THOMAS B. McNAMARA, Bankruptcy Judge.
Electrical energy. Since Thales of Miletus (circa 585 B.C.) made his initial observations on the generation of static electricity by rubbing a piece of ilektron against fur, intellectuals have puzzled over the physics of the phenomenon. Great scientists like Alessandro Volta, André-Marie Ampère, James Prescott Joule, Michael Faraday, George Ohm, James Watt, Thomas Edison, and Nikola Tesla provided the foundation for development of the modern electric industry including the manufacture, transmission, distribution, and measurement of electrical energy. And, now, electrical energy is virtually indispensable for modern living and work.
This case presents an interesting question touching on the nature of electrical energy and connecting it with bankruptcy. Chapter 11 debtor, Escalera Resources Co. (the "Debtor"), produces coal bed methane gas from its wells in Wyoming. Its operations rely on substantial quantities of electrical energy. PacifiCorp d/b/a Rocky Mountain Power ("PacifiCorp") is a public utility. It supplied the Debtor with metered electrical energy both before and after the Debtor sought protection under the Bankruptcy Code.
In 2005, as part of comprehensive changes to the Bankruptcy Code, Congress enhanced certain creditors' rights by enacting Section 503(b)(9). That new provision created an administrative expense priority for "the value of any goods received by the debtor within 20 days before the date of commencement of a case." So, creditors that supplied goods right before a bankruptcy jump to the front of the line for distributions. Right or wrong from a policy perspective, that is what Congress decided. Now, the Court must decide whether the electrical energy supplied by PacifiCorp in the days leading up to the Debtor's bankruptcy constitutes "goods" entitled to priority status under the Bankruptcy Code. The exercise requires some basic understanding of the nature of electrical energy; but this is not a science test. The main focus of the inquiry is on the plain meaning of the term "goods."
The Debtor filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on November 5, 2015 (the "Petition Date"). (Docket No. 1.) The Debtor operates as a "debtor in possession" under Section 1107. The Court has not confirmed a plan of reorganization. PacifiCorp filed Proof of Claim No. 46-1 (the "Claim") for $240,479.43 on the basis of "electricity sold by electric utility." PacifiCorp asserted that an $87,853.94 portion of the Claim was entitled to administrative expense priority under Section 503(b)(9) as "[t]he value of the electricity sold to the Debtor and received by the Debtor in its ordinary course of business during the 20 day period prior to the Petition Date."
Subsequently, PacifiCorp filed a "Motion for Order Allowing Administrative Expense Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(9)." (Docket No. 206, the "Application.") Consistent with its Claim, PacifiCorp requested that the Court enter an Order allowing an $87,853.94 portion of the Claim as an administrative expense priority under Section 503(b)(9). The Debtor opposed the Application by filing its "Response to PacifiCorp's Motion for Order Allowing Administrative Expense Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(9)." (Docket No. 232, the "Response.") The Debtor did not challenge the amount of the Claim but contended that none of the Claim should receive administrative expense priority treatment. The Debtor argued that electricity is not a "good" under the Uniform Commercial Code (the "UCC") and Section 503(b)(9). Creditor, Société Générale, joined in the Response and adopted the Debtor's arguments.
Prior to trial, the parties submitted a "Stipulation of Agreed Facts for Evidentiary Hearing." (Docket No. 309, the "Stipulated Facts.") The Court conducted a one-day evidentiary hearing on the Application and Response. (Docket Nos. 313 and 335.) Prior to the presentation of evidence, PacifiCorp reduced the amount asserted as an administrative expense priority from $87,853.94 to $84,253.95 (as adjusted, the "Administrative Expense Claim"). (Docket No. 335, "Transcript of Evidentiary Hearing on PacifiCorp's Motion for Order Allowing Administrative Expenses, Debtor's Response Thereto and Joinder," May 10, 2016, at 6-7 [hereinafter, "Tr. at ___"].) At trial, the Court heard testimony from three witnesses: Dr. Shawn Kolitch, Stacy Splittstoesser, and Ben Geertsen. Further, the Court admitted Exhibits 1-8 proffered by PacifiCorp and Exhibits A-C presented by the Debtor. The Court acknowledges the professional and skilled legal work by counsel for both parties in presenting their evidence and arguments. The Application and Response are ripe for final decision.
The Court has jurisdiction over this matter under 28 U.S.C. § 1334. The issues raised in the Application and Response are core proceedings under 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(A) (matters concerning administration of the estate), (B) (allowance or disallowance of claims against the estate), and (O) (other proceedings affecting the liquidation of the assets of the estate or the adjustment of the debtor-creditor relationship). Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1408 and 1409. The Court has jurisdiction to enter final judgment with respect to the Application and Response.
The Debtor is a publicly-traded, independent energy company engaged in the exploration, development, production, and sale of natural gas and crude oil in the Rocky Mountain basins of the western United States. In re Escalera Resources Co., 2015 WL 7351396, at *1 (Bankr. D. Colo. Nov. 9, 2015). Its core operations are natural gas (coal bed methane) wells in Wyoming. Id. PacifiCorp is a public utility company that sells electricity to the Debtor. (Stipulated Fact No. 1.)
(Ex. 4-8.) Witnesses Stacy Splittstoesser (the Wyoming Regulatory Affairs Manager of PacifiCorp) and Ben Geertsen (a Senior Credit Analyst of PacifiCorp) authenticated the exhibits and provided details concerning the nature and amount of the Administrative Expense Claim. The Court finds both Stacy Splittstoesser and Ben Geerten to be credible and competent.
The Debtor had three accounts with PacifiCorp. (Stipulated Fact No. 3.) However, PacifiCorp supplied the bulk of electrical energy to the Debtor under a single account: XXX9206-001-5 (the "Principal Account"). For example, the Principal Account is the basis of $240,125.27 (or more than 99%) of the total $240,479.93 amount of the Claim. (Ex. 4; Stipulated Fact No. 6.) Similarly, during the 20-day period prior to the Petition Date, the Principal Account constituted $83,946.96 (or more than 99%) of the total $84,253.95 amount of the Administrative Expense Claim. (Ex. 8.)
PacifiCorp supplied electrical energy to the Debtor measured by five meters. (Ex. 5 and 7; Tr. at 87.) More than 99% of the electrical energy flowed through Meter Nos. 35739021 and 35739016, both of which were associated with the Principal Account. PacifiCorp supplied the remaining amount of electrical energy through three other meters. All of the electrical energy was metered and delivered to the Debtor in Wyoming in connection with the Debtor's coal bed methane natural gas operations. (Tr. at 72.)
PacifiCorp issued Invoices for each of the three accounts covering each of the five meters for the 20-day period prior to the Petition Date. The Invoices identify the main charges as for "ELECTRIC SERVICE." (Ex. 6 at 2-3, 5-6 and 9.) The "Electric Service" sections of the Invoices are followed by a table and further explanation of the charges. Id. For example, the first Invoice (which contains the same format as the other Invoices and covers the Primary Account as well as the highest-use meter) states the following:
(Id.) Thus, meter readings form the basis for the charges detailed in the Invoices. "The purpose of the meter is to identify and measure the usage of electricity. . . ." (Tr. at 87.) Over 99% of the amount of the Administrative Expense Claim is based upon electrical energy supplied by PacifiCorp to the Debtor as identified by actual daily meter readings of the two main meters, Meter Nos. 35739016 and 35739021. (Ex. 8 at 2; Tr. at 88-89.) With respect to the remaining amount of the Administrative Expense Claim (less than 1%), PacifiCorp calculated such amount by prorating monthly meter readings. (Id.)
After quantifying the amount of electrical energy supplied, the balance of each of the Invoices details the associated financial charges. Again, the first Invoice is typical:
(Id.) Thus, the Invoices establish that the great majority of the charges levied against the Debtor were for actual electrical energy supplied on a "kw" or kilowatt basis. However, there were some minor amounts included on the Invoices for "Customer Efficiency Services" and taxes.
In the Administrative Expense Summary, PacifiCorp provided further detail for its Administrative Expense Claim. (Ex. 8.) Notably, the Administrative Expense Summary confirms that PacifiCorp limited the Administrative Expense Claim only to the supplied electrical energy. (Id. at 2.) Put another way, PacifiCorp is not claiming a Section 503(b)(9) administrative expense priority for "Customer Efficiency Services," taxes, or city franchise fees listed on the Invoices. (Id.) Instead, only the value of electrical energy actually supplied to the Debtor during the 20-day period before the Petition Date is included. (Id. and Tr. at 79 and 90.) Ben Geersten testified that the amount of the Administrative Expense Claim fairly and accurately represents the value of the electrical energy provided to the Debtor during the 20 days prior to the Petition Date. (Tr. at 91.) The Court concurs and finds that the value of the electrical energy provided to the Debtor during the relevant time is $84,253.95.
