San Francisco Chronicle

Judge refuses to spare PG& E from facing North Bay fire claim

- By Joel Rosenblatt and Mark Chediak

PG& E Corp. suffered another legal setback Friday as a judge said he won’t release the company from a key legal claim over the most destructiv­e wildfires in California history.

PG& E has been challengin­g a California law allowing private property owners to hold the utility 100 percent responsibl­e for any losses caused by its equipment or power lines even if it didn’t act negligentl­y. Edison Internatio­nal, owner of the dominant utility in Southern California, is also facing the prospect of multibilli­ondollar payouts under the same law over a record- setting blaze near Los Angeles.

Friday’s tentative ruling marks the second time in a month a state judge has refused to spare PG& E from having to face a claim under inverse condemnati­on.

PG& E has said since it’s a private company and can’t “socialize the burden” from damage to individual­s through taxes, it shouldn’t be liable under inverse condemnati­on. PG& E doesn’t have the authority to tax and can only

raise rates approved by the California Public Utilities Commission.

“There is no basis for PG& E’s argument that imposing inverse condemnati­on liability” is unconstitu­tional unless the utility is guaranteed to “automatica­lly recover” its costs through rate hikes, Superior Court Judge Curtis Karnow said in the ruling.

In April, a Sacramento judge said trial judges’ hands are tied by previous appellate court rulings and they can’t interpret the law the way the utility is asking.

“We continue to believe that inverse condemnati­on, as applied to a privately owned utility, is a flawed legal doctrine that is bad for all California­ns,” PG& E said. “We believe it is in everyone’s interest to have this issue decided promptly.”

During a hearing Friday, PG& E’s lawyer, Kevin Orsini, said the court’s ultimate conclusion about inverse condemnati­on “goes to the very viability of” of investorow­ned utilities.

“It is critical that we hear from the higher courts of the state sooner rather than later,” he said. Once a trial draws near, all parties will gain the “benefit of further guidance from the court of appeal whether inverse condemnati­on does apply,” he said.

Karnow was skeptical of PG& E’s request to seek an immediate appeal, just as Superior Court Judge Allen Sumner in Sacramento refused to do. California courts ordinarily require lawsuits to play out to final resolution before appeals begin, a process that may take two to three years.

The judge said it’s unlikely he will have any “unique” insight to offer on the dispute that appeals courts couldn’t figure out for themselves.

Orsini said that in the Sacramento case, which involves the 2015 Butte Fire in the Sierra Nevada foothills, the utility has filed a writ with the state court of appeals — a procedure that could fast- track the outcome.

Officials haven’t determined the causes of the Tubbs Fire and a series of other blazes that burned through the North Bay last year, but analysts have said the utility could face more than $ 15 billion in claims from the fires.

“We believe it is in everyone’s interest to have this issue decided promptly.”

PG& E

 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle 2017 ?? PG& E crews work on Vintage Circle in Santa Rosa’s Fountaingr­ove neighborho­od, destroyed by the Tubbs Fire.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle 2017 PG& E crews work on Vintage Circle in Santa Rosa’s Fountaingr­ove neighborho­od, destroyed by the Tubbs Fire.

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