2. Discussion

2.1. Factual Issues

Beginning in April 20041 and continuing to the present, Pac-West, a CLEC licensed by this Commission, has been applying its local tariff to calls originated by Comcast, another licensed CLEC, and terminated by Pac-West. Pac-West and Comcast do not directly interconnect and have never entered into an interconnection agreement. All calls originated by Comcast customers are delivered to Pac-West's switch by the transiting carrier, Pacific Bell Telephone Company (AT&T California). Until recently, monthly bills for these charges were sent to AT&T Corp., believed by Pac-West to be Comcast's agent for payment. Many, if not all, of these calls are so-called "ISP-bound" calls, i.e., they are calls from a Comcast subscriber to a dial-up Internet service provider.

To construct its monthly bills to Comcast, Pac-West relies on data identifying Comcast as the originating carrier of such calls supplied to Pac-West by AT&T California, the transiting carrier. Pac-West constructs each month's bill by examining call detail reports (Cat-50 Reports) provided to it by AT&T California. Each such report identifies a call by its area code and central office code (NPA/NXX), which are generally the first six digits of a ten-digit phone number, and its Originating Carrier Number (OCN). The Cat-50 report does not identify the line number of the originating caller (generally, the last four digits of a 10-digit phone number).

Thus in preparing a bill with respect to termination charges for a particular call, Pac-West's billing department is in possession of a report from AT&T California that identifies the call as one that originated from a line assigned to Comcast in a particular NPA/NXX and lasted for a certain amount of time but does not indicate the full telephone number of the originating caller. Pac-West follows the same billing practice with regard to approximately thirty other CLECs besides Comcast for whom it terminates calls.

In its testimony, Comcast argues that many of the calls for which Pac-West billed it were calls that did not originate with a Comcast customer. By way of explanation, Comcast states that each NPA/NXX supports 10,000 individual customer lines. Although Comcast may be listed as the owner of all 10,000 lines, in many instances it has sub-contracted the use of those lines to other carriers. For example, in NPA/NXX 206/594, Comcast uses only lines 0001-2000 for its own customers; lines 2001-8000 are sub-contracted to Metro PCS; and lines 8001-9999 are sub-contracted to T-Mobile. A Cat-50 report that identified a call by listing only OCN 7610 (Comcast's OCN) and the NPA/NXX 206/594 followed by four zeros might actually be a call from either a Metro PCS customer or a T-Mobile customer.

To support this position, Comcast's witness Blimmel testified that he compared originating telephone numbers of calls from specific NPA/NXXs for whose termination Pac-West billed Comcast with Comcast's telephone number inventory for those locations and found that substantially more than half of the originating line numbers were not in the Comcast inventory. Comcast argues that this comparison proves that Pac-West billed it for calls made by non-Comcast customers.

In its rebuttal, Pac-West argues that such erroneous billing is impossible. AT&T California, the transiting carrier, knows which CLEC originated any call and automatically assigns the proper OCN to each call that it delivers to Pac-West. If a number has been ported to another CLEC from Comcast, AT&T California will receive calls originated by that other CLEC's customer via the other CLEC's trunks and will automatically assign the other CLEC's OCN to such calls. Pac-West explains the apparent discrepancy between the call detail records and Comcast's telephone number inventory by reference to the treatment of calls identified by four zeros in the last four positions of the telephone number. NPA/NXX/0000 is not a telephone number. It is a number assigned to the central office switch from which the call originates. Since it is a not a telephone number, it will not appear in the Comcast telephone number inventory even if the call was originated by a Comcast customer.

Pac-West's explanation of the manner in which calls are recorded on the Cat-50 records is not challenged by AT&T or Comcast. AT&T Corp., as the transiting carrier, records the OCN for each call that it delivers to Pac-West and displays that information on the Cat-50 record. We find that Pac-West is entitled to rely on the billing information it gets from AT&T California to construct its bills to any CLEC for whom it terminates calls transited by AT&T California. Furthermore, we find it significant that although AT&T Corp. is a party to this proceeding, neither Comcast nor AT&T Corp. introduced testimony from AT&T California regarding the manner in which Cat-50 reports are prepared. A representative of AT&T California could have testified definitively about a central factual issue in this case. The fact that Comcast and AT&T Corp. declined to put on such a witness strongly suggests that such testimony would support the position taken by Pac-West.

