Opinion
Appellants Wayne and Lorraine A. Cardellini appeal from an order transferring this case to the municipal court as a matter outside the jurisdiction of the superior court. The sole issue presented is whether this transfer was proper.
Statement of Facts
The facts essential to the jurisdictional question are undisputed. Appellants own two plots of land in the City of Woodside, California, which receive water service from the City of Redwood City. The dispute between the parties arises from a fee of $6,554.63 charged for connection of appellants’ newly built home to Redwood City’s water supply via a water main constructed by Melvin Casey, a private developer.
In November 1978, the Redwood City Council adopted resolution number 8611, which added sections 15(a) and 15(b) to the rules and regulations of the city water department. Section 15(a) establishes a procedure by which the water department will consider applications for extensions to its water distribution system, built at the applicant’s cost. Section 15(b) authorizes the city to enter refunding agreements with applicants who have installed such extensions, to permit the applicants to obtain partial reimbursement from owners of property fronting upon the extensions who subsequently seek to connect to them. Such refunds would be based on engineering and *394 construction costs (determined by the director of public works to be reasonable) and include a sum based on the San Francisco Bay Area cost of construction index. The city would undertake to “make its best efforts to collect a refund for the applicant” but not be responsible for it in the event of a legal challenge; property owners would be required to pay the specified fee to the city as a condition of connection to the water main extension.
After constructing the water main extension at issue in this case, respondent Casey entered an agreement with the city, pursuant to section 15(b) above, which made three lots subject to a refund fee in the event of subsequent connection to the main. Appellants’ lot number 36 is one of the three specified.
In 1981, construction of appellants’ home, partially on each of their lots numbers 36 and 53, was completed. In order to receive water service, appellants’ property was connected to the water line constructed by Casey, rather than to a preexisting city water line which appellants claim previously served their property. 1 Appellants were charged $550 in connection fees under the Redwood City Code, plus an additional fee of $6,554.63 under the agreement between the city and Casey. Appellants paid the latter fee under protest and received water service.
Having tendered the $6,554.63 and made claim upon the city for that amount, appellants brought an action in superior court against the city and Casey, for declaratory relief and damages of $6,554.63. The cause of action for declaratory relief alleged that the Casey agreement arbitrarily assigned costs to only some of the parcels abutting the water main extension; afforded Casey recovery of more than the reasonable cost of the facility; and was unauthorized under the city’s governing documents and state law. In this regard, appellants contend that the city charter, section 74, required that procedures for laying of pipes be established by ordinance, rendering a connection fee authorized by resolution invalid; that an ordinance exists which would require a less substantial connection fee than the one charged; that the fee charged violates requirements of state law that municipal utility rates be uniform and nondiscriminatory; and that the Casey agreement is invalid because signed by an official other than one of those designated in the city charter as authorized to bind the city.
The superior court found that no equitable relief was sought in this action and referred the matter to arbitration. Appellant requested a trial de novo *395 (Code Civ. Proc., § 1141.20). After unreported conferences, the case was transferred to municipal court as “a matter outside the jurisdiction of the superior court.”
Discussion
A.
Declaratory Relief as the Basis for Superior Court Jurisdiction
Appellants contend that the trial court erred in transferring this case to the municipal court because the complaint stated a sufficient cause of action for declaratory relief. The municipal court has jurisdiction over equitable actions only as expressly conferred by statute (2 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Courts, §§ 201, 202, pp. 228-230); an action for declaratory relief is not one of those enumerated. (Code Civ. Proc., § 86.) Rather, the Code of Civil Procedure expressly provides that actions for declaratory relief are to be brought in the superior court. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1060.) 2
“A complaint for declaratory relief is legally sufficient if it sets forth facts showing the existence of an actual controversy relating to the legal rights and duties of the parties under a written instrument or with respect to property and requests that the rights and duties of the parties be adjudged by the court. ... If these requirements are met and no basis for declining declaratory relief appears, the court should declare the rights of the parties whether or not the facts alleged establish that the plaintiff is entitled to favorable declaration.”
(Wellenkamp
v.
Bank of America
(1978)
Although the superior court may deny declaratory relief, it may not transfer an action stating a sufficient claim for declaratory relief to the municipal court.
(Cook
v.
Winklepleck
(1936)
As a general rule, the superior court has no jurisdiction over an action in which “1. there is a fully matured cause of action for money; 2. the demand is within the jurisdiction of an inferior court; 3. a money judgment for plaintiff or a judgment in defendant’s favor will fully and finally resolve the dispute between the parties; and 4. there is no occasion for any declaration concerning their future conduct.”
(Bachis
v.
State Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co.
(1968)
In the present case, it appears that “the rights of the complaining party have crystallized into a cause of action for past wrongs”
(Travers
v.
Louden
(1967)
Although appellants correctly state that the interpretation of charters, statutes and ordinances is an appropriate subject for declaratory relief
(Walker
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1961)
B.
