88-001978RU
Central Corporation vs.
Florida Public Service Commission
Status: Closed
DOAH Final Order on Friday, June 24, 1988.
DOAH Final Order on Friday, June 24, 1988.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8CENTRAL CORPORATION, )
11)
12Petitioner, )
14)
15vs. ) CASE NO. 88-1978RU
20)
21FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE )
25COMMISSION, )
27)
28Respondent. )
30________________________________)
31FINAL ORDER
33Pursuant to notice, an administrative hearing was held before Diane D.
44Tremor, Hearing Officer with the Division of Administrative Hearings, on May 20,
561988, in Tallahassee, Florida. The issue for determination in this proceeding
67is whether the statement contained in Section 7 of respondent's Order Number
7919095, which requires alternative operator services providers to hold subject to
90refund all revenues in excess of the local exchange company's most comparable
102rate, constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority.
111APPEARANCES
112For Petitioner: Wings S. Benton
117Patrick K. Wiggins
120Ransom & Wiggins, P.A.
124Post Office Drawer 1657
128Tallahassee, Florida 32302
131For Respondent: Mary Jane Lord, Debra W. Schiro, and
140Susan T. Clark
143101 East Gaines Street
147Tallahassee, Florida 32301
150INTRODUCTION
151Pursuant to Section 120.56, Florida Statutes, petitioner Central
159Corporation (Central) challenges a portion of Order No. 19095 of the Florida
171Public Service Commission (PSC), contending that the challenged statement
180constitutes a rule within the meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act and is
193invalid for failure of the PSC to promulgate it in accordance with the
206rulemaking procedures required in Section 120.54, Florida Statutes. In support
216of its position of invalidity of the challenged statement, petitioner presented
227the testimony of Alan Taylor, PSC's Chief of the Bureau of Service Evaluation,
240Division of Communications; Jill Hurd, PSC's Chief of the Bureau of Rates and
253Economics, Division of Communications; James Freeman, accepted as an expert in
264the area of economics as applied to the regulation of utilities; and Lester
277Freeman, the president of Central Corporation. Petitioner's Exhibits 1, 3, 5-8,
28811, 12, 15-21, 23 and 24 were received into evidence, some to a limited extent.
303In support of its position that the challenged statement is not a "rule"
316within the meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act, the PSC presented the
328testimony of Alan Taylor, and offered no further exhibits into evidence.
339Subsequent to the hearing, both parties submitted proposed findings of fact
350and proposed conclusions of law. To the extent that the parties' proposed
362factual findings are not included in this Final Order, they are rejected for the
376reasons set forth in the Appendix hereto.
383FINDINGS OF FACT
386Upon consideration of the oral and documentary evidence adduced at the
397hearing, as well as facts stipulated to by the parties, the following relevant
410facts are found:
4131. Central Corporation, formerly known as TFC Teleservices Corporation, is
423a provider of alternative operator services (AOS). An AOS provider provides
434operator assisted long distance telecommunications services to various entities
443including hotels, motels, universities, hospitals and private pay telephone
452providers. This new AOS telecommunication industry emerged after 1984 when AT&T
463ceased paying commissions to hotels for toll-traffic from guests and when the
475Federal Communications Commission authorized privately-owned pay phones. There
483are currently nine AOS providers in Florida.
4902. Central is authorized by Certificate Number 1528, issued by the PSC on
503November 21, 1986, to operate as an interexchange carrier within the State of
516Florida. Central currently operates in Florida under an approved tariff on file
528with the PSC, which tariff became effective on September 15, 1987, and
540authorizes Central to charge certain amounts for its services. Prior to the
552challenged action, the PSC never placed any conditions upon Central's approved
563tariffed rates.
5653. Interexchange companies (IXCs) are companies which provide long
574distance telephone services. They are certificated by the PSC on a statewide
586basis and engage in competition with each other. Such competition, along with
598the PSC's fitness screening and approval of tariffed rates, is considered
609adequate to protect the public. Consequently, the PSC does not regulate the
621rates of IXCs, at least minor IXCs including AOS providers. The PSC does not
635set rate levels for minor IXCs and does not set an authorized rate of return on
651equity for minor IXCs. Indeed, in accordance with Section 364.337, Florida
662Statutes, which authorizes the PSC to exempt from the requirements of Chapter
674364 a telephone company which is in competition with or duplicates the services
687of another telephone company, the PSC has placed AOS providers under the
699separate rules and regulations pertaining to IXCs, which are not rate base
711regulated. The PSC has never established for any minor IXC a rate base or an
726authorized or required rate of return.
7324. Local exchange telephone companies (LECs) serve a franchised monopoly
742area. The LEC agrees to provide service indiscriminately to the public without
754competition, and, in return, the PSC guarantees the LEC the opportunity to earn
767a fair rate of return designed to emulate what might be achieved in a
781competitive market. The PSC sets rate bases and rate levels for LECs, and
794authorizes the rate of return on equity. In other words, unlike IXCs, LECs are
808rate base regulated utilities. LECs and/or the PSC may initiate rate relief or
821rate decrease proceedings. Interim relief is often necessary and is authorized
832by statute and case law due to the regulatory lag time pending the conclusion of
847the proceedings. Such interim rate relief or interim rate decreases are done on
860an individual case-by-case basis and are based upon the financial condition of
872the particular LEC. The PSC has never provided interim rate relief or interim
885rate decreases on an industry-wide basis. It has set a "generic" rate cap,
898establishing a 25 cent local call rate for privately-owned pay phones, but that
911was done on a prospective basis. The PSC has never imposed an industry-wide
924rate cap, with a requirement to hold subject to refund monies in excess of that
939cap.
9405. At the request of PSC staff, the PSC opened, on December 18, 1987,
954Docket Number 871394-TP styled "In re: Review of Requirements Appropriate for
965Alternative Operator Services provided from Public Telephones." This was
974designated as a "generic" proceeding, and emanated from numerous complaints the
985PSC had received from end users (i.e., guests of hotels and motels, hospital
998patients and pay telephone users) who had been charged for alternative operator
1010services. The nature of the complaints included end users being charged for AOS
1023without being aware of using the service, lack of prior knowledge of the rates
1037being charged, inability to use the services of their preferred IXC and
1049inability to access the LEC operator. The most significant complaint, however,
1060was the excessive rate being charged by some AOS providers. The evidence
1072demonstrates that the intrastate long distance rates charged by Central are
1083considerably higher than the rates charged by Southern Bell, an LEC.
