In July 1980, the Board of Supervisors of Franklin County, Virginia levied a utility tax upon its citizens pursuant to Va.Code § 58-617.2.
The Town of Rocky Mount, Virginia is located within Franklin County, Virginia. Under Virginia law, towns such as Rocky Mount may levy taxes within their jurisdiction for purposes of funding the town’s government, in addition to those taxes levied by the county. See, for example, Va. Code §§ 58-844, 845. The Town of Rocky Mount has for several years levied a utility tax upon its residents for the purposes of the Town. Franklin County recently levied its own utility tax pursuant to Va.Code § 58-617.2. Consistent with the terms of the statute, Franklin County could not collect its utility tax from its residents who reside in the Town of Rocky Mount since the Town already imposed a utility tax.
Plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of § 58-617.2 because County residents were required to pay the County utility tax while Town residents were not. They submit that the County utility tax was used to help support the County school system, and that, since both County and Town residents use the County’s school system (the town does not have a separate school system), the Town residents should be required to pay the County utility tax.
Plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment from the district court that the County utility tax enacted under § 58-617.2 discriminated against County residents in violation of the Constitution because the Town residents were not taxed by the County. They also sought a mandatory injunction requiring that Town residents be required to pay the County utility tax. Finally, they sought damages equal to the difference between the amount of utility taxes actually paid and the lower amount that would have been paid had Town residents been required to pay the County tax in addition to their own.
The Town and the County moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that such action was barred by the Tax Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341, and that in any event a cause of action was not stated. The district court dismissed the case without opinion.
The Supreme Court has consistently construed § 1341 to drastically limit federal court intervention into state tax matters. Rosewell v. LaSalle National Bank,
Clearly, plaintiffs are barred from seeking federal court review if Virginia provides them a plain, speedy and efficient state court remedy. The state remedy must meet certain minimal procedural criteria. Rosewell, supra,
A review of the remedies provided under Virginia law convinces us that plaintiffs have a plain, speedy and efficient remedy. In a departure from the general rule, it has been well settled in Virginia for years that the collection of an illegal tax may be enjoined at the instance of an individual taxpayer by a court of equity unless there is an adequate remedy at law. See Commonwealth v. Tredegar Co.,
We are thus of opinion that Virginia offers plaintiffs in her courts the opportu
Plaintiffs next challenge the award of attorneys’ fees to the Town and the County as prevailing parties under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Such fees are allowable in the court’s discretion when a suit is unreasonable, frivolous, or meritless within the meaning of Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
When plaintiffs initiated this action, the law was settled both by statute and decision that a federal court could not entertain such a suit for injunctive relief unless no plain, speedy and efficient state court remedy existed. McNary precluded a suit for damages. Any doubt that an action for discretionary declaratory relief could be maintained after Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v. Huffman,
In light of the settled principles of law existing before the filing of this action and handed down during the action, all before the hearing in the district court, we conclude that plaintiffs’ suit is meritless within the meaning of Christiansburg Garment Co., in that it is unreasonable or groundless and that the plaintiffs continued to litigate after it clearly became so. Christiansburg Garment Co.,
The district court, having found that plaintiffs’ action was frivolous as a matter of fact and law, was ever so careful in its assessment of attorneys’ fees. It required affidavits showing literal item by item compliance with the twelve criteria established in this circuit in Barber v. Kimbrell’s Inc.,
We are thus of opinion the district court did not abuse its discretion either in the award of attorneys’ fees or in the amount thereof.
The judgment of the district court is accordingly
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Va.Code § 58-617.2 then provided in pertinent part (1982 and 1984 amendments do not affect this case):
Any city or town or county may impose a tax on the consumers of the utility service or services provided by any corporation coming within the provisions of this article, ...
Any county, city or town may impose a tax on the consumers of services provided within its jurisdiction by any electric light and power, water or gas company owned by another municipality; ... Any county tax imposed hereunder shall not apply within the limits of any incorporated town located within such county which town now or hereafter imposes a town tax on consumers of utility service or services____
. While there is some discussion that the County enacted the utility tax to provide revenue for a short fall in the school system’s budget, the parties acknowledge that the tax is not earmarked by 'statute. Thus it may be used for general County purposes.
. We think the suggestion that the federal Constitution requires the Town to earmark its utility tax for school purposes, when this is not required by state law, is simply frivolous. The same may be said of the request for imposition of the County tax within the Town, contrary to the positive provisions of state law.
. The Seventh Circuit has affirmed the award of attorneys’ fees in a similar case. Werch v. City of Berlin,
