Court Opinion

ID: 8213744
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-13 13:13:22.021631+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:24.714448
License: Public Domain

PRESENT: All the Justices

ASHLAND, LLC
                                                              OPINION BY
v. Record No. 210800                                 JUSTICE WESLEY G. RUSSELL, JR.
                                                            OCTOBER 13, 2022
VIRGINIA-AMERICAN WATER COMPANY

                FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF HOPEWELL
                            William Allan Sharrett, Judge

       Ashland, LLC (“Ashland”) appeals the circuit court’s dismissal of its claim against

Virginia-American Water Company (“Virginia-American”) for an alleged breach of contract.

Specifically, Ashland contends that the circuit court erred in concluding that Article IX, Section

4 of the Constitution of Virginia deprived the circuit court of jurisdiction to adjudicate Ashland’s

contract claim. For the reasons that follow, we agree with Ashland, reverse the judgment of the

circuit court, and remand the matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                          I. Background

       Virginia-American is a private utility company that operates water plants, including one

in the City of Hopewell. It provides water to local customers, including Ashland, a chemical

manufacturer. Virginia-American provides its customers water service pursuant to a tariff issued

by the State Corporation Commission (“Commission”).1

       In 2018, Virginia-American undertook repairs at its Hopewell water plant. The repairs

involved installation of a bypass line that carried water near electronic equipment critical to

       1
         “A tariff is a schedule of rates, rules, and regulations issued pursuant to an order of the
[Commission]. It sets out the rates which a public utility must charge and the terms and
conditions under which it is required to supply service to its customers.” Kroger Co. v.
Appalachian Power Co., 244 Va. 560, 561 n.1 (1992). The tariff governing Virginia-American’s
provision of water is entitled “Rates, Rules and Regulations for Furnishing Water and
Wastewater Service in the Territory Supplied by the Company in the City of Alexandria, City of
Hopewell, [and Other Specified Areas].”
proper operation of the water plant. The bypass line ruptured, damaging the electronic

equipment and rendering associated water pumps inoperative. The equipment failure caused an

outage that disrupted water service to Ashland. During the outage, Ashland was unable to

manufacture the chemicals it sells.

        Alleging that the outage resulted in $515,000 in damages due to lost business and profits,

Ashland filed suit against Virginia-American in the Circuit Court of the City of Hopewell.

Ashland’s complaint asserted a breach of contract claim based on an alleged violation of the

tariff. Ashland relied on Rule 19(c) of the tariff, which provides that Virginia-American “will

undertake to use reasonable care and diligence in order to prevent and avoid interruption and

fluctuations in the service, but it cannot and does not guarantee that such will not occur.”

Ashland claimed that Virginia-American’s placement of the bypass line near the electronic

equipment constituted “a breach of its contractual duty to use reasonable care.”

        Virginia-American demurred to the complaint by asserting that other provisions of the

tariff barred Ashland’s claim. Virginia-American cited tariff Rule 8(f), which provides in part

that Virginia-American “shall not, in any way or under any circumstances, be held liable or

responsible to any party . . . for any losses or damage resulting from any . . . deficiency in . . .

supply of water due to any cause whatsoever[,]” and Rule 17(a), which states that Virginia-

American “does not guarantee a[n] . . . uninterrupted supply of water, and customers are

cautioned to provide sufficient storage of water where an absolutely uninterrupted supply must

be assured.”

        Although not initially raised by Virginia-American, the question of whether the circuit

court had jurisdiction to hear Ashland’s breach of contract claim arose during the briefing of and

                                                   2
argument about Virginia-American’s demurrer. 2 In its questions of counsel, the circuit court

explored whether it had jurisdiction to hear the matter or whether resolution of this type of

dispute was committed to the Commission. The circuit court also provided the parties an

opportunity to brief the jurisdictional issue.

       After taking the matter under advisement, the circuit court issued a letter opinion

addressing “whether [it] ha[d] subject matter jurisdiction to hear this case.” The circuit court

concluded that Ashland’s “contention that jurisdiction is appropriate because it has brought a

contract action fails to properly interpret a ‘tariff.’” The circuit court explained, “[i]t remains

true that ‘circuit courts have jurisdiction over common law contract claims’ [and that] a tariff

‘establishes the contractual relationship between the parties’[; y]et, these two truths do not mean

that a dispute over tariff provisions is merely a common law contract claim.” The circuit court

concluded that “while the two may appear to be similar, a tariff is not the equivalent of a

contract.”