10946. Central entered an appearance in Docket No. 871394-TP on December 30,
11061987. At an Agenda Conference held on February 2, 1988, the PSC voted on
1120various recommendations of its staff. As pertinent to this proceeding, the PSC
1132voted to set an expedited hearing to be held as soon as practicable to determine
1147whether AOS are in the public interest and various other issues concerning the
1160provision of AOS. The PSC also voted to require all AOS providers to place all
1175revenues subject to refund that are generated by charges in excess of the AT&T
1189rate for a comparable call. This vote exceeded the staff's recommendation,
1200which did not include a "hold subject to refund" requirement.
12107. At an Agenda Conference held on February 16, 1988, the PSC voted to
1224reconsider the rate cap applicable to AOS providers and to hold the Order
1237reflecting their February 2nd vote pending such reconsideration.
12458. At its Agenda Conference held on March 15, 1988, the PSC reconsidered
1258and raised the rate cap amount from the AT&T rate for a comparable call to the
1274LEC rate for a comparable call, thereby decreasing the amount of revenues that
1287AOS providers must hold subject to refund.
12949. The action taken on March 15, 1988, was embodied in written Order No.
130819095 issued on April 4, 1988. This Order is entitled "Order Setting for
1321Hearing the Issue of Whether Alternative Operator Services are in the Public
1333Interest and Placing Revenues Subject to Refund ..." The remainder of the title
1346relates to "proposed agency action" concerning other requirements for AOS
1356providers, which are not challenged in this proceeding. Order No. 19095
1367declares that paragraph 7, which requires AOS providers to hold subject to
1379refund all charges collected in excess of the approved rate, is effective
1391February 2, 1988. The Order further recites
"1398We are cognizant of the serious
1404impact this action may have on AOS
1411providers and their customers.
1415However, it is our view that we
1422must take immediate and effective
1427action to remedy the abusive
1432situation we perceive exists at
1437this time. It is in consideration
1443of these conflicting concerns that
1448we have chosen the least drastic
1454action available. This action does
1459not require AOS providers to
1464immediately stop charging current
1468rates. It does not suspend or
1474revoke any certificates of public
1479convenience and necessity. It does
1484not levy any fines or penalties.
1490It merely places revenues subject
1495to refund to allow for the return of
1503these monies if it is subsequently
1509decided that they were generated
1514from inappropriate charges."
1517Although not embodied within the terms of Order No. 19095, the parties
1529stipulated that the hearing to determine public interest is scheduled for August
15419-12, 1988.
154310. Central requested the PSC to hold an evidentiary hearing prior to
1555making the rate cap take effect, but this request was denied. The rate cap
1569requirement and the disposition of the revenues held by AOS providers pursuant
1581to Order No. 19095 are issues to be determined at the hearing to be held August
15979- 12, 1988.
160011. The rate cap requirement set forth in Order No. 19095 applies to all
1614AOS providers operating in Florida. Central's current tariff authorizes Central
1624to charge more than the rate cap specified in Order No. 19095. Prior to Order
1639No. 19095, there was no rate cap on AOS providers.
164912. Regardless of whether the PSC ultimately orders a refund, the "hold
1661subject to refund" requirement which became effective on February 2, 1988, has
1673immediate and significant adverse impacts upon Central. Central is a
1683relatively new company and must use the revenue it generates on a daily basis.
1697Prior to Order No. 19095, Central was able to rely on the unconditional use of
1712revenues it receives under its approved Florida tariff. If Central continues to
1724charge its current tariffed rates, it will have to set aside the difference
1737between what it bills and the rate cap, place it in escrow and will not be able
1754to utilize those funds. It is estimated that the revenues Central might have to
1768refund if it continues to charge its current rates would between $1.2 and $1.7
1782million. Nonrecoverable commissions and the cost of a actually making the
1793refund would increase the potential cost of the refund. If Central were to
1806reduce its rates to the LEC rate, it would lose a substantial amount of revenue
1821and does not know where it can make up that loss. Even if this option were
1837chosen today, Central would still have to determine to whom it provided services
1850since February 2, 1988, and what the potential refund would be. Additional
1862staffing and/or computer equipment would be necessary to keep track of prior
1874users and charges. A third option is for Central to withdraw from Florida
1887intrastate operations pending the outcome and conclusions of the August PSC
1898proceedings. Central operates in many states. While its Florida business makes
1909up only 8 to 10 percent of its intrastate revenues, some 40 percent of Central's
1924entire business originates at Florida properties. If Central were to cease
1935paying commissions on intrastate revenues, its intrastate business originating
1944from Florida would go to its competitors. While Central has made the decision
1957not to do business in certain states due to those state's methods of rate
1971regulation, such decisions were made on a prospective basis. Other immediate
1982and adverse impacts upon Central include the administrative costs and burdens
1993associated with separate bookkeeping for its Florida operations, as well as
2004separate books within Florida to segregate the difference between the rate cap
2016and its tariffed rates. Central has already experienced delays in loan
2027financing. Lenders want to wait and see what the PSC does with AOS providers.
2041The valuation of the company is affected due to money taken out of the revenue
2056stream and placed in escrow. Central's financial statement must reflect the
2067contingent liability of potential refunds and full disclosure must be made to
2079the Federal Communication Commission.
2083CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
208613. The position of petitioner Central Corporation is that the provision
2097of Order Number 19095 contained in Section 7, which requires AOS providers to
2110hold subject to refund all revenues in excess of the local exchange company's
2123most comparable rate, constitutes a "rule" within the meaning of the
2134Administrative Procedure Act, and is invalid for failure to follow appropriate
2145procedures for rulemaking. As an AOS provider in Florida subject to the
2157challenged requirement, and having demonstrated an immediate and substantial
2166adverse effect resulting from the challenged requirement, petitioner has
2175standing to seek an administrative determination of its validity pursuant to
2186Section 120.56, Florida Statutes.
