Lead Opinion
Dеfendants BellSouth Telecommunications, LLC, and Earth-link, Inc., Earthlink, LLC, Deltacom, LLC, and Business Telecomm, LLC (collectively, “Defendants”), filed this interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s denials of their motions to dismiss the complaints by Cobb County and Gwinnett County (collectively, the “Counties”) regarding the Defendants’ alleged violations of the Georgia Emergency Telephone Number 9-1-1 Service Act of 1977, OCGA § 46-5-120 et seq. (the “9-1-1 Act”).
We agree with the Defendants that the 9-1-1 Act does not explicitly or implicitly sаnction a direct right of action by the Counties against the Defendants due to their alleged failure to bill or collect the required fees, but also find that the Counties may pursue their claims against the Defendants for the alleged failure or refusal to collect the
Background
In 1977, the General Assembly passed the 9-1-1 Act to “establish and implement a cohesive state-wide emergency telephone number 9-1-1 system which will provide citizens with rapid, direct access to public safety agencies by dialing telephone number 9-1-1 [.] ” OCGA § 46-5-121 (a). The 9-1-1 Act authorizes a local government to pay for the 9-1-1 services it provides by “imposing] a monthly 9-1-1 charge upon each telephone service” that is or would be served by the 9-1-1 service. OCGA § 46-5-133 (a). The 9-1-1 Act broadly describes “telephone service” as “any method by which a 9-1-1 emergency call is delivered to a public safety answering point[,]” and includes
local exchange telephone service or other telephone communication service, wireless service, prepaid wireless service, mobile telecommunications service, computer service, Voice over Internet Protocol service, or any technology that delivers or is required by law to deliver a call to a public safety answering point.
OCGA § 46-5-122 (16.1).
The 9-1-1 Act makes telephone companies intermediaries between local governments and citizens for the purpose of collecting the funds necessary to implement the 9-1-1 service and dispatch centers. It provides that telephone customers “may be billed for the monthly 9-1-1 charge” of up to $1.50 for each subscription per telephone service provided. OCGA § 46-5-134 (a) (1) (A).
Each service supplier shall, on behalf of the local government, collect the 9-1-1 charge from those telephone subscrib*325 ers to whom it provides telephone service in the area served by the emergency 9-1-1 systеm. As part of its normal billing process, the service supplier shall collect the 9-1-1 charge for each month a telephone service is in service, and it shall list the 9-1-1 charge as a separate entry on each bill. . . .
OCGA § 46-5-134 (a) (1) (B). The same requirement applies to wireless service, except for services billed to federal, state or local governments. See OCGA § 46-5-134 (a) (2) (C). Further, “[e]ach service supplier that collects 9-1-1 charges” may “retain ... an administrative fee” and “[t]he remaining amount shall be due quarterly to the local government^]” OCGA § 46-5-134 (d) (1). The 9-1-1 Act further grants local governments the right to “audit or cause to be audited the books and records of service suppliers with respect to the collection and remittance of 9-1-1 charges.” OCGA § 46-5-134 (d) (4).
The Counties sued the Defendants alleging that they should have billed two classes of customers a larger amount of 9-1-1 charges. The Counties argued that Defendants were required to, but did not, bill a 9-1-1 charge for all of the “exchange access lines, channels, or pathways” available to customers that purchased “multiрlex” services, which can carry multiple simultaneous calls over a single physical line, and that Defendants were required to, but did not, bill a 9-1-1 charge for every ten-digit telephone number provided to users of VoIP technology.
The Defendants moved to dismiss the Counties’ complaints. After a consolidated oral argument, the trial court denied the motions to dismiss.
Analysis
1. The parties agree that the 9-1-1 Act does not сontain an express right of action authorizing local governments to enforce the statute against telephone companies and service suppliers. However, the plaintiff Counties allege and the trial court found that the statutory scheme of the 9-1-1 Act indicates an intent by the General Assembly to give local governments an implied right of action for damages against telephone companies and suppliers based upon a violation of the statute. The trial court reasoned that it was implausible that the General Assembly would confer auditing powers to local governments without a corresponding remedy if they were to discover that a telephone company or service supplier had not collected and/or remitted the proper amount owed to them under the statute. The Defendants argue that this ruling was in error; we agree that the trial court so erred.
