 55 W.W.R. 129 which it is contended
must be applied when interpreting s. 6(1) of the Act.
The
clear object of the Act is to ensure stability in the operation of public
utilities and the maintenance of just, reasonable and non-discriminatory
rates. That object would be defeated if the board having, on November 14,
1962, made an order fixing the rates to be paid by the distributor for natural
gas purchased from the producer, reduced those rates on February 19, 1966, more
than three years later, and directed the reduced rates be effective as from
January 1, 1962, or as from any other date prior to
February 19, 1966.
and
further at p. 732:
In no
section of the Act do I find any wording indicating an intention on the part of
the Legislature to confer on the board authority to make orders fixing rates
with retrospective effect or any language requiring a construction that such
authority has been bestowed on the board. To so interpret s. 6(1) would render
insecure the position of not only every public utility carrying on business in
the Province but also the position of every customer of such public utility.
However,
Ritchie J.A.'s comments deal with the Public Utilities Act,
R.S.N.B. 1952, c. 186, which did not provide the Board with any power to make
interim orders. I readily agree that Ritchie J.A.'s concerns about the
financial stability of utility companies are valid when one is faced with the
argument that a Board has the power to revisit its own previous final
decisions. Since no time limit could be placed on the period which could be
revisited, any power to revisit previous final decisions would have to be
explicitly provided in the enabling statute. Furthermore, even if final orders
are "for the time being", it does not necessarily follow that they
must be stripped of all their finality through the judicial recognition of a
power to revisit a period during which final rates were in force.
However,
there should be no concern over the financial stability of regulated utility
companies where one deals with the power to revisit interim rates. The very
purpose of interim rates is to allay the prospect of financial instability
which can be caused by the duration of proceedings before a regulatory
tribunal. In fact, in this case, the respondent asked for and was granted
interim rate increases on the basis of serious apprehended financial
difficulties. The added flexibility provided by the power to make interim
orders is meant to foster financial stability throughout the regulatory
process. The power to revisit the period during which interim rates were in
force is a necessary corollary of this power without which interim orders made
in emergency situations may cause irreparable harm and subvert the fundamental
purpose of ensuring that rates are just and reasonable.
Even
though Parliament has decided to adopt a positive approval regulatory scheme
for the regulation of telephone rates, the added flexibility provided by the
power to make interim orders indicates that the appellant is empowered to make
orders as of the date at which the initial application was made or as of the
date the appellant initiated the proceedings of its own motion. The underlying
theory behind the rule that a positive approval scheme only gives jurisdiction
to make prospective orders is that the rates are presumed to be just and
reasonable until they are modified because they have been approved by the
regulatory authority on the basis that they were indeed just and reasonable.
However, the power to make interim orders necessarily implies the power to
modify in its entirety the rate structure previously established by final
order. As a result, it cannot be said that the rate review process begins at
the date of the final hearing; instead, the rate review begins when the
appellant sets interim rates pending a final decision on the merits. As was
stated in obiter in Re Eurocan Pulp &
Paper Co. and British Columbia Energy Commission (1978), 87 D.L.R.
(3d) 727 (B.C.C.A.), with respect to a similar though not identical legislative
scheme, the power to make interim orders effectively implies the power to make
orders effective from the date of the beginning of the proceedings. In turn,
this power must comprise the power to make appropriate orders for the purpose
of remedying any discrepancy between the rate of return yielded by the interim
rates and the rate of return allowed in the final decision for the period
during which they are in effect so as to achieve just and reasonable rates
throughout that period.
(iv) The Power to Make a One-time Credit Order
Once
it is decided, as I have, that the appellant does have the power to revisit the
period during which interim rates were in force for the purpose of ascertaining
whether they were just and reasonable, it would be absurd to hold that it has
no power to make a remedial order where, in fact, these rates were not just and
reasonable. I also agree with Hugessen J. that s. 340(5) of the Railway
Act provides a sufficient statutory basis for the power to make remedial
orders including an order to give a one-time credit to certain classes of
customers.
CNCP
Telecommunications argues that the one-time credit order should be limited to
the amount of revenues actually derived as a direct result of the 2 per cent
interim rate increase and that these excess revenues should be refunded to the
actual customers who paid them. The presumption behind this argument is that
the portion of the interim rates corresponding to the final rates in force
prior to the beginning of the proceedings cannot be held to be unjust or
unreasonable until a final decision is rendered. As I have held that the
appellant has jurisdiction to review the fairness and the reasonableness of
these interim rates in their entirety because the rate-review process starts as
of the date of the beginning of the proceedings, this argument must be
dismissed.
Finally,
it is true that the one-time credit ordered by the appellant will not
necessarily benefit the customers who were actually billed excessive rates.
However, once it is found that the appellant does have the power to make a
remedial order, the nature and extent of this order remain within its
jurisdiction in the absence of any specific statutory provision on this issue.
The appellant admits that the use of a one-time credit is not the perfect way
of reimbursing excess revenues. However, in view of the cost and the
complexity of finding who actually paid excessive rates, where these persons
reside and of quantifying the amount of excessive payments made by each, and
having regard to the appellant's broad jurisdiction in weighing the many
factors involved in apportioning respondent's revenue requirement amongst its
several classes of customers to determine just and reasonable rates, the
appellant's decision was eminently reasonable and I agree with Hugessen J. that
it should not be overturned.
VI - Conclusion
In
my opinion, the appellant had jurisdiction to review the interim rates in force
prior to Decision 86-17 for the purpose of ascertaining whether they were just
and reasonable, had jurisdiction to order the respondent to grant the one-time
credit described in Decision 86-17 and has committed no error in so doing.
I
would allow the appeal and confirm the appellant's decision, with costs in all
courts.
Appeal
allowed with costs.
Solicitor
for the appellant: Avrum Cohen, Hull.
Solicitors
for the respondent: Clarkson, Tétrault, Montréal.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada: The Deputy Attorney General
of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Consumers' Association of Canada: Janet Yale, Ottawa.
Solicitor
for the intervener Canadian Business Telecommunications Alliance: Kenneth G.
Engelhart, Toronto.
Solicitor
for the intervener the CNCP Telecommunications: Michael Ryan, Toronto.
Solicitors
for the intervener the National Anti‑Poverty Organization: Andrew Roman
and Glenn W. Bell, Ottawa.