219014. The PSC contends that the "hold subject to refund" provision of
2202Section 19095 is not a "rule." Various sections within Chapter 364, Florida
2214Statutes, are cited for the proposition that rate changes and interim rates are
2227accomplished by "orders," and it is contended that rates are never set or
2240affected by "rules." The PSC equates the challenged requirement to the
2251establishment of interim rates during the pendency of a full rate-making
2262proceeding. Section 120.72(3), Florida Statutes, is then relied upon by the PSC
2274to demonstrate that the interim rate provisions of Chapter 364 are not subject
2287to the provisions of Chapter 120. The PSC further urges that the challenged
2300requirement is not "final" and is not intended to be determinative of the rights
2314of any given AOS provider. 1/ Instead, future proceedings in August are
2326contemplated to determine whether alternative operator services are in the
2336public interest and whether refunds are appropriate. According to the PSC, the
2348challenged requirement is tentative and effective only until the hearings in
2359August, and it is then that future policy will be developed and implemented.
2372The PSC cites various cases whereby the Courts have allowed it to take action
2386affecting rates in "order" form, as opposed to undergoing the rulemaking
2397requirements of Chapter 120, Florida Statutes.
240315. With certain exclusions not here applicable, a "rule" within the
2414meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act is an
"2422agency statement of general applicability
2427that implements, interprets, or prescribes
2432law or policy . . . "Section 120.52(16),
2440Florida Statutes.
2442It has been held that an agency statement is a "rule" if it purports in and of
2459itself to create certain rights and adversely affect others or serves by its own
2473effect to create rights, to require compliance or otherwise to have the direct
2486and consistent effect of law. Balsam v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative
2498Services, 452 So.2d 976 (Fla. 1st DCA, 1984); State, Department of
2509Administration v. Harvey, 356 So.2d 323 (Fla. 1st DCA, 1978).
251916. There can be no doubt that the challenged "hold subject to refund"
2532requirement falls within the above definitions of a "rule." The requirement is
2544applicable to all AOS providers in Florida. In and of itself, and by its own
2559effect, it requires AOS providers to either immediately change their previously
2570approved rates or to set monies aside for a potential refund in the future. The
2585fact that the requirement to hold monies may terminate, at some future point in
2599time at least six months subsequent to its imposition, does not lessen or
2612obviate the immediate, indeed retroactive, requirement of compliance. The
2621challenged requirement is directly and consistently applicable to all AOS
2631providers within Florida and its immediate effect is not limited by its somewhat
2644finite duration. Balsam v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services,
2654supra. The burdens of the requirement occur regardless of whether a refund is
2667ultimately required. The challenged requirement is easily distinguishable from
2676the case of Department of Commerce v. Matthews Corp., 358 So.2d 256 (Fla. 1st
2690DCA, 1978). There, the court held that a wage rate determination which applied
2703to one party, in one geographic location, for one construction project was not a
2717rule because it was not of general applicability and did not have the consistent
2731effect of law. Here, the "hold subject to refund" requirement applies to every
2744AOS provider operating within Florida on a daily basis for a period of at least
2759six months.
276117. With very limited exception, all forms of agency decision-making are
2772subject to the APA. Every requirement or policy relied upon by an agency in
2786reaching a decision must be codified as a rule or expressly stated in an order.
2801A rule has been defined above, and an "order" is defined as a "final agency
2816decision which does not have the effect of a rule . . ." Section 120.52(11),
2831Florida Statutes. As concluded above, the challenged requirement does have the
2842effect of a rule. Nevertheless, it is recognized that when adjudicating
2853individual cases, agencies may find themselves developing policies which may
2863generally be applicable to future cases. This hybrid of a "rule" and an "order"
2877has been characterized as "incipient policy," and even sanctioned, especially
2887where new policies are in the developmental stage and in the process of
2900refinement and further observation. See McDonald v. Department of Banking and
2911Finance, 346 So.2d 569 (Fla. 1st DCA, 1977). The courts have long recognized
2924that rulemaking may not be forced upon an agency, and that policy may be
2938developed through the adjudication of individual cases. Both rulemaking and the
2949adjudication of individual cases fulfill administrative due process requirements
2958of notice, hearing and judicial review. While the procedure to be used is left
2972to the agency's discretion, there is a "self- enforcing" incentive for
2983rulemaking. When an agency elects to adopt incipient policy in a non-rule
2995proceeding, there must be adequate support and a record foundation for its
3007decision in each proceeding. McDonald v. Department of Banking and Finance,
3018supra. It has been recognized that rulemaking proceedings are preferable where
3029established industry-wide policy is being altered, Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v.
3038Department of Business Regulation, 393 So.2d 1177 (Fla. 1st DCA, 1981), and it
3051is envisioned that resources will not be wasted by repeatedly explicating and
3063defending agency policy. Barker v. Board of Medical Examiners, 428 So.2d 720
3075(Fla. 1st DCA, 1983).
307918. While an agency may thus develop, establish or announce its policy
3091statements through rulemaking or through adjudication on a case-by-case basis,
3101the PSC followed neither path in this instance. There was no rulemaking as
3114envisioned by Section 120.54 of the APA. There was no proceeding as envisioned
3127by Section 120.57 of the APA. Interested and affected persons had no forum in
3141which to challenge the PSC's imposition of a new requirement, and there was no
3155record to review to determine if the basis for the action was supported. 2/
3169Thus, while the challenged statement appears in an "order," it is not the type
3183of "order" agencies are required to utilize when making decisions affecting
3194substantial interests on a case-by-case basis.
320019. The PSC argues that the action taken -- the "hold subject to refund"
3214requirement, is simply in the nature of an interim rate requirement which the
3227PSC has the authority to impose without compliance with APA requirements. 3/
3239This argument must fail for several reasons. As noted in the findings of fact,
3253AOS providers are not rate base regulated by the PSC, and the interim rate
3267provisions in Chapter 364 are inapplicable, at the present time, to AOS
3279providers. In addition, the interim rate procedures of Chapter 364 have never
3291been applied on an industry wide basis. Of necessity, the considerations are
3303specific to a particular utility or company and its particular financial
3314condition. To apply a measure characterized as an interim rate provision to all
3327AOS providers implements a new policy which deviates from the PSC existing
3339policy and manner of regulating AOS providers. Thus, whether the abrupt
3350discontinuance of prior policy is deemed either a new policy or an interim rate
3364provision, it must be done in compliance with either rulemaking requirements or
3376individual case-by-case adjudication, where there is opportunity for notice,
3385hearing and judicial review. There was none here.