Pac-West's complaint sought a total of $379,466.43 in termination charges for the period April 6, 2004 to August 27, 2007 plus all late payment charges and post-August 27, 2007 termination charges imposed by Pac-West in accordance with its intrastate tariff. Pac-West witness Tutt testified that the unpaid termination charges for the period April 2004 through January 2008 totaled $383,528.36, an increase of $4,060.93 over the originally pled amount, and that late payment charges for the same period totaled $209,850.04. In his March 21st reply testimony, Pac-West witness Sprague re-calculated the amounts allegedly due Pac-West by referring to an additional code that appears at position 149 of the Cat-50 records supplied to Pac-West by AT&T California. This is the so-called "settlement code" which, according to the Ordering and Billing Forum (OBF) guidelines employed by all parties to this dispute, indicates whether a call is to be rated as "local" or "toll." Witness Sprague examined the settlement code on a 15% sample of bills rendered to Comcast by Pac-West and determined that 44% of them which had previously been rated as "local" for termination charge purposes should be rated "toll." Applying Pac-West's termination charge for toll calls to 44% of the calls at issue in this case, increases the termination charges allegedly due to Pac-West by an additional $325, 875.16.

Although Comcast argues, as indicated above, that a majority of the calls identified on the Cat-50 reports as originating from Comcast customers did not match numbers in the Comcast inventory, Comcast does not dispute the accuracy of the amounts shown on the invoices as termination charges associated with such calls. Comcast does, however, vigorously protest the retroactive re-rating of previously billed calls from local to toll and the associated increase in the amounts allegedly due to Pac-West. Comcast points out that Pac-West did not file an amended complaint but instead asserted that additional sums were due in Sprague's reply testimony. Comcast objects to this as improper pleading, a violation of due process and prohibited back-billing.

We agree with Comcast that the retroactive re-rating of calls based on the settlement code was neither properly pled nor allowable under the Commission's rules. If Pac-West wanted to seek these additional amounts from Comcast, the appropriate way to do so would have been to file an amended complaint to which Comcast could have responded. Comcast's recovery is limited to the originally pled amount of (a) $379,446.43 in unpaid termination charges for the period from April 16, 2004 to August 27, 2007, in accordance with Pac-West's Intrastate Tariff; (b) all termination charges for termination services provided by Pac-West to Comcast since August 27, 2007; (c) and all future termination charges Comcast incurs under Pac-West's Intrastate Tariff unless and until Comcast and Pac-West enter into an agreement superseding the Intrastate Tariff. Accordingly, the $4,060.93 in additional termination charges set out in Tutt's testimony and the $325,875.16 in recalculated termination charges set out in Sprague's reply testimony are disallowed.

In D.06-06-055, we declined to award Pac-West interest or late payment charges on the unpaid intrastate tariffs. We reasoned that (a) under Commission case law, the decision whether to award interest or late fees on unpaid tariff charges is a matter within the Commission's discretion; (b) no federal decision requires application of the intrastate tariffs of the carrier seeking reciprocal compensation; rather, the application of such tariffs is a matter within the Commission's equitable discretion; (c) an award of interest would not be appropriate in view of the long period of time that elapsed between AT&T Communications of California, Inc.'s initial refusal to pay Pac-West's invoices and the filing of Pac-West's complaint in C.04-10-04; and (d) not awarding interest or late charges would bring the amount awarded to Pac-West more in line with the $.0007 per minute-of-use cap contained in the interim compensation plan set forth in ¶ 8 of the FCC's ISP Remand Order.

As we have noted, the current case is legally indistinguishable from D.06-06-055; indeed, if the allegations of AT&T Corp. and Comcast are to be credited, it involves some of the same phone calls for which termination payments were sought in that decision. Accordingly, we have no reason to alter our conclusion regarding interest and late payment fees and they will be denied.

2.2. Legal Issues

C.07-09-010 is legally indistinguishable from Pac-West Telecomm, Inc., AT&T Communications of California, Inc., C.04-10-024, which we decided in favor of Pac-West in D.06-06-055, currently on appeal to the United States District Court. Decision 06-06-055 concluded that (a) the Commission has jurisdiction to hear a dispute between two CLECs regarding ISP-bound calls originated by one and terminated by the other; (b) neither Pac-West's Intrastate Tariff nor the Commission's jurisdiction to enforce it is pre-empted by federal law; (c) Pac-West's Intrastate Tariff applies to so-called ISP-bound traffic including virtual NXX traffic; and (d) a complaint to the Commission is an appropriate means to enforce Pac-West's tariff.

