Opinion
Dеfendant Truckee Sanitary District (TSD) and intervener Dart Industries Inc. (Dart) appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County in favor of plaintiff Trimont Land Company (Trimont).
1
In essence the judgment limits the number of sewer connections TSD may grant to properties within its territorial confines in order to reserve a portion of its total capacity for the use of Trimont on property outside the district
We hold the Legislature did not give sanitary districts such as TSD the power to grant a contractual preference for disposal capacity in the event of a shortage in capacity to those outside thе district, who are not ready to use the capacity, where the preference prohibits service to members of the district ready to use the capacity. Thus, insofar as Trimont’s contract attempts to provide a perpetual guarantee of disposal capacity under all circumstances, including shortage, the contract is ultra vires. Accordingly, we hold the guarantee void and reverse the judgment.
Facts
TSD is a sanitary district organized pursuant to the Sanitary District Act of 1923, as set forth in part 1 of division 6 of the Health and Safety Code. (§§ 6400-6924.)
Trimont is a wholly owned subsidiary of Fibreboard Corporation. Fibreboard owned 25,000 acres of land in County known as the Tahoe Tree Farm. In 1970 Trimont was in the process of planning á development of the Tahoe Tree Farm. Trimont caused county to establish county service area number 21 to provide services to the planned development. Trimont obtained a conditional use permit for one phase of its development known as Northstar-at-Tahoe, commonly referred to as Northstar. The conditional use permit was subject to conditions requiring adequacy of sewage and water facilities.
Trimont planned to place ski runs, condominiums, single family lots, a golf course, and commercial areas within Northstar. In order to provide sewage service to these facilities Trimont considered several alternatives, the major two of which were an onsite plant or service by TSD. Ultimately it was determined that service by TSD was the most favorable alternative. Since Northstar is not physically within the territorial confines of TSD, it was necessary for Trimont and County to contract with TSD for the sewage service to Northstar.
At the time of the agreement, Trimont leased 50 acres of land from a third party pursuant to a lease containing a clause giving Trimont an option to purchase. Trimont’s sole obligation under the TSD-Trimont agreement was to exercise its option to purchase the 50 acres upon demand by TSD within a certain time (the purchase price could be paid by County or by Trimont), to “make avаilable” the 50 acres to TSD, and to transfer title to all or a portion thereof should TSD require fee ownership. 2 Trimont made available to TSD 12 of the 50 acres in 1973, and TSD used the 12 acres for sewage disposal between 1973 and 1975. In 1972 and 1973, County caused the expansion facilities to be built. In 1974, TSD demanded fee title to the 50 acres, but Trimont refused to convey and deposited a deed to the land in court in this action. The trial court ruled the deed should be delivered to TSD.
Pursuant to the 1971 agreement, sewage connections were made within Northstar; however, development and sales were slower than anticipated and Northstar has not required the capacity called for in the agreement. For example, as of trial, only 614 condominiums and 262 single-family homes had been built or were under construction at Northstar; TSD had a total of 4,250 connections to its sewer system, of which 3,335 were located outside of Northstar and 915 connections were at the development.
In 1971 the Legislature enacted an uncodified water act, known as the Tahoe-Truckee Sanitation Agency Act. (Stats. 1971, ch. 1560.) Pursuant to that act the regional Tahoe-Truckee Sanitation Agency (TTSA) was formed, with TSD being one of five member districts of the agency. One purpose of TTSA was to construct a regional sewage trеatment plant. Funds for the construction were contributed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, the State of California, and the member districts.
Although in 1971 the parties correctly anticipated that a regional agency would be formed, they failed to anticipate the effect of such an agency.
In May 1977, the Lahontоn Regional Quality Control Board issued order 6-77-27 which mandated the aforementioned restrictions on capacity. The order also required TSD to cease operating its own ponds when the regional facilities became operational (the regional plant began processing sewage in 1978). The 1977 order of the Lahonton Board was affirmed by the state board in May 1978 in order No. WQ 78-8. The legality of the order was not challenged in this action. Thus, at trial, TSD’s total capacity to treat sewage, including service of Northstar, was limited to 1.16 mgd. 3
Dart is the successor in interest of LakeWorld Development Corporation (LakeWorld). At about the same time that Trimont was planning its North-star development in Placer County, LakeWorld was planning a resort development in Nevada County to be known as Tahoe-Donner. As a condition of subdivision map approval, Nevada County required LakeWorld to annex Tahoe-Donner to TSD to obtain sewage service. A little over a year before the Trimont-Placer-TSD contract was formed, TSD and LakeWorld entered into an agreement for annexation of Tahoe-Donner to TSD and the provision of sewer service to Tahoe-Donner by TSD. The agreement provides that LakeWorld would construct facilities for sewage works within Tahoe-Donner and that TSD would accept conveyance of title to those works and “thereafter operate, maintain, repair and replace such works and provide adequate sanitary sewer service therefrom to the lands in the project which those works are capable of serving.”
