Opinion
The issue presented is whether as a matter of law the City of Los Angeles (city) can impose a sewer service charge on the Regents of the University of California (Regents) when the charge is used to finаnce capital improvements to the local sewer system. We conclude that they may not.
The Los Angeles Municipal Code section 64.102 was amended effective 1980 so as to increase the city’s sewer service charge. 1 The amendment also earmarked a portion of the charge for the financing of capital improvements to the local sewer system. In pertinent рart, the new ordinance reads:
*453 “(1) For the payment of costs of operation and maintenance (including replacement) for the sewer system, the rates shall be:
“For residential users..................................................6.9 cents
“For commercial, industrial and governmental users ...........10.6 cents
“(2) . . . For the financing of capital improvements to sewer system, the rates shall be:
“Residential Users.....................................................16.4 cents
“Commercial, Industrial and Governmental Users.............26.2 cents”
The part of the charge to be used for capital improvements was paid by the Regents under protest. In September 1981, the Regents filed a declaratory relief action and an injunctiоn for reimbursement of monies paid. They stopped paying the charge. The city cross-complained, seeking a declaration that the Regents are required to pay the charges. The сity also asked for unpaid charges.
The Regents’ motion for summary adjudication was granted. The basis for the judgment was an earlier case between the parties,
Regents of University of California
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1979)
I
In
Regents of University of California
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
“A special assessment is generally defined as a charge imposed on property owners within a limited area to help pay the cost of a local improvement designed to enhance the value of the property within that area.
(Northwestern etc. Co.
v.
St. Bd. Equal.
(1946)
“At bench, although the amount of the ‘sewage facilities charge’ is based upon anticipated use of the sewer system by the user, the collected revenues are not used to defray the costs of providing sewer service to the users. Such costs are funded through the ‘sewer connection charge’ and the ‘monthly sewer service charge, ’ charges whose payments the Regents do not dispute. Rather, the revenues collected as a result of the ‘sewage facilities charge’ are used by the city to provide capital for sewer construction, i.e. to finance local imprоvements. Such a charge for capital funding is little more than a disguised special assessment.
(County of Riverside
v.
Idyllwild County Water Dist., supra,
84 Cal.App.3d at pp. 659-660.) City argues, and the court below agreed, that the Regents should be required to pay their fair share of the capital costs of local improvements whose benefits they enjoy. The people of the city, the argument goes, should not be required to bear the full burden of improvеments whose benefits inure to the people of the state as a whole, as is the case with a state university. This argument, perhaps a good one, is directed in the wrong quarter, for this court has no аuthority to modify the tax-exempt status of publicly owned property. Unless some constitutional modification of article XIII is adopted, the ‘sewer facilities charge’ remains as merely one more special assessment masquerading under a different name and one more attempt by a local taxing entity to accomplish indirectly what it cannot do directly. Although the Regents may benefit from an improved and expanded sewer system, by reason of their exemption from property taxation they cannot be required to contribute to its capital costs.
(County of Santa Barbara
v.
City of Santa Barbara
(1976)
*455 We uphold the decision of the court below that Regents controls the case before us.
II
The city contends that the sewer service charge is not equivalent to a special assessment. The city argues that the sewerage facilities charge prohibited in
Regents
differs from the sewer service charge here because the former was based on an anticipated use
(Regents of the University of California
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
Nor does the method of calculating the charge define its nature. Whether the charge is a one time occurrence or a monthly assessment is irrelevant to the purpose for which the collection is made. The character of the assessment is also not affected by the fact that the sewer service charge is unrelated to property value. (Regents of the University of California v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 100 Cal.App.3d at pp. 549-550.)
The city attempts to distinguish a case cited in
Regents
from the case before us. In
County of Riverside
v.
Idyllwild County Water Dist., supra,
Similarly, the Attorney General’s opinion,
The city’s bankruptcy case,
In re Lorber Industries of California, Inc.
(9th Cir. 1982)
Ill
The city argues that imposition of a sewer service charge is a valid exercise of its police power rather than an exercise of its taxing powеr. It relies for this proposition on certain language in
Longridge Estates
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1960)
In Longridge Estates, two developers were required to pay an outlet sewer charge before final approval of their tract maps. They sued to recover the monies paid. The case is not pertinent to the issues before us. In Longridge Estates, the city wаs regulating private development by insuring that adequate sewage facilities existed for the planned subdivisions. We find no such regulation in a sewer charge for capital improvements. Even if the sewer charge were a regulatory ordinance, Regents tells us that the state when conducting its sovereign activity is free from all such regulation.
IV
Appellant’s last contention is that the capital improvements which necessitated the increase are of benefit to the Regents. An entire sewer system must be maintained in size and strength to accommodate the potential maximum use of all facilities permitted. This issue has already been determined: “Although the Regents may benefit from an improved and expanded sewer system, by reason of their exemption from property taxation they cannot be required to contribute to its capital costs. [Citations.]”
(Regents of University of California
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
*457 The summary judgment is affirmed.
McClosky, J., and Lucas, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 1, 1983, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 14, 1983.
Notes
Thе ordinance was in response to federal pressure to eliminate the discharge of sewage sludge into the Pacific Ocean by July 1, 1985. A consent decree between the city, the State of California, and various federal and state agencies provides that the city’s failure to stop the discharge of sludge into the Pacific Ocean by the target date will result in a penalty of $10,000 per day of violation. A plant is under construction in the San Fernando Valley which will relieve the burden in the Hyperion plant where the sewage from UCLA is processed. City claims that if the valley plant were not being constructed, a decrease in sewage would be necessary from the areas utilizing Hyperion, including UCLA. We refrain from speculation as to how such a decrease in sewage would be accomplished.
We do not read the cases cited by Regents to hold that state property is constitutionally exempt from payment of special assessments.
Inglewood
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1929)
Whether the exemption is based on the Constitution or public policy, in this case the result is the same.
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