Since PacifiCorp is a public utility, its rates are regulated by the Wyoming Public Service Commission. (Tr. at 70; Stipulated Fact No. 2.) The Wyoming Tariff Information identifies the "Applicable Wyoming Rate Schedules." (Ex. 7.) Schedule 46 is titled "Large General Service Time of Use - 1,000 KW and Over" and states that it applies to:
(Id. at 2.) Consistent with the Invoices, Schedule 46 permits "Monthly Billing" for "Basic Charge," "Demand Charge," Energy Charge," and "Minimum Charge." (Id. at 2-3.) All of the authorized Schedule 46 charges are based on the number of kilowatt hours supplied. (Id.) Further, Schedule 46 refers to "Continuing Service at each service location." The other applicable Schedules, Schedules 25 (Small General Service) and 26 (General Service), contain similar terminology. The Debtor added Tariff Schedules used by PacifiCorp for many other types of accounts such as for residential, agricultural, and street lighting customers. (Ex. A.) Virtually all of the other Tariff Schedules contain the word "service" in their titles and text.
PacifiCorp presented Dr. Shawn Kolitch as an expert witness "in the field of physics." (Tr. at 14.) His testimony focused on the characteristics of electrical energy. Dr. Kolitch is well qualified. (Ex. 1 and Tr. 14.) He received a Bachelor of Sciences in applied mathematics and a Master of Sciences in applied physics from Columbia University. Thereafter, he earned a Doctorate in physics from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Kolitch taught physics, including the principles of electricity and magnetism, as a physics lecturer and assistant professor of physics at three universities. He published several articles and made numerous presentations on physics topics. After a career focused on the sciences, Dr. Kolitch elected to pursue a new field: law. He earned a Juris Doctorate and is in private practice in Oregon. In his current work, Dr. Kolitch marries his science and legal training by focusing on intellectual property in the emerging technology and high-technology industries. The Court approved Dr. Kolitch's designation under F.R.E. 702 as an expert witness in the field of physics. Dr. Kolitch testified on complex issues in a straightforward and understandable manner. The Court finds that Dr. Kolitch's testimony was highly credible and very helpful to the Court in assessing the nature of electrical energy.
Dr. Kolitch, testified that "the electricity provided by a utility company to a customer . . . is more properly described as `electrical energy'" rather than just "electricity." (Ex. 2 at 1 and 3.) That is because:
(Tr. at 16.) Put another way, "electrical energy is the energy per electron multiplied by the total number of electrons carrying the charge." (Tr. at 16.) And, "[a]n electron is a fundamental particle of nature." (Tr. at 15.)
The Court finds that Dr. Kolitch's use of the phrase "electrical energy," rather than the more amorphous word "electricity," is proper and best reflects the nature of the transaction between PacifiCorp and the Debtor. The phrase "electrical energy" is particularly appropriate in this case because "the transfer of electrical energy is precisely what occurs (and what the customer pays for) when a utility company supplies electricity to a customer." (Ex. 2 at 3.) Accordingly, the Court adopts "electrical energy" as the proper terminology.
The production of utility-scale electrical energy relies on a discovery made by the English scientist Michael Faraday in 1831, commonly known as "Faraday's Principle." (Ex. 2 at 4.) Faraday discovered that "rotating a loop of wire between the poles of a magnet causes charged particles within the wire to move around the loop, a phenomenon now commonly known as the flow of `electric current.'" (Id.) Even now, almost two hundred years after Faraday's original discovery, electric utility companies generate electrical current and electrical energy primarily by causing large coils of wire to rotate between the poles of a magnet. (Tr. at 17-18.) Rotation is accomplished most commonly by using coal, natural gas, diesel fuel, or nuclear energy to heat water and transform it into steam. (Ex. 2 at 7.) The resulting steam is used to spin a turbine that then produces electrical energy. (Id.)
At trial, Dr. Kolitch demonstrated Faraday's Principle by using a hand-crank electric generator to generate electrical energy that was transmitted by copper wire and consumed by a series of light bulbs. (Tr. at 18-22.) The demonstration showed that:
(Ex. 2 at 9.)
Power plants produce alternating electric current that is supplied to customers. (Ex. 2 at 6-7.) "The most basic characteristic of AC power is that it represents sub-microscopic charged particles (electrons) moving back-and-forth in a wire, many times per second. This back-and-forth movement is what `alternating' in `alternating current' means." (Ex. 2 at 13. See also Tr. at 17.) According to Dr. Kolitch:
(Ex. 2 at 10.)
Public utilities typically supply electrical energy to their customers through the electric grid and highly conductive copper transmission wires. An electromechanical meter measures the electric energy sold to an end-user. Put another way, a meter "identifies and measures the electrical energy passing through it." (Ex. 2 at 10.) How does the standard meter work?
(Tr. at 22.) The electrical energy transferred to a customer "typically [is] measured in kilowatts (kW). Over a set period, such as a monthly billing cycle, the total electrical energy transferred to the customer is the average power multiplied by the time, usually expressed in kilo-watt-hours (kWh)." (Ex. 2 at 19; see also Tr. at 23.)
Dr. Kolitch was quite emphatic that the supply of electrical energy to a customer, and its measurement, is based on movement:
(Tr. at 23-24.; see also Ex. 2 at 30.)
Ultimately, Dr. Kolitch opined that: (1) "electrical energy passing from a utility company to a customer is identifiable"; and (2) "electrical energy transferred to the customer is by its fundamental nature moving — and therefore movable — at all times, including when it passes through the customer's electricity meter." (Ex. 2 at 30.) The Court finds Dr. Kolitch's foregoing opinions compelling, well-supported, and valid. Accordingly, the Court accepts Dr. Kolitch's conclusions concerning the characteristics of electrical energy (which stem from his expertise in the field of physics); however, the Court (not Dr. Kolitch) must decide whether electrical energy constitutes "goods" within the meaning of Section 503(b)(9).
The Application requests the allowance of the Administrative Expense Claim as a priority in the amount of $84,253.95. Section 503(b)(9) provides priority treatment for:
As set forth in the Court's Findings of Fact, PacifiCorp established that it supplied $84,253.95 worth of electrical energy to the Debtor within 20 days before the Petition Date. The Debtor did not contest the ordinary course nature of the transaction. Thus, the only remaining question is whether the electrical energy received by the Debtor qualifies as "goods" within the ambit of Section 503(b)(9).
The Court employs a fair reading method that dictates the primacy of the statutory text. Stated differently, the inquiry must center on the "language of the statute itself." Ransom v. FIA Card Servs., N.A., 562 U.S. 61, 69 (2011) (quoting U.S. v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc., 489 U.S. 235, 241 (1989)). Here, the main issue is the meaning of one word: "goods." However, neither Section 503(b)(9), nor the Bankruptcy Code, defines the term "goods." Thus, the Court must engage in a classic statutory interpretation exercise. Since the Bankruptcy Code "standardizes an expansive (and sometimes unruly) area of law," it is the Court's "obligation to interpret the Code clearly and predictably using well established principles of statutory construction. RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated Bank, 132 S.Ct. 2065, 2073 (2012).
The starting place is the "plain" or "ordinary" meaning of the text. Clark v. Rameker, 134 S.Ct. 2242, 2246 (2014); Hamilton v. Lanning, 560 U.S. 505, 513 (2010). As the U.S. Supreme Court explained, "[w]hen terms used in a statute are undefined, we give them their ordinary meaning." Asgrow Seed Co. v. Winterboer, 513 U.S. 179, 187 (1995). And, statutory interpretation should focus on the meaning of the statutory text at the time of enactment. Baker Botts L.L.P. v. ASARCO LLC, 135 S.Ct. 2158, 2165 n.2 (2015) (interpreting the word "services" as of 1934 when the term was first used in the statute). Put another way, "[t]o gain a proper understanding of the statute at issue, we must put in into its historical context." Aulston v. U.S., 915 F.2d 584, 585 (10th Cir. 1990). Fortunately, in this case, no real historical foray is required because Section 503(b)(9) was enacted by Congress only a decade ago as part of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23 (2005).
While the Court looks to the modern "ordinary meaning" of the term "goods," context also is important. The term "goods" appears as part of a single sentence subsection in a statute governing the "allowance of administrative expenses" as part of the bankruptcy process. 11 U.S.C. § 503 identifies those categories of claims or expenses that are afforded more favorable treatment than other unsecured claims. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 507 (listing priorities), 726 (detailing the distribution of property of the estate); and 1129 (requiring payment of priority administrative expenses as part of Chapter 11 plan confirmation). In 2005, Congress expanded the category of administrative expense claims to include the value of "goods" received by the Debtor shortly before the bankruptcy filing. So, the measure obviously was designed to provide additional redress for creditors — not debtors.
Beyond this expansion of creditors' rights, what did Congress intend in enacting Section 503(b)(9)? The Court believes that is the wrong question. The Court should not decide "what the legislature meant . . . [but] only what the statute means." Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Theory of Legal Interpretation, 12 HARV. L. REV. 417, 419 (1899). More recently the U.S. Supreme Court explained: "in interpreting a statute a court should always turn first to one, cardinal canon, before all others. We have stated time and again that courts must presume that a legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute what it says there." Conn. Nat'l Bank v. Germain, 503 U.S. 249, 253-54 (1992). Thus, "[w]hen the words of a statute are unambiguous, then, this first canon is also the last: `judicial inquiry is complete.'" Id. (quoting Rubin v. U.S., 449 U.S. 424, 430 (1981)).
