Court Opinion

ID: 4640867
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-09 14:09:50.243953+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:00:17.951261
License: Public Domain

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as In
re Complaint of Wingo v. Nationwide Energy Partners, L.L.C., Slip Opinion No. 2020-Ohio-
5583.]

                                         NOTICE
     This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
     advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
     promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
     South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
     formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
     the opinion is published.

                          SLIP OPINION NO. 2020-OHIO-5583
IN RE COMPLAINT OF WINGO, APPELLANT, v. NATIONWIDE ENERGY PARTNERS,
  L.L.C., INTERVENING APPELLEE; PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO,
                                        APPELLEE.
  [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
   may be cited as In re Complaint of Wingo v. Nationwide Energy Partners,
                     L.L.C., Slip Opinion No. 2020-Ohio-5583.]
Public Utilities—R.C. 4905.03 and 4905.04—Public Utilities Commission’s
        jurisdiction over customer’s claims against submetering company—
        Commission’s jurisdiction is defined by statute—Commission has
        jurisdiction over “public utilities”—Commission improperly adopted a
        jurisdictional test of its own making to determine whether submetering
        company was a “utility” rather than applying the relevant legal standards
        provided in the jurisdictional statute—Order reversed and cause remanded.
    (No. 2019-0273—Submitted May 12, 2020—Decided December 9, 2020.)
       APPEAL from the Public Utilities Commission, No. 17-2002-EL-CSS.
                                     _____________
                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

       DEWINE, J.
       {¶ 1} This case involves a complaint filed with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (“PUCO”) against a company that provides submetering
services. Submetering involves buying gas, electric and other services from a
public utility and then reselling those services to the ultimate consumer. The PUCO
dismissed the complaint, concluding that it did not have jurisdiction over the claims
against the submetering company.
       {¶ 2} The PUCO’s jurisdiction is provided by statute, and broadly speaking,
it has jurisdiction over any business that is a “public utility.” See R.C. 4905.04.
But in the decision below, the PUCO did not look to the statutory scheme to
determine whether the submeterer is a public utility; instead, it applied a
jurisdictional test of its own devising. This was improper. The General Assembly
writes the laws determining the PUCO’s jurisdiction, not the PUCO. Thus, we
reverse the PUCO’s dismissal of the complaint and remand for the PUCO to
determine its jurisdiction based upon the jurisdictional statute.
                                  I. Background
       {¶ 3} The underlying question in this matter is whether the PUCO has
jurisdiction over claims about submetering services provided by Nationwide
Energy Partners, L.L.C. (“NEP”). Submetering is a practice in which an entity
“engage[s] in the resale or redistribution of public utility services.” In re the
Commission’s Investigation of Submetering in the State of Ohio, Pub. Util. Comm.
No. 15-1594-AU-COI, Fourth rehearing entry, ¶ 4 (Jan. 9, 2019). Originally,
submetering developed with an apartment owner, or other similar owner of a multi-
residential complex, dividing up a common master bill so that each individual
resident would pay for their share of the utilities used. Today, submetering is big
business, with third-party resellers such as NEP providing submetering services for
multiple properties and landlords. These resellers make their profit largely because

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                                      January Term, 2020

they are able to purchase utility services at a wholesale price that is less than the
resale price they charge to individual customers.1
         {¶ 4} Cynthia Wingo is one such customer. In September 2017, she filed a
complaint with the PUCO alleging that as a condition of her apartment lease, she is
required to purchase water, sewer, and electric services from NEP.2 She asserted
that although “NEP claims to bill residents and tenants at the residential rate
charged by the host utility,” it does not offer services equivalent to those received
by direct customers of the utility. Because NEP is not subject to regulation by the
PUCO, she alleged, it does not provide certain benefits and protections that a
customer would receive if she contracted directly with a public utility. These
include rebates and energy-efficiency measures offered by the host utility, certain
emergency-assistance programs for lower-income residents, protections against
disconnections, and various other consumer-protection measures.
         {¶ 5} Shortly after filing an answer, NEP sought dismissal of Wingo’s
complaint. NEP maintained that it is not a public utility and, consequently, is not
subject to the PUCO’s jurisdiction. In order to evaluate this assertion, the PUCO

