182 N.E.2d 846 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1961
Lead Opinion
The plaintiffs, appellants herein, duly filed a taxpayer's suit against the defendants, appellees herein, the city of Toledo, a charter city, joining its mayor and members of council, seeking a permanent injunction enjoining payment by the city of assessments levied by the County of Lucas, on benefited property for the construction of an interceptor sewer, known as Sanitary Sewer No. 49 (a part of which is located within the city by virtue of annexation proceedings), out of the Sewer Rental Fund created by the city by collection of rental charges against city resident sewer users. The trial court denied the injunction, and the taxpayers appeal to this court on questions of law and fact.
Hereinafter, plaintiffs, appellants herein, will be referred to as the taxpayers, and the defendants, appellees herein, as the city.
The taxpayers claim that such payment disbursed out of such fund is ultra vires in that this appropriation of the fund acquires the character of funds derived from taxation subject to constitutional regulation by the state Legislature and is in conflict with state statute, and also that such payment is not for a public purpose but an unlawful payment by the city of a private debt or obligation.
The city contends that the payments are for a public purpose in the operation of a municipal public utility, to wit, a public sewerage system, and, if its ordinance authorizing such disbursement of the sewer fund conflicts with the state statute, then the ordinance is, nevertheless, valid because the statute is unconstitutional as an invasion of the city's constitutional vested right as a home-rule charter city.
The questions presented are, first, whether the ordinance of the city is in conflict with state statute, and, second, if so, whether the state statute is invalid as an encroachment on the *371
right of municipal home rule under the Constitution, and third, whether the sewer rental charge and the use thereof by the city come within the purview of Section
The evidence, stipulated by the parties to consist of the transcript of all testimony and exhibits attached thereto, offered and received in the Common Pleas Court, reveals that on May 10, 1937, the city passed an ordinance pursuant to Sections 3891-1 and 3891-5 of the General Code, which sections were re-enacted into Sections
Section
Section
On January 18, 1960, the city enacted the following:
"That it hereby declares and determines as the policy of the city of Toledo that whenever an area is annexed to the city of Toledo in which there has been constructed or is in the process of construction of a sanitary intercepting sewer, the cost and expense of which has been assessed or will be assessed against the benefited property owners by the Board of Commismissioners of Lucas County, Ohio, then, and in that event, beginning with the installment of assessment next due and payable, the city of Toledo upon such annexation having been finally accepted by council, will assume and order to be paid to the Treasurer of Lucas County, Ohio, or to the property owner paying them, all such installments of assessments outstanding after said time and shall order such then outstanding installments of assessments to be paid annually, prior to billing, as each such installment becomes due and payable. Assessments paid in full before certification and levy by the county auditor or installments of such assessments paid by the property owner after such time shall be refunded to the property owner paying them on the same basis."
On February 8, 1960, the city passed two ordinances directing the auditor of the city to make withdrawals from the sanitary sewer fund and place such funds in a special account, known as "Special Projects Account No. 1652," on his books, and to draw vouchers against such "Special Account" to the Treasurer of Lucas County in payment of the 1959 installment of assessment for county Intercepter Sewer No. 49 assessed against benefited property which had been annexed to the city after the completion of the construction of the sewer; and also to refund and pay to certain property owners the amount of the 1959 installment of assessment levied by the county commissioners *373 for Sewer 49, which assessments had theretofore been paid. And, thereupon, the auditor withdrew from the sewer fund the sum of $7,721.84 and placed it in such special account. He then drew two vouchers payable to the Treasurer of Lucas County for payment of the 1959 installment of assessments in the amounts of $1,469 and $3,212.64; and, also from such special account, he drew vouchers totaling $3,040.20 in payment to property owners so assessed to reimburse them for the payment by them of such assessments against their property for Sewer No. 49.
The evidence further shows that intercepter sewers constructed in the city in the past have been financed out of funds obtained from bond issues without assessments being made upon the abutting properties; and that Intercepter Sewer No. 49, constructed by the county, is an extension of the city Intercepter Sewer No. 1640, to which it is connected. It should be observed that payment by the city of that part of assessments for the construction of Intercepter Sewer No. 49 lying within the city uniformly puts the property annexed to the city on an equitable basis with all other property in the city; the annexed area, of course, being subject to sewer rental charges the same as other city resident sewer users.
