Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of defendants following the granting of a motion for a judgment on the pleadings.
The action is one for a declaratory judgment and an injunction seeking an adjudication as to whether the City of Pacific Grove can charge persons residing out of the city limits who are connected to a sewer system of the city a higher rate than persons residing within the city limits without showing a reasonable basis for the higher rate. The trial court granted the motion for a judgment on the pleadings on the basis of
Hobby
v.
City of Sonora,
Hobby
involved an ordinance imposing an annual service charge on two-family dwellings outside the city limits for sewer connections with the city’s sewage system. It was contended that the ordinance was invalid and unconstitutional because of arbitrary discrimination against users residing outside the city and that the city attempted to impair the
*56
obligation of its contract. Both contentions were found to be without merit. It was conceded by the plaintiffs that the city could not be compelled to set up a schedule of rates which would apply equally to users within the city and to those without. The asserted ground of discrimination was that the county users had already paid a charge for connecting with the city’s system and that since they had already paid in full for their service privileges the ordinance was discriminatory to the plaintiffs since no portion of the burden was placed upon the users inside the city. This contention was answered by the rationale that since the city could not. compel residents outside the city to connect with the city’s system which was wholly owned by the taxpayers of the city any right they might acquire to use the system could only arise out of and be predicated upon a contractual relationship with the city. (
In considering the propriety of the trial court’s order granting the motion for judgment oh the pleadings we must allude to certain basic applicable principles. We first note that a motion for a judgment on the pleadings is in the nature of a general demurrer and that the issues raised by it are legal and not factual, and as such admits the material facts alleged in the pleadings of the adverse party.
(Hospital Council of Northern Cal.
v.
Superior Court,
The function of a general demurrer is to determine whether the complaint states a cause of action.
(Venuto
v.
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.,
An important guide is the definition of a cause of action. (In
Colvig v. RKO General, Inc.,
The complaint 2 in this case must, therefore, be analyzed in the light of the foregoing principles. It alleges, essentially, that pursuant to the enactment of an ordinance the City of Pacific Grove set a sewer service charge for users outside the city limits at four times the rate set for users inside the city limits without any proper basis for the differential; that a bond issue passed for improvements to the sewage plant of the City of Pacific Grove will be financed by sewer service charges, as increased to both domestic and outside users and no part will be financed through funds obtained through taxation; that plaintiff signed a written revocable permit for sewer service which allowed the city to charge plaintiff whatever sewer service rates it might establish from time to time; that such permit amounted to a license upon the faith of which plaintiff expended considerable sums of money to connect with such service, and that by reason thereof the city should be estopped from terminating such service. The complaint alleges that plaintiff is a user of the city’s sewer service whose property is outside the city and that he brings this action on behalf of himself and all other property owners similarly situated.
The lack of uniformity in the rate charged to users of public utility service who reside outside the city limits from those charged to users inside the city limits is not necessarily unlawful discrimination and is not prima facie unreasonable.
(Durant
v.
City of Beverly Hills,
We observe that both
Durant
and
Hobby
went to judgment. The instant case is merely in the pleading stage and is concerned solely with whether the complaint states a cause of action.
Hobby
was not concerned with discrimination in the context of reasonableness but solely with whether the city could set up an annual service charge for users residing out of the city as a class under the circumstances disclosed by the record. In
Durant
the reviewing court acknowledged that charges that are unreasonable, unfair or fraudulently or unfairly established constitute an unjust or unreasonable discrimination rendering a rate or charge unreasonable, but that the burden is upon the person claiming the rate or charge to be unreasonable to show that the charges are unreasonable, unfair, or fraudulently or arbitrarily established. (
In
City & County of San Francisco
v.
Western Air Lines, Inc.,
In light of these principles we conclude that plaintiff has stated a cause of action. The complaint, stripped of irrelevant facts and matters specifically pleaded, alleges sufficient facts warranting judicial relief if such facts can be. established at trial. It is alleged therein that the ordinance in question sets a sewer service charge for plaintiff, who is a user outside the city limits, at four times the rate set inside the city limits without any proper basis for the differential. This is an allegation that the sewer charge imposed on plaintiff is unreasonable. There exists in plaintiff, as a user of a public utility’s sewer service, a primary right that he cannot be charged an unreasonable rate for such service and there rests on the city, as a public utility, the corresponding duty not to charge plaintiff an unreasonable rate for such service. The complaint seeks to enforce defendants’ obligation to charge a reasonable rate. Having stated a cause of action it will be incumbent upon plaintiff at trial to sustain the burden of showing that the rates charged him are unreasonable and, therefore, discriminatory.
It should be noted here that the Durant case was decided prior to the enactment of the Evidence Code which became effective January 1, 1967. Durant holds that there is a presumption that rates fixed by a lawful rate-fixing body are reasonable, fair and lawful and that the burden is upon the person contending otherwise to overcome this presumption. Under the Evidence Code, however, “[a] presumption is not evidence” but “an assumption of fact that the law requires to be made from another fact or group of facts found or otherwise established in the action.” (Evid. Code, § 600, subd. (a).) 4 Accordingly, the presumption declared in Durant is not evidence but a presumption within the meaning of the Evidence Code. We apprehend it to be a rebuttable presumption affecting the burden of proof because it is established to carry out or to effectuate some public policy other than or in addition to the policy of facilitating the trial of actions. (See §§ 601, 603, 605.) “The effect of a presumption affecting the burden of proof is to impose upon the party against whom it operates the burden of proof as to the nonexistence of the presumed fact.” (§ 606.) 5 We are not unmindful that the presumption declared in Durant is not one of those *60 specifically mentioned in the Evidence Code as a presumption affecting the burden of proof (§ 660 et seq.), but we do deem it to be a presumption established by decisional law. Section 660 provides: “The presumptions established by this article, and all other rebuttable presumptions established by law that fall within the criteria of Section 605, are presumptions affecting the burden of proof.” (Italics added.)
In view of the foregoing we perceive that in the context of the pleadings the burden of proof is first imposed upon plaintiff to establish that defendants’ charges to users outside the city limits are higher than those charged to users inside the city limits. The burden then shifts to defendants to establish that the rates were fixed by a lawful rate-fixing body. Upon such a showing an assumption of fact is required to be made that the rates fixed are reasonable, fair and lawful. The burden then shifts back to plaintiff to establish the nonexistence of the presumed fact, i.e., that the rates fixed are unreasonable, unfair or unlawful.
Our
holding
that plaintiff has stated a cause of
action is not to
be interpreted as giving judicial cognizance to plaintiff’s contention that he has obtained an irrevocable license because he has alleged that he expended money for improvements in reliance on the parol license. While an irrevocable license may be obtained in this manner
(Cooke
v.
Ramponi,
The judgment is reversed.
Sims, J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
Notes
No petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was filed.
Our reference to the complaint includes the original complaint and the supplemental complaint.
In Texas.it has been held that when a city fixes a rate status between the city and its outside customers the city cannot thereafter arbitrarily change the rate so as to discriminate between them and the customers residing in the city, and that if the city so discriminates the burden is on the city to show that there is some reasonable basis for the difference in the rates which it establishes.
(City of Texarkana
v.
Wiggins,
Unless. otherwise indicated all statutory references hereinafter made are to the Evidence Code.
Section 500 provides: “Except as otherwise provided by law, a party has the burden of proof as to each fact the existence or nonexistence of which is essential to the claim for relief or defense that he is asserting.”
