185 S.W.2d 411 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Affirming in part, reversing in part.
In the year 1942, under ordinances duly adopted by the Board of Council, the City of Mayfield acquired the waterworks plant previously owned by the Kentucky-Tennessee Light Power Company. Funds for its purchase were obtained from the sale of Water Works Revenue Bonds. The ordinances authorizing the purchase and providing for the operation and control of the system, as well as the bonds issued in pursuance of the ordinances, provided for the payment to the city by the Electric Board (created to operate jointly the water *377 and electric systems) certain sums of money yearly, as "tax equivalents." The ordinances above referred to likewise provided that the City Council could transfer any surplus (after the payment of the costs of maintenance and operation and the satisfaction of sinking fund requirements) to the general fund of the city. The city commenced the operation of the plant January 1, 1943. Previous to the acquisition of the system by the city, the latter paid the Kentucky-Tennessee Light Power Company a yearly hydrant rental of $40 each for the first 100 hydrants, and $30 each for the remaining 81 hydrants used by the city for fire protection. The city paid rentals to the Electric Board at this rate until June 1944. In June, 1944, the Board and City Council agreed upon a straight rate of $24 per year per hydrant, which rate it is conceded is reasonable. The City Council passed an ordinance modifying the rate in accordance with the agreement, but declared the rate to be retroactive to January 1, 1943.
On the 16th day of August, 1944, this action was instituted by the Board; its individual members; and a citizen, taxpayer, and consumer of water of the City of Mayfield; against the City of Mayfield, its Mayor, and Board of Council; wherein plaintiff sought a declaration of the rights of the parties under the Statutes of the Commonwealth and the ordinances of the city hereinbefore referred to. The questions presented are:
1. Did the Board of Council have the authority to direct the surplus revenues of the Water Works to be transferred to the general fund of the city?
2. Can the city and Board legally follow the direction of the ordinance adopted by the Board of Council to make the reduction in fire hydrant rates retroactive?
3. Can the City Council require the Board to pay to it any sum of money as an equivalent for taxes?
It is contended by the Board: (1) That, in the event the revenues of the Board exceed the costs of operation, maintenance, and sinking fund requirements, it is the duty of the Board to reduce consumers' rates to the extent that the revenues produced will not exceed such requirements, and that the city is not entitled to profit by the operation of the plant; (2) that neither the Board nor the city has, nor do they jointly have, the legal right to give retroactive effect to the reduction in rates to *378 be paid by the city for fire hydrants; and (3) that the city does not have the authority to require the Board to pay tax equivalents to the city. The city contends conversely in each particular.
Our conclusion in respect to the first question is of controlling influence in a determination of the second and third. Because the headnotes in the Revised Statutes do not indicate, in each instance, to which class of city the various sections apply, one must look to the original enactments to determine the sections the General Assembly intended to apply to cities of the various classes. The City of Mayfield is a fourth-class city, and acquired its water plant under the authority of KRS
Thus it will be seen that the Legislature intended that a city of the fourth class operating a waterworks plant should use the profits, if any, derived from its operation, to supplement the general fund of the city; and should not hold such profits in trust for the users of water, unless, of course, they should exceed a fair return upon the property used and usable. This intention is so plainly manifested, that further comment would be superfluous. We therefore conclude, in answer to the first question propounded, that the City of Mayfield has the authority to, as it did by ordinance, direct that the surplus, over and above the operating and maintenance costs and statutory sinking fund requirements, be paid into the general fund of the city.
That being true, it had the right to retroactively reduce the fire hydrant rate paid by it to the Board, provided such reduction did not, and will not, deplete or embarrass the operating maintenance, or sinking funds. It is conceded that there is a sufficient surplus from profits, after all statutory requirements have been met, to refund to the city the amount it has paid to the Board in excess of $24 per year per hydrant from the time of the commencement of operation of the plant by the Board. This amount would be payable to the general fund of the city, as net profits, had the fire hydrant rate not been reduced; and we see no substantial difference between its refund by reason of a retroactive reduction in rates and direct payment authorized by KRS
It is obvious, from reading the Statutes hereinbefore referred to, that the city has no right to withdraw any sum of money from the revenues of the water plant until first funds sufficient in amount to cover operating, maintenance, and sinking fund requirements shall have *380
been set aside. That being true, the city's right to exact tax equivalents from the surplus funds likewise could not be questioned, were it not for the fact that such withdrawal would constitute an operating expense of the plant, and thus deplete the profit and loss account which eventually must control the Board's action in increasing, decreasing, or maintaining the present consumers' rates. In the operation of its waterworks, the city is acting in its proprietary capacity. Previous to its acquisition of the plant, it received in its governmental capacity from the Kentucky-Tennessee Light Power Company taxes in the approximate amount of the tax equivalent it will receive under the ordinance in question. In determining what is to be a fair and reasonable profit on the property used and usable, the city should be permitted to be compensated for the loss of taxes resulting from its acquisition of the plant, before it can be required to calculate its profits in anticipation of a reduction in rates. Even the TVA Act (KRS
The judgment on the original appeal is affirmed; the judgment on the cross-appeal is reversed, with directions that another be entered in conformity with this opinion.
Whole Court sitting.