Lead Opinion
Dеfendants Denver Sewer Corporation (“Denver Sewer”) and Town of Roxbury (New York) (the “Town”) appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, Howard G. Munson, Chief Judge, entered in favor of plaintiffs RR Village Association (“RR Village” or the “Association”), et al., declaring void for lack of due process the Town’s action in approving prospective and retroactive increases in the rates charged by Denver Sewer to members of the Association without affording the Association or its members notice or a hearing. On appeal, defendants contend principally that the district court should have dismissed the complaint on the grounds that (1) plaintiffs had no property interest in the existing sewer rates, and (2) even if plaintiffs had a property interest, due process was satisfied by the availability to plaintiffs of judicial review of the Town’s actions. Finding merit only in the contention that plaintiffs had no property interest with respect to rates for future services, we reverse so much of the judgment of the district court as declared void the Town’s approval of prospective rate increases, and in all other respects we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
The sequence of pertinent events is not in dispute.
A. The Parties and the Events
RR Village is a membership corporation whose members own townhouse units in a development known within the Town as Roxbury Run. Denver Sewer provides sewage disposal service to all individually owned units in Roxbury Run. The Town, acting through its governing body (“Town Board”), has responsibility under N.Y.Transp.Corp.Law § 121 (McKinney Supp. 1987), either to provide sewage disposal services for its inhabitants or to contract with a private corporation for provision of these services.
Prior to October 8, 1984, the Town had contracted for Denver Sewer to provide sewage disposal services in Roxbury Run, setting the rates that Denver Sewer could charge at $13 for the first 9,000 gallons of sewage and $1.05 for each additional 1,000 gallons. On October 3, 1984, Denver Sewer petitioned the Town for rate increases tо $62.50 for the first 9,000 gallons of sewage and $5.07 for each additional 1,000 gallons. It requested that the increases be made retroactive to January 1, 1983. In support of these requests, Denver Sewer submitted figures to show that from 1980 to 1983 it had operated at a loss and that the then-current rates did not generate income sufficient to meet current expenses and provide a return to stockholders.
On October 8, 1984, the Town Board met and, after hearing from Denver Sewer, passed a resolution granting the requested increases and making the new rates retroactive to January 1, 1983. Neither the Association nor any Roxbury Run homeowner had received noticе of Denver Sewer’s petition or of the Town’s intent to consider such a petition at the October 8 meeting; neither the Association nor any member was present to be heard in opposition.
Plaintiffs learned of the rate increases through newspaper reports and promptly wrote the Town Board (1) stating that the homeowners had not received prior notice of Denver Sewer’s petition, (2) questioning the figures presented by Denver Sewer, and (3) stating that the rate increase breached undertakings made to the home
Roxbury Run homeowners soon began to receive bills reflecting the increased rates. They apparently continued to pay at the pre-October 8, 1984 rates and refused to pay amounts charged in excess of those rates.
B. The District Court’s Decisions
In January 1985, plaintiffs commenced the present action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982), contending that the Town’s aрproval of rate increases, prospective and retrospective, without affording the Association or its members an advance hearing deprived plaintiffs of their property without due process. The complaint sought, inter alia, a judgment declaring that the new rates were void. Both sides moved for summary judgment.
In a Memorandum-Decision and Order filed April 28, 1986 (“First Decision”), the court at first granted summary judgment in favor of defendants. Finding that there had been no cessation of sewer service to plaintiffs but only increases in the rates, the court held that N.Y.Transp.Corp.Law § 121 did not give ratepayers a property interest in previously fixed sewer rates, and hеnce plaintiffs had not shown any deprivation of their property. The court also ruled that the Town’s approval of rate increases was legislative action for which due process did not require an advance hearing. Accordingly, a judgment was entered dismissing the complaint.
Plaintiffs timely moved for reconsideration, and, in a Memorandum-Decision and Order filed October 6, 1986 (“Second Decision”), the court vacated the prior judgment and granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs, voiding the Board’s October 8, 1984 approval of rate increases. In the Second Decision, the court held that ratepayers have a property interеst in the continuation of existing rates until new proposed rates are found to be fair and reasonable. It held that the Town’s rate determination was not legislative action and that due process required public notice and a hearing prior to the deprivation of the ratepayers’ property interest.
A formal judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs on October 23, 1986. On November 17, 1986, defendants appealed.