       In further examining the issue, the circuit court referenced provisions of the Code that

govern consumer complaints about entities subject to Commission regulation. It found that the

“statutes show a proclivity on the part of the General Assembly to place the [Commission] in

charge of controversies involving public utilities and customers.” Finally, and “[m]ost

importantly,” the circuit court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction because Article IX, Section 4

of the Constitution of Virginia provides that only the Supreme Court may hear appeals of

decisions of the Commission and that “‘no other court . . . shall have jurisdiction to review,

       2
           In fact, when the issue of whether the circuit court had jurisdiction to hear Ashland’s
contract claim first arose, Virginia-American was adamant that the circuit court had jurisdiction
over the claim and made clear that Virginia-American had “not asked [the circuit court] to hold
that it lacks jurisdiction to decide this case.”

                                                  3
reverse, correct, or annul any action of the Commission or to enjoin or restrain it in the

performance of its official duties.’” Finding that the promulgation of a tariff by the Commission

is an “‘action’” of the Commission, the circuit court concluded that “[t]o sit for this controversy,

[it] must ‘review’ the [t]ariff” and that it lacked the power to do so.

        The circuit court memorialized its ruling in an order dated May 24, 2021. The order

specified that, “[u]pon consideration of the pleadings, briefs, and argument, for the reasons stated

in the [l]etter [o]pinion . . ., the [c]ourt finds that it lacks jurisdiction to address the merits of the

controversy, including the merits of [Virginia-American’s d]emurrer.” On that basis, the circuit

court dismissed Ashland’s complaint.

        Ashland noted an appeal to this Court, asserting that the circuit court erred in concluding

that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Ashland’s breach of contract claim and in declining

to reach the merits of and ultimately overrule Virginia-American’s demurrer. We granted

Ashland’s petition for appeal.

                                               II. Analysis

                                         A. Standard of review

        Ashland’s challenge to the circuit court’s determination that it lacked jurisdiction over

Ashland’s breach of contract claim presents a question of law subject to de novo review in this

Court. Andrews v. Richmond Redevelopment & Hous. Auth., 292 Va. 79, 85 (2016). To the

extent that the circuit court’s determination regarding jurisdiction turned on its interpretation of

the Constitution of Virginia, questions of constitutional interpretation also are questions of law

subject to de novo review. Montgomery Cnty. v. Virginia Dep’t of Rail & Pub. Transp., 282 Va.

422, 435 (2011).

                                                     4
                               B. Circuit court’s ruling on jurisdiction

        The Commission was created “to protect the public rights by regulating public utilities.”

Newport News & O.P. Ry. & Elec. Co. v. Hampton Roads Ry. & Elec. Co., 102 Va. 847, 851

(1904). Article IX, Section 2 of the Constitution of Virginia provides that “[s]ubject to such

criteria . . . prescribed by law, the Commission shall have the power and be charged with the

duty of regulating the rates, charges, and services and, except as may be otherwise authorized by

this Constitution or by general law, the facilities of railroad, telephone, gas, and electric

companies” and that it also “shall have such other powers and duties not inconsistent with this

Constitution as may be prescribed by law.” The General Assembly has provided by statute for

the Commission to exercise similar ratemaking and other regulatory authority over water

companies like Virginia-American. See Code §§ 12.1-12 & 56-261, et seq.; see also City of

Alexandria v. State Corp. Comm’n, 296 Va. 79, 95 (2018).