For these reasons, the Court is quite reticent to engage in an analysis and discussion of legislative history as part of its statutory interpretation work. In fact, the exercise of trying to divine intent from legislative statements (whether from floor speeches, debates, or committee reports) is a sort of fiction. See Antonin Scalia and Bryan A. Garner, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 394 (Thompson/West 2012) [hereinafter, "READING LAW"] ("The use of the term legislative intent encourages this search for the nonexistent.") But, in this case, even if the Court wanted to seek fiction, it would be even more impossible because there is no legislative history explaining Section 503(b)(9) and Congress' intention in using the expansive word "goods." See H.R. Rep. 109-31(I) (2005), as reprinted in 2005 U.S.C.C.A.N. 88 (House Report notes only that "Section 1227(b) amends Bankruptcy Code section 503(b) to provide that the value of any goods received by a debtor not later than within 20 days prior to the commencement of a bankruptcy case in which the goods have been sold to the debtor in the ordinary course of the debtor's business is an allowed administrative expense"). The Debtor acknowledges the lack of legislative history. See Response at 2 ("BAPCPA's sparse legislative history is of little help . . . there is no legislative history as to why § 503(b)(9) was needed. . . .").
So, we turn back to the meaning of the language Congress actually used: "goods."
Interpretation of the word "goods" used in Section 503(b)(9) of the Bankruptcy Code, which after all is a federal statute, is a matter of federal law — not state law. Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Serv., Inc., 500 U.S. 90, 97 (1991); In re Pilgrim's Pride Corp., 421 B.R. 231, 236 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 2009). Unfortunately, there is no binding federal precedent for this Court since neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit have addressed the meaning of the word "goods" under Section 503(b)(9).
Thus, the Court must look elsewhere for plain meaning. Dictionaries can help determine the ordinary meaning of words. Baker Botts, 135 S. Ct. at 2165 (utilizing dictionaries from time period when statute was passed to confirm plain meaning of the word "services" in Bankruptcy Code). And, analogous statutory and common law may be an important aide. See Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Darden, 503 U.S. 318, 322-23 (1992) (using the common law meaning of "employee" to construe the term in ERISA statute); Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 490 U.S. 730, 738-41 (1989) (utilizing conventional common law understanding of word to ascertain meaning of federal statute). Of course, the context of the Bankruptcy Code must be taken into account as key. But, unless the statutory text and context of the Bankruptcy Code somehow lead to an entirely contrary understanding of the word "goods," the ordinary meaning of the term "goods" should prevail whether the question arises in bankruptcy or not. Indeed, every bankruptcy court decision construing Section 503(b)(9) has looked outside of bankruptcy for a definitional analog and all have seized on the UCC, a state law statutory scheme, as the main source for defining "goods" under the Bankruptcy Code.
The Court concludes that there are many useful guideposts for ascertaining "plain meaning" in this case including dictionaries, the UCC, federal antitrust law, federal labor law, federal energy regulatory law, state tort law, tax law, and international treaties — in addition to persuasive but non-binding precedent from other federal and state courts. Virtually all of such sources point in the same direction.
Plain meaning may be ascertained by examining typical usage of words. Although not dispositive, reference to dictionaries published near the time of statutory enactment often is helpful, at least as a starting place. Clark, 134 S. Ct. at 2246 (utilizing dictionaries to interpret the words "funds" and "retirement" in Bankruptcy Code); Ransom, 562 U.S. at 69 (using dictionaries to interpret the word "applicable" in Bankruptcy Code). One of the more prominent and popular United States dictionaries defines "goods" as "commodities; wares" or "portable personal property." AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 756 (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 4th ed. 2000). The main British counterpart is quite similar. "Goods" are "[t]hings that are produced for sale; commodities and manufactured items to be bought and sold; merchandise, wares" or "[p]ersonal property, possessions; esp. movable property." OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY (ONLINE), available at www.oed.com. Offering a slightly more refined legal definition, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY defines "goods" as "[t]angible or movable personal property other than money. . . . The sale of goods is governed by Article 2 of the UCC" or "[t]hings that have value, whether tangible or not." Bryan A. Garner, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY at 714 (Thompson Reuters 8th ed. 1999).
None of the many dictionaries consulted by the Court contains detailed lists of "goods." Thus, and perhaps not surprisingly, such dictionaries make no specific references to electricity or electrical energy as being either included in, or excluded from, the definition of "goods." Instead, the main etymological lesson from examination of dictionary definitions is that the term "goods" is very broad. Indeed, the "[t]hings that have value, whether tangible or not" definition of "goods" seems to be about the most encompassing definition of an object in the English language. And, "personal property" is not far off.
That Congress chose to use an extremely broad word, "goods," does not suggest that the judiciary should somehow impose its own limits or exclusions where Congress did not do so. Instead, under the "general-terms canon" of statutory interpretation, "the presumed point of using general words is to produce general coverage — not to leave room for courts to recognize ad hoc exceptions. . . . [I]n the end, general words are general words, and they must be given general effect." READING LAW at 101. Utilization of general words "demonstrates breadth." Pa. Dep't of Corr. v. Yeskey, 524 U.S. 206, 212 (1998) (quoting Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co., 473 U.S. 479, 499 (1985)).
The Debtor invites the Court to consider "common parlance" and proposes as a "goods" definition: "tangible items that can `be packaged and handled.'" Response at 2. But, the Debtor provides no authoritative linguistic source for the definition. Instead, the "packaged and handled" phrase appears to have come from Pilgrim's Pride, where a bankruptcy court seemingly created the phrase out of whole cloth. 421 B.R. at 239.
The Court concludes that the broad dictionary definitions of "goods" seem far more representative of the typical usage of "goods" than the Pilgrim's Pride formulation. Under such definitions, "goods" means "things that have value, whether tangible or not," "things that are produced for sale," "commodities," and "personal property."
Electrical energy most definitely is a "thing." Dr. Kolitch explained that "electrical energy is the energy per electron multiplied by the total number of electrons carrying the charge." (Tr. at 16.) Furthermore, electrical energy obviously has value. In this case, the value of the electrical energy supplied during the relevant time period was $84,253.95. PacifiCorp produced the electrical energy for sale and did sell it to the Debtor (albeit the Debtor failed to pay for the electrical energy). Further, the electrical energy had value in that it was critical to operate the Debtor's coal bed methane wells and other infrastructure. And, electrical energy is a "commodity." See Williams v. Duke Energy Int'l, Inc., 681 F.3d 788, 800 (6th Cir. 2012); City of Kirkwood v. Union Elec. Co., 671 F.2d 1173, 1181-82 (8th Cir. 1982). Futures contracts for electrical energy are regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC"). DiPlacido v. Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n, 364 Fed. Appx. 657 (2d Cir. 2009).
To the extent that tangibility is a requisite for "goods" under some (but not all) dictionary definitions, electrical energy is tangible. It exists. It can be seen under certain conditions (i.e., an arc of electric current). It can be heard humming through overhead transmission wires. Moreover, as even a small child knows, electrical energy can be touched or felt, albeit with risk of electrical shock and serious personal injury. In short, electrical energy is perceptible to the senses. And, it can be quantified. So, it is tangible. As set forth in more detail below, the tangibility of electrical energy is confirmed by numerous legal sources. In addition to the sensory perception aspect, the evidence from Dr. Kolitch and Ben Geersten confirms that electrical energy can be measured by use of an electromechanical power meter. (Ex. 2 at 10.) The meter "identifies and measures the electrical energy passing through it." Id. The unit of measurement is a kilowatt. (Ex. 2 at 19; see also Tr. at 23.)
Therefore, putting it all together on a common sense basis, there really can be no doubt electrical energy falls within the ambit of "goods" under typical usage definitions. In fact, the question is not even close. Nevertheless, a more comprehensive and discerning approach (including an analysis of legal usage) seems warranted as a check on the common meaning because the term "goods" appears in many legal texts and may constitute a "legal term of art." So, the Court turns to legal definitions and usage.
In the absence of a definition of "goods" in the Bankruptcy Code, all bankruptcy courts construing Section 503(b)(9) have turned to the UCC. See In re NE Opco, Inc., 501 B.R. 233, 237 (Bankr. D. Del. 2013); In re Erving Indus., Inc., 432 B.R. 354, 365 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2010); GFI Wis., Inc. v. Reedsburg Util. Comm'n, 440 B.R. 791, 797 (W.D. Wis. 2010) ("Every bankruptcy court to consider the issue . . . has applied the Uniform Commercial Code definition of goods."). Notably, both the Debtor and PacifiCorp advocate for the Court to adopt the UCC approach. Application at 2-3; Response at 3-4. There is some attraction to this method since the UCC does contain an express definition of the term "goods" and both parties seem to accept it.