II. APPELLATE JURISDICTION
At oral argument of this appeal, we called to counsel’s attention the fact that the Second Decision of the district court, granting plaintiffs’ timely motion to vacate the judgment that had been entered on the First Dеcision, was filed on October 6, 1986, more than 30 days, see Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(1), prior to the filing of defendants’ November 17 notice of appeal. Noting that the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure provide that where a timely motion has been made under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59 to alter or amend the judgment, “the time for appeal for all parties shall run from the entry of the order ... granting or denying ... such motion,” Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(4), we inquired whether defendants’ notice of appeal was timely. We conclude that, in light of the combined effect of Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(6) and Rules 54 and 58 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the document that initiated the running of defendants’ time tо appeal was the October 23, 1986 judgment entered following the Second Decision, not the Second Decision itself, and that defendants’ notice of appeal was therefore timely.
For purposes of the time limitations imposed by Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(4), an “order is entered within the meaning of this Rule 4(a) when it is entered in compliance with Rules 58 and 79(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(6). Rule 58 provides that “[e]very judgment shall be set forth on a separate document ... [, and] is effective only when so set forth....” Fed.R.Civ.P. 58. Rule 54 defines the term “judgment” to include “any
The separate-document requirement is designed to reduce uncertainty on the part of an aggrieved party as to when the time to file a notice of appeal begins to run. See Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis,
The ruling being appealed here was explicated in the Second Decision, a 14-page opinion that stated “So Ordered” at the end. This did not satisfy the separate-document requirement. That requirement was satisfied by entry of the October 23, 1986 judgment. Thus defеndants’ time to appeal did not begin to run until October 23, and their November 17 notice of appeal was timely. Accordingly, we have jurisdiction of the present appeal.
III. THE MERITS
Turning to the merits, we conclude that defendants were entitled to judgment insofar as plaintiffs sought relief from the increase in the rates for future sewage services, because plaintiffs had no protectable property interest in future rates. On the other hand, plaintiffs did have such an interest in the rates they had been required to pay in the past, and they were entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard before the Town could properly aрprove a retroactive rate increase.
A. Property Interests
Property interests are created, and their dimensions defined, by state law. See Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
The New York provision under which sewer rates are set provides as follows:
A sewage-works corporation shall supply each city, town, village or other municipal area or district wherein such corporation operates, and the inhabitants therein, with facilities or make provision for the collection, treatment and disposal of sewage at fair, reasonable and adequate rates agreed to between the corporation аnd the local governing body or bodies____ Rates shall be reviewable at intervals of not more than five years or at any time by petition of the corporation or motion by the local governing body on written notice after a period of ninety days. The petition of a corporation shall be determined within ninety days of its filing, and in the event a determination is not rendered within such period of time, the petition shall be deemed approved. The local governing body of a city or village, or of a county or town on behalf of a sewer district or for a special sewer improvement shall have the power to contraсt with a sewage-works corporation for collection, treatment or disposal of sewage. No contract for such services shall be executed for a period greater than ten years.
N.Y.Transp.Corp.Law § 121. Though, so far as we are aware, no New York court has considered the rights of the inhabitants under this section, state court decisions on analogous issues indicate the conclusions the New York courts would reach on whether homeowners have a property interest in prospective and retrospective sewer rates.
New York courts have made clear that when a person has provided services with the understanding that he will receive payment at a promulgated rate, he has a property interest in receiving that rate, and he is deprived of his interest if the rate is changed retroactively. See Clove Lakes Nursing Home v. Whalen,
On the other hand, the New York courts have repeatedly held that state law creates no property interest in rates to be paid for services to be provided in the future, even where, as here, a statute or regulation requires that such rates be reasonable. See Sigety v. Ingraham,
The line drawn by the New York courts between past and future rates to be paid to the provider of services is equally applicable to the receiver of the services who is required to pay the effective rates. Just as the provider is entitled to rely on the promulgated rates as fixing his income for past services, the receiver is entitled to rely on those rates as establishing his expense for past services. The reliance of both sides on the promulgated rates with respect to past services rises to the level of a property interest of which neither may be deprived without procedural due process. And just as the provider of services is not entitled to expect that his rate of compensation will not be reduced for services yet to be provided, the homeowner is not entitled to expect that the rates for future services will not be raised. With respect to future services, the ratemaker retains discretion to fix the rates deemed appropriate, and thus neither the hope of the provider nor the hope of the receiver rises to the level of a property interest.