        The authority conferred upon the Commission by the Constitution and the General

Assembly to set the rates for and otherwise regulate water companies is near plenary, subject to

review only in this Court. Entitled “Appeals from actions of the Commission[,]” Article IX,

Section 4 of the Constitution of Virginia provides that “[a]ll appeals from the Commission shall

be to the Supreme Court only” and that “[n]o other court of the Commonwealth shall have

jurisdiction to review, reverse, correct, or annul any action of the Commission or to enjoin or

restrain it in the performance of its official duties[.]” 3

        3
         Prior to the adoption of Article IX, Section 4 as part of the Constitution of 1971, a
similar provision of the Constitution of 1902 governed appeals from the Commission.
Specifically, Article XII, Section 156(d) of the Constitution of 1902 provided, in pertinent part,
that

                [a]ll appeals from the [C]ommission shall be to the Supreme Court
                of Appeals only. . . . No court of this Commonwealth (except the

                                                     5
        Much as the Commission has been granted near plenary authority over matters committed

to it by the Constitution or statute, circuit courts have, subject to an amount in controversy

requirement, been given similar authority to adjudicate contract actions. Code § 17.1-513

provides that the circuit courts

                shall have original and general jurisdiction of all civil cases, except
                cases upon claims to recover personal property or money not of
                greater value than $100, exclusive of interest, and except such
                cases as are assigned to some other tribunal; . . . and also, of all
                cases, civil or criminal, in which an appeal may be had to the
                Supreme Court.[4]

        As we previously have observed, “[t]o state the obvious, circuit courts

have subject matter jurisdiction over contract disputes,” Pure Presbyterian Church of

Washington v. Grace of God Presbyterian Church, 296 Va. 42, 56 (2018), and exercise that

authority “[u]nless ousted of jurisdiction by law.” Appalachian Power Co. v. John Stewart

Walker, Inc., 214 Va. 524, 530 (1974). Thus, a circuit court has jurisdiction over a common law

contract claim unless a provision of the Constitution or an enactment of the General Assembly

strips it of that authority.

                Supreme Court of Appeals, by way of appeals as herein
                authorized), shall have jurisdiction to review, reverse, correct or
                annul any action of the [C]ommission, within the scope of its
                authority, or to suspend or delay the execution or operation thereof,
                or to enjoin, restrain or interfere with the commission in the
                performance of its official duties[.]

Although there have been some minor changes in wording, we, as pertinent to the issues raised in
this appeal, discern no material difference in the relevant provisions of Article IX, Section 4 of
the current Constitution and Article XII, Section 156(d) of the Constitution of 1902.
Accordingly, our decisions decided under the prior constitutional provision remain viable
authority for resolving this appeal.
        4
        Ashland initiated its suit in 2019. The General Assembly amended Code § 17.1-513 in
2020 and 2021, see 2020 Acts ch. 903 (Reg. Sess.); 2021 Acts chs. 187, 489 (Spec. Sess. I).
These amendments have no bearing on this case.

                                                  6
       Given these potentially conflicting grants of jurisdiction, the proper characterization of

Ashland’s claim for damages is critical. Ashland characterizes its claim as nothing more than a

common law breach of contract action with the tariff merely supplying the terms of the contract

between the utility and its customer. Virginia-American asserts that Ashland’s action cannot be

characterized as a common law breach of contract action because the alleged obligations stem

from the Commission-approved tariff, making it impossible for the circuit court to adjudicate the

case without reviewing those terms in violation of Article IX, Section 4.

       The circuit court correctly observed that there are differences between a tariff and the

traditional commercial contract. The terms of a tariff are not the result of arms-length

negotiations between a company and its customer. Rather, the terms of a tariff, including the

rates set therein, are imposed on the utility and its customers by the Commission, which, in doing

so, “is exercising a legislative function delegated to it by the General Assembly.” City of

Alexandria, 296 Va. at 94 (quoting Old Dominion Comm. for Fair Util. Rates v. State Corp.

Comm’n, 294 Va. 168, 180 (2017)). Furthermore, in the case of a monopoly utility with a

defined service territory, the customer’s decision is to either accept these terms or go without

service.

       These differences, however, do not change the fundamental nature of the relationship

between the utility and its customers. The relationship, in law and fact, is a contractual one with

the obligations of the parties to one another defined by the terms of the tariff. As we have stated

previously, a Commission-approved tariff “establishes the contractual relationship between the

parties,” the utility and its customer. Kroger Co. v. Appalachian Power Co., 244 Va. 560, 562

(1992); see also Po River Water & Sewer Co. v. Indian Acres Club of Thornburg, Inc., 255 Va.

108, 113-14 (1998). Accordingly, the fact that the obligations that Ashland alleges Virginia-

                                                 7
American breached stem from the Commission-approved tariff does not preclude Ashland’s

action from being one for common law breach of contract over which a circuit court could

properly exercise jurisdiction.