339320. Certainly, the PSC has the authority (indeed, the duty) to continually
3405evaluate its policies and procedures with regard to the regulation of utilities
3417in Florida. However, when it determines to take action in the form of an
3431industry-wide requirement which purports to have the present effect and force of
3443law, it must do so in the manner authorized by statute. The "hold subject to
3458refund" requirement constitutes a "rule," yet it was not the product of a
3471rulemaking proceeding. It was not the product of an individual adjudication
3482envisioned by Chapter 364 for interim rate relief. It was not notice of
3495proposed agency action. Unlike the factual situation in the case of Florida
3507Public Service Commission v. Indiantown Telephone System, Inc. et al, 435 So.2d
3519892 (Fla. 1st DCA, 1983), the challenged statement is much more than defining a
3533controversy or a notice designed to focus on disputed issues, with the
3545subsequent opportunity for challenges and adjudicatory hearings. If the PSC
3555felt the need for immediate action in order to protect the public welfare, it
3569could have utilized the emergency rule provisions contained in Section
3579120.54(9), Florida Statutes. This mechanism, of course, would have been
3589effective for only ninety days.
359421. The cases cited by the PSC are readily distinguishable from the
3606instant case. In Indiantown, supra, the Court recognized that adjudicatory
3616proceedings affecting several parties could be accomplished in a single docket
3627resulting in a single order. There, the PSC issued a "Notice of Proposed Agency
3641Action" to each telephone company in the state notifying of its intent to
3654disapprove certain existing agreements. Contained in that notice was a
3664statement of the facts and a statement of the policy. A procedure was then set
3679forth for affected parties to file petitions for hearings on the proposed agency
3692action, said hearings to be held in accordance with Section 120.57, Florida
3704Statutes. Noting that the agency action involved in the Indiantown proceeding
3715was "proposed," rather than final, and that opportunities for challenges and
3726adjudicatory hearings were afforded, the Court held that the Notice of Proposed
3738Agency Action was not a rule, and permitted the PSC to proceed to develop its
3753policy through adjudication on a case-by-case basis. As indicated above, the
"3764hold subject to refund" requirement was not set forth as proposed agency
3776action. It became effective on February 2, 1988, over two months before the
3789Order was even reduced to writing. It is true that at the August, 1988 hearing
3804to be held on the issue of whether AOS are in the public interest, interested
3819parties will have the opportunity to present evidence and argument on whether
3831refunds should be ordered. However, the challenged statement constitutes a
3841present requirement to either place monies in escrow or change rates NOW, or
3854actually from February 2, 1988, through the conclusions of the August hearings.
3866This is not proposed agency action. By its own effect, it immediately and
3879retroactively requires compliance with no opportunity for input, challenge or
3889hearing.
389022. The PSC cites the case of United Telephone Company v. Mann, 403 So.2d
3904962 (Fla. 1981) as authority for establishing an interim "subject to refund"
3916condition pending a full scale rate-making proceeding. That case involved a
3927single, noncompetitive rate base regulated utility, and individual action was
3937taken with due regard to the particular financial condition of that single
3949company. The PSC has cited no judicial case law approving PSC interim rate
3962action taken with regard to an entire industry or a previously non-rate base
3975regulated entity.
397723. In summary, the challenged "hold subject to refund" requirement, as
3988contained in Section 7 of Order Number 19095, constitutes a "rule" within the
4001meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act. The PSC having failed to follow
4013the rulemaking procedure set forth in Section 120.54, Florida Statutes, the
4024statement constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority
4033within the meaning of Section 120.52(8), Florida Statutes, and is invalid.
4044FINAL ORDER
4046Based upon the findings of fact and conclusions of law recited herein, it
4059is ORDERED that the requirement that alternative operator services providers
4069hold subject to refund all revenues in excess of the local exchange company's
4082most comparable rate, as contained in Section 7 of Order Number 19095,
4094constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority.
4102Ordered and entered this 24th day of June, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida.
4114_________________________________
4115DIANE D. TREMOR
4118Hearing Officer
4120Division of Administrative
4123Hearings
4124The Oakland Building
41272009 Apalachee Parkway
4130Tallahassee, Florida 32301
4133(904) 488-9675
4135Filed with the Clerk of the
4141Division of Administrative Hearings
4145this 24th day of June, 1988.
4151ENDNOTES
41521/ This argument is interesting in light of the fact that the Order itself, in
4167Section 7, recites that "it is our view that we must take 'immediate and
4181effective' action to remedy the abusive situation we perceive exists at this
4193time." Although the Order itself was reduced to written form on April 4, 1988,
4207the "hold subject to refund" requirement was made effective as of February 2,
42201988. In addition, the notice attached to the Order provides that while certain
4233of its provisions are preliminary in nature and will become effective or final
4246on a future date only if a petition for hearing is not timely filed, the
4261provisions of Section 7 are reviewable only by a motion for reconsideration or
4274judicial review.
42762/ Indeed, the PSC successfully objected to the receipt into evidence of a
4289transcript of the Agenda Conference, urging that the transcripts of Agenda
4300Conferences, which are simply discussions between the Commission and its
4310advisory staff, are not part of the official records of the Commission.
43223/ Though not determinative of the issues here since it is concluded that this
4336is not an interim rate proceeding, the exception from APA requirements contained
4348within Section 120.72(3) does not appear to be applicable when the PSC itself
4361initiates proceedings "in the nature of interim rate" changes. That exception
4372appears to allow individual public utilities and regulated companies, not the
4383PSC itself, to proceed under the interim rate provisions of Chapter 364. It is
4397a mechanism designed to solve the problem of regulatory lag, and not a device to
4412allow the PSC to ignore Chapter 120 when imposing industry-wide requirements.
4423APPENDIX TO FINAL ORDER, CASE NO. 88-1978RU
4430The parties' proposed findings of fact have been fully considered and are
4442accepted and/or incorporated in this Final Order, with the following exceptions:
4453Central Corporation
44555 - 7. Rejected as irrelevant to the issues in
4465dispute.
446667. Rejected as an improper factual finding.
447371. Rejected as argumentative.
4477PSC
447810, last sentence Rejected as irrelevant to the issues in
4488dispute.
448911. Rejected as argumentative.
449313 - 15. Rejected as argumentative and/or legal
4501argument, as opposed to factual findings.
4507COPIES FURNISHED:
4509Wings S. Benton
4512Patrick K. Wiggins
4515Ransom & Wiggins, P.A.
