Waterworks and Sanitary Sewer Bd. v. Dean

Citation69 So.2d 704,260 Ala. 221
Decision Date06 August 1953
Docket Number3 Div. 654
PartiesWATERWORKS AND SANITARY SEWER BOARD et al. v. DEAN.
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama

Walter J. Knabe and Hartwell Davis, Montgomery, for appellants.

R. Lea Harris, Montgomery, for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

This is a suit in equity by appellee seeking by a declaratory judgment an adjudication as to the right and power of the Waterworks and Sanitary Sewer Board of Montgomery to charge and collect a service fee for the use of its sanitary sewer system.

The contention is that the law under which the board is acting is unconstitutional and void, and that the statute does not permit the charge because the system was constructed at the cost of adjacent property owners.

There was a demurrer to the bill on behalf of the respondents. This demurrer was overruled. All the respondents unite in the appeal and assign errors. The errors so assigned go generally to the decree overruling the demurrer.

Appellee cross-assigned errors, for that the trial court failed to rule on the constitutionality and validity of Title 37, sections 402, 402(15), 402(18), approved June 29, 1951, as violative of Const. sections 22, 23, 212, and 'of the requirement of uniformity of taxation'. Also because the court failed to adjudge the alleged fee or charge to be a tax and that the board is not authorized to collect a tax. The cross-assignments also state that they are made with the hope and request that this Court will rule on the constitutionality of said provisions of law referred to in them. Both parties in brief have expressed a desire that this be done. But there is some difficulty in the way of doing so. The bill does not allege that the board was incorporated, nor when it was organized.

Looking over the history of the pertinent legislation, we find that Code sections beginning with section 394, Title 37 to section 402 apply only to the creation and operation of a waterworks board. Its power was extended to gas distribution by an Act of July 22, 1947, General Acts 1947, page 48. That Act is set up in the pocket part of the Code as sections 402(2) to 402(14). Sections 394 to 402, supra, were amended by an Act approved September 19, 1949, so as to include in the powers of a board created for that purpose sanitary sewer systems of cities. There was no provision to extend the power of any previously created board to include sewer systems, but the Act authorized the creation of a board to own and operate the waterworks and sanitary sewer systems of cities. This Act was set up in the pocket part of the Code as amended sections 394, 395, 398, 399, 400 and 402, Title 37.

On June 29, 1951 another Act was approved, General Acts 1951, page 416, which did not purport to amend Code sections, but created a distinct act complete in itself authorizing the incorporation of a board for the purpose of operating a water system, a sewer system, a gas system, and an electric system or any one or more of them. It contained many of the features of sections 394 to 402, supra, and especially in section 4 it conferred powers upon such a corporation as did section 398 as amended by the Act of 1949, supra. The Act of 1951, supra, is set up in the pocket part of the Code as sections 402(15) to 402(27). Section 13 of the Act, § 402(27), provides that no corporation provided for in it shall thereafter be incorporated under sections 394 to 402 as amended, but that corporations then in existence organized under those statutes shall continue in existence under the powers, etc., conferred by those statutes, but that by amending the certificate of incorporation they may come under and be governed and controlled by all the provisions of that Act, 1951, supra.

The complaint does not allege that the board was ever incorporated. It was probably incorporated but the date of its incorporation is material to know whether it is governed by the Act of 1949 or of 1951. If it was incorporated after the Act of 1949 and before the Act of 1951, it would be controlled by the Act of 1949, unless it has amended its certificate of incorporation as authorized by the Act of 1951. No such allegation is made. But the amended bill attaches as exhibit 'A' a document alleged in paragraph nine to be an 'ad' which the board caused to be published subsequent to the filing of the original bill in this suit. That 'ad' stated that the waterworks board was 'set up' in 1949, under sections 402(15) through 402(27), and amended its charter so as to acquire the sewer system. But it could not have been 'set up' (incorporated) in 1949 under sections 402(15) through (27), for that was the Act of 1951. But such discrepancies are immaterial. If the board was incorporated when the Act of 1949 applied, it must have complied with section 402(27) to come under the Act of 1951. That exhibit is not an allegation of fact, since it was only an 'ad' by the board.