An indispensable facility of a city is a public sewerage system, and its function is clearly interrelated with a water system. An equitable method to finance the maintenance, enlargement or replacement of such public works is provided by Sections
The assessment here in question is for the construction of Sewer No. 49 so far as the property abutting thereon lies within the city limits. That portion of the sewer is an "enlargement" *374
or "extension" of the city sewerage system, a fait accompli. The area in question located in the city cannot, therefore, be said to be an "unsewered" area. Thus, the proposed payment therefor by the city is not in conflict with the state statute. However, the city contends that the facts cannot support such a construction and that the acquiring of such sewer, as well as the extension of sewers into other areas of the city not now having sewerage facilities, would entail a conflict with the statute. It is further contended, however, that a municipality has authority vested in it by Section
It cannot be questioned that the operation of a city sewage system is a municipally-operated public utility on the local level, and that Section 4, Article XVIII of the Constitution is direct authority and self-executing and cannot be limited by statute. This power is recognized by the Legislature in Section
In Swank v. Village of Shiloh,
"The power of a municipality to own or operate a public utility is granted by the people through the Home-Rule Amendment (Section
Thus, the acquisition by the city of Sewer No. 49 within its limits by payment of the cost of construction, that is the assessments levied on abutting property, is not prohibited by Section
The language of Section
Counsel for taxpayers urge that payment to the County of Lucas of the assessments as they become due on Sewer No. 49 and that the payment to the owners of abutting property of the installment of assessments theretofore paid by them is not for a public purpose and is an unlawful payment of a private debt or obligation. The weakness of such argument is inherent in its statement. A non sequiter is met when it must be conceded that the payment by the city unquestionably results in the payment by the city for the construction of Sewer 49, located in the city, and constituting an enlargement or extension of the sewerage system of the city, definitely for a public purpose, and unequivocally not "for any other purpose." This is abundantly clear because the assessment is a lien on the property and not made an obligation of the benefited property owner enforceable by personal judgment, in personam, against such property owner whoever he may be at the time the assessment is in default of payment. The action is in rem or in invitum to foreclose the lien on the property for the unpaid assessment. Dreake, Treas.,
v. Beasley,
On the question whether the application of the sewer rental fund in this case comes within the purview of Section 13 of Article XVIII, counsel for taxpayers cite City of Franklin v. *376 Harrison,
Thus, in Himebaugh v. City of Canton,
"1. Water rates or charges or `rents' collected by a municipality cannot be classed as taxes so long as their use is limited to the waterworks purposes enumerated in Section 3939, General Code; but if employed as a mere device to lessen the burden of taxation for general governmental purposes, such funds should be considered in the category of taxes.
"2. Water-rent payers are not ipso facto taxpayers."
See, also, City of Cincinnati v. Roettinger,
The sewer funds appropriated, as in the instant case, in view of the undisputed facts, cannot, by any metaphysics, be considered in the category of taxes.
It is therefore concluded that defendants are entitled to judgment, denying plaintiffs' injunctive relief and dismissal of the petition.
Judgment accordingly.
DEEDS, J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
Municipalities receive and derive their power and authority for the exercise of local self-government from Section
Thus the General Assembly has enacted Section
In City of Cincinnati v. Roettinger,
It may be contended with some force that the appropriation of funds in the instant case is not a device to lessen the burden *378
of taxation for general governmental purposes and thus the case is to be distinguished from the facts presented in City ofFranklin v. Harrison,
In reaching the conclusion, I am not persuaded by the contention of the appellants that such assumption is motivated by a desire to influence the property owners outside the city to favor annexation to such municipality. Should it be assumed that the ordinances are not in conflict with the statute, the motivation underlying the adoption of the ordinances is a matter of legislative, not judicial, determination.
I also dissent on the further ground that the payments are to be made pursuant to an appropriation of public funds for the benefit of private persons without legal or moral justification on the part of the municipality to pay same. 15 McQuillin Municipal Corporations (3 Ed.), Section 39.19. Cf. State, ex rel.Caton, v. Anderson,