Georgia has “longstanding precedential authority rejecting the creation of implied private rights of action[.]” Somerville v. White,
As noted above, all parties concede that the 9-1-1 Act does not contain an express right of action that would allow the Counties to bring the claims in this lawsuit against the Defendants. See generally
Although the 9-1-1 Act does not provide that local governments have a right of action against telephone compan ies, it does provide a similar right of action against telephone customers. Specifically, the 9-1-1 Act provides that telephone customers are “liable for the 9-1-1 charge[ ] . . . until it has been paid to the service supplier.” OCGA § 46-5-134 (b). Under the 9-1-1 Act, if a customer refuses to pay the 9-1-1 charge, then the telephone company is to inform the local government, which may “initiate[ ]” a “collection action” against that customer. Id. While the legislature also could have specifically created a cause of action for a breach of the 9-1-1 Act against telephone service providers by its terms, it did not choose to do so.
Not to be deterred, the Counties claim and the trial court held that the audit provisions of the 9-1-1 Act gave rise to an inference that the General Assembly intended that local governments could sue telephone service providers. See OCGA § 46-5-134 (d) (4) (The 9-1-1 Act provides that a “local government may on an annual basis, and at its expense, audit or cause to be audited the books and records of service suppliers with respect to the collection and remittance of the 9-1-1 charges”). However, again, had the General Assembly intended within the statute itself to make the Defendants or other telephone service providers liable for amounts not collected from customers, then it knew how to do so.
Contrary to the Counties’ assertion, it is plausible that the General Assembly would make service providers subject to an audit
The Counties next allege that an implied right of action exists because the 9-1-1 Act gave them the power to “bring and defend actions.”OCGA § 46-5-138(c) (1). However, thefactthatthe Counties may sue or be sued does not confer a right of action; it merely confers the capacity to sue. The Eleventh Circuit rejected a similar argument in Smith v. Russellville Production Credit Assn., 777 F2d 1544, 1548 (I) (11th Cir. 1985). Smith held that the appellants’ argument
in support of an implied right of action, that the inclusion of a “sue and be sued” provision in the Farm Credit Act is evidence that Congress intended to create a private right of action under that act, is completely without merit. The “sue and be sued provision” simply indicates that Congress intended that [Production Credit Associations (“PCAs”)], like other private entities, be held accountable for breaking the law and be able to seek relief under appropriate circumstances. The provision does not indicate that Congress intended, in enacting the Farm Credit Act, to create an independent substantive legal basis under which PCAs could be sued.
Id.
In summary, we disagree with the trial court’s finding that the 9-1-1 Act provides an implied right of action to the Counties for the Defendants’ alleged failure to collect the proper amount of fees under the statute.
