Arizona Supreme Court Ruling on Utility Rate Consolidation and Commission Deference

Utility Rate Consolidation and Commission Deference (CV-20-0047-PR)

The Arizona Supreme Court clarified the standard of judicial deference owed to the Arizona Corporation Commission. It ruled that while the Commission has plenary ratemaking authority, courts review constitutional issues de novo. Applying this standard, the Court upheld the consolidation of separate wastewater districts into a single rate structure.

Last updated July 15, 2026. Case: Sun City Home Owners Association v. Arizona Corporation Commission, et al., Arizona Supreme Court, No. CV-20-0047-PR; Affirmed.

Scope note: This page provides an educational summary of the Arizona Supreme Court’s decision in Sun City Home Owners Association v. Arizona Corporation Commission, which is a precedential decision addressing the standard of review for Corporation Commission decisions and the constitutionality of utility rate consolidation. This page is educational and is not legal advice.

The takeaway

The Arizona Corporation Commission is not entitled to ‘extreme deference’ on matters of constitutional and statutory compliance, which are subject to de novo judicial review. Furthermore, the Commission’s consolidation of distinct utility service districts into a single district with a uniform rate structure does not violate the Arizona Constitution’s prohibition against rate discrimination under Article 15, Section 12, as all customers in the consolidated district receive a like and contemporaneous service.

Case Participants

Petitioner Side

  • Robert L. Ellman (Attorney for Appellant)
    Ellman Law Group LLC
    Argued for Sun City Home Owners Association

Respondent Side

  • Andy M. Kvesic (Attorney for Appellee)
    Arizona Corporation Commission
    Chief Counsel/Legal Division Director
  • Maureen A. Scott (Attorney for Appellee)
    Arizona Corporation Commission
    Deputy Chief of Litigation and Appeals
  • Wesley C. Van Cleve (Attorney for Appellee)
    Arizona Corporation Commission
    Argued; Assistant Chief Counsel
  • Michael T. Hallam (Attorney for Intervenor)
    Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP
    Attorney for EPCOR Water Arizona Inc.
  • Lawrence A. Kasten (Attorney for Intervenor)
    Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP
    Argued for EPCOR Water Arizona Inc.
  • Michele Van Quathem (Attorney for Intervenor)
    Law Offices of Michele Van Quathem, PLLC
    Attorney for Verrado Community Association, Inc.

Neutral Parties

  • Clint Bolick (Justice)
    Supreme Court of the State of Arizona
    Authored the opinion of the Court and a concurring opinion
  • Robert M. Brutinel (Chief Justice)
    Supreme Court of the State of Arizona
    Joined the majority opinion
  • Ann A. Scott Timmer (Vice Chief Justice)
    Supreme Court of the State of Arizona
    Joined the majority opinion
  • John R. Lopez IV (Justice)
    Supreme Court of the State of Arizona
    Joined the majority opinion
  • James P. Beene (Justice)
    Supreme Court of the State of Arizona
    Joined the majority opinion
  • Bill Montgomery (Justice)
    Supreme Court of the State of Arizona
    Joined the majority opinion
  • Garye L. Vásquez (Judge)
    Arizona Court of Appeals, Division Two
    Designated to sit in this matter due to the recusal of Justice Andrew W. Gould

What happened

In February 2012, EPCOR Water Arizona Inc. acquired five wastewater districts (Agua Fria, Anthem, Mohave, Sun City, and Sun City West) with highly disparate monthly rates.

The Arizona Corporation Commission ordered EPCOR to file a rate application to evaluate consolidation, stand-alone, and deconsolidation scenarios.

Following a six-day evidentiary hearing in February 2017, the Commission approved a five-year phase-in plan to fully consolidate the districts into a single rate structure with a uniform rate of $38.59.

The Sun City Home Owners Association and the Residential Utility Consumer Office intervened and opposed consolidation, arguing that it would cause Sun City residents to subsidize other districts.

Sun City appealed the Commission’s decision, and the Court of Appeals upheld it, applying an ‘extreme deference’ standard.

The Arizona Supreme Court granted review, held that ‘extreme deference’ does not apply to constitutional review, but affirmed the consolidation as non-discriminatory.

Video overview of the case record

An AI-generated video overview of Sun City Home Owners Association v. Arizona Corporation Commission, et al. (CV-20-0047-PR (Ariz.)). Arizona Supreme Court upholds utility rate consolidation and reviews constitutional compliance de novo. This plain-language summary was generated from the court’s filings; the court’s own records control.

Listen: audio deep dive on the case record

An AI-generated audio deep dive walking through the case record in Sun City Home Owners Association v. Arizona Corporation Commission, et al. Generated from the case filings; verify against the linked records below.

Audio overview generated with Google NotebookLM from the case’s court filings.

Procedural timeline

Step 2012-02-01 EPCOR Water Arizona Inc. acquires five wastewater districts: Agua Fria, Anthem, Mohave, Sun City, and Sun City West.
Step 2014-12-01 The Arizona Corporation Commission orders EPCOR to file a rate application evaluating consolidation, stand-alone, and deconsolidation scenarios.
Step 2016-04-01 EPCOR files its rate application with the Arizona Corporation Commission.
Step 2017-02-01 The Commission conducts a six-day evidentiary hearing addressing rate consolidation.
Step 2020-01-23 The Court of Appeals, Division One, issues an opinion upholding the Commission’s consolidation decision under an ‘extreme deference’ standard.
Step 2021-10-01 The Arizona Supreme Court issues its decision, affirming the rate consolidation and clarifying that the Commission’s constitutional compliance is reviewed de novo.