       Despite the contractual nature of Ashland’s claim, Virginia-American maintains that

Article IX, Section 4 precludes the circuit court from entertaining this suit because, “[i]n order to

adjudicate Ashland’s claim in the case at bar, the circuit court had to review – interpret, construe

– the [Commission]’s action adopting the specific language of the [t]ariff.” The circuit court

essentially adopted this position—that it was precluded from hearing the matter if resolution of

the claim involved reading, interpreting, or applying any portion of the tariff.

       In the context of Article IX, Section 4 or the predecessor version found in Article XII,

Section 156(d) of the Constitution of 1902, we have not read “review” as prohibiting a circuit

court from reading, interpreting, or applying a tariff provision in common law actions between a

utility and its customer. To the contrary, we consistently have allowed circuit courts to do so, as

long as all the circuit court was required to do was read, interpret, and apply the tariff provisions.

See, e.g., Po River, 255 Va. at 114 (recognizing the ability of a circuit court to read and apply the

provisions of a tariff to adjudicate a billing dispute between a utility and its customer by

“comput[ing] the recipient’s liability for payment at the rate set by the Commission for the

customer class pertaining to that recipient”); Kroger Co., 244 Va. at 562 (1992) (affirming a

circuit court’s decision to sustain a plea in bar based on “the single issue [of] whether the [t]ariff

barred [the customer]’s negligence action against” the utility).

       These cases reflect our longstanding understanding of “review” in the context of Article

IX, Section 4 and its predecessor in the Constitution of 1902. Properly understood, these

provisions prohibit any court of the Commonwealth (with the exception of this Court) from

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addressing whether the Commission committed error in any action entrusted to the Commission

by the Constitution or statute. That is, only this Court may engage in judicial review of an action

of the Commission. Circuit courts are barred from considering whether the Commission

exceeded its authority or otherwise erred in the adoption of a tariff; circuit courts remain free to

read and then apply the terms of a tariff as adopted by the Commission as is necessary to resolve

a common law dispute.

       To hold otherwise would be to preclude any actions for damages between a customer and

a utility over the underpayment or overpayment of a utility bill. After all, to determine whether a

customer has paid too much or too little for utility service requires that some court read the tariff

and determine what the customer actually owed under the terms of the tariff. As our cases

demonstrate, we long have held that trial courts could adjudicate such cases without running

afoul of either Article IX, Section 4 of the Constitution of Virginia or its predecessor, Article

XII, Section 156(d) of the Constitution of 1902. See, e.g., Po River, 255 Va. at 114; Chesapeake

& Potomac Tel. Co. of Virginia v. Bles, 218 Va. 1010, 1010 (1978); Massaponax Sand & Gravel

Corp. v. Virginia Elec. & Power Co., 166 Va. 405, 407 (1936). 5

       5
           A conclusion that circuit courts do not have jurisdiction to hear such claims for damages
would mean that no tribunal could hear such disputes. We consistently have held that the
Commission lacks jurisdiction to resolve contract claims between utilities and their customers.
See, e.g., Little Bay Corp. v. Virginia Elec. & Power Co., 216 Va. 406, 409 (1975); Appalachian
Power Co., 214 Va. at 533; Sydnor Pump & Well Co. v. Taylor, 201 Va. 311, 316-17 (1959)
(Virginia law “does not empower the Commission to determine and adjudicate the rights and
liabilities of parties to contracts between a privately owned water system and its consumer
connectors. . . . The question whether [such] a contract has been breached is for the courts to
determine.”); City of Lynchburg v. Commonwealth, 164 Va. 57, 63-64 (1935); Norfolk &
Western Ry. v. Commonwealth, 143 Va. 106, 113-14 (1925). The Commission has recognized
this line of cases as well as the limitation on its powers they contain, holding that “[i]t is settled
law in Virginia that this Commission is not the proper forum to award monetary damages for a
breach of contract.” In re Global NAPS, Inc., Case No. PUC-2004-00067, 2006 WL 707023, at
*3 (Va. S.C.C. Jan. 10, 2006).

