WATT, J.:
¶ 1 Appellants
¶ 2 Customers appeal from the Commission's dismissal of their "Application to Vacate or Modify Order 341630 and Redetermine Issues."
¶ 3 SWBT filed a Motion to Dismiss asking the Commission to summarily dismiss Customers' application. SWBT argued that Customers lacked any legal basis for the requested relief as this matter had been reconsidered and reaffirmed by the Commission on at least two separate times and presented multiple times to this Court.
¶ 4 The two issues before this Court with respect to the Commission's Order Dismissing Cause are simply: (1) whether the Commission acted within its authority, and (2) whether the findings and conclusions reflected in this Order are supported by the law and substantial evidence? We answer both questions affirmatively and uphold the decision by the Commission.
¶ 5 Any person aggrieved by any action or order by the Commission "affecting the rates, charges, services, practices, rules or regulations of public utilities," may appeal the decision. Any such appeal
¶ 6 Customers filed their Application on September 14, 2015, asking the Commission to vacate or modify PUD 260
¶ 7 The 1989 Order was appealed to this Court urging that the Commission's Order was not supported by sufficient evidence and urged the surplus created by the tax changes should be treated as an overcharge under 17 O.S. 1981, 121 and therefore required a refund to ratepayers. Henry v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., 1991 OK 134, 825 P.2d 1305. We held that the surplus funds were solely created by federal tax changes and not as a result of an overcharge by SWBT and thus "121 affords no authority for requiring the refund sought by AARP and the State." Id. 11, 825 P.2d at 1311. Although portions of the 1989 Order were remanded back to the Commission for further proceedings, we affirmed the order in part as discussed herein.
¶ 8 Commissioner Hopkins ("Hopkins"), was one of the two commissioners who voted in favor of the 1989 Order. Several years after the adoption of this Order, the public learned that Hopkins had accepted a bribe in exchange for assuring his favorable vote to the 1989 Order. Hopkins was indicted in 1993 and then later convicted for his criminal act.
¶ 9 Following Hopkins' conviction, in March 1997, Anthony, pro se, filed a document titled "Suggestion to the Court," advising this Court of the criminal misconduct of Hopkins and asked this Court to recall its mandate issued in Henry v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., 1991 OK 134, 825 P.2d 1305. This Court issued an Order wherein we concluded that the document filed by Anthony "[did] not invoke either the appellate or original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court."
¶ 10 After this Court's Order, this matter was next considered on remand to the Commission in light of Hopkins accepting a bribe. On remand in 1997, the Commission issued an Order, ("Cause 260 Remand Order") and held that "rehearing of the entire cause [by the Commission] is neither warranted nor in the public interest.... [and t]here is no benefit to reopening a ten-year old case."
¶ 11 In January 2010, Anthony again filed a "Suggestion for Sua Sponte Recall of Mandate, Vacation of Opinion, and Remand of Cause to the Oklahoma Corporation Commission for Want of Appellate Jurisdiction with Brief in Support of Suggested Actions."
¶ 12 The Commission's Order granting SWBT's Motion to Dismiss the Customers' application must be upheld if: (1) the Commission has "regularly pursued its authority,"
¶ 13 The Order from which Customers appeal contains
¶ 14 The Order Dismissing Cause also discussed in detail the Cause 260 Remand Order from 1997, noting that in 1997, the Commission found it had no jurisdiction over the Cause 260 Order and that rehearing was unwarranted and not in the public interest. The Commission also determined that it had no jurisdiction to modify or amend the issues that had already been affirmed by the Oklahoma Supreme Court, ie. that the surplus funds held by SWBT were not an overcharge within the meaning of 17 O.S. 121 and therefore ratepayers were not entitled to a mandatory refund.
¶ 15 Customers urged that the dismissal of their application to reopen and vacate the 1989 Order involves a constitutional violation and thus requires a higher standard of review requiring this Court to "exercise its own independent judgment as to both the law and the facts." Okla. Const. art. IX, 20. We find Customers' assertion without merit. But even so, a full review and consideration of all facts in this matter and the law leads us to the same result.
¶ 16 The Commission is created by Article IX of our state Constitution and consists of three members elected by the people at a general election. A concurrence by a majority is required to exercise the authority of the state to "supervise, regulate and control public service corporations, and to that end it has been clothed with legislative, executive and judicial powers." Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Corp. Comm., 1994 OK 38, ¶ 5, 873 P.2d 1001, 1004.
¶ 17 The issues raised by Customers have already been considered on two separate occasions and
¶ 18 Furthermore, issue preclusion bars this Court from reconsidering matters already litigated. We previously determined in Henry, supra. that ratepayers were not entitled as a matter of law to a mandatory refund of the surplus money held by SWBT created from federal tax changes. Customers sought a refund in its Application, the same relief previously denied by the Commission
¶ 19 By our state Constitutional directive, this Court is bound to uphold the findings and conclusion of the Commission where they are "sustained by the law and substantial evidence." Okla. Const. art. IX. 20. We find the Commission's Order Dismissing Cause contains overwhelming evidence and legal authority supporting its Order. The Order Dismissing Cause, Order No. 655899 is hereby affirmed.
Kauger, Watt, Winchester, Edmondson, Colbert, Reif, Wyrick, JJ. — Concur
Gurich, V.C.J. — Concur by reason of stare decisis
Combs, C.J. — Dissent.