1. Background information on the history and practice of submetering can be found in a host of
materials. See, e.g., Campo Corp. v. Feinberg, 110 N.Y.S.2d 250, 252, 279 A.D. 302 (1952)
(describing the practice by landlords in New York City at the turn of the twentieth century of
purchasing electricity from a public utility at a wholesale rate and reselling the electricity to their
tenants at a retail rate); Manufactured Hous. Inst. v. United States Environmental Protection Agency,
467 F.3d 391, 394 (4th Cir.2006) (defining submetering as the practice of “property owners metering
and billing their tenants for water purchased by the owners but distributed to and actually used by
the        tenants”);        Nationwide        Energy         Partners,      Who       We          Are,
https://www.nationwideenergypartners.com/about              (accessed       Sept.     23,        2020)
[https://perma.cc/5FYY-WF82]; Gearino, Shocking Cost Investigation: Utility Middle Men Charge
Renters         Inflated      Prices,     Columbus           Dispatch       (Oct.     20,       2013),
https://www.dispatch.com/news/20131020/shocking-cost-investigation-utility-middle-men-
charge-renters-inflated-prices (accessed Sept. 23, 2020) [https://perma.cc/M5TA-2ZNW].

2. Wingo’s complaint also included a claim that a natural gas company’s provision of submetering
services also constituted the unregulated provision of public-utility services. That company did not
choose to intervene in this appeal. As a result, we limit our analysis to Wingo’s claims made against
NEP.

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                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

examined NEP’s activities and the services NEP provided to Wingo and her
landlord under a test originally set forth in a 1992 PUCO order (the “Shroyer test”)
and recently modified by the PUCO (the “modified Shroyer test”). See Pub. Util.
Comm. No. 17-2002-EL-CSS, ¶ 64-68, 70-78 (Oct. 24, 2018). Using the modified
Shroyer test, the PUCO concluded that NEP is not a public utility and dismissed
Wingo’s complaint for lack of jurisdiction. Id. at ¶ 91.
       {¶ 6} Wingo twice applied for rehearing, but the PUCO denied her
applications. Pub. Util. Comm. No. 17-2002-EL-CSS, Second rehearing entry, ¶ 1
(Feb. 6, 2019). She then filed an appeal in this court, raising six propositions of
law—the fifth of which we previously dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. 157 Ohio
St.3d 1518, 2019-Ohio-5289, 136 N.E.3d 1522.
 II. The PUCO’s Jurisdiction Is Established by Statute, Not by an Agency-
                                   Created Test
       {¶ 7} In Wingo’s first proposition of law, she contends that the PUCO erred
in concluding that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. In her second and fourth
propositions of law, she argues that the PUCO erred in its application of the law to
the facts alleged in her complaint and failed to adequately explain or support its
decision. Central to a resolution of each of these propositions is a common issue:
whether determination of the PUCO’s jurisdiction is governed by statute or by a
test of the PUCO’s own creation. Wingo asserts that the PUCO’s use of its own
jurisdictional test, rather than the applicable statutory language, to determine
whether NEP is a public utility was improper. We agree.
       A. The PUCO’s Jurisdiction Is Defined by the General Assembly
       {¶ 8} The General Assembly has vested the PUCO with the “power and
jurisdiction to supervise and regulate public utilities.” R.C. 4905.04; see also R.C.
4905.05; R.C. 4905.06. The PUCO “has no authority to act beyond its statutory
powers.” Discount Cellular, Inc. v. Pub. Util. Comm., 112 Ohio St.3d 360, 2007-

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                                January Term, 2020

Ohio-53, 859 N.E.2d 957, ¶ 51. Thus, whether the PUCO has jurisdiction in this
case depends on whether NEP is a public utility.
        {¶ 9} The statutory scheme defines what is a public utility. R.C. 4905.02
tells us that, with a handful of exceptions, a “public utility” is any entity that is
defined in R.C. 4905.03. That section, in turn, defines several types of public
utilities, three of which are relevant to the services that NEP provides to Wingo:

               (C) An electric light company, when engaged in the business
        of supplying electricity for light, heat, or power purposes to
        consumers within this state, including supplying electric
        transmission service for electricity delivered to consumers in this
        state, but excluding a regional transmission organization approved
        by the federal energy regulatory commission;
               ***
               (G) A water-works company, when engaged in the business
        of supplying water through pipes or tubing, or in a similar manner,
        to consumers within this state;
               ***
               (M) A sewage disposal system company, when engaged in
        the business of sewage disposal services through pipes or tubing,
        and treatment works, or in a similar manner, within this state.