4519Post Office Drawer 1657
4523Tallahassee, Florida 32302
4526Mary Jane Lord, Debra W.
4531Schiro, and Susan T. Clark
4536101 East Gaines Street
4540Tallahassee, Florida 32301
4543Steve Tribble, Clerk
4546Public Service Commission
4549101 East Gaines Street
4553Tallahassee, Florida 32301
4556David Swafford, Executive Director
4560Public Service Commission
4563101 East Gaines Street
4567Tallahassee, Florida 32301
4570Liz Cloud, Chief
4573Bureau of Administrative Code
45771802 The Capitol
4580Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0250
4583Carroll Webb, Executive Director
4587Administrative Procedures Committee
4590120 Holland Building
4593Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1300
4596NOTICE OF RIGHT TO JUDICIAL REVIEW
4602A PARTY WHO IS ADVERSELY AFFECTED BY THIS FINAL ORDER IS ENTITLED, TO JUDICIAL
4616REVIEW PURSUANT TO SECTION 120.68, FLORIDA STATUTES. REVIEW PROCEEDINGS ARE
4626GOVERNED BY THE FLORIDA RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE. SUCH PROCEEDINGS ARE
4637COMMENCED BY FILING ONE COPY OF A NOTICE OF APPEAL WITH THE AGENCY CLERK OF THE
4653DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS AND A SECOND COPY, ACCOMPANIED BY FILING
4664FEES PRESCRIBED BY LAW, WITH THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL, FIRST DISTRICT, OR
4677WITH THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL IN THE APPELLATE DISTRICT WHERE THE PARTY
4690RESIDES. THE NOTICE OF APPEAL MUST BE FILED WITHIN 30 DAYS OF RENDITION OF THE
4705ORDER TO BE REVIEWED.
4709=================================================================
4710DISTRICT COURT OPINION
4713=================================================================
4714IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
4720FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
4725FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
4734COMMISSION, FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
4740DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED.
4744Appellant,
4745CASE NO. 88-1889
4748vs. DOAH CASE NO. 88-1978RU
4753CENTRAL CORPORATION,
4755Appellee.
4756__________________________/
4757Opinion filed October 19, 1989.
4762An Appeal from a Final Administrative Order.
4769Diane Tremor, Hearing Officer.
4773David E. Smith, Public Service Commission, Tallahassee, for Appellant.
4782Wings S. Benton and Patrick K. Wiggins of Ransom & Wiggins, Tallahassee, for
4795Appellee.
4796JOANOS, J.
4798The Florida Public Service Commission has appealed from a final
4808administrative order declaring Paragraph 7 of Public Service Commission Order
481819095 to be an invalidly promulgated rule pursuant to Chapter 120, Florida
4830Statutes. Under the facts of this case, we affirm.
4839An alternative operator service (AOS) provides operator-assisted long
4847distance telecommunications services. Appellee Central Corporation is a type of
4857AOS denominated an interexchange carrier (IXC). In December 1987, after
4867receiving numerous general complaints from AOS users of excessive rates, the
4878Commission opened Docket No. 871394-TP for the purpose of reviewing the
4889regulatory requirements appropriate for an emerging telecommunications industry
4897providing long distance telephone services.
4902The initial action in this docket was taken when the Commission voted in
4915February 1988 to set an expedited hearing to determine whether the provision of
4928AOS service was in the public interest. In March 1988, the Commission voted
4941that AOS providers would be required to hold subject to refund all revenues
4954collected by those providers which exceeded the most comparable local exchange
4965rate. This decision was embodied in Paragraph 7 of Order 19095, issued April 4,
49791988. The Commission explained that the revenues were being placed subject to
4991refund pending the results of the hearing on whether AOS was in the public
5005interest, in order that the excess monies could be returned if it was decided
5019that they were generated from inappropriate charges.
5026After the Commission denied its request to hold an evidentiary hearing
5037prior to effectuating Paragraph 7, Central petitioned for an administrative
5047determination that Paragraph 7 was an invalidly promulgated rule. The gravamen
5058of the Commission's argument in support of Paragraph 7 was that it constituted
5071an "interim rate order" pursuant to Section 364.055, Florida Statutes, and thus
5083was not subject to the requirements of the Administrative Procedures Act,
5094Chapter 120, Florida Statutes.
5098The rates which may be charged by most telephone companies regulated by the
5111Commission are set with reference to a "rate base," in order that a reasonable
5125rate of return on equity may be calculated. The Commission acknowledges that
5137rates which may be charged by an IXC are not set in consideration of such a
5153base, but are set forth by the IXC as part of the "tariff" which it is required
5170to maintain on file with the Commission. See Rule 25-24.485, Florida
5181Administrative Code.
5183During any proceeding for a change of rates, the Commission may authorize
5195the collection of "interim rates" until the entry of a final order with regard
5209to the change. Section 364.055(1), Fla. Stat. The difference between the
5220interim rate and the previously authorized rates must be collected subject to
5232refund in the event the final order does not authorize the rate change. Section
5246364.055(2)(a), Fla. Stat.
5249However, the specifically prescribed method for calculation of interim
5258rates as set forth in Section 364.055(4) and (5)(a-b), makes this section
5270impracticable of application to telephone companies such as Central, "those
5280rates are not established with regard to a rate base. Further, the instant
"5293hold subject to refund" provision was not entered in a "proceeding for a change
5307of rates," as authorized by Section 364.055(1), but rather in anticipation of a
5320proceeding to determine whether AOS services were in the public interest.
5331Therefore, we agree with the ruling of the hearing officer that Paragraph 7
5344cannot be classified as an interim rate order pursuant to Section 364.055(1) so
5357as to be exempt from the requirements of the APA. See Section 120.72(3),
5370Florida Statutes (1987)(notwithstanding any provision of this chapter, all
5379public utilities and companies regulated by the Commission shall be entitled to
5391proceed under the interim rate provisions of chapter 364).
5400However, the Commission does have the statutory authority to take action
5411upon receipt of consumer complaints of excessive rates. Section 364.14(1),
5421Florida Statutes (1987), provides that
5426[w]henever the Commission finds, ... upon
5432complaint, that the rates, charges, tolls,
5438or rentals demanded, exacted, charged, or
5444collected by any telephone company .
5450are unjust, unreasonable, unjustly
5454discriminatory, unduly preferential, or in
5459anywise in violation of law ... the
5466Commission shall determine the just and
5472reasonable rates, charges, tolls or rentals
5478to be thereafter observed and in force and
5486fix the same by order.