The trial was lengthy and the exhibits voluminous. In awarding Trimont both declaratory and injunctive relief, the trial court proceeded on a contract theory and determined the 1971 contract constituted a continuing guarantee by TSD to reserve 300,000 gallons per day of its capacity for the benefit of Trimont. In order to prevent a breach of the continuing guarantee the court issued an injunction restraining TSD from granting more than 1,000 new connections within its territory even though Trimont was not ready to use its reserved capacity.
Discussion
I
At the outset, TSD contends the trial court was simply wrong in finding, as a fact, that the 1971 agreement provided Trimont with a guarantee of 300,000 gallons of disposal capacity for so long as Trimont needed the capacity. TSD contends the trial court should have found that TSD’s promise of allocated capacity terminated when the regional sewage treatment plant became operational.
“In resolving the issue of the sufficiency of the evidence, we are bound by the established rules of appellate review that all factual matters will be viewed most favorably to the prevailing party
(Leming
v.
Oilfields Trucking Co.
(1955)
II
We next note that, in our analysis, the limitations on TSD’s disposal capacity, based on environmental concerns, are givens or axioms in this action. For example, neither the federal EIS nor the orders of the Lahonton Regional Water Quality Control Board were litigated in this case; neither federal nor state authorities were parties to the trial of the action. Accordingly, it is not for us to speculate as to whether these disposal limitations were right or wrong; we must accept them as premises and go from there. We recognize, as did the parties at trial, that the practical effect of these limitations was to create a shortage in TSD’s sewage disposal capacity.
Appellant Dart contends that TSD did not have the power to enter into the guaranteed allocation provided in the 1971 agreement. Trimont argues that the 1971 agreement, including the guarantee of disposal capacity, was authorized by Health and Safety Code section 6823. 5
In order to find out whether section 6823 gave TSD the power to enter into a perpetual guarantee of capacity with entities outside its boundaries, the net effect of which is to grant a preference in limited caрacity to those outside the district over those inside the district, we are mindful that “In construing a statute ‘we begin with the fundamental rule that a court “should ascertain the intent of the Legislature so as to effectuate the purpose of the law.”’
(Moyer
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1973)
Section 6823 plainly authorizes a sanitary district to enter into contracts with counties or with private individuals for the treatment or disposal of sewage. Thus, the first paragraph of the statute provides in relevant part that “The district may contract with . . . any county . . . with any person, firm or corporation, for the . . . use of any sewer or sewers or other works or facilities for the handling, treatment or disposal of sewage or industrial waste from the district and such other area as may be designated in said
We note that section 6823 further allows such a contract to provide for the disposal of sewage from areas located outside the geographic confines of the district. Thus, the first paragraph of the statute allows such a contract to provide for the “handling, treatment or disposal of sewage or industrial waste from the district and such other area as may be designated in said contract. . . .” (italics added) and the second paragraph of the statute similarly states that such a contract may provide for the “disposal of sewage or industrial waste from any area designated by such person, firm or corporation so contracting . . . .” (Italics added.)
Although the plain meaning of section 6823 allows the district to contract with those outside the district for the disposal of sewage, the statute is less clear with respect to whether it authorizes the district to enter into a contract that guarantees disposal capacity perpetually to an outsider where enforcement of the guarantee would mean that outsiders not ready to use disposal capacity would receive a preference over members of the district who have a present need to use the capacity. On the one hand, the first paragraph of section 6823 provides in part that a contract may be “upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the parties thereto . . . .” And the second paragraph of the statute provides in part that disposal of sewage may be “upon such terms and conditions as may be provided in said contract.” These clauses, of course, suggest the district has the power to enter into any kind of contract it wants to, presumably including a contract perpetually guaranteeing disposal capacity under all circumstances to those outside the district.