               B. The PUCO Created Its Own Jurisdictional Test
        {¶ 10} In the proceeding below, the PUCO did not apply the statutory
language. Instead, it looked to a test of its own making, the modified Shroyer test,
to determine whether NEP is a public utility and therefore subject to PUCO
jurisdiction. Some historical background about the test’s development is helpful
here.

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                              SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

        {¶ 11} The PUCO developed the original Shroyer test in a proceeding
determining whether a trailer-park owner who purchased water from the city of
Delaware and charged tenants for the water they used was operating as a public
utility. In re Complaints of Inscho v. Shroyer’s Mobile Homes, Pub. Util. Comm.
Nos. 90-182-WS-CSS, 90-252-WS-CSS, and 90-350-WW-CSS, 1992 WL 937210
(Feb. 27, 1992). The test called for an evaluation of three questions: (1) whether
the entity has “manifested an intent to be a public utility by availing [itself] of
special benefits available to public utilities;” (2) whether the utility service is
available to the general public rather than to a specific class of residents; and (3)
whether the provision of utility services is “ancillary” to the entity’s “primary
business.” Id.
        {¶ 12} The modified Shroyer test that the PUCO used in this action has a
more recent history. Beginning in December 2015, the PUCO undertook an
investigation to develop a regulatory framework for the practice of submetering in
Ohio. In re the Commission’s Investigation of Submetering in the State of Ohio,
Pub. Util. Comm. No. 15-1594-AU-COI, ¶ 1 (Dec. 16, 2015). In its conclusions to
the investigation, the PUCO stated that it had adopted the Shroyer test as the means
by which it determined whether an entity is a public utility. In re the Commission’s
Investigation of Submetering in the State of Ohio, Pub. Util. Comm. No. 15-1594-
AU-COI, ¶ 16 (Dec. 7, 2016). And, as a result of its investigation, the PUCO
announced it would apply the Shroyer test, with modifications, to entities engaged
in submetering. Id. at ¶ 16-17.
       {¶ 13} The PUCO adopted two modifications to the Shroyer test, which
substantially changed the inquiry into whether an entity is a public utility. Most
notably, the modified test creates a presumption under the third prong that a reseller
is a public utility if it charges a customer more for utility services than the customer
would pay “the local public utility under the default service tariff for the equivalent
usage on a total bill basis.” In re the Commission’s Investigation of Submetering

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                                       January Term, 2020

in the State of Ohio, Pub. Util. Comm. No. 15-1594-AU-COI, Second rehearing
entry, ¶ 49 (June 21, 2017). A reseller can rebut this presumption by showing that
one of two safe harbors applies—either that (1) the reseller is “simply passing
through its annual costs of providing a utility service charged by a local public
utility” or (2) “the [r]eseller’s annual charges for a utility service * * * do not
exceed what the resident would have paid the local public utility for equivalent
annual usage, on a total bill basis, under the local public utility’s default service
tariffs.” Id. at ¶ 40.3
         {¶ 14} Applying this modified test to Wingo’s complaint, the PUCO
determined that NEP is not a public utility. As to the first prong, it found that NEP
has not manifested an intent to be a public utility because it has not taken advantage
of the special benefits available to public utilities, such as eminent domain. Pub.
Util. Comm. No. 17-2002-EL-CSS at ¶ 64, 68. As to the second prong, it concluded
that NEP does not offer its services to the general public, but only to people living
in a place where it has reached an arrangement with the owner. Id. at ¶ 65, 68. As