5491Therefore, the Commission may act by order to fix "just and reasonable rates"
5504upon complaints that existing rates are unjust and unreasonable. The crux of
5516this appeal therefore becomes whether Paragraph 7 as enacted and implemented in
5528this case was an "order," that is, a final agency decision which does not have
5543the effect of a rule, Section 120.52(11), Florida Statutes, or a "rule," an
5556agency statement of general applicability which prescribes law or policy,
5566including any form which imposes any requirement not specifically required by
5577statute or an existing rule. Section 120.52(16), Fla. Stat.
5586The hearing officer determined that Paragraph 7 had the effect of a rule in
5600that: 1) it was of general applicability, i.e., it affected all Florida AOS
5613providers, and 2) it imposed an immediate requirement not otherwise required by
5625statute or existing rule, that is, in light of the "hold subject to refund"
5639language, AOS providers either had to change previously approved rates to match
5651those charged by local exchange companies, or set monies aside to cover the
5664potential refund obligation. We agree.
5669The Commission argued below, and before this court, that the temporary
5680nature of Paragraph 7, that is, its applicability only until the August 1988
5693proceeding, precluded its classification as a rule. However, a temporally
5703limited agency action is properly denominated a rule if it has the consistent
5716effect of law, that is, is consistently applicable throughout its existence to
5728an entire group rather than to one member of that group. Balsam v. Department
5742of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 452 So.2d 976 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984).
5754Paragraph 7 is by its terms applicable to every AOS provider in Florida,
5767regardless of the actual rates being charged by individual providers, for the
5779entire duration of its applicability.
5784The Commission further argues that Paragraph 7 does not explicitly require
5795AOS providers to take any previously unrequired action. It merely notifies them
5807that they might be required to meet a contingent liability in the future,
5820leaving it to their sole discretion how to meet that contingency. We find that
5834this contention ignores reality, in that some action, of whatever nature, must
5846be taken by these companies to meet the liability for these rate differentials
5859in the event it is imposed.
5865We are not unmindful of the principle that rulemaking cannot be forced upon
5878an agency and that policy may be developed through the adjudication of
5890individual cases. See McDonald v. Department of Banking and Finance, 346 So.2d
5902569 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977)(while the Florida Administrative Procedures Act requires
5913rulemaking for policy statements of general applicability, it also recognizes
5923the inevitability and desirability of refining incipient agency policy through
5933adjudication of individual cases).
5937However, both rulemaking and the adjudication of individual cases fulfill
5947administrative due process requirements of notice, hearing and judicial review.
5957Here, the PSC followed neither path. There was no rulemaking as envisioned by
5970Section 120.54, Florida Statutes, nor was there a proceeding as envisioned by
5982Section 120.57, Florida Statutes. Interested and affected persons had no forum
5993in which to challenge the PSC's imposition of a new requirement, and there was
6007no record to review to determine if the basis for the action was supported.
6021Thus, the instant agency action is not the type of order agencies are required
6035to utilize when making decisions affecting substantial interests on a case-by-
6046case basis.
6048Therefore, because Paragraph 7 of PSC Order 19095 is consistently
6058applicable throughout its existence to every Florida AOS provider, and because
6069its effect is to impose requirements on these companies previously unimposed by
6081statute or preexisting rule, we find that the hearing officer was correct in her
6095classification of this provision as a rule subject to the requirements of
6107Section 120.54, Florida Statutes. Because those requirements were admittedly
6116not followed by the Commission in this case, the provisions of Paragraph 7
6129cannot be enforced.
6132We do not by this opinion hold that the Commission cannot, by order, fix
6146reasonable rates for a telephone company against whom complaints of excessive
6157rates have been filed, pursuant to the authority granted by Section 364.14,
6169Florida Statutes. It simply cannot do so in the form of a rule without
6183following the statutory procedures for the promulgation of such rules.
6193The order of the hearing officer is affirmed.
6201SHIVERS, C.J., CONCURS. ERVIN, J., DISSENTS WITH OPINION.
6209ERVIN, J., dissents.
6212I had assumed that following this court's seminal decision in McDonald v.
6224Department of Banking & Fin., 346 So.2d 569 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977), we had moved
6239away from the sterile exercise of attempting to classify agency action as either
6252a rule or an order, as exemplified in such pre-McDonald opinions as Price Wise
6266Buying Group v. Nuzum, 343 So.2d 115 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977), and State of Fla.,
6281Dep't of Admin. v. Stevens, 344 So.2d 290 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977). The majority's
6295opinion unfortunately furnishes a bright signal to litigants that this type of
6307review mechanism remains not only alive but exceedingly well--despite the
6317absence of any explicit authority in our Administrative Procedure Act (APA) for
6329invalidating agency action having the characteristics of a rule, as defined in
6341Section 120.52(16), Florida Statutes (1987), but not formally adopted as such.
6352I conclude that Public Service Commission Order No. 19095 is just what it
6365purports to be: an order rather than a rule. As such, it does not fall within
6381the definition of a rule as provided in section 120.52(16):
"6391Rule" means each agency statement of
6397general applicability that implements,
6401interprets, or prescribes law or policy or
6408describes the organization, procedure, or
6413practice requirements of an agency and
6419includes any form which imposes any
6425requirement or solicits any information not
6431specifically required by statute or by an
6438existing rule.
6440(Emphasis added.)
6442Order No. 10995 requires alternate operator services (AOS) providers to
6452hold, subject to refund, all revenues in excess of an amount certain, until the
6466disposition of the revenues is determined by the hearing set in the order. The
6480appellee argues that this order is a rule, chiefly because it is generally
6493applicable to all AOS providers, and because it is immediately enforceable; thus
6505it is argued, the order prescribes law or policy without being subject to the
6519stricture of rulemaking. To the contrary, the Public Service Commission
6529(Commission) argues that although orders may also prescribe law, the order on
6541review cannot possibly be a rule, because its only effect is to ensure certain
6555monies be set aside until policy can be developed and enunciated--"prescribed,"
6567within the meaning of section 120.52(16).
