Third Circuit: Court Rules on Interconnection Agreement Dispute
May 10, 2007
The Third Circuit Court of Appeals ruled yesterday that disputes between telephone companies concerning interconnection agreements formed and approved pursuant to the Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996 must first be litigated before a state utility commission before proceeding to federal court.
In Core Communications v. Verizon Pennsylvania Inc.,
No. 06-2419, a unanimous three-judge panel held that “interpretation
and enforcement actions that arise after a state commission has
approved an interconnection agreement must be litigated in the
first instance before the relevant state commission. A party
may then proceed to federal court to seek review of the commission’s
decision or move on to the appropriate trial court to seek damages
for a breach, if the commission finds one.” The Court
reasoned that the allowing parties to circumvent state utility
commissions in post-interconnection agreement formation disputes
would undermine the Telecom Act’s “sense of cooperative
federalism, under which the states were given primary responsibility
over interconnection agreements.”
The decision upheld the U.S. District Court’s dismissal of the breach of contract claim for lack of jurisdiction on the grounds that it had not yet been reviewed by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission.
A copy of the full opinion is available by clicking here.