2. The Defendants next argue that the trial court erred in concluding that the 9-1-lAct, when read in conjunction with OCGA §§ 51-1-6 and 51-1-8, provides the Counties with common law remedies against the Defendants or any other telephone service provider. As to this point, we hold that the Counties may pursue claims against the Defendants due to their alleged failure or refusal to collect these charges; the 9-1-1 Act imposed a duty upon the Defendants to do so,
“The language of OCGA §§ 51 -1 -6[
We do not agree with the Defendants’ argument that Best Jewelry Mfg. Co. v. Reed Elsevier, Inc.,
Further, both OCGA §§ 51-1-6 and 51-1-8 were passed in 1863, prior to the passage of the 9-1-1 Act in 1977. Thus,
we must presume that the General Assembly had full knowledge of the existing state of the law and enacted the statute with reference to it. We construe statutes in connection and in harmony with the existing law, and as a part of a general and uniform system of jurisprudence, and their meaning and effect is to be determined in connection, not only with the common law and the constitution, but also with reference to other statutes and the decisions of the courts.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Chase v. State,
3. The Defendants argue that the trial court erred in concluding that the 9-1-1 charge imposed by the 9-1-1 Act is a “fee” rather than a “tax,” and contend that if the trial court had properly classified the charge as a tax, that it would have had no choice but to dismiss the Counties’ claim pursuant to our holding in Fulton County v. T-Mobile, South,
“Although it is often important to decide whether a particular charge is a tax or a fee, it is frequently difficult, to discern whether a given enactment provides for a regulatory fee or authorizes simply a tax.” Hadley v. City of Atlanta,
First, taxes are a means for the government to raise general revenue and usually are based on ability to pay (such as property or income) without regard to direct benefits which may inure to the payor or to the property taxed. Fees, on the other hand, are intended to be and should be clearly described as a charge for a particular service provided. Second, fees should apply based on the contribution to the problem. Third, fee payers, unlike tax payers, should receive some benefit from the service for which they are paying, although the benefits may be indirect or immeasurable.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id. See also Unified Govt. of Athens-Clarke County v. Homewood Village,
However, we find that T-Mobile
show that while some local governments provide no 911 services at all, Cobb and Gwinnett Counties provide enhanced landline 911 services that use special computer software to display the caller’s home address and location on a map. Residents may even have “Smart 911” services that allow them to pre-register their anticipated 911 needs for special circumstances, such as “senior with Alzheimer’s” or “child with disability.” Indeed, because different local governments offer different, 911 services, and none are authorized to accumulate more charges than their actual service costs, different, local governments charge different amounts for 911 services up to the statutory maximum of $1.50.
Bеcause the analysis of whether the 9-1-1 Act charges are a tax or a fee, or whether T-Mobile was correctly decided in the first instance,
Judgment affirmed in part, reversed in part, and vacated in part, and case remanded.
Notes
The United States Telecom Association and Incompas, as well as the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, have filed amicus curiae briefs in this case.
When a customer “has several telephone access lines, each exchange access facility shall constitute a separate subscription.” OCGA § 46-5-122 (17). “Exchange access facility” is defined as ‘the access from a particular telephone subscriber’s premises to the telephone system” of a telephone company and includes, inter alia, service supplier-provided access lines, PBX trunks, Centrex network access registers, and Voice over Internet Protocol (“VoIP”) service suppliers and any other communication, message, signal, or information delivery system capable of initiating a 9-1-1 emergency call. OCGA § 46-5-122 (7).
VoIP service is “any technology that permits a voice conversation using a voice connection to a computer... which sends a digital signal over the Internet through a broadband connection to be converted back to the human voice at a distant terminal!.]” OCGA § 46-5-122 (17.1).
The trial court should not grant a motion to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted unless:
(1) the allegations of the complaint disclose with certainty that the claimant would not be entitled to relief under any state of provable facts asserted in support thereof; and (2) the movant establishes that the claimant could not possibly introduce evidence within the framework of the complaint sufficient to warrant a grant of the relief sought. In deciding a motion to dismiss, all pleadings are to be construed most favorably to the party who filed them, and all doubts regarding such pleadings must be resolved in the filing party’s favor.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Best Jewelry Mfg. Co. v. Reed Elsevier, Inc.,
In their supplemental brief, the Counties argue that Section 14 (b) of the Senate Bill 222 from the 2017 legislative session indicates that the General Assembly intended to preserve an implied cause of action under the 9-1-1 Act. However, we fail to see how legislation passed 40 years after the 9-1-1 Act was enacted clarifies what the intent was of the original General Assembly which passed the Act, and in any event, Senate Bill 222 was vetoed by Georgia’s Governor and did not become law.
See also OCGA § 48-13-59 (a), (b) (making it unlawful “for any innkeeper to fail, neglect, or refuse to collect the [hotel] tax,” and imposing a “penalty of being liable for and paying the tax himself” as well as a misdemeanor charge punishable by a fine or imprisonment if the statute is violated); OCGA § 48-13-124 (a), (b) (making it unlawful for any dealer to “knowingly and willfully fail, neglect, or refuse to collect the [energy tax] ” and imposing a penalty of “being liable for and paying the tax himself” as well as a “misdemeanor of a high and aggravated nature” punishable by a fine or imprisonment if the statute is violated).