However, since interpretation of the word "goods" used in Section 503(b)(9) is a matter of federal law — not state law — the UCC does not automatically determine the rule of decision. See Am. Sur. Co. of N.Y. v. Sampsell, 327 U.S. 269, 272 (1946) ("federal bankruptcy law, not state law, governs the distribution of a bankrupt's assets to his creditors"). But, the UCC is a very important analog. Why? First, the UCC does contain a definition of "goods" that was in place prior to the enactment of Section 503(b)(9). Second, the priority claim dispute between PacifiCorp and the Debtor is, in essence, a commercial dispute between corporations relating to a transaction (i.e., the purchase and sale of electrical energy). The UCC generally governs commercial "transactions in goods." COLO. REV. STAT. § 4-2-102(1); WYO. STAT. ANN. § 34.1-2-102(1).
COLO. REV. STAT. § 4-2-105. The definition of "goods" contained in the Wyoming version of the UCC is substantively identical to the Colorado version. WYO. STAT. ANN. § 34.1-2-105(a) and (b). The Court refers to these similar definitions more generically as "UCC Section 2-105." Further simplified, under the UCC Section 2-105 definition, "goods" must be: (1) things existing and identifiable; (2) movable at the time of identification; and (3) capable of being sold.
Many state courts and federal courts (sitting in diversity) have applied UCC Section 2-105 to determine whether electrical energy is "goods." Such determinations are important for purposes of choice of substantive law because the UCC only applies to a "transaction in goods." If the sale of electrical energy is a "transaction in goods," then the provisions of the UCC apply; if not, the transaction is governed by state common law rather than the UCC.
Notwithstanding the statutory uniformity of UCC Section 2-105, at first blush, the non-bankruptcy case law construing the term "goods" in the context of electrical energy does not seem particularly uniform. The majority view is that electrical energy is "goods" for purposes of UCC Section 2-105. Case law from California, Indiana,
More recently, in a different Pacific Gas case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit stated: "The parties appear to agree that the provision of electricity involves the sale of goods which would invoke the UCC. . . . Indeed, we would lack jurisdiction . . . if the contracts [for sale of electricity] were interpreted as involving the provision of services rather than goods." Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. U.S., 838 F.3d 1341, 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2016). The appellate court then proceeded to decide the merits since the electrical energy sale contracts involved the sale of goods.
Despite the apparent logic of the majority approach, some courts have disagreed and determined that electrical energy is not "goods" under the UCC. In the Court's view, the suggested disarray in the UCC Section 2-105 case law (outside of bankruptcy) is overstated and can be explained by a careful and more nuanced analysis. Virtually all of the cases characterized as supporting the minority UCC approach can be distinguished because they involved personal injury caused by contact with high voltage wires prior to metering and delivery of electrical energy.
After carefully parsing the state personal injury cases involving high voltage wire contact (not metered and delivered electrical energy), there seems to be only one real outlier: New York. New York courts first addressed whether electrical energy constitutes "goods" under the UCC in Farina v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 438 N.Y.S.2d. 645, 647 (N.Y. App. Div. 1981). Farina was a personal injury case stemming from contact with an overhead electric wire prior to metering and delivery. Although the main focus was on a tort claim, the intermediate appellate court also discussed a UCC claim. First, Farina determined that the UCC was inapplicable because there was no sale. Id. Then, in what appears to be almost an after-thought, the Farina court mentioned: "goods." The entire UCC "goods" discussion consisted of only a single sentence: "[W]e are unable to conclude that it was intended that electricity be included within the definition of "goods" (Uniform Commercial Code, § 2-105)." Id. And, again, the case was of the personal injury before metering variety.
The Farina dicta jumped to federal court in U.S. v. Consol. Edison Co. of N.Y., 590 F.Supp. 266, 269 (S.D.N.Y. 1984). That case concerned a breach of contract (to recover overcharges) against a public utility. Again, the UCC "goods" discussion comprised one sentence: "In New York, electricity is not considered "goods" and the U.C.C. therefore is not directly applicable to contracts involving the provision of electricity." Id. at 269. The court dropped a footnote citing Farina as the exclusive support for the proposition. From that humble beginning, the Farina dicta somehow metastasized into a precedential holding referenced in many subsequent New York cases as controlling. See Encogen Four Partners, L.P. v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 914 F.Supp. 57, 61 (S.D.N.Y. 1996) (determining that New York UCC did not apply to electricity sale contracts; adopting Consol. Edison without analysis).
The bottom line is that the great majority of state courts consider electrical energy to be "goods" under the UCC. In the special context of personal injury cases involving overhead power wires (before metering and delivery of electrical energy), some States exclude application of the UCC holding that stray electrical current in overhead power lines is not "goods." However, such state courts frequently have distinguished such results and clarified that electrical energy metered and delivered to a customer constitutes "goods" under the UCC.
All bankruptcy courts construing Section 503(b)(9) in the context of electrical energy have adopted the UCC Section 2-105 definition of "goods." But, despite this uniformity in initial analytic approach, such bankruptcy courts have reached starkly contradictory results concerning whether electrical energy is "goods."
Erving Industries is the key early decision determining that electricity is "goods" under UCC Section 2-105 and Section 503(b)(9). In that case, a power company presented a large priority claim for electrical energy supplied to the debtor during the 20 days before bankruptcy. The debtor conceded the value and timing elements. Thus, as in this case, in Erving Industries the main issue was whether electrical energy qualified as "goods." Noting the absence of a Bankruptcy Code definition of "goods," the Erving Industries bankruptcy court adopted the UCC Section 2-105 definition. The court reasoned that electricity is tangible since "[e]lectricity . . . is the thing the customer seeks to purchase" and "customers rely on the specific physical properties of electricity to fulfill their needs. . . ." Erving Indus., 432 B.R. at 368 (emphasis in original). In the terms of UCC Section 2-105 analysis, the bankruptcy court concluded:
Erving Indus., 432 B.R. at 369-70. As a result, the Erving Industries bankruptcy court allowed a Section 503(b)(9) administrative expense priority for electrical energy.
Relying heavily on Erving Industries, a different bankruptcy court reached the same conclusion in In re Grede Foundries, Inc., 435 B.R. 593 (Bankr. W.D. Wis. 2010), aff'd sub nom. GFI Wis., 440 B.R. at 799. The case involved the typical scenario of a public utility providing electrical energy to its customer. Grede Foundries looked to UCC Section 2-105. Id. at 595. The debtor conceded that the electrical energy was movable but argued that "the movement is so fast as to be nonexistent." Id. at 596. Allowing a Section 503(b)(9) administrative expense priority, the bankruptcy court ruled that "[n]either the Bankruptcy Code nor the UCC require that particles move at any particular speed before they can be deemed `moveable.'" Id. On appeal, the district court affirmed. GFI Wis., 440 B.R. 791.
The district court, acting as an appellate court, decided that "it is reasonable" to use UCC Section 2-105 to define "goods" in Section 503(b)(9). Id. at 798. GFI Wisconsin also referenced many non-bankruptcy UCC decisions. The court promoted a common sense approach:
Id. at 800.
More recently, several other bankruptcy courts adopted the reasoning and rationale of Erving Industries, Gedde Foundries, and GFI Wisconsin. See In re Wometco de P.R. Inc., 2016 WL 155393, at *2 (Bankr. D.P.R. Jan. 12, 2016) (court "concludes that because electricity is movable at the time of identification to the contract, the purchased electricity constitutes a good under 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(9)"); In re S. Mont. Elec. Generation and Transmission Coop., Inc., 2013 WL 85162, at *5 (Bankr. D. Mont., Jan. 8, 2013) ("electricity is movable, tangible and consumable" and is "goods" under Section 503(b)(9)). Ultimately, the Court finds this line of cases persuasive.
A roughly equal number of other bankruptcy cases reach the opposite electrical energy result under UCC Section 2-105 and Section 503(b)(9): Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 240; NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 256; In re Samaritan All., LLC, 2008 WL 2520107, at *4 (Bankr. E.D. Ky. June 28, 2008); Hudson Energy Serv., LLC v. Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., Inc. (In re Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., Inc.), 538 B.R. 666, 673-74 (S.D.N.Y. 2015).
Id. at 239. After reaching this conclusion, the bankruptcy court attempted to bolster its decision by looking at the "plain meaning" of the UCC and the Bankruptcy Code. To do so, the bankruptcy court attempted to divine the intent of the drafters of the UCC — not Congress. Thus, with no actual support, the Pilgrim's Pride decision hypothesizes that: "UCC § 2-105 does not suggest that the provision's drafters had intended that `goods' would include things which cannot be packaged and handled" and "the UCC's authors did not intend things like electricity . . . to be within the scope of section 2-105." Id. (emphasis added). Finally, the bankruptcy court also cited numerous other decisions (from New York, Massachusetts, Michigan and Ohio) for the proposition that "electricity does not fall within the UCC's definition of `goods.'" Id. at 240. Ultimately, the Pilgrim's Pride court denied the creditor's application for Section 503(b)(9) priority for the supplied electrical energy.