On the other hand, we note that the first paragraph of the statute authorizes the district to enter into such contracts “when in the judgment of the legislative body of said district
it is for the best interests of the district so to do.
” (Italics added.) This language suggests that the Legislature intended section 6823 to be of primary benefit to inhabitants of the district and not to those located outside it.
6
We conclude that section 6823 is sufficiently
B
We are unaware of any case in California construing section 6823 or discussing the power of a sanitary district to dispose of sewage for those outside the district. Both sides to this dispute have cited cases involving the extraterritorial provision of utility services by cities. We thus examine whether we may look to the law of municipal corporations for guidance.
In
In re Werner
(1900)
In
Petition East Fruitvale Sanitary Dist.
(1910)
These cases make it clear that, for purposes of ascertaining the scope of powers properly exercised by a sanitary district, the district is characterized as a public corporation, inferior to a municipal corporation.
9
McQuillin calls public corporations “quasi-municipal corporations” and defines them
C
We first examine California cases construing the power of municipal corporations to dispose of sewage beyond their boundaries. Unless the law expressly provides to the contrary, a California municipal corporation may construct a system to dispose of its sewage outside its boundaries, because “Proper sewers are in this day so essential to the hygiene and sanitation of a municipality, that a court would not look to see whether a power to construct and maintain them had been granted by the charter, but rather only to see whether by possibility the power had been expressly denied.”
(McBean
v.
City of Fresno
(1896)
The reason for the foregoing rule was discussed in
Mulville
v.
City of San Diego
(1920)
In
Tronslin
v.
City of Sonora
(1956)
Although the source of the city’s power to contract to supply
extraterritorial
service was not expressly discussed in Tronslin,
10
we view the case
We acknowledge that a public corporation such as TSD can exercise certain implied powers.
11
However, in our view, neither
Tronslin
nor its predecessors
(McBean
et al.) are applicable here.
12
Where a municipal corporation asserts implied powers to act outside its territorial limits based on necessity, indispensability or emergency of the power exercised, the courts will inquire as to the basis of the asserted necessity, indispensability or emergency. (See
City of Oakland
v.
Brock
(1937)
Nor is such an implied power “essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation.”
(Mulville, supra,
at p. 738.) In
Guptill
v.
Kelsey
(1907)
D
We next examine California cases cited to us involving the extraterritorial provision of utility services, other than sewage disposal, by municipalities or utility districts. We find those authorities inapposite for a variety of reasons.. First, since 1911, when article XI, section 19 of the California Constitution was adopted, municipal corporations have been expressly authorized to supply light, water, power, heat, transportation, telephone service, or other means of communication (but not sewage disposal) to those outside the boundaries of the corporation. 14 Former article XI, section 19 was replaced by current article XI, section 9 on June 2, 1970. (3 Deering’s Const. Ann., p. 137.) Current article XI, section 9, subdivision (a) provides: “A municipal corporation may establish, purchase, and operate public works to furnish its inhabitants with light, water, power, heat, transportation, or means of communication. It may furnish those services outside its boundaries, except within another municipal corporation which furnishes the same service and does not consent.”
These constitutional provisions have been held to authorize municipаl corporations to furnish the utility services enumerated in the provisions to those outside the municipality. (See, e.g.,
City of North Sacramento
v.
Citizens Utilities Co.
(1961)
The parties have cited California cases that have recognized that where a municipality or utility district acquires an established system that supplies persons outside the municipality or district with water or power, the acquiring entity “must, on principles of fairness and justice, continue the service which was furnished outside the district, where this can be done efficiently and economically.”
(Sacramento etc. Dist.
v.
Pac. G. & E., supra,
Finally, we are aware of no California case holding that outsiders served by a municipality or district are entitled to a preference over inhabitants in the event of a shortage of utility service.
16
Thus, in upholding a contractual duty of a city to supply outsiders with water, the court in
Sawyer
v.
City of San Diego, supra,
Since our survey of California municipal corporation law has produced no ready answer to our problem of interpreting section 6823, we turn to more general guidelines of statutory interpretation and to the law of other jurisdictions. “ ‘It is a generally accepted principle that in adopting legislation the Legislature is presumed to have had knowledge of existing domestic judicial decisions and to have enacted and amended statutes in the light of such decisions as have a direct bearing upon them. [Citations.]’