See OCGA § 46-5-134 (m) (2) (providing that the local government may be held liable to subscribers for pro rata reimbursement of funds not spent according to the 9-1-1 Act).
At this time, we do not address whether and/or to what extent common law might also impose a duty upon the Counties that could be enforced under these statutes. The viability of these common law claims will more appropriately be tested pursuant to a motion for summary judgment after discovery. We refrain from ruling thereon until the “tax” versus “fee” issue is resolved, as discussed in Division 3 herein.
OCGA § 51-1-6 states that “[w]hen the law requires a person to perform an act for the benefit of another or to refrain from doing an act which may injure another, although no cause of action is given in express terms, the injured party may recover for the breach of such legal duty if he suffers damage thereby.”
OCGA § 51-1-8 provides that “[pjrivate duties may arise from statute or from relations created by contract, express or implied. The violation of a private duty, accompanied by damage, shall give a right of action.”
We note that the order appealed was pursuant to a motion to dismiss where no evidence was considered.
While we do not endeavor herein to determine, the Counties contend that T-Mobile was wrongly decided. We defer consideration of such issue until after the trial court further considers the fee versus tax issue on remand.
We note that because T-Mobile was an appeal on an order resolving a motion to dismiss, it likewise appears to have been decided without the bеnefit of evidence.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring fully and specially
I concur fully with the majority’s holdings in Divisions 1 and 2 that the 9-1-1 Act does not provide the Counties with a private right of action, explicitly or otherwise, to enforce its provisions against telephone-service providers such as the Defendants but that the 9-1-1 Act, read in conjunction with OCGA § 51-1-6,
1. As to the trial court’s erroneous finding that the 9-1-1 Act provides an implied cause of action for the Counties to sue the Defendants to enforce its provisions, I write separately to emphasize that, even with regard to statutes enacted prior to the effective date of OCGA § 9-2-8,
Thus, I take this opportunity to reiterate that, so long as the meaning of the relevant statutory text is рlain and does not lead to an
judges start discussing not the meaning of the statutes the legislature actually enacted, as determined from the text of those laws, but rather the unexpressed “spirit” or “reason” of the legislation, and the need to make sure the law does not cause “unreasonable consequences,” [thus venturing] into dangerously undemocratic, unfair, and impractical territory. The “spirit or reason” approach to statutory interpretation invites judges to read their own policy preferences into the law, as we all believe that our own policy views are wise and reasonable, which tempts us to assume, consciously or unconsciously, that the legislature could not have intended differently.22
As Georgians (and Americans), we are “governed by laws, not by the intentions of legislators.”
2. I also fully concur with the majority’s holding that OCGA § 51-1-6 provides the Counties with a potentially viable cause of action to enforce the Defendants’ duties imposed by the 9-1-1 Act. Neverthe
The Defendants have cited our Supreme Court’s decision in Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Jenkins,
But even though OCGA § 51-1-6 can provide a private right of action to enforce a duty imposed by a different statute, in order to
In addition to satisfying the foregoing requirements, a plaintiff asserting a claim under OCGA § 51-1-6 must have suffered damages or harm resulting from the defendant’s violation of a legal duty owed to the plaintiff.