In the present case, it is plain that, in their use of Denver Sewer’s sewage disposal servicеs, plaintiffs had relied prior to October 8, 1984, on the rates previously announced. Accordingly, with respect to pre-October 8 services, the district court properly ruled in its Second Decision that plaintiffs had a property right in the promulgated rates and that they were deprived of that right when the rates were changed retroactively. While § 121 states that rates are “reviewable” at least every five years, nothing in the section, or in state court interpretations of it, or in prior rate determination practice under the section suggests that previously promulgated rates are tentative and not to be relied upon when there has been no announcement that they are tentative or subject to retroactive change.
On the other hand, plaintiffs were not entitled, under state law, to rely on existing rates in perpetuity, and hence they had no property interest in rates for future services. Their claim asserting that the Town’s determination of such rates deprived them of property without procedural due process should therefore have been dismissed.
B. The Process Due With Respect to Rates for Past Periods
Insofar as the Town’s approval of a retroactive increase is concerned, we conclude that the district court properly ruled that due process required that plaintiffs be givеn notice and an opportunity to be heard before they could be deprived of their interest in the existing rates for past services. The New York courts have held that for retroactive rate changes, procedural due process both requires and is satisfied by notice, an opportunity prior to deprivation to be heard in some fashion (including by written submissions or by informal consultation through representatives), an opportunity for a prompt administrative-level hearing after the initial order of retroactive rates, and an opportunity for a judicial challenge. See Clove Lakes Nursing Home v. Whalen,
First, affording notice before the deprivation of property is itself a fundamental requirement of procedural due process. See Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v. Craft,
Second, due process ordinarily requires some opportunity to be heard prior to the deprivation of property. See Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
Nor can it be said that affording such an opportunity would have been impracticable because the Town, in failing to afford the Association an opportunity to be heard, acted in a “random and unauthorized” manner, as that term is used in Hudson v. Palmer,
Finally, though no notice or opportunity to be heard would have been required if the act of the Town Board had been legislative, the granting of a retroactive increase in sewer rates cannot be considered legislative action. The test for determining whether official action is adjudicative or legislative focuses on the function performed by the dеcisionmaker, not on the method of selecting the decisionmaker, cf. Minnesota State Board for Community Colleges v. Knight,
The Town’s granting of Denver Sewer’s request for a retroactive rate increase appears to have been based solely on the Town’s acceptance of facts presented by Denver Sewer about its purported history of losses. The record does not suggest that there was any consideration of facts relating to the sewage disposal industry in general, much less of questions of social or economic policy or of broad economic factors such as general rates of inflation, interest, or return. Similarly, the facts that plaintiffs would have presented, had they been given the opportunity, apparently would have related solely to Denver Sewer and its corporate parent, i.e., they would have challenged the alleged history of losses both as inaccurate and as irrelevant or misleading because of prior representations by Denver Sewer’s parent. The Town’s resolution of the dispute between Denver Sewer and the plaintiffs was therefore not a policy decision but rather an adjudicative determination of disputed facts about the parties and their activities, businesses, and properties.
Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the Town’s retroactive rate determination deprived plaintiffs of property rights without affording them procedural due process. We therefore affirm that part of the judgment that declared invalid the rates determined by the Town Board at its October 8, 1984 meeting for the period January 1, 1983, to October 8, 1984. Of course, nothing in our opinion today prevents the Town from redetermining rates for this period in compliance with the demands of due process.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we affirm so much of the judgment as declared invalid the retroactive rates determined by the Town, but we reverse so much of the judgment as declared invalid the prospective rates determined by the Town.
Each party shall bear his or its own costs of this appeal.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
If I were convinced that my colleagues were not doing exactly what the district court did, i.e., finding section 121 unconstitutional as applied, I would be pleased to concur in Judge Kearse’s customarily fine opinion. However, because I am satisfied that this is not the case, I respectfully dissent.