                                                  9
        Virginia-American argues that our decision in Little Bay Corp. v. Virginia Elec. & Power

Co., 216 Va. 406 (1975) suggests a different conclusion. To the contrary, our decision in Little

Bay is wholly consistent with these prior cases and with our decision today.

        In Little Bay, Little Bay brought a contract action against VEPCO. Id. at 407. Unlike the

circumstance here, the action did not seek to require VEPCO to comply with a condition

imposed by a tariff adopted by the Commission. Rather, it sought to require VEPCO to make

payments that an order of the Commission specifically prohibited VEPCO from making. Id. at

408. In pursuing its action in the circuit court, Little Bay made clear that it was not attempting to

enforce a contractual term grounded in a Commission-approved tariff, but rather, it was

collaterally attacking the validity of an order of the Commission. Id. at 408-09. We affirmed the

circuit court’s conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction to hear Little Bay’s claim because, no matter

how it was presented, it was nothing more than an attack on a decision of the Commission. Id. at

409. Thus, our decision in Little Bay is wholly consistent with our conclusion here: circuit

courts are free to read and then apply the terms of a tariff as adopted by the Commission as is

necessary to resolve a common law dispute between a utility and its customer, but lack

jurisdiction to resolve actions, even actions styled as contract disputes, that require the circuit

court to determine whether the Commission erred in a matter entrusted to it by the Constitution

or statute.

        Here, Ashland’s suit assumes that the adoption of the tariff by the Commission was

appropriate and proper. Nothing in Ashland’s suit calls into question any action of the

                                                  10
Commission. Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, the circuit court erred in concluding that it

lacked jurisdiction to hear Ashland’s breach of contract action. 6

                                C. Virginia-American’s demurrer

       Having determined, albeit erroneously, that it lacked jurisdiction to even consider

Ashland’s breach of contract claim, the circuit court next concluded that it could not “address the

merits of the controversy, including the merits of [Virginia-American’s d]emurrer.” Given our

conclusion that the matter was properly before the circuit court and “[b]ecause the decision

whether to grant a demurrer is a question of law,” Kaltman v. All Am. Pest Control, Inc., 281 Va.

483, 489 (2011), both Ashland and Virginia-American invite us to address the merits of Virginia-

American’s demurrer. We decline the invitation.

       “As a general rule, we serve as ‘a court of review, not of first view.”’ California Condo.

Ass’n v. Peterson, 301 Va. 14, 23 (2022) (quoting Bailey v. Loudoun Cnty. Sheriff's Office, 288

Va. 159, 181 (2014)). Because the circuit court’s jurisdictional inquiry became the focus of the

proceedings below, the arguments below as well as those in this Court focused on that question

as opposed to the merits of Virginia-American’s demurrer. Given the significance of that issue

in this case, we believe that all would be best served by a full development of and argument

       6
          In addressing the jurisdiction question in its letter opinion, the circuit court also
referenced certain statutes. Specifically, the circuit court cited to Code §§ 56-6, 56-232, & 56-
247.1(A)(3) as demonstrating “a proclivity on the part of the General Assembly to place the
[Commission] in charge of controversies involving public utilities and customers.” Although
these statutes may provide for certain proceedings between utilities and their customers to be
heard before the Commission, they neither expressly nor impliedly strip a circuit court of its
jurisdiction to hear common law actions that fall outside of the Commission’s purview. Any
doubt that the General Assembly did not intend for these statutes to extinguish the ability of a
customer or a utility to seek common law remedies in the courts of the Commonwealth is laid to
rest by Code § 56-7, in which the General Assembly provides that “[n]othing contained in [Title
56] shall in any way abridge or alter existing remedies at common law or under any other statute,
but the new remedies given shall be deemed to be in addition to those already existing.”

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about the issue below. Thus, although “we have the appellate discretion to decide legal issues

for the first time on appeal, we decline to do so in this case.” Id.

       Accordingly, offering no opinion on Virginia-American’s demurrer or the ultimate

viability of Ashland’s claim, we remand the matter to the circuit court for further proceedings

consistent with this opinion.

                                           III. Conclusion

       For the foregoing reasons, the circuit court erred in concluding that it lacked jurisdiction

over Ashland’s breach of contract claim. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the circuit

court and remand the matter for further proceedings.

                                                                          Reversed and remanded.

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