PURPOSE: This rule prescribes the content
and procedure for filing pleadings before the commission and for service
thereof.
(1) Every
pleading or brief shall be signed by an attorney of record with the attorney's
individual name or, if a natural person is not represented by an attorney,
shall be signed by the natural person.
(2) By signing a pleading, the signer
represents that he or she is authorized to so act.
(3) Pleadings or briefs shall include the
signer's address, state bar number(s), email address, fax number, and telephone
number, if any.
(4) Each pleading
shall include a clear and concise statement of the relief requested, a specific
reference to the statutory provision or other authority under which relief is
requested, and a concise statement of the facts entitling the party to
relief.
(5) An unsigned pleading or
brief may be rejected.
(6) By
presenting or maintaining a claim, defense, request, demand, objection,
contention, or argument in a pleading, motion, brief, or other document filed
with or submitted to the commission, an attorney or party is certifying to the
best of the signer's knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an
inquiry reasonable under the circumstances, that-
(A) The claim, defense, request, demand,
objection, contention, or argument is not presented or maintained for any
improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless
increase in the cost of litigation;
(B) The claims, defenses, and other legal
contentions therein are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument
for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the
establishment of new law;
(C) The
allegations and other factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if
specifically so identified, are likely to have evidentiary support after a
reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery; and
(D) The denials of factual contentions are
warranted on the evidence or, if specifically so identified, are reasonably
based on a lack of information or belief.
(7) Any person filing a pleading or a brief
shall file with the secretary of the commission either-
(A) The original; or
(B) An electronic copy.
(8) Each pleading may be accompanied by a
cover letter which states the subject matter. This cover letter shall contain
no matter for commission decision.
(9) Any document's filing date shall be the
date and time the document is physically or electronically stamped as filed by
the secretary of the commission. Documents physically received in the
commission's data center during regular business hours shall be stamped on the
date received. Documents physically received in the commission's data center
after regular business hours shall be stamped the next day that the commission
has regular business hours. Documents submitted electronically to the
commission's electronic filing and information system (EFIS) will be stamped
filed on the date and time the document is received in EFIS and will be deemed
filed on that date and time.
(10)
Pleadings and briefs in every instance shall display on the cover or first page
the case number and the title of the case. In the event the title of a case
contains more than one (1) name as applicants, complainants, or respondents, it
shall be sufficient to show only the first of these names as it appears in the
first document commencing the case, followed by an appropriate abbreviation (et
al.) indicating the existence of other parties.
(11) Pleadings and briefs that are not
electronically filed shall be bound at the top or at an edge, shall be
typewritten or printed upon white, eight and one-half by eleven-inch (8 1/2" ×
11") paper. Attachments to pleadings or briefs shall be annexed and folded to
eight and one-half by eleven-inch (8 1/2" × 11") size whenever practicable.
Printing on both sides of the page is encouraged. Lines shall be double-spaced,
except that footnotes and quotations in excess of three (3) lines may be
single-spaced. Reproduction of any of these documents may be by any process
provided all copies are clear and permanently legible. Electronically filed
pleadings or briefs shall be formatted in the same manner as paper
filings.
(12) Pleadings and briefs
which are not in substantial compliance with this rule, applicable statutes, or
commission orders may not be accepted for filing. In addition, filings will be
scanned for computer viruses before being uploaded into the commission's
electronic system and may not be accepted if the filing is infected. The
secretary of the commission may return these pleadings or briefs with a concise
explanation of the deficiencies and the reasons for not accepting them for
filing. Tendered filings which have been rejected may not be entered on the
commission's docket. The mere fact of filing shall not constitute a waiver of
any noncompliance with these rules, and the commission may require amendment of
a pleading or entertain appropriate motions in connection with the
pleading.
(13) Parties shall be
allowed ten (10) days from the date of filing in which to respond to any
pleading unless otherwise ordered by the commission.
(14) Any request for expedited treatment
shall include the words "Motion for Expedited Treatment" in the title of the
pleading. The pleading shall also set out with particularity the following:
(A) The date by which the party desires the
commission to act;
(B) The harm
that will be avoided, or the benefit that will accrue, including a statement of
the negative effect, or that there will be no negative effect, on the party's
customers or the general public, if the commission acts by the date desired by
the party; and
(C) That the
pleading was filed as soon as it could have been or an explanation why it was
not.
(15) Unless
otherwise provided by these rules or by other law, the party filing a pleading
or brief shall serve every other party, including the staff counsel and the
public counsel, a copy of the pleading or brief and cover letter. Any party may
contact the secretary of the commission for the names and addresses of the
parties in a case.
(16) Methods of
Service.
(A) Any person entitled by law may
serve a document on a represented party by-
1.
Delivering it to the party's attorney;
2. Leaving it at the office of the party's
attorney with a secretary, clerk, or attorney associated with or employed by
the attorney served;
3. Mailing it
to the last known address of the party's attorney;
4. Transmitting it by facsimile machine to
the party's attorney; or
5.
Transmitting it to the email address of the party's attorney.
(B) Any person entitled by law may
serve a document on an unrepresented party by-
1. Delivering it to the party; or
2. Mailing it to the party's last known
address.
(C) Completion
of Service.
1. Service by mail is complete
upon mailing.
2. Service by
facsimile transmission is complete upon actual receipt.
3. Service by email is complete upon actual
receipt.
(17)
Every pleading or brief shall include a certificate of service. Such
certificate of service shall be adequate proof of service.
(18) Any pleading may be amended within ten
(10) days of filing, unless a responsive pleading has already been filed, or at
any time by leave of the commission. Parties shall be allowed ten (10) days
from the date of filing in which to respond to an amended pleading unless
otherwise ordered by the commission.
(19) Any list of issues ordered by the
commission must set out each question presented for decision. Each question
presented should be clear and concise.