Some years after Pilgrim's Pride, a different bankruptcy court reached the same result: NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 259-60. As in Pilgrim's Pride, the NE Opco court did not receive any evidence concerning the nature of electrical energy. Instead, the NE Opco decision seems to rely on the bankruptcy judge's understanding of electrical energy coupled with reference to a physics article. Id. at 251 n.68. The NE Opco court endorsed use of UCC Section 2-105 for the bankruptcy priority issue and cited a series of non-bankruptcy cases supposedly standing for the proposition that "electricity is not a good." Id. at 248 n.61. Then, after a long recitation of the holdings in Pilgrim's Pride, Erving Industries, and GFI Wisconsin,
NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 250. Then, after establishing a new rule, the NE Opco bankruptcy judge calculated (based upon the speed of light) that electrical energy travels "1 mile in 8.024 microseconds." Id. at 251 n.69. According to the NE Opco court, the remarkably fast movement of electrical energy disqualifies it as "goods" under the "plain meaning" of the UCC Section 2-105 and Section 503(b)(9). Id. at 251 and 256. Having reached his conclusion on that basis, the bankruptcy judge addressed a number of other arguments, none of which changed the result.
The unpublished Samaritan Alliance decision, 2008 WL 2520107, adds little to the debate. In that case, a utility sought a priority for electrical energy supplied to the debtor pre-bankruptcy. The court did not have any evidence concerning the nature and characteristics of electrical energy. After summarizing the parties' arguments and citations, the bankruptcy court's analysis boiled down to a conclusory sentence: "the court concludes that while courts are divided on the general question of whether or not electricity is `goods,' the Court agrees with the Debtor that section 503(b)(9) is not applicable here and that the electricity provided is more properly characterized as a `service.'" Id. at *4.
The final case in the electricity-is-not-goods line is Great Atlantic, 538 B.R. 666. In that case, the bankruptcy court conducted a hearing during which it received evidence concerning the nature of electrical energy. The bankruptcy court entered a bench ruling denying administrative expense priority treatment for electrical energy. The bankruptcy court relied on NE Opco and held that "the time between identification and consumption of a good must be `meaningful.'" Id. at 669. On appeal, the Great Atlantic district court determined that the bankruptcy court's factual findings were not erroneous. Further, the district court clarified that "identification [of electrical energy] occurs after consumption, not — as NE Opco presumed — when the electricity passes through the meter." Id. at 673. As a result, the district court affirmed.
Respectfully, the Court determines that the Pilgrim's Pride, NE Opco, Samaritan Alliance, and Great Atlantic decisions are not persuasive under UCC Section 2-105 and Section 503(b)(9). Why?
First, three of the four decisions (Pilgrim's Pride, NE Opco, and Samaritan Alliance) are bereft of any evidentiary foundation concerning the characteristics of electrical energy. Instead, the bankruptcy courts proceeded on their own devices. The lack of competent evidence renders the resulting judicial conclusions suspect. Contrawise, in this case, the Court received and credited expert physics testimony that is contrary to conclusions reached without the benefit of any evidence.
Second, the court in the lead case, Pilgrim's Pride, based its result (at least in part) on supposedly discovering the intent of the UCC's "authors" and "drafters." Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 239. This seems like a search for legislative history gone amuck. Instead of trying to divine the intentions of Congress (a difficult task in its own right and perhaps a "fiction"), the Pilgrim's Pride court took it a step further looking for the intentions of unelected authors. Who are the UCC's drafters? The Pilgrim's Pride decision does not say. But, a prominent treatise explains that "[t]he original Uniform Commercial Code was the product of almost a generation of effort on the part of legal scholars in active practice and in the academic community." Richard W. Duesenberg et al., 3 SALES & BULK TRANSFERS UNDER THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE § 1.01 (Lexis Nexis 2016). This generation of now-unknown legal scholars and practitioners developed the first model UCC in 1952. Because the UCC Official Commentary does not shed light on whether UCC Section 2-105 was designed to include electrical energy, the Pilgrim's Pride bankruptcy judge did not look there for intent. Instead, the decision notes the UCC text and merely seems to guess at what the intent of the unidentified and unelected "drafters," might have been — all without any citation to actual "drafter" sources. This type of guesswork is not compelling and contrary to principles of statutory interpretation.
Third, in the two key cases, Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco (which are the main basis of Great Atlantic), the courts do not adequately acknowledge that the great majority of UCC decisions (over decades) have determined that metered and delivered electrical energy is "goods." Instead, they seem to mix-and-match products liability overhead transmission cases plus minority law from New York. But, the problem is even worse than that. The Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco courts mistakenly cite some decisions for holdings that are the opposite of the decisions' actual rulings. For example, both the Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco decisions cite the Ohio case of Cincinnati Gas & Elec., 502 N.E.2d 713, in support of the proposition that "courts have held that electricity does not fall within the UCC's definition of `goods.'" Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 240; see NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 248 n.61 (same). However, the Cincinnati Gas & Elec. municipal court simply did not make such a ruling. In Cincinnati Gas & Elec., an electric utility sued its customer for breach of contract in connection with the supply of electrical energy and sought to apply the UCC. This is the actual holding:
Id. at 715. So, as applied to the context of this case — where PacifiCorp provided electrical energy to the Debtor which was metered, delivered and used — Cincinnati Gas & Elec. strongly supports a determination that such electrical energy is "goods" under the UCC Section 2-105 definition. Similarly, the courts in Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco both cite Michigan case law, Williams, 234 N.W.2d 702, for the proposition that electrical energy is not "goods." Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 240; NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 248 n.61. Although that is the holding of Williams (an overhead electric transmission wire products liability case), both the Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco decisions fail to acknowledge a subsequent Michigan appellate case (albeit not decided under the UCC) that clarified that electrical energy becomes a "finished good" when it "reaches its customers' meters." Detroit Edison, 844 N.W.2d at 207. Finally, the Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco courts also rely on New York precedent without any critical analysis. Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 240; NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 248 n.61. But, as explained previously, the New York view is a true outlier built on the faulty foundation of a dicta statement in the Farina overhead electric transmission products liability case. In the end, the Court simply discounts the analysis of precedent presented by Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco.
Fourth, the NE Opco court announced a new rule for "goods" that the period between identification and consumption must be "meaningful." NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 250. The bankruptcy court essentially opined that because electrical energy moves at "8.024 microseconds" per mile, there could be no "meaningful" interval between identification and consumption. But, the novel time interval concept is nowhere to be found in UCC Section 2-105. And, would 10, or 100, or 1,000 seconds be meaningful? The Court believes that under a UCC analysis the focus should be on the nature of electrical energy (including whether it is movable at the time of identification) rather than an arbitrary time interval.
Having carefully reviewed the text of UCC Section 2-105 and UCC case law (both in and outside of bankruptcy), the Court reaches its own conclusion about whether electrical energy satisfies the UCC definition of "goods." Under UCC Section 2-105, "goods" are: (1) things existing and identifiable; (2) movable at the time of identification; and (3) capable of being sold. There are no other requirements.
As the name suggests, the UCC is designed to promote uniformity in state law in the area of commercial matters (including sales). So, it is quite salient to reiterate again at the outset that the majority of state and federal courts (sitting in diversity) have determined that electrical energy constitutes "goods" under UCC Section 2-105, especially when the electrical energy is metered and delivered to a customer. In fact, outside of the bankruptcy context, the Court has not been able to locate any decisions (except in New York) that conclude that metered and delivered electrical energy is anything other than "goods" under UCC Section 2-105. So, the Debtor's argument (i.e., that metered electrical energy is not "goods") is very much a departure from the norm and long-standing national precedent.
Turning to the UCC Section 2-105 definition of goods, the Debtor concedes that electrical energy is a thing that exists, can be identified, and is capable of being sold. However, the Debtor denies that electrical energy is "moveable at the time of identification." Response at 3-4. Citing Pilgrim's Pride and NE Opco, the Debtor contends that "electricity is only identifiable once it is measured at the meter, after which `it has already been consumed by the end user.'" Id.
On a factual basis, the expert testimony of Dr. Kolitch strongly rebuts the Debtor's argument. A trained physicist, he explained and opined:
The Debtor's counsel conducted a highly skilled (and even entertaining) cross-examination of Dr. Kolitch; but, Dr. Kolitch did not retreat from his credible testimony and opinions. The Debtor's best evidence was that electrical energy is fast. On cross-examination, Dr. Kolitch acknowledged that electrical energy moves "very quickly," almost at the "speed of light" and transits 200 feet of copper wire in "around 226 nanoseconds." (Tr. at 36-38.) There is no doubt that the electrical energy supplied by PacifiCorp passed the 5 electromechanical meters and was consumed or used by the Debtor in its natural gas operations very quickly — in hundreds or possibly thousands of nanoseconds. Citing NE Opco, the Debtor argues "[t]here is no meaningful delay between identification and consumption of electricity, and the `infinitesimal gap' between the two `is too short to establish that electricity is moveable at the time of identification' so as to be a good within the meaning of the UCC." Response at 3; NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 256.