3. The “default service tariff” refers to the rate that customers would pay if they purchased utility
services directly from their local regulated utility based on the utility’s standard rates as filed with
and approved by the PUCO. See In re the Commission’s Investigation of Submetering in the State
of Ohio, Pub. Util. Comm. No. 15-1594-AU-COI, Second rehearing entry, at ¶ 40, 49–50; Hull v.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, 110 Ohio St.3d 96, 2006-Ohio-3666, 850 N.E.2d 1190, ¶ 25 (defining tariffs
as the rates filed with and approved by the PUCO). Not all customers will pay this rate. Since the
development of Ohio’s “energy choice” program over the last decade, consumers have had the
option to purchase electricity from a variety of suppliers, some of whom may offer a lower price
than the local public utility.                See PUCO, Choosing an Electric Supplier,
https://puco.ohio.gov/wps/portal/gov/puco/utilities/electricity/resources/choosing-an-electric-
supplier (accessed Sept. 28, 2020) [https://perma.cc/NQ8N-NKTP]; PUCO, What Is Energy Choice
Ohio?, https://energychoice.ohio.gov/Pages/About%20Choice.aspx (accessed Oct. 5, 2020)
[https://perma.cc/YC3Y-5KMQ]; PUCO, How Are Electric Generation Rates Set?,
https://puco.ohio.gov/wps/portal/gov/puco/utilities/electricity/resources/how-are-electric-
generation-rates-set (accessed Sept. 25, 2020) [https://perma.cc/L2NF-CJWY]. Consumers who
purchase from suppliers other than their local public utility still have their electricity distributed to
them by their local public utility and pay that local utility’s distribution costs. Thomas, Lendel &
Park, Understanding Electricity Markets in Ohio, Urban Publications, Maxine Goodman Levin
College of Urban Affairs, Cleveland State University, 18-20 (July 2014),
https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2270&context=urban_facpub
(accessed Oct. 5, 2020) [https://perma.cc/VZ4K-CHQS].

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                              SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

to the third prong, it found that NEP is not a public utility because NEP simply
passes through the cost of water and sewer services charged by the city of
Reynoldsburg. Id. at ¶ 66. For the electric services, the PUCO accepted as true
Wingo’s allegation that she paid more for a single month than she would have if
she were directly served by the local public utility, American Electric Power
(“AEP”). It then utilized the second safe-harbor provision and concluded that,
based on additional billing statements submitted by NEP, NEP’s charges to Wingo
were less on an annual basis than she would have paid under AEP’s default service
tariff. Id. at ¶ 74-78.
        {¶ 15} The question is whether the PUCO’s use of the modified Shroyer
test to determine the extent of its jurisdiction is appropriate.
 C. The PUCO’s Modified Shroyer Test Bears Little Relation to the Statutory
                                       Scheme
        {¶ 16} In its original version—and used in the context for which it was
developed (a trailer-park operator apportioning water costs among tenants)—the
Shroyer test bore some connection to the statutory scheme. The inquiries into (1)
whether the trailer-park operator had manifested an intent to be a public utility, (2)
whether the trailer-park operator resold water to others outside of the trailer park,
and (3) whether water resale was “ancillary” to the primary business of operating
a trailer park can all be connected to the statutory language—that is, whether the
trailer-park operator was a “water-works company, * * * engaged in the business
of supplying water through pipes or tubing, or in a similar manner, to consumers
within this state,” R.C. 4905.03(G).
        {¶ 17} In contrast, the PUCO’s modifications to the Shroyer test are
remarkable for their almost complete disconnect from the statutory language. The
third prong of the original test—whether utility services are “ancillary” to the
reseller’s primary business—is grounded in the statutory language.           Thus, if
metering services are completely ancillary to a business—say a building owner who

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                                January Term, 2020