Complete uploaded source-document index

This index is generated from every public-facing source file currently present in assets/court_case_downloads/sun-city-home-owners-association-v-acc/raw/: 1 PDF, 1 other source file. Files are ordered by the date/sequence embedded in the normalized filename; non-court review materials, when present, are labeled separately from court filings.

FAQ

What was the main issue in Sun City Home Owners Association v. Arizona Corporation Commission?

The case addressed two primary issues: first, whether the Arizona Corporation Commission is entitled to ‘extreme deference’ when courts review its decisions; and second, whether the Commission’s decision to consolidate several geographically distinct wastewater districts into a single district with a uniform rate violated the Arizona Constitution’s prohibition against discriminatory rates.

What did the Court decide regarding judicial deference to the Corporation Commission?

The Arizona Supreme Court held that the Commission is not entitled to ‘extreme deference’ regarding issues of constitutional and statutory compliance. While courts defer to the Commission’s factual findings under a substantial evidence standard, they review questions of constitutional and statutory compliance de novo.

Did the consolidated rate structure violate the Arizona Constitution’s prohibition on discriminatory rates?

No. The Court ruled that because the consolidation would result in identical rates for all customers who receive the ‘same exact service’ under like circumstances, it satisfies the constitutional requirement of non-discrimination under Article 15, Section 12. Charging a uniform rate across a consolidated district is not unconstitutionally discriminatory even if the historical costs of serving each individual community differed.

What was the underlying dispute that led to this case?

EPCOR Water Arizona Inc. acquired five wastewater districts with varying monthly rates. The Commission approved a five-year phase-in plan to consolidate these districts into a single rate structure. The Sun City Home Owners Association opposed this consolidation because it would significantly increase monthly bills for Sun City residents to subsidize improvements in other districts.

Which parties supported and opposed the rate consolidation?

The rate consolidation was supported by EPCOR, the Commission staff, and the Agua Fria, Anthem, and Mohave districts. It was opposed by the Sun City Home Owners Association and the Residential Utility Consumer Office, who advocated for maintaining the existing stand-alone rates.

Case Dossier

This generated dossier mirrors the structured data surfaced on the OAH/ADRE case pages. It is added from the curated court-case record and the custom page source package, while the hand-authored analysis below remains intact.

Case Summary

Case ID / citationCV-20-0047-PR (Ariz.)
Court / tribunalArizona Supreme Court
Decision / key dateOctober 1, 2021
Judge / panelJustice Clint Bolick, Chief Justice Robert M. Brutinel, Vice Chief Justice Ann A. Scott Timmer, Justice John R. Lopez IV, Justice James P. Beene, Justice Bill Montgomery, Judge Garye L. Vásquez
PartiesSun City Home Owners Association (Appellant) v. Arizona Corporation Commission (Appellee), EPCOR Water Arizona, Inc. (Intervenor), and Verrado Community Association, Inc. (Intervenor)
Governing law
  • A.R.S. § 40-254.01
  • A.R.S. § 40-334
Topics
AssessmentsProcedure
Outcome / holding

The Arizona Corporation Commission is not entitled to ‘extreme deference’ on matters of constitutional and statutory compliance, which are subject to de novo judicial review. Furthermore, the Commission’s consolidation of distinct utility service districts into a single district with a uniform rate structure does not violate the Arizona Constitution’s prohibition against rate discrimination under Article 15, Section 12, as all customers in the consolidated district receive a like and contemporaneous service.

Primary public sourceView source opinion/order

Parties, Court, and Research Coverage

Uploaded source package1 PDF, 1 other source file
Step-by-step docket roadmap6 roadmap entries
Video overviewSun City Home Owners Association v. Arizona Corporation Commission, et al.
Study / briefing material1 section
FAQ / homeowner questions5 questions
Curated download aliases0 download links

Key Issues & Findings

Case Summary

This case involves an appeal by the Sun City Home Owners Association opposing the Arizona Corporation Commission’s decision to fully consolidate five wastewater districts managed by EPCOR Water Arizona Inc. into a single district with uniform rates. The Arizona Supreme Court addressed the level of deference owed to the Commission and whether charging uniform rates across historically separate districts constitutes unlawful discrimination under the Arizona Constitution. The Court clarified that while the Commission holds plenary ratemaking authority, its constitutional compliance is reviewed de novo without ‘extreme deference’. The Court ultimately held that achieving rate parity across consolidated districts is not unconstitutionally discriminatory.

Key Issues & Findings

The Court reasoned that Article 15, Section 12 of the Arizona Constitution categorically prohibits rate discrimination between persons or places for rendering a ‘like and contemporaneous service.’ Because all customers within the newly consolidated EPCOR district would pay identical rates and receive identical wastewater services, the rates satisfy this non-discrimination standard. The Court rejected the argument that rate consolidation is discriminatory because it fails to align with individual district cost of service (cost causation), noting that cost causation is highly relevant to determining whether rates are ‘just and reasonable’ under Article 15, Section 3, but is not the basis for a discrimination analysis under Section 12. Finally, the Court clarified that although the Commission’s factual findings receive deference, courts owe no deference to the Commission’s interpretations of constitutional limits.

Why It Matters

This decision is highly significant because it establishes that the Arizona Corporation Commission’s constitutional and statutory compliance is reviewed de novo, rejecting the prior ‘extreme deference’ standard applied by the Court of Appeals. It also confirms the constitutionality of rate consolidation for public utilities serving multiple Arizona communities, paving the way for uniform rate structures despite historical cost-of-service disparities among different geographic areas.

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