The Debtor's argument is not without some allure, but the Court rejects it on a variety of grounds. First, the testimony from Dr. Kolitch was that "the electrical energy identified at the customer's meter is moving — and therefore movable — when it is identified." That is all that is necessary under the only portion of the UCC definition of "goods" that the Debtor contests. Second, the "no meaningful delay between identification and consumption of electricity" rule announced in NE Opco comes from thin air. UCC Section 2-105 does not refer to the necessity of a short time interval. And, how long is "meaningful"? Other commodities that generally are considered "goods" (such as water and natural gas) are supplied through pipes and metered. Such products move quickly, albeit not nearly as quickly as electrical energy. Surely the NE Opco approach cannot mean that water and natural gas somehow are transformed into non-"goods" because they move fairly quickly. So, it seems that the NE Opco court developed a unique rule applicable only to electrical energy. In the Court's view, the NE Opco focus on interval is unsupported and unwarranted. Third, the Court acknowledges again that the strong majority of UCC case law supports the classification of electrical energy that has been metered and delivered to a customer as "goods." Given that the UCC is designed to provide uniformity in commercial law, the Court is reticent to adopt a minority view that destroys the uniformity of the UCC. Fourth, stepping aside from the physics, a common-sense interpretation of UCC Section 2-105 dictates that electrical energy meets the criteria. It is a thing that exists, can be identified, and is capable of being sold. By the daily activity of turning on the light switch, we know that electrical energy moves. Moreover, it is measured as it passes through a meter. A meter records movement of electrical energy but is not read every nanosecond. Instead, the public utility reads the meter periodically and this calculation then finds its way to the dreaded electric bill. Nothing else is required to satisfy the UCC Section 2-105 definition of "goods."
Thus, electrical energy is "goods" under UCC Section 2-105 which the Court has adopted as the applicable legal definition of the term. But, as we shall see in a moment, the UCC is not the only legal source that helps clarify the plain meaning of the term "goods" and whether electrical energy constitutes "goods." Federal antitrust law, federal labor law, federal energy regulatory law, state tort law, tax law, and international treaties (including the international equivalent of the UCC) all confirm that electrical energy is "goods."
Sections 2 and 3 of the Robinson-Patman Antidiscrimination Act (the "Robinson-Patman Act"), 15 U.S.C. §§ 13 and 14, use the terms "commodities" and "goods." Since numerous federal courts have construed such terms in the context of electricity-oriented claims, Robinson-Patman Act cases also provide insightful guidance (albeit not binding precedent) concerning the commonly accepted legal meaning of the term "goods."
Section 2(a) of the Robinson-Patman Act prohibits "any person engaged in commerce" from discriminating "in price between different purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality . . . where the effect of such discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly. . . ." 15 U.S.C. § 13(a) (emphasis added). Although Section 2(a) of the Robinson-Patman act uses the term "commodities" rather than "goods," the words are synonymous. Town of Concord, Mass. v. Boston Edison Co., 676 F.Supp. 396, 397 (D. Mass. 1988) ("The term `commodity' is commonly used to refer to goods, merchandise, wares, supplies and other items bought and sold in the marketplace."); see also Brian Garner, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 331 (Thompson Reuters 10th ed. 2014) (defining "commodity" as "An article of trade or commerce. The term embraces tangible goods, such as products or merchandise, as distinguished from services.")
Section 3 of the Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 14, makes it unlawful for any "person engaged in commerce . . . to lease or make a sale or contract for sale of goods, wares, merchandise, machinery, supplies, or other commodities" on an agreement that "the lessee or purchaser thereof shall not use or deal in the goods, wares, merchandise, machinery, supplies, or other commodities of a competitor. . . ." Id. Thus, the statute makes plain that "goods" means a type of "commodity." In addition, the word "commodities" generally is construed similarly in both Sections 2 and 3 of the Robinson-Patman Act. City of Gainesville v. Fla. Power & Light Co., 488 F.Supp. 1258, 1280 (S.D. Fla. 1980).
At least two federal appellate courts have examined whether the sale of electrical energy is considered a "commodity" under Section 2 of the Robinson-Patman Act. The leading appellate case is City of Kirkwood, 671 F.2d 1173. City of Kirkwood involved a municipality's claim that an electrical energy supplier engaged in a discriminatory and anti-competitive "price squeeze." Id. at 1175. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit determined that the alleged misconduct stated a Robinson-Patman claim:
Id. at 1181-82 (emphasis added). Much more recently, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit came to the same conclusion. In Williams, 681 F.3d 788, the plaintiff argued that an electric utility engaged in price discrimination in the sale of electrical energy. The appellate court cited City of Kirkwood with approval and "reaffirm[ed] that electricity is a commodity" under the Robinson-Patman Act. Id. at 800.
Consistent with appellate precedent, the clear majority
Town of Concord, 676 F. Supp. at 398 (emphasis added and internal citation omitted). Notably, the Robinson-Patman Act electrical energy jurisprudence does not refer to the UCC definition of "goods." Instead, the antitrust cases take a more common sense and plain-meaning approach.
The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 ("FLSA") establishes national fair labor standards, including minimum wage, overtime pay, and child labor protections. 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq. Many of the substantive FLSA provisions reference work performed in the production of "goods." See 29 U.S.C. § 206 (minimum wage for employees "engaged in commerce or in the production of goods"); § 207 (maximum hours for employees "engaged in commerce or in the production of goods"); § 212 (prohibiting shipment of "any goods produced" by oppressive child labor). Given the repeated reference to "goods," Congress defined the term:
29 U.S.C. § 203(i). The FLSA definition is very similar to the phraseology of Section 3 of the Robinson-Patman Act. 15 U.S.C. § 14 ("goods, wares, merchandise, machinery, supplies, or other commodities"). It also is very close to many dictionary definitions.
The federal agency administering the FLSA, the Department of Labor, has determined that "[g]oods includes. . . electrical energy or power. . . ." 29 C.F.R. § 776.20(b) (Interpretative Bulletin on the General Coverage of the Wage and Hours Provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act). Judicial decisions construing the FLSA are in accord. For example, in Walling v. Conn. Co., 62 F.Supp. 733, 734 (D. Conn. 1945), aff'd 154 F.2d 552 (2d Cir. 1946), the court determined that the FLSA applied since, among other things, "a substantial part of the goods produced by [the powerhouse employees] is produced to be used in interstate commerce, that is, the [electric] current which goes into the operation of the New Haven Railroad and the drawbridges of the city." Thus, the Walling court equated electric current with "goods."
The Federal Power Act governs the transmission and sale of electrical energy in interstate commerce. 16 U.S.C. § 824 et seq. Congress vested the Federal Power Commission ("FPC"), later replaced by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC"), as the federal agency charged with regulation and enforcement of federal law governing the interstate transmission and sale of electrical energy, including establishment of "just and reasonable" wholesale electrical energy rates. 16 U.S.C. § 824d(a); see also In re Enron, 328 B.R. 75, 80-81 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2005) (discussing broad jurisdiction grant to FERC).
The FPC and the FERC repeatedly and consistently have determined that Article 2 (Sales) of the UCC governs contracts for the interstate sale of electrical energy. But, as discussed previously, Article 2 of the UCC is only applicable to "transactions in goods." COLO. REV. STAT. § 4-2-102(1); WYO. STAT. ANN. § 34.1-2-102(1). Thus, in ruling that Article 2 of the UCC governs transactions for the interstate sale of electrical energy, the FRC and FERC both effectively have determined that electrical energy is a "good."
Minnesota Power & Light Co., 52 FPC 617 (FPC 1974), illustrates the point. In that case, the dispute "centered solely upon the language set forth in [interstate electrical energy] contracts" between a public electric utility and its customers (various Minnesota municipalities). Id. at 618. In interpreting the language of the contracts, the FPC stated:
Id. at 619 (emphasis added; citations omitted). Some years later, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit confirmed that state contract law governs FERC-regulated contracts (at least to the extent that "there is no significant conflict between any federal interest and the use of state law"). Pennzoil Co. v. F.E.R.C., 645 F.2d 360, 387 (5th Cir. 1981). And, the applicable state law "is the law that would govern the parties' dealings were there no [federal] regulation at all of the contract's subject matter." Id.
Relying on Pennzoil and FERC precedent, many FERC decisions have applied UCC sale of goods law to electrical energy sale contracts. Golden Spread Elec. Coop., Inc., 123 FERC ¶ 61,047, at 61,260 n.273 (FERC Apr. 21, 2008) (applying general UCC law to interpret settlement concerning electric energy sale issues); Villages of Jackson Ctr., 91 FERC ¶ 63,013 (FERC June 29, 2000) (referencing UCC to define "course of conduct" and noting: "Electricity is a commodity. With commodities, there is no way to differentiate the product. . . ."); Golden Spread Elec. Coop., Inc., 40 FERC ¶ 61,348 (FERC Sept. 29, 1987) (applying Texas UCC law to assignment of electrical energy sale contracts); Cent. Ill. Pub. Serv. Co., 20 FERC ¶ 61,043 at 61,092 (FERC July 12, 1982) (applying Illinois UCC to electric energy sales contract). These FPC and FERC decisions confirm that electrical energy is "goods."