Section 398, as amended by the Act of 1949, confers on the board practically the same powers as section 402(18) does under the Act of 1951.

Paragraph 4 of the bill alleges that the board was acting under authority of section 402 in making the sewer charge. It should be either section 398 or 402(18). But whatever may be the accurate statute to which reference is made in that connection, the question is the same. A reference in the bill to an applicable statute is not controlling as to the applicability of that statute. The question depends upon the proper statute which has application and not the one which is referred to in the pleading as controlling. There can be but one system of laws fixing the rights of parties under a given situation, State ex rel. Rountree v. Summer, 248 Ala. 545, (5), 28 So.2d 565, and that is a question of law and not one of pleading.

In paragraph 6 of the bill it is alleged that Title 37, sections 402(15) and 402(18), each separately and conjunctively, violate each of the following sections of the Constitution, sections 22, 23, 212 and 223. The bill then copies each of those constitutional provisions. So far as here material in respect to its allegations, section 22 prohibits any law impairing the obligation of contracts. Section 23 embraces the principle of eminent domain. Section 212 prohibits the delegation of the power to levy taxes to individuals, private corporations or associations. Section 223 prohibits a municipality from assessing to abutting property owners the cost of construction of sewers in excess of the increased value of such property.

With respect to section 22, supra, it is alleged in paragraph 16 of the bill of complaint that the former owner of complainant's property was forced by the city authorities to connect to the present sewer system at his own expense 'with implied condition that said owner or his assigns would have unfettered right to use sewer system without tax or cost'. Complainant alleges that therefore to require him to pay a service charge for the use of the sewer would impair the obligation of a contract which ran to him by reason of said assignment. But no such contract is implied. The contention is untenable. Carson v. Sewer Commissioners, 182 U.S. 398, 21 S.Ct. 860, 45 L.Ed. 1151.

With respect to sections 23, 212 and 223 of the Constitution, to which reference was made above, the contention is that the exaction of a service charge for the use of the sanitary sewer system by adjoining property owners is the exaction of a tax or the confiscation of property by requiring the payment of a charge, or by indirectly assessing complainant's property, to pay for the construction cost of an extension of the sanitary sewer system, contemplated for the future, in excess of special benefits which will accrue to said property by reason thereof.

The tenor of our cases refutes the contention in all respects. When the city is operating a utility for public use, it is engaged in a proprietary or business enterprise, and may make a charge for the service the same as though a private corporation were so engaged. The charge made must be reasonable to both the users of the facility and to its operators. Mitchell v. City of Mobile, 244 Ala. 442, 13 So.2d 664. The charge for the service must have relation to the benefits to the user and to a reasonable return on the investment by the city, based on the value of the plant. Of course this is predicated upon the theory that the city paid for the utility and owns it. In that event, it may when duly authorized by law sell and dispose of it to another holder to operate with the same power that the city had. But such assignee would have no greater power as to rates and charges than the city had. The effect of our Mitchell case, supra, and others is to recognize fully that such a service charge is compensation for the use of the facility and not the exaction of a tax, and that a city has the right to make a charge for the use of a sewer system constructed at the general expense of the city. City of Leeds v. Avram, 244 Ala. 427, 14 So.2d 728; Benson v. City of Andalusia, 240 Ala. 99, 195 So. 443; MacMahon v. Baumhauer, 234 Ala. 482, 175 So. 299.

The Supreme Court of the United States has held that it would not violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to require a sewer service charge although the cost of the construction of the system was charged to the property owners, when such property owners are not required to connect with the system. Carson v. Sewer Commissioners, 182 U.S. 398, 21 S.Ct. 860, 45 L.Ed. 1151, see, 127 A.L.R. 1374 et seq.

Both the Act of 1949, section 3, ...

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