(Buckley
v.
Chadwick
(1955)
“[I]t is not to be presumed that the Legislature in the enactment оf statutes intends to overthrow long-established principles of law unless such intention is made clearly to appear either by express declaration or by necessary implication. [Citations.]”
(County of Los Angeles
v.
Frisbie
(1942)
In the instant case, the most compelling basis upon which authority for the perpetual guarantee to Trimont can be asserted is the general language found in section 6823 to the effect that the contract contemplated by the statute may be “upon such terms and conditions as may be provided in said contract.” However, in light of the long-recognized judicial characterization of the purpose of a sanitary district, to wit, to provide service to its own members, we conclude that the general grant of power in section 6823 may not be construed to allоw a sanitary district to prefer outsiders over its members in the event of a shortage. If that was what the Legislature wanted, it could have said so explicitly. (See
Big Sur Properties
v.
Mott
(1976)
Moreover, this court has said that “the rule is well established that language purporting to define the powers of a municipal corporation is to be strictly construed, and ... the power is denied where there is any fair, reasonable doubt concerning the existence of the power.
(City of Madera
v.
Black,
Finally, we are mindful that a statute should be construed to eliminate doubts as to the provision’s constitutionality.
(Associated Home Builders etc., Inc.
v.
City of Livermore
(1976)
When we apply these principles to our interpretation of section 6823, we can find no basis upon which to conclude that the Legislature intended to grant a sanitary district, such as TSD, the contractual power to grant a preference in limited disposal capacity to those outside the district, not ready to use the capacity, over its inhabitants who have a current need for such service. Accordingly, we hold that the first sentence of paragraph 4 of the 1971 TSD-Trimont agreement, purporting to grant a perpetual guarantee of disposal capacity to Trimont under all circumstances, including shortage, is ultra vires and void.
18
(See
Jaynes
v.
Stockton, supra,
F
Our conclusion is reinforced by our survey of municipal corporation law in other jurisdictions.
19
(See generally, Annot., Power of Municipal Corporation to Extend its Service Beyond Corporate Limits (1927)
For example, in
City of Sweetwater
v.
Hamner
(Tex.Civ.App. 1923)
Notwithstanding these grants of power, the court found no authority for the city to spend its funds for construction of the water main to the United States Gypsum Company plant: “A municipal corporation cannot exercise its powers outside its limits, except when granted express legislative authority so to do, for all power and privileges conferred by the Constitution and statutes on municipal corporations must be held to be limited in their exercise to the territory embraced in the municipal boundaries, and for the
In
Richards
v.
City of Portland
(1927)
The Oregon Supreme Court considered two statutes that allowed the city to serve outsiders. One statute, section 3770, Oregon Laws, then provided in relevant part: “ ‘That any incorporated city or town . . . owning ... a system of waterworks ... for supplying water ... for its inhabitants, and for general municipal purposes, . . . shall have the right, and are hereby authorized ... to sell, and supply and dispose of water . . . from such system to any person . . . within or without the limits of such incorporated city . . . and to make contracts in reference to the sale and disposal of water . . . from such system, for use within or without the corporate limits.’” (Richards v. City of Portland, supra, 255 P. at p. 329.)
Holding that the city was not empowered either by this statute or its charter to act as a public utility for the рurpose of furnishing water to outsiders, the court said, inter alia: “The water system was established at the expense of the taxpayers of the city, and a holding that those who have not borne such burden shall have equal rights therein would not be based on sound equitable principles. . . . The water system was constructed primarily to serve those who paid for it. When such projects are undertaken
Similarly, in
Farwell
v.
City of Seattle
(1906)
Finally, we are aware of cases that have upheld the furnishing of water to those outside the city limits with strong expressions of dictum to the effect that any extraterritorial supply would be limited to a surplus available only after needs of inhabitants were satisfied. (See e.g.
Bair
v.
Mayor and City Council of Westminster
(1966)
We acknowledge that these decisions do not control our interpretation of section 6823, because we have no evidence that section 6823 was patterned after any of the statutory or charter provisions construed in these out-of-state cases. (Compare
Union Oil Associates
v.