We affirm the conclusions of D.06-06-055 and apply them to this case. In particular, we affirm that Pac-West's Intrastate Tariff applies to all the traffic originated by Comcast and terminated by Pac-West including so-called VNXX traffic, i.e., traffic between customers in different local calling areas that is rated as local traffic for billing purposes. Because VNXX traffic is local traffic for billing purposes, we have no need to inquire which portion of the traffic sent to Pac-West by Comcast was locally routed and which was not.

On November 19, 2007, Pac-West, AT&T California and AT&T Corp., together with other AT&T entities, entered into a Stipulation and Settlement Agreement as part of the resolution of Pac-West's Chapter 11 bankruptcy (Bankruptcy Stipulation). The Bankruptcy Stipulation included the Release, pursuant to which Pac-West released all the AT&T entities and their "predecessors and successors in interest, heirs, assigns, past, present, and future officers, directors, shareholders, agents, employees, managers, representatives, attorneys, accountants, advisors, owners, partners, shareholders, trustees, parent and subsidiary organizations, affiliates and partners" from all claims of any kind prior to April 30, 2007 "including but not limited to...termination liabilities and penalties, late payment fees and charges, invoices issued...amounts due...termination fees, claims under the filed rate doctrine, [and] claims for reciprocal compensation."

The Release explicitly extends to "all such claims of every kind whatsoever...direct or indirect, absolute or contingent...relating in any way to the billing which was or could have been issued for any period prior to [April 30, 2007]." The Release includes a waiver of California Civil Code § 1542 which, unless explicitly waived, exempts unknown claims from the scope of a general release. The Release clearly bars Pac-West from recovering any of the unpaid termination charges at issue in this suit prior to April 30, 2007 directly from AT&T Corp.

Comcast asserts that under the terms of the NSA, AT&T Corp. is the only entity liable to Pac-West for the unpaid termination charges. To support this position, Comcast introduced as an exhibit AT&T Corp. response to Comcast's Data Request 2.4. That response includes the following sentence:

"The Network Services Agreement requires AT&T to pay the invoices for legal LEC traffic fees for traffic carried over loops leased to Comcast Phone pursuant to the Agreement."

Comcast argues that this response amounts to an admission that AT&T Corp. rather than Comcast is legally liable for the termination fees billed by Pac-West. Pac-West argues that this response simply indicates that AT&T Corp. is acting as Comcast's payment agent.

The NSA consists of two parts, an equipment lease and a service agreement. The leased equipment consists primarily of switches and loops dedicated to the use of Comcast customers. The services consist of call handling services (call origination, transiting and termination) together with ancillary services such as Caller ID and voicemail. Comcast pays separate monthly fees to AT&T Corp. for the leased equipment, call handling services and ancillary services.

There are two types of call handling services covered by the NSA. The first consists of handling calls originated by a Comcast customer and terminated to an AT&T Corp. customer or vice-versa. Such calls are not an issue in this case. The second consists of calls originated by a Comcast customer and terminated to a CLEC customer or vice versa. In the latter case, AT&T Corp. or one of its affiliates acts as a transiting carrier, moving calls between Comcast and the other CLEC over AT&T's lines. When Pac-West terminates a call originated by a Comcast customer and transited to Pac-West by an AT&T entity, Pac-West bills Comcast for terminating that call in accordance with the schedule of charges set out in its intrastate tariff. As discussed more fully below, notwithstanding that the termination charges related to calls originated by Comcast customers, Pac-West sent the invoices for terminating the calls to AT&T Corp. until October, 2006.

The Base Price for Broadport [a package of services provided by AT&T Corp. to Comcast], for new or existing lines, includes:

A.2.a.iii Interconnection and connectivity (local, intraLATA toll, exchange access) to the ILEC, other LECs, CMRS and IXCs.

Comcast argues that this language establishes that the Pac-West charges are AT&T Corp.'s responsibility.