Electrical energy is a virtual necessity for modern living. However, inadvertent contact with electric current can result in grave personal injury and substantial property loss. Given its pervasive use through the United States, electrical energy has been the subject of much tort litigation. A critical legal issue in tort cases is whether electrical energy is a "product" or a "service." The distinction is important for determining the applicable substantive law. And, the term "product" is virtually synonymous with "goods." See 29 U.S.C. § 203(i) (defining "goods" as including "products"); Brian Garner, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 331 (Thompson Reuters 10th ed. 2014) (defining "commodity" as "An article of trade or commerce. The term embraces only tangible goods, such as products or merchandise, as distinguished from services.") (emphasis added); AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE at 757 (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 5th ed. 2011) ("goods" means "a product. . . .").
The focus on the term "product" in tort litigation is driven by the Restatement of Torts (Second) (the "Restatement") which has been adopted in most States in the United States. Under the title "Special Liability of Seller of Product for Physical Harm to User or Consumer," Section 402A of the Restatement provides:
(Emphasis added.)
Some of the bankruptcy court cases considering Section 503(b)(9) also have considered state tort law as analogous. So, is electric energy a "product" under Restatement Section 402A and applicable state tort law? The clear majority of States considers electrical energy to be a "product," not a "service" and, therefore, subject to the framework of Restatement Section 402A for most purposes. In fact, "the majority of the state courts considering this issue have encountered little difficulty deciding that electricity is a product. . . . [because] electricity is `a form of energy that can be made or produced by men, confined, controlled, transmitted and distributed. . . ." Bryant v. Tri-County Elec. Membership Corp., 844 F.Supp. 347, 349 (W.D. Ky. 1994) (citing Ransome v. Wis. Elec. Power Co., 275 N.W.2d 641, 643 (Wis. 1979). Further, even those few jurisdictions that sometimes characterize electrical energy as a "service" draw a distinction between the location of the electrical energy in the distribution channel. If the electrical energy is in high voltage wires and has not been delivered to a customer, then the minority jurisdictions consider the electrical energy to be a "service" for tort purposes. (This is similar to the approach that some state courts have taken under the UCC.) However, if the electrical energy has "passed the meter" and been delivered to a customer, then most of the minority jurisdictions deem the delivered electric energy to be a "product" under Restatement Section 402A.
Precedent in the following jurisdictions confirms that electrical energy that has passed the customer's meter is a "product" for strict liability purposes under Section 402(A) of the Restatement: California;
At least 22 States expressly define "electricity" as "tangible personal property" in connection with state taxation.
(Emphasis added.) The definition means that Wyoming has determined that electrical energy can be "seen, weighed, measured, felt or touched" or is otherwise perceptible to the senses. Furthermore, many States that have not expressly defined the phrase "tangible personal property" in their tax statutes nevertheless have determined that electrical energy falls within the meaning of the phrase. See Powerex Corp. v. Dep't of Revenue, 346 P.3d 476, 491 (Or. 2015) ("electricity is tangible personal property [for tax purposes]. . . . It is perceptible to the senses, most significantly to the sense of touch. It can be physically located within a state and shipped from one state to another. . . . And the physical properties of electricity are what makes it valuable to a purchaser. . . .").
At the federal level, the IRS agrees. In a pair of almost identical Private Letter Rulings, the IRS determined that "Producers of electric energy are subject to IRC § 263A. Generation of electric energy constitutes production of tangible personal property." IRS Priv. Ltr. Rul. 200152012, 2001 WL 1659979 (Dec. 28, 2001); IRS Priv. Ltr. Rul. 200152014, 2001 WL 1659981 (Dec. 28, 2001) (same).
The United States, Mexico, and Canada entered into a multilateral treaty, the North American Free Trade Agreement ("NAFTA"), to facilitate the movement of goods in international commerce. NAFTA, Can.-Mex.-U.S., Dec. 17, 1992, 32 I.L.M. 289 (1993). Treaties form part of the "supreme law of the land." U.S. CONST. Art. VI. Chapter Six of the NAFTA is titled "Energy and Basic Petrochemicals" and its purpose is to "strengthen the important role that trade in energy and basic petrochemical goods plays in the free trade area and to enhance this role. . . ." NAFTA Article 601(2) (emphasis added). NAFTA Article 602(1) confirms that Chapter Six "applies to measures related to energy and basic petrochemical goods originating in the territories of the Parties. . . ." (emphasis added).
But, what "goods" are "energy and basic petrochemical goods" within the ambit of NAFTA? The treaty identifies the "energy and basic petrochemical goods" by cross reference. NAFTA Article 602(2)(h) states that "energy and basic petrochemical goods refer to those goods classified under the Harmonized System as. . . heading[]. . . 27.16. . . ." (emphasis added). NAFTA Article 201 defines "Harmonized System" as "the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System, and its legal notes, and rules as adopted and implemented by the parties in their respective tariff laws." In turn, Heading 2716.00 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (Supp. 2016)
The United Nations Convention on the International Sale of Goods ("UNCISG") is the international functional equivalent of Article 2 of the UCC. The United States ratified the UNCISG and the treaty entered into force between the United States and ten other nations as of January 1, 1988. S. Treaty Doc. No. 98-9, 98th Cong. 1st Sess. 22 (1983), reprinted at 15 U.S.C. App. 52 (2002), 19 I.L.M. 668. Subsequently, many other nations joined. Currently, 85 countries are parties to the UNCISG. See Status of Conventions and Model Laws, United Nations General Assembly Note by Secretariat UN Doc A/CN.9/876 (May 17, 2016).
As the title of the treaty suggests, the UNCISG generally applies to "contracts of sale of goods between parties whose places of business are in different States." UNCISG Art. 1(1) (emphasis added). The UNCISG does not specifically define the term "goods"; however, the treaty lists certain categories of goods that are exempted from coverage by the UNCISG. In addition to excluding consumer goods, the UNCISG excludes "sales. . . of electricity." UNCISG Art. 2(f). The express exclusion of electricity in the UNCISG suggests that electrical energy is a "good." The Secretariat of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law confirmed as much in the Explanatory Note accompanying the UNCISG:
Explanatory Note by the UNCITRAL Secretariat on the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods at ¶ 10.
The World Trade Organization ("WTO") is an intergovernmental organization that regulates international trade. The United States and 163 other nations are members of the WTO. Run by member governments, the WTO develops international trade rules and agreements designed to lower customs tariffs trade barriers covering both goods and services. The WTO Secretariat characterizes electrical energy as "goods." For example, in the 2010 World Trade Report, the WTO Secretariat discussed some unique features of electricity but concluded that "we may still consider refining and electricity generation to represent the minimum amount of processing necessary to allow these goods to be traded" and it is "more natural to view electricity as a manufactured good." 2010 World Trade Report at 54-55, WTO Secretariat.
As we have seen, the word "goods" is an especially broad and encompassing term in common usage. The same is true in legal texts and cases outside of bankruptcy, including under the UCC, federal antitrust law, federal labor law, federal energy regulatory law, state tort law, state tax law, and international treaties. The Court adopts the UCC Section 2-105 legal definition of "goods" for purposes of Section 503(b)(9). However case law, regulations, administrative rulings, and secondary sources construing the words "goods," "commodities," and "products" as used in the Robinson-Patman Act, the FLSA, the Federal Power Act, state tort laws, state tax laws, NAFTA, and UNCISG also clearly are analogous and further confirm, in a remarkably consistent fashion, both the common meaning and more specialized legal meaning of the term "goods" under UCC Section 2-105. See Darden, 503 U.S. at 322-28 (using the common law meaning of "employee" to construe the term in ERISA statute); Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence, 490 U.S. at 739-41 (utilizing conventional common law understanding to ascertain meaning of federal statute). The Court finds that electrical energy constitutes "goods" in both ordinary and legal usage. To hold otherwise would be contrary to the plain understanding of the term "goods" and would upset established legal meaning across many areas of law.
The Debtor has offered no compelling argument why "goods" should have a different meaning under the Bankruptcy Code than under the consistent usage in dictionaries, UCC Section 2-105, federal antitrust laws, federal labor laws, federal energy regulatory law, state tort law, state tax law, and international treaties. Under Section 503(b)(9), Congress expanded creditors' rights substantially by establishing an administrative priority for the very broad and general category of "goods." Electrical energy plainly falls within the scope of the term.
The Debtor highlighted evidence showing that PacifiCorp used the word "services" when referring to the supply of electrical energy. For example, the Invoices identify the main charges as for "Electric Service" and some of the tables on the Invoices contain the heading: "Service Period." (Ex. 6 at 2-3, 5-6 and 9). Neither the Debtor nor PacifiCorp introduced any supply contracts. But, the Court construes the Invoices as part of the contractual arrangement between the Debtor and PacifiCorp. Furthermore, PacifiCorp is a public utility and its rates are regulated by the "Wyoming Public Service Commission." (Stipulated Fact No. 2.) The Wyoming Tariff Information identifies "Applicable Wyoming Rate Schedules." (Ex. 7.) All of the Applicable Wyoming Rate Schedules (including Rate Schedules 25, 26 and 46) refer to "service." The Debtor suggests that the numerous references to "services" may show the parties' intent and should be used as a basis to reject electrical energy being classified as "goods."