In sum, to establish a negligence per se claim under OCGA § 51-1-6, a plaintiff must show that (1) the defendant violated a specific statutory duty, (2) the duty is mandatory and expressly imposed, (3) the plaintiff is in the class of persons that the statutory duty was intended to protect, (4) the plaintiff suffered the type of harm that the duty was intended to guard against, and (5) the defendant’s breach of that duty caused the plaintiff’s injuries. And here, it remains to be seen whether the Counties can present sufficient evidence to satisfy each of these requirements with respect to the Defendants’ alleged violations of the 9-1-1 Act. That said, at this stage in the proceedings, the allegations in the Counties’ complaints are at least sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss. Nevertheless, litigants should be cautioned that the mere fact that a plaintiff is negatively impacted or harmed by a defendant’s violation of a statutorily imposed duty is
3. As previously mentioned, I concur with the majority’s ultimate conclusion that the Counties’ complaints are sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss, and I agree that the case should be remanded for further proceedings consistent with this Court’s opinion. Nevertheless, I concur in judgment only as to Division 3 of the majority’s opinion because I do not agree with all that is said in reaching that conclusion. According to the majority, the trial court’s finding that the charge the Defendants are required to exact from their customers under the 9-1-1 Act is a fee, rather than a tax, is premature, and the parties, upon remand, should be allowed to present evidence to aid the court in deciding that issue. I respectfully disagree. This Court has already considered the charge exacted under the 9-1-1 Act and expressly held, as a matter of law, that the type of charge authorized by and imposed under the Act is a tax. And the trial court, which is bound by the decisions of this Court, erred in holding otherwise. But for the reasons set forth infra, the trial court’s error in this regard is irrelevant to our resolution of this appeal.
In Fulton County v. T-Mobile S., LLC,
Nevertheless the trial court attempted to distinguish T-Mobile by suggesting that the sole basis for our holding was that the
But unlike in T-Mobile, the issue of whether the 9-1-1 charge authorized by the Act is a tax is not the “dispositive issue in this case.”
I am authorized to state that Judge Self joins this concurrеnce in Divisions 1 and 2.
The trial court below and Defendants (on appeal) reference OCGA § 51-1-8 in passing, but their primary focus is on OCGA § 51-1-6 and its accompanying case law. Indeed, the Defendants cite only one case that even references OCGA § 51-1-8, and that opinion merely groups it with OCGA § 51-1-6 for the basic proposition that both statutes only authorize recovery of damages for the breach of a legal duty otherwise created. See Parris v. State Farm Mut.Auto. Ins. Co., 229 Ga.App. 522, 524 (
As noted by the majority, OCGA § 9-2-8 (a) provides that “[n]o private right of action shall arise from any Act enacted after July 1, 2010, unless such right is expressly provided therein.” (emphasis supplied). Subsection (b) of OCGA § 9-2-8 provides that
[njothing in subsection (a) of this Code section shall be construed to prevent the breach of any duty imposed by law from being used as the basis for a cause of action under any theory of recovery otherwise recognized by law, including, but not limited to, theories of recovery under the law of torts or contract or for breach оf legal or private duties as set forth in Code Sections 51-1-6 and 51-1-8 or Title 13.
In my view, our appellate courts should stop referencing altogether the ethereal fiction of “legislative intent” in the context of statutory interpretation. A judge should not care about what any legislator intended but did not expressly provide for in the statutory text. See King v. Burwell, _ U. S. _ (
Somerville v. White,
Somerville,
Somerville,
Somerville,
See Shorter Coll. v. Baptist Convention of Ga.,
Merritt v. State,
Conroy v. Aniskoff,
Scalia & Garner, supra note 8, at 16; accord Callaway Blue Springs, LLLP,
See Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Jenkins,
Jenkins,
While OCGA § 51-1-6 “set[s] forth general principles of tort law,” Bell,
See Jenkins,
Id. (emphasis supplied).
See, e.g., Simerly,
See Schaff v. Snapping Shoals Elec. Membership Corp.,
See Jenkins,
Norman v. Jones Lang LaSalle Americas, Inc.,
See U. S. Bank, N.A. v. Phillips,
See Rowell v. Phoebe Putney Meml. Hosp., Inc.,
See Legacy Acad., Inc. v. Doles-Smith Enterprises, Inc.,
Norman,
See Norman,
Id. at 469 (2) (punctuation omitted; emphasis supplied).
See generally id. at 469-73 (2).
Id. at 473 (2) (emphasis supplied).
See id. at 469-73 (2).
(Emphasis supplied.)
See generally T-Mobile,
Id. at 472 (2).
See Smith v. Baptiste,
T-Mobile,
See id. at 466; see also OCGA § 48-5-380.
Best Jewelry Mfg. Co.,
In Anthony v. Am. Gen. Fin. Servs., Inc.,