simply passes on electricity costs as a convenience to its tenants—it would seem
fair to say that the landlord is not “an electric light company” and is not “engaged
in the business of supplying electricity.” (Emphasis added.) R.C. 4905.03(C). But,
as modified, the third prong of the Shroyer test goes well beyond considerations
whether utility-resale activities are ancillary to another business. Instead, the
modified test, with its presumption and safe harbors, focuses on how much profit
the reseller makes and whether the consumer is charged more than she would have
been under the default-service-tariff rates. This is an inquiry that has nothing to do
with the statutory language.
        {¶ 18} The PUCO argues this court’s decision in Pledger v. Pub. Util.
Comm., 109 Ohio St.3d 463, 2006-Ohio-2989, 849 N.E.2d 14, affirmed its use of
the Shroyer test to determine if an entity is a public utility, and the PUCO further
assumes that this affirmation gives it the power to adopt the modified Shroyer test
as the means by which it determines if an entity is a public utility. But this position
is in error.
        {¶ 19} No decision of this court can give the PUCO the authority to write
its own jurisdictional rules. It is axiomatic that “where jurisdiction is dependent
upon a statutory grant, this court is without the authority to create jurisdiction when
the statutory language does not. That power resides in the General Assembly.”
Waltco Truck Equip. Co. v. Tallmadge Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 40 Ohio St.3d 41,
43, 531 N.E.2d 685 (1988).
        {¶ 20} Moreover, we find nothing in Pledger that authorizes the PUCO to
write its own jurisdictional rules. Pledger dealt with an apartment owner that
charged tenants for the water used in their apartments. Pledger at ¶ 2. The water
was purchased from the Akron Water Department, and the landlord simply billed
tenants for the water they used at Akron’s rate, plus a 10 percent administrative
charge. Id. When tenants filed a complaint, the PUCO applied the original three-
part Shroyer test and determined it did not have jurisdiction and dismissed the

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                            SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

complaint. Id. at ¶ 7. On appeal, the tenants challenged the PUCO’s use of the
third prong of the Shroyer test, arguing that the statutory text did not allow for
consideration whether reselling utility services was “ancillary” to the landlord’s
primary business. Id. at ¶ 26. The tenants pointed to the phrase “in the business
of” in the text of R.C. 4905.03 and argued that anyone who buys and sells utility
services falls under PUCO’s jurisdiction. Id. This court disagreed with the tenants’
reading of the statute and affirmed the PUCO. We explained:

               Appellant’s argument ignores the fact that the noun
       “business” is followed in both statutory provisions by the
       preposition “of,” which is used to introduce words describing the
       noun preceding it. A utility is not in the “business of” buying and
       selling an ordinary commodity or service. Instead, R.C.
       4905.03(A)(8) [now R.C. 4905.03(G)] refers to the “business of
       supplying water through pipes or tubing, or in a similar manner,”
       and R.C. 4905.03(A)(14) [now R.C. 4905.03(M)] refers to the
       “business of [providing] sewage disposal services through pipes or
       tubing, and treatment works, or in a similar manner.”

(Emphasis and third brackets added in Pledger.) Id. at ¶ 27.
       {¶ 21} Contrary to the PUCO’s suggestion, Pledger was decided based
upon a textual application of the jurisdictional statute. This court rejected the
challenge to the third prong of the Shroyer test precisely because it found the
PUCO’s interpretation consistent with the jurisdictional statute and the tenants’
interpretation inconsistent with the statutory text. Thus, Pledger stands for the
proposition that any jurisdictional test used by the PUCO must be moored in the
statutory language. Nothing in Pledger gives the PUCO the power to write
jurisdictional rules that go beyond the statutes drafted by the General Assembly.

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                                    January Term, 2020

        {¶ 22} In applying its modified Shroyer test, the PUCO is making a policy
judgment about who it wants to regulate. “Resellers,” it is saying, “as long as you
don’t charge too much (as measured by default-service-tariff rates), we will leave
you alone. We won’t even consider complaints filed against you. But cross that
price line, and you are subject to our jurisdiction and our rules.”
        {¶ 23} The PUCO even acknowledges that its jurisdictional test is nothing
more than a policy judgment. It says the second safe harbor “is justified because
the resident can not [sic] be considered harmed by the submetered arrangement if
the resident is paying the same amount as if the resident was served directly by the
public utility.” Pub. Util. Comm. No. 17-2002-EL-CSS at ¶ 73. But whether
someone is “harmed” isn’t a jurisdictional question; it is a merits question that can
be answered only after it is determined that an activity falls within the PUCO’s
jurisdiction.
        {¶ 24} This is not to say that the policy judgment that the PUCO is making
under the guise of defining its jurisdiction is unreasonable. After all, the PUCO,
like all government entities, has finite resources.              And, as far as consumer
protection goes, it may be prudent to leave alone resellers who keep their charges
within certain limits and go after others who gouge their customers. But defining
the parameters of the PUCO’s jurisdiction is up to the General Assembly, not the
PUCO. And the jurisdictional price-line drawn by the PUCO has no connection to
the statutory language that defines its jurisdiction.
        {¶ 25} It may well make sense for the General Assembly to directly address
the question whether entities who engage in submetering fall within the PUCO’s
jurisdiction. The jurisdictional statute doesn’t directly address reselling, and at the
time of its enactment, large-scale third-party-metering companies did not exist.4
But until it does so, the PUCO must apply the law that is on the books. The fact