Paragraph A.2 consists of a recitation of the services provided by AT&T Corp. to Comcast in the Broadport package. The language of A.2.a.iii cited above is ambiguous. It may mean that third-party charges for interconnection and connectivity of the Comcast-originated traffic are to be paid by AT&T Corp. from the "Base Price" or it may simply mean that AT&T Corp. will establish those connections as part of the service it provides to Comcast.2 In any case, the cited language does not relieve Comcast of the legal obligation to pay charges lawfully imposed on traffic it originates; at most it establishes that AT&T Corp. will make those payments on its behalf.

The conclusion that Comcast is ultimately responsible for the payment of third party charges is reinforced by other provisions of the NSA. For example, Paragraph b.2.d.vi of the NSA establishes a monthly Exchange Access Usage Charge payable by Comcast to AT&T Corp.:

"The Exchange Access Usage Charge will apply to all usage (A) for which CUSTOMER [i.e., Comcast] is the presubscribed carrier for the originating end user...and (B) with respect to which AT&T is billed switched access charges under the terms of a LEC tariff covering switched access..."

Pursuant to b.2.d.v of the NSA, the Exchange Access Usage Charge is calculated as the average of three months' access charges imposed by other carriers on intraLATA traffic originated by Comcast and is subject to a true-up mechanism. The effect of these provisions is that Comcast reimburses AT&T Corp. for all such charges paid by AT&T Corp. on its behalf.

In a similar vein, the fact that Pac-West sent its invoices for terminating Comcast-originated traffic to an AT&T affiliate until October 20063 does not establish that Comcast had no obligation to pay the invoices. To the contrary, each invoice related solely to termination of calls identified by Comcast's OCN. While all three parties recognized that AT&T Corp. or one of its affiliate would handle payment of the termination charges, the record contains no evidence that Pac-West released Comcast from its obligation to pay the charges. Further, Comcast and AT&T Corp. could not force Pac-West to accept such a release simply by entering the NSA.

We conclude that the NSA does not relieve Comcast of its obligation to pay the termination charges imposed by Pac-West.

In his December 11, 2007 Ruling consolidating C.07-09-010 with C.07-11-015, the assigned ALJ ruled that Comcast's claim for indemnity against AT&T Corp. would be considered only if it were first determined that Comcast is liable to Pac-West for unpaid termination charges. The contingency described in the ALJ's consolidation ruling having occurred, this proceeding will remain open to address Comcast's indemnity claims.

1 The applicable statute of limitations for unpaid tariffed charges is three years from the date service is rendered under a tariff. Pub. Util. Code § 737. The statute is tolled for six months by a written refusal to pay. Comcast sent Pac-West a written refusal to pay the billed charges on April 6, 2007. Comcast had six months from April 6, 2007 in which to file this action for unpaid charges dating from April 4, 2004. The action was timely filed.

2 During the prehearing conference on December 10, 2007, Randolph Deutsch, counsel for AT&T Corp., described the structure of the NSA as follows:

MR. DEUTSCH: [T]he agreement states that AT&T will provide the network services for Comcast to provide telephony service to Comcast end-user customers. And that telephone service not only involves providing the physical lines and switches to Comcast, but also to administer and pay or receive reciprocal compensation payments involved with other carriers who either the traffic is terminated to or who terminate traffic to Comcast. Comcast pays, in essence, a fee for the entire service to AT&T.

3 PacWest Exhibit A, the testimony of Debbie Tutt, includes an exhibit consisting of invoices submitted by Pac-West for terminating Comcast-originated calls beginning in April 2004. From this exhibit it appears that invoices for the months of April through September 2004 were submitted to TCI Telecommunications Services of California (TCI-CA), an AT&T affiliate in Bedminster, New Jersey. Invoices for the months of October, 2004 through May, 2006 were submitted to AT&T Communications in Alpharetta, Georgia. Invoices for June and July 2006 were submitted to TCI-CA in Alpharetta, GA. Invoices for August and September 2006 were submitted to Comcast Phone of California, LLC also in Alpharetta, GA. Invoices for October 2006 forward were submitted to Comcast Phone in Englewood, CO. All the invoices prior to the invoice for October 2006 include the identifying language "AT&T Caller Service 6908" in the address to which the bills were sent. All the invoices, regardless of the addressee, include the Comcast OCN 7610 in a reference line.

From this billing history it appears that Pac-West was sending monthly bills for terminating Comcast-originated calls from April 2004 through September 2006 to an AT&T affiliate or to "Comcast Phone of California, LLC" at an AT&T address. Thereafter, such bills have been sent to Comcast in Colorado.

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