Regarding the "services" language in the Invoices, the Court determines that the use of the word "services" is not determinative. Instead of looking at the labels used on the Invoices, the Court must look at the substance of the transactions and the economic reality. A recent U.S. Supreme Court case is instructive: U.S. v. Eurodif, S.A., 555 U.S. 305 (2009). In that case, the U.S. Department of Commerce sought to impose "antidumping" duties pertaining to uranium enrichment transactions. The defendant argued that the Tariff Act of 1930, 19 U.S.C. § 1673, did not apply because the transactions were for "services," rather than for "foreign merchandise." The defendant pointed out that the underlying contracts characterized the transactions as the sale of uranium enrichment "services." Despite the use of the word "services" in the contracts, the government contended that the transactions really were "sales of goods rather than services. . . ." Id. The U.S. Supreme Court determined that the government agency "may reasonably treat the transaction as the sale of goods" even though the transaction was labeled as a "service" contract. Id. at 322. Although the Eurodif decision deals with a tax and regulatory issue, the same principle applies to this case. See Erving Indus., 432 B.R. at 364 n.18 (usage of the word "services" in electric energy contract was "loose" and not dispositive). And, as set forth above, the Court determines that electrical energy qualifies as "goods."
In terms of the Wyoming Public Service Commission, that entity was established to regulate "every public utility" in the State of Wyoming. WYO. STAT. ANN. § 37-2-112. Wyoming law defines the phrase "public utility" as including all companies that own, operate or control "any plant, property or facility": (1) "for the generation, transmission, distribution, sale or furnishing to or for the public of electricity"; (2) "for the manufacture, distribution, sale or furnishing to or for the public of natural or manufactured gas"; (3) "for the supply, storage, distribution or furnishing to or for the public of water"; and (4) "for the transportation or conveyance to or for the public of oil or gas." WYO. STAT. ANN. § 37-1-101. The Wyoming Public Service Commission, has passed regulations governing utility service, quality, adequacy, change in service, service interruptions, service connections, refusal to serve, discontinuation of service, and rates. Wyoming Public Service Commission Regulations Chapter 3 (Electric, Gas and Water Utilities). The rates are set forth on tariff schedules for electricity, water, and natural gas service. The word "service" is pervasive throughout the Wyoming statutes and regulations governing electrical energy, natural gas and water sales. From this, the Debtor infers that the statutory and regulatory scheme (and use of the word "services") dictates that electrical energy is not "goods" but "services." The same type of regulatory regime is present in most other states.
There is no doubt that natural gas and water are "goods" within the meaning of the UCC. COLO. REV. STAT. § 4-2-107 ("A contract for the sale of minerals or the like (including oil and gas) . . . is a contract for the sale of goods . . . if they are to be severed by the seller. . . ."); WYO. STAT. ANN. § 34.1-2-107 (same); see also Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 241 ("natural gas falls within the term `goods'"); NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 251-52 (acknowledging that natural gas and water are "goods"); In re Plastech Engineered Prods., Inc., 397 B.R. 828, 839 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. 2008) (natural gas is "goods"). The Court determines that use of the word "service" in relation to natural gas and water in Wyoming public utility statutes and regulations cannot somehow transform products that are "goods" into something else and is irrelevant. The same is true of electrical energy. See GFI Wis., 440 B.R. at 801 ("Wisconsin's rules for electrical utilities" are irrelevant for Section 503(b)(9) analysis).
Although the Debtor did not directly raise the argument in the Response, some of the bankruptcy cases cited by the Debtor discuss the application of Sections 366 and 546(c). Section 366 is titled: "Utility Service" and governs certain aspects of "utility service" for "electricity, water and gas" after the commencement of bankruptcy proceedings. Alan N. Resnick and Henry J. Somer, 3 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 366.01 (Lexis Nexis 16th ed. 2016). Does use of the phrase "utility service" in Section 366 mean that electrical energy is not a "good" under Section 503(b)(9)? The Court thinks not. The issue is similar to the Debtor's argument raised under the Wyoming public utilities statutes and regulations. Section 366 simply does not purport to change categories of "goods" (such as natural gas, water, and electrical energy) into "services."
Every court that has considered the issue has determined that Section 366 is irrelevant for purposes of interpreting the word "goods" in Section 503(b)(9). See NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 255 ("Section 366 of the Bankruptcy Code cannot control whether something is a good under the U.C.C. and, by extension, section 503(b)(9)."); GFI Wis., 440 B.R. at 801 (same); Pilgrim's Pride, 421 B.R. at 241 ("Congress could have —but did not — except from section 503(b)(9) . . . providers that are acting as utilities [under Section 366]"). The Court agrees. The GFI Wisconsin court stated the rationale for rejecting the argument succinctly:
GFI Wis., 440 B.R. at 801.
The Section 546(c) argument is similar. Section 546(c) governs reclamation rights in "goods" sold to a bankruptcy debtor "if the debtor has received such goods while insolvent, within 45 days before [the bankruptcy]" and provides that the creditor makes a reclamation demand within the statutory time frame. The Debtor hints, indirectly through citations, that Section 503(b)(9) administrative priority should be limited only to "goods" that are reclaimable under Section 546(c). The suggestion is that electrical energy is not reclaimable because it is consumed almost immediately. The short reason why this contention does not carry the day for the Debtor is because Sections 503(b)(9) and 546(c) are not linked. In other words, the statutory text of Section 503(b)(9) does not indicate that administrative priority is limited only to those goods for which reclamation is available under Section 546(c). Again, every court presented with the argument has rejected it. NE Opco, 501 B.R. at 255 ("To argue that section 546(c) defines the limit of what constitutes a good under section 503(b)(9) or the Bankruptcy Code as a whole turns the statute on its head."); GFI Wisconsin, 440 B.R. at 801 ("Had Congress intended to limit administrative priority claim under § 503(b)(9) to only the subset of goods that could qualify for reclamation under § 546(c), Congress could have said so."); Erving Indus., 432 B.R. at 372-373 ("Section 546 does not limit or control in any way the rights that claimant has under § 503(b)(9)"). The Court concurs.
For its final argument, the Debtor contends that "a narrow construction of § 503(b)(9) is warranted." Response at 4. The "narrow construction" advocated by the Debtor supposedly would exclude electrical energy from being included as "goods" subject to administrative priority under Section 503(b)(9).
The Debtor is correct that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that bankruptcy priority claims should be "tightly construed." Howard Delivery Serv., Inc. v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 547 U.S. 651, 657 (2006); see also U.S. v. Embassy Rest., 359 U.S. 29, 31 (1959) ("if one claimant is to be preferred over others, the purpose should be clear from the statute"). But that principal only applies when the statute is not clear. Howard Delivery, 547 U.S. at 668 (applying the narrow construction approach but only where U.S. Supreme Court "found it far from clear" that the asserted priority claim fit the priority statute).
The Court simply does not find any ambiguity in the term "goods." The word "goods" is an extremely broad and encompassing term. Its common meaning and well-established legal meaning include electrical energy. And, as noted earlier, "the presumed point of using general words is to produce general coverage — not to leave room for courts to recognize ad hoc exceptions. . . . [I]n the end, general words are general words, and they must be given general effect." READING LAW at 101. Maybe Congress did not consider or anticipate that the word "goods" in Section 503(b)(9) would include electrical energy. (There is no specific evidence of Congress' intent one way or the other.) But, "the fact that a statute can be `applied in situations not expressly anticipated by Congress does not demonstrate ambiguity. It demonstrates breadth.'" Yeskey, 524 U.S. at 212. Since the Court does not find the term "goods" to be ambiguous, the Court rejects resort to the doctrine of strict interpretation. Id. (declining to apply doctrine of constitutional doubt since statute was not ambiguous); see also Erving Indus., 432 B.R. at 373-74 (rejecting a narrow construction of term "goods" because there was no ambiguity; "electricity easily falls within the definition [of goods]").
Furthermore, "if Congress enacted into law something different from what it intended, then it should amend the statute to conform it to its intent." Lamie v. U.S. Trustee, 540 U.S. 526, 542 (2004). If Congress meant to exclude electrical energy from Section 503(b)(9) coverage, it could has done so expressly as was done in the UNCISG. In the context of this case, the invitation to engage in a "narrow reading" is a euphemism for changing the law enacted by the Legislative Branch.
So, that brings us to the nut of the matter. In the absence of a Congressional exclusion of electrical energy in Section 503(b)(9), the Debtor is seeking to have the Court impose a policy preference in favor of debtors and against electric utilities in bankruptcy cases. The Debtor suggests that such a policy is consistent with principles of equitable distribution amongst creditors in bankruptcies and may promote reorganization. Perhaps.
GRANTS the Application. PacifiCorp shall have an allowed administrative priority claim under Section 503(b)(9) in the amount of $84,253.95 for electrical energy delivered to the Debtor in the 20 days prior to the Petition Date.