4. The jurisdictional statute dates from at least the 1950s. See 1953 Am.H.B No. 1, 125 Ohio Laws
7.

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                              SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

that interpreting the statute may involve some complexity doesn’t give the PUCO
license to write its own rules.
        {¶ 26} Thus, we remand this case for the PUCO to determine whether it has
jurisdiction based upon the jurisdictional statute, not the modified Shroyer test. In
doing so, the PUCO will need to apply R.C. 4905.03 and determine whether NEP
is an “electric light company,” “water-works company,” or “sewage disposal
system company” “in the business of supplying” any of the covered services. Of
particular significance in this inquiry are the meanings of the terms “an electric
light company,” “water-works company,” and “sewage disposal system company”
and “in the business of” and “supplying,” and the application of those terms to the
facts of the case. The application of the relevant legal standards to the facts is one
that is best left to the PUCO in the first instance.
 III. We Cannot or Need Not Consider Wingo’s Other Propositions of Law
        {¶ 27} The remaining propositions of law can be addressed in short order.
In her third proposition, Wingo claims that the PUCO erred by considering matters
outside of the pleadings in granting NEP’s motion to dismiss under Civ.R. 12(B)(6).
NEP counters that consideration of matters outside of the pleadings is appropriate
under Civ.R. 12(B)(1) on a motion to dismiss for a lack of subject-matter
jurisdiction. In light of our remand to the PUCO to apply the proper jurisdictional
test, this matter does not present a live controversy. We trust that on remand, the
PUCO will apply the proper standards and make clear to the parties the evidentiary
framework under which it is operating.
        {¶ 28} In her sixth proposition of law, Wingo challenges the PUCO’s
decision to grant rehearing solely for the purpose of extending its time to consider
her rehearing application and attempts to use this case to make a generalized
challenge to what she says is routine practice of the PUCO. She points to R.C.
4903.10(B), which provides that “if the commission does not grant or deny such
application for rehearing within thirty days from the date of filing thereof, it is

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                                  January Term, 2020

denied by operation of law.” Wingo and amicus curiae, Industrial Energy Users-
Ohio, which also advances the issue, may well have a legitimate complaint, but this
appeal is not the appropriate vehicle for considering this question. The injury that
Wingo complains of—the PUCO’s granting itself an extension—is not one that can
be redressed by a decision in her favor. See ProgressOhio.org, Inc. v. JobsOhio,
139 Ohio St.3d 520, 2014-Ohio-2382, 13 N.E.3d 1101, ¶ 7. Here, even if the PUCO
erred by granting the extension, it did not change the outcome of the proceeding
below. The PUCO’s decision to dismiss her complaint remained unchanged. Thus,
a ruling on the issue here could have no effect on the outcome of the case and is not
properly before us.
                                       IV. Conclusion
        {¶ 29} For the reasons stated above, we reverse the PUCO’s decision
dismissing Wingo’s complaint and remand the cause for further hearing. Further,
we direct the PUCO to apply the jurisdictional statute and not the modified Shroyer
test, in assessing its jurisdiction.
                                                                     Order reversed
                                                               and cause remanded.
        O’CONNOR, C.J., and KENNEDY, FRENCH, and STEWART, JJ., concur.
        DONNELLY, J., concurs in judgment only.
        FISCHER, J., dissents.
                                  _________________
        Whitt Sturtevant, L.L.P., Mark A. Whitt, and Lucas A. Fykes, for appellant.
        Dave Yost, Attorney General, and John Jones and Robert A. Eubanks,
Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.
        Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease, L.L.P., Michael J. Settineri, and Daniel E.
Shuey, for intervening appellee.
        McNees, Wallace & Nurick, L.L.C., Frank P. Darr, and Matthew R.
Pritchard, urging reversal for amicus curiae Industrial Energy Users-Ohio.

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SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

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