A federal court which is asked to rule on a constitutional question implicating the validity of a State law is obligated to offer an
Notice and the opportunity to intervene are specifically provided for whenever “the constitutionality of any statute of [a] State affecting the public interest is drawn in question” in a suit between private parties. 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b). Because Congress believed that declarations of unconstitutionality have ramifications beyond the interests of the litigants in a particular case, Heckler v. Edwards,
The present suit is one in which the constitutionality of a New York statute has been drawn in question. Denver Sewer Corporation is a creature of the New York Transportation Corporations Law, and its rates must be set in accordance with the provisions of that Law. It is undisputed that, in agreeing to an increase in sewer rates without public notice or hearing, both the Corpоration and the Town believed they were lawfully exercising the authority granted . them by N.Y.Transp.Corp.L. § 121. The Town Board’s resolution expressly stated that the rate increase petition was granted pursuant to that section. In a newspaper article which appeared the following day, two Town Board members and the attorneys for both the Town and the Sewer Corporation were reported as expressing the belief that New York law did not require them to conduct a public hearing for the rate increase.
Thus, it was clear from the outset that the constitutionality of section 121 was an issue in the case. As plaintiffs conceded in the district court, “this is a case of first impression, involving the interplay between section 121 of the N.Y.Transp. [Corp.] Law and Due Process requirements as developed in very recent Supreme Court decisions.” Although the district court stated in its decision that it was not finding section 121 unconstitutional on its face but only the Town Board’s application of the statute in this case, it is well established that the constitutionality of a State statute is “drawn in question” for the purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2403 by a challenge to its application in the facts of a particular case. Fleming v. Rhodes,
Because the sewer rate determination pursuant to section 121 was a matter “affecting the public interest”, the district court erred in neglecting its statutory obligation to certify the existence of the constitutional challenge to the New York Attorney General. We now compound that error by finding unconstitutionality while neglecting our own obligation to notify the Attorney General. By enjoining the grant of a retroactive rate increase without a prior hearing, we are effectively stating that, if section 121 permits this to be done, it is unconstitutional. In sum, our holding of unconstitutionality must refer to the statute which the Town purported to follow. In my view, the legitimate State interests that Congress sought to protect through 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b) are fully implicated by a decision of this nature, аnd the State Attorney General should have been given an opportunity to present the State’s position.
I believe the district court also erred in failing to adequately consider whether a decision on the constitutional question could have been avoided through the resolution of an unsettled issue of State law. Railroad Comm’n of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
Although N.Y.Transp.Corp.L. § 121 is silent as to whether public notice and a hearing are required before a town may approve a private sewage corporation’s petition for an increased sewer rate, I believe there is a reasonable likelihood that the New York courts would construe that statute in conjunction with other statutory provisions to require the notice and hearing which the residents of RR Village claim under the Fourteenth Amendment. The apparent purpose of permitting private sewage works corporations to enter a field previously reserved to public agencies was to provide a vital health service to the inhabitants of a subdivision without creating additional expense to the municipality involved, and thus to solve a vexing problem for growing communities. Wild Oaks Util., Inc. v. Green,
Article 14-F of New York’s General Municipal Law, which permits municipalities to establish and impose sewer rents by local law or ordinance, see Gen.Mun.L. § 452(2), provides that amendments to such sewer rents must be accomplished in the same mannеr. Id. This section, which was enacted in 1951, provides that sections 90 and 95 of the Village Law and sections 130 and 133 of the Town Law shall apply to both the adoption and amendment of ordinances establishing sewer rents. Section 90 of the Village Law, which has been succeeded by section 20-2002, required notice and a hearing for the enactment and amendment of the pertinent ordinances. Section 130 of the Town Law contained similar provisions. The New York State Comptroller has issued several opinions to the effect that such sewer rent amendments must be accompanied by notice and public hearing. See Opns.St.Comp. (1985) No. 85-69; (1979) No. 79-135. See also N.Y.Town L. §§ 202-a(5), 202-b, 202-d; N.Y.Mun.Home Rule L. § 20(5).
Where, as here, a statute is part of an interconnected scheme of regulation and is silent in a matter that is explicit elsewhere in the scheme, the statute may be read in conjunction with its companion statutes so as to provide a logical, overall consistency. See Boehning v. Indiana State Employees Ass’n, Inc.,
Pullman abstention is applicable even though, as here, plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of a State law оnly as applied in a particular case. Winters v. Lavine, supra,
In addition to all the recognized grounds for Pullman abstention, I would only note that, if the State courts were to hold that State law required notice and a hearing before either the prospective or retroactive rate increases were approved, plaintiffs would receive all the relief they seek, not the half-a-loaf this Court is now providing.