Municipal Court Subject Matter Jurisdiction
While the trial court would thus have been correct in deciding that this case was outside the jurisdiction of the superior court on the basis that it merely seeks damages for a matured claim
{Bachis
v.
State Farm Mutual
*398
Auto. Ins. Co., supra,
A special, or local, assessment “is a charge imposed on particular real property for a local public improvement of direct benefit to that property, as for example a street improvement, lighting improvement, irrigation improvement, sewer connection, drainage improvement, or flood control improvement,” assessed because the property “has received a special benefit over and above that received by the general public.”
(Solvang Mun. Improvement Dist.
v.
Board of Supervisors
(1980)
An assessment is clearly involved when a governmental body imposes a charge to reimburse the cost of an improvement which it initiates.
(Solvang
*399
Mun. Improvement Dist.
v.
Board of Supervisors, supra,
The essential factor for our analysis is the purpose served by the connection fee. By the terms of the California Constitution, “The use of all water now appropriated, or that may hereafter be appropriated, for sale, rental, or distribution, is hereby declared to be a public use, and subject to the regulation and control of the State . . . .” (Art. X, § 5.) Municipal corporations are authorized to establish, purchase, and operate public works to furnish water and other utilities. (Art. X, § 9.) The furnishing of utilities is a municipal and public function.
(Irish
v.
Hahn
(1929)
The fee imposed by Redwood City was a condition of connection to the city’s water distribution system. Appellants’ land was subject to the fee because, under the Casey agreement, it was one of the plots which would benefit from Casey’s water main. The fee thus serves the purpose of an assessment—repayment of costs of a public improvement—whether it is ultimately paid over to a private party or remains in the city’s hands. 7 Respondent city characterizes its role simply as a facilitator of a private arrangement. There is, however, no contractual relationship between appellants and Casey. Moreover, it is apparent that appellants sought provision of city water, not connection to Casey’s line in and of itself. From the land owner’s point of view, the contested fee represents a mandatory condition *400 of receiving water service despite the fact that it was to be paid to a private party under the terms of a contract entered by the city. The propriety of the city’s undertaking this type of agreement with a private developer, and of the method of assessment utilized, 8 are precisely the issues to be litigated below.
We find that this case involves legality of an assessment and is therefore outside the jurisdiction of the municipal court. The order transferring the case to municipal court is vacated, and the case remanded to superior court.
Rouse, J., and Smith, J., concurred.
Notes
Respondent city states that appellants sought to connect to Casey’s water line; appellants claim that the city “refused to allow re-connection to an existing water line and compelled” connection to the new line.
Code of Civil Procedure section 1060 provides, in pertinent part: “Any person interested under a deed, will or other written instrument, or under a contract, or who desires a declaration of his rights or duties with respect to another, or in respect to, in, over or upon property, or with respect to the location of the natural channel of a watercourse, may, in cases of actual controversy relating to the legal right and duties of the respective parties, bring an original action in the superior court .... He may ask for a declaration of rights or duties, either alone or with other relief; and the court may make a binding declaration of such rights or duties, whether or not further relief is or could be claimed at the time ....’’
The municipal court has jurisdiction of cases involving claims of $15,000 or less (Code Civ. Proc., § 86); the claim in this case is for $6,554.63.
A disposition in favor of appellants on the validity of the $6,554.63 fee on the basis of construction of the agreement and city rules would render irrelevant as a practical matter the question of the original connection decision, giving appellants complete relief without declaratory judgment. An unfavorable disposition on this ground, however, would not give complete relief: it is possible that a trial court might find that the city had authority to enter its agreement with Casey, and therefore to charge the $6,554.63, yet find that the city should have enabled appellants to connect to the preexisting water line, avoiding application of the Casey contract altogether.
The record does not disclose the actual basis of the trial court’s decision. The order transferring the case to the municipal court simply states that the matter is outside the jurisdiction of the superior court. Prior to this order, in referring the case to arbitration, the court indicated that the action “does not contain a prayer for equitable relief.” It is unclear to us how this conclusion could have been reached given the clear allegations of the complaint, and we are given no other hint as to the basis of the trial court’s conclusion on the jurisdictional issue.
The charge in this case does not appear to be a “tax.” “Assessments” and “taxes” differ in that the former are charges “for benefits conferred”
(County of Santa Barbara
v.
City of Santa Barbara
(1976)
We note that municipalities are authorized to require subdivisions to install supplemental improvements for the benefit of property not within the subdivision (Gov. Code, § 66485.) In such a case, the local agency must reimburse the subdivider for the additional cost of such improvements and may do so through assessments on the benefitted property. (Gov. Code, §§ 66486, 66487.) By analogy, it would appear that a fee charged to reimburse an improvement voluntarily dedicated to public use should also be viewed as an assessment.
Respondents appear to suggest that the fee here was not an assessment because it was not determined according to the formal procedural requirements for enacting assessments. The fact that such procedures were not followed here, however, would be less an indication that the fee was not an assessment than that it may have been improperly imposed.