6573In order to decide whether the subject order is a rule, it is necessary for
6588us to examine some of the primary objective behind rulemaking and determine
6600whether those considerations are applicable to the action on review. Perhaps
6611the most important goal of the rule adoption is fair notice to the public of the
6627agency's intended action, described by this court as "clos[ing] the gap between
6639what the agency and its staff know about the agency's law and policy and what an
6655outsider can know." McDonald, 346 So.2d at 580 (quoting K. Davis, Discretionary
6667Justice 102 (1969)(hereinafter Davis)). Rulemaking is also designed to assure
"6677'mature consideration of rules of general application,'" 1/ as well as to impel
"6691agencies to 'confine their own discretion' by 'moving from vague standards to
6703definite standards to broad principles to rules.'" Id. (quoting Davis, at 55).
6715Applying the above considerations to the case at hand, it is obvious that
6728the Commission's order is not impressed with any of the benchmarks of policy for
6742which the provisions of Section 120.54, Florida Statutes (1987), relating to
6753rulemaking, are required. The Commission itself identifies the order as an
6764interim measure designed to ensure consumer protection during the time that the
6776Commission examines the issues presented by the complaints it has received. As
6788such, the order under review can neither be impressed with the "mature
6800consideration" intended for a rule, nor can it be viewed as the initial step in
6815a progression from vague standards to definite standards and finally to broad
6827principles, given the agency's confession of a lack of adequate information on
6839the merits presented by the complaints of excessive charges by AOS. Due to the
6853agency's lack of formulation of any policy at the time of the entry of the order
6869on review, we are not confronted with any gap between what the agency knows and
6884what the public is unaware of. Indeed, at the time of the order's entry, it
6899appears that the agency itself knew little more than would an interested
6911outsider, in that the purpose of the public hearing, as provided in the order,
6925was to obtain information from which the Commission hoped to develop an
6937intelligent policy judgment that it was then unable to state. In my judgment,
6950none of the considerations that are relevant to rule adoption is present here.
6963As observed in McDonald, the framers of the APA "had no intention of
6976building an impenetrable wall between policymaking and adjudication." McDonald,
6985346 So.2d at 581. "The folly of imposing rulemaking procedures on all
6997statements of incipient policy is evident[,]" because to do so will hardly
7010encourage agencies to "structure their discretion progressively by vague
7019standards, then definite standards, then broad principles, then rules." Id. at
7030580 (emphasis added). Although the definition of a rule "obviously could be
7042read literally to encompass virtually any utterance by an agency," 2/
7053nevertheless, to do so makes it impossible for an agency to "wisely sharpen its
7067purposes through adjudication before casting rules." Id. at 581 (citing Shapiro,
7078The Choice of Rulemaking or Adjudication in the Development of Administrative
7089Policy, 78 Harv. L. Rev. 921, 927 (1965)).
7097In a number of cases this court has recognized that it is unwise to force
7112agencies to pigeonhole their activities into "rule" versus "order" categories.
7122For example, in Florida Pub. Serv. Comm'n v. Indiantown Tel. Sys. Inc., 435
7135So.2d 892 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983), holding that the Commission could proceed to
7148develop policy through adjudication rather than rulemaking, this court said that
"7159there is no authority to compel the agency to choose rulemaking over
7171adjudication." Id. at 895-96. Furthermore, in Department of Revenue v. U.S.
7182Sugar Corp., 388 So.2d 596, 598 (Fla. 1st DCA 1980)(Ervin, J., concurring), it
7195was noted that the classification of agency action as a rule or order is not
7210important; rather the relevant inquiry is whether the agency has adequately
7221explained its action, and, if it has, whether its action is within the
7234discretion delegated to it. If an agency has explained itself and has acted
7247within its delegated authority, then the court should sustain the action even
7259though the agency's statement "may have all the characteristics of section
7270120.52[16]'s definition of rule." Id. As was observed in White Advertising
7281Int'l v. State of Fla. Dept. of Transp., 368 So.2d 411, 413 n.5 (Fla. 1st DCA
72971979)(Ervin, J., concurring and dissenting)(citing 1 K. Davis, Administrative
7306Law Treatise 286 (1958)), "Professor Davis' solution to deciding whether such
7317borderline activities [i.e., categorizing as rule or order] should be validated
7328is 'to avoid classifying them--to skip the labeling and to proceed directly to
7341the problem at hand.'"
7345More than six years ago this court rejected an argument that the Board of
7359Medical Examiners' interpretation of Section 458.311(1)(b), Florida Statutes
7367(1979), which resulted in the applicant being barred for licensure as a medical
7380practitioner because he had not graduated from an approved medical school, was
7392invalid for the reason that the interpretation had not been adopted as a rule.
7406Barker v. Board of Medical Examiners, 428 So.2d 720 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). In
7420upholding the Board's nonrule policy decision, we made the following
7430observations:
7431The fact, however, that no rule was extant
7439at the time Barker applied for licensure does
7447not necessarily mean the Board's action was
7454void. The time has long since passed (if
7462ever it existed) that agency action was
7469mechanically invalidated simply because no
7474rule was in effect. Certain opinions from
7481this court during our early experience with
7488Florida's 1974 Administrative Procedure Act
7493may have so indicated. Our academic
7499endeavors in attempting to label the action
7506either rule or nonrule to determine whether
7513or not it fell within section 120.52(14)'s
7520[now renumbered as 120.52(16)] definition of
7526a rule have now been largely discarded.
7533There are, however, costs exacted upon an
7540agency which avoids the rulemaking procedure
7546provided by section 120.54, chief among those
7553being that the agency may be required
7560repeatedly to defend its nonrule policy
7566decisions in each case.
7570Id. at 722 (citations omitted).
7575The above approach appears to have been approved by the Florida Supreme
7587Court, insofar as it relates to an agency's formation of policy. In City of
7601Tallahassee v. Florida Pub. Serv. Comm'n, 433 So.2d 505 (Fla. 1983), the supreme
7614court, while denying the city's petition to force the Commission to initiate
7626rulemaking, made the following observations:
7631The statutes outlining the PSC's
7636jurisdiction and duties are necessarily
7641general in nature, providing for
7646flexibility in the exercise of its power.
7653To the extent the PSC solidifies its
7660position on policy in a particular area,
7667we believe such established policy should
7673be codified by rule. However, as in the
7681instant case, if the PSC seeks to
7688exercise its authority on a case-by-case
7694basis until it has focused on a common
7702scheme of inquiry derived through
7707experience gained from adversary
7711proceedings, then we hold that there
7717should be erected no impediment to the
7724PSC's election of such course.
7729* * *
7732Currently, by its own actions and
7738admissions, the PSC has shown that ...
7745it is in a formulative stage regarding
7752policy. As such, no greater restraints
7758should be imposed on the exercise of the
7766PSC's authority other than those already
7772found in section 366.06(1) as well as
7779those factors it has, and subsequently
7785will, expressly raise either in its
7791orders or through adversary proceedings
7796in this Court.
7799* * *
7802We have held in the past and continue
7810to hold in this case, that administrative
7817agencies may develop policies by
7822adjudication and that formal rulemaking
7827is not initially necessary in all cases.
7834Id. at 507-08 (emphasis added).
7839In the instant case, despite the contrary admonition of a number of
7851scholars and judges, appellee asks this court to approve the hearing officer's
7863order that places the agency's action into the rulemaking category--an exercise
7874which appears to me to be one of mere labeling--rather than permit the agency to
7889proceed with incipient policymaking by interim order, and then to final action.
7901If the latter course were approved, this court would be in a position of
7915reviewing whether the action taken was correct, rather than being restricted to
7927the limited question, at this truncated juncture, of whether the action should
7939be invalidated, because not adopted as a rule.
7947Appellee also argues, relying upon Balsam v. Department of Health &
7958Rehabilitative Servs., 452 So.2d 976 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984), that action which has
7971industry-wide effect is necessarily a rule, regardless of the duration of the
7983agency action. I do not regard Balsam as standing for such a broad proposition.
7997The court's holding in Balsam, which invalidated a moratorium imposed by the
8009agency on receipt of certificate of need (CON) applications, appears largely
8020motivated by the court's recognition that if appellant, a party substantially
8031affected by the agency's imposition of the moratorium, had not been afforded the
8044review mechanism provided by the rulemaking procedures of Chapter 120, the
8055appellant would have had no review until the next "batching cycle" of CON
8068applications. Id. at 977. By that time, appellant would have been deprived of
8081a competitive advantage. Id. In fact, the result of our decision in Balsam was
8095to order HRS to make a determination on appellants' application for a CON "as
8109soon as possible." Id. at 978. 3/ In the present case, Central Corporation,
8122however, has been provided a point of entry into the administrative proceeding,
8134and indeed has now had a full section 120.57(1) hearing, pursuant to the very
8148order it challenges. Thus, in my judgment, the policy underpinning our decision
8160in Balsam is inapplicable to the instant case.
8168The very fact that Central has been afforded dual entries into the
8180administrative arena via both the rule challenge and adversary adjudicatory
8190avenues is perhaps an even more fundamental reason why the order on review
8203should not be invalidated as a nonadopted rule, or why the rule challenge
8216proceeding should not be entertained. The practice of allowing simultaneous,
8226dual administrative proceedings was condemned in Fox v. State Bd. of Osteopathic
8238Medical Examiners, 395 So.2d 192 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981), in which we held that
8252declaratory statement proceedings brought pursuant to section 120.565 of the APA
8263could not be pursued on issues simultaneously litigated in a section 120.57
8275adjudicatory proceeding. See also Couch v. State of Fla. Dep't. of Health &
8288Rehabilitative Servs., 377 So.2d 32 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979). Similarly, in the case
8301at hand, issues were simultaneously litigated under Sections 120.57 and 120.56,
8312Florida Statutes (1987). In my judgment, it is questionable whether the party
8324affected by the agency's action has the legal right to proceed under both
8337statutes, in that the order which it is challenging as a nonadopted rule itself
8351provides the party with a formal hearing, which was sought, and which has now
8365been concluded. One has to question whether permitting such dual reviews, under
8377the circumstances at bar, results in an undesirable manipulation of the
8388procedural protections provided in the APA.
8394For the above reasons I would reverse the hearing officer's order of
8406invalidation.
8407ENDNOTES
84081/ McDonald, 346 So.2d at 580 n.6 (quoting NLRB v. Wyman-Gordon Co., 394 U.S.
8422759, 764, 89 S.Ct. 1426, 1429, 22 L.Ed.2d 709, 714 (1969)).
84332/ McDonald, 346 So.2d at 581 (quoting Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. Federal Power
8448Comm'n, 506 F.2d 33, 37 (D.C. Cir. 1974)).
84563/ Another pertinent reason for invalidating the agency's action in Balsam was
8468that there was no statutory authority for the imposition of a moratorium, in
8481that Section 381.494(5), Florida Statutes (1981), required the agency, by rule,
8492to provide for the submission of CON applications on a "timetable or cycle
8505basis." Balsam, 452 So.2d at 977. Consequently a moratorium on such
8516applications would clearly have been in contravention of the authority delegated
8527to the agency by the legislature. In contrast, the agency here is specifically
8540given the authority by Section 364.14(1), Florida Statutes (1987), to determine
8551by order whether the rates demanded are "just and reasonable."
8561M A N D A T E
8568From
8569DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA
8575FIRST DISTRICT
8577To the Honorable, the Judges of the Diane Demor
8586Hearing Officer
8588WHEREAS, in that certain cause filed in this Court styled:
8598FLORIDA MANUFACTURED HOUSING
8601ASSOCIATION, INC., A Florida
8605incorporated association not
8608for profit
8610Case No. 88-1889
8613vs. Your Case No. 88-1978-R
8618DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS
8621REGULATION, DIVISION OF FLORIDA
8625LAND CONDOMINIUMS AND MOBILE
8629HOMES
8630vs.
8631FEDERATION OF MOBILE HOME OWNERS
8636OF FLORIDA, INC.
8639The attached opinion was rendered on October 19, 1989.
8648YOU ARE HEREBY COMMANDED that further proceedings be had in accordance with said
8661opinions, the rules of this Court and the laws of the State of Florida.
8675WITNESS the Honorable Douglass B. Shivers
8681Chief Judge of the District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District and the
8695Seal of said court at Tallahassee, the Capitol, on this 21st day of November,
87091989.
8710_______________________________
8711Clerk, District Court of Appeal of Florida,
8718First District
Case Information
- Judge:
- DIANE D. TREMOR
- Date Filed:
- 04/22/1988
- Date Assignment:
- 04/22/1988
- Last Docket Entry:
- 10/19/1989
- Location:
- Tallahassee, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- Public Service Commission
- Suffix:
- RU