Johnson
(1935)
We turn to the scope and effect of our holding. While we void the perpetual guarantee of disposal capacity in paragraph 4 of the TSD-Trimont agreement, we do not set aside the agreement in its entirety. As we have noted, section 6823 expressly authorizes TSD to contract to supply service outside its boundaries. Paragraph 12 of the agreement in question contains a severability clause providing, “In the event that any part or provision herein contained in this Agreement or incorporated herein, be found to be illegal or unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction, such finding shall not affect the remaining parts, portions or provisions hereof.”
Provided the subject of a contract is within the power of a governmental body, a contract between a governmental body and a private party is to be construed by the same rules which apply to the construction of contracts between private persons. (See
Pacific Architects Collaborative
v..
State of California
(1979)
TSD has never suggested it wishes to provide service to Trimont on a basis different from the way it serves its inhabitant members, i.e., on a “first come, first served” basis. Consequently, we do not reach the substantial question of whether a sanitary district might have the power to allocate unused capacity on other than a “first come, first served” basis in the event of a shortage of capacity.
21
(Compare
Morrison Homes Corp.
v.
City of Pleasanton, supra,
58 Cal.App.3d at pp. 733-734, with
Carlton
IV
We tie up a last loose end related to the deed to Trimont’s 50 acres of land that Trimont deposited with the court. As we have noted (ante, p. 336), part of the consideration for the 1971 agreement was that Trimont would convey title to the 50 acres to TSD upon request; the land could be purchased by Trimont or County.
Our resolution of this litigation leaves Trimont with substantial benefit from the agreement, in the form of service already provided by TSD and, presumably, in the form of service to be provided in the future on a “first come, first served” basis. But our invalidation of the guarantee means that Trimont got less than it bargained for. It is possible that some equitable adjustment should be made.
We are aware of the rule that “ ‘contracts wholly beyond the powers of a municipality are void. They cannot be ratified; no estoppel to deny their validity can be invoked against the municipality; and ordinarily no recovery in
quasi
contract can be had for work performed under them.’ ”
(Miller
v.
McKinnon
(1942)
Here, we need not go so far as
Normandy.
TSD has not received the consideration in dispute; title to the 50 acres of property has never been conveyed to the district. To the extent that TSD seeks a conveyance of the entire 50 acres, TSD asks that Trimont furnish consideration arguably attributable (in part at least) to the guarantee of disposal capacity declared ultra vires. We are unaware of any case that has allowed a public entity to insist on payment of consideration under an ultra vires contract, where the public entity has not furnished the goods or services contemplated by the contract. (Compare
City of Pasadena
v.
Estrin
(1931)
City of Vernon
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1955)
Upholding the trial court on its theory of impracticability, the Supreme Court approved an equitable adjustment between the parties: “Despite the language that the contracts are ‘terminated’ and ‘invalid,’ the effect of the judgment herein is not to determine that when performance by one party became impracticable the contracts were altogether abrogated regardless of what performances had already been rendered by either party. Such a determination would be incorrect. (See
Ogren
v.
Inner Harbor Land Co.
(1927),
Here, on remand, the trial court shall balance the benefits received and reasonably to be received by Trimont and County from the 1971 agreеment against the consideration called for in the agreement. In performing that task, the trial court shall consider, inter alia, the extent of benefits received to date by Trimont and reasonable benefits to be received in the future even in the absence of the void guarantee. If the trial court concludes that there exists a disparity between the consideration called for by the contract and benefits reasonably received or to be received, the trial court shall make an equitable adjustment by allowing title to the 50 acres of real property to remain with Trimont or by requiring Trimont to deed only a part of the 50 acres to TSD. We do not mean to suggest that any disparity between benefits and consideration necessarily exists.
V
The judgment is reversed and the permanent injunction heretofore entered is dissolved. The matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings described in part IV, above. Each side shall bear its costs of suit on appeal.
Puglia, P. J., and Blease, L, concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 24, 1983.
Notes
Although obviously interested in the outcome, cross-defendant and respondent County of Placer has filed no brief in this court; rather, it has simply joined in Trimont’s position.
The agreement provided that title would revert to the entity paying the purchase price “in the event said lands be abandoned by District оr put to a use by District other than as sewage disposal facilities. ”
We have been asked by Trimont to take judicial notice of certain enlargements of this capacity since the date of trial. However, Trimont does not suggest that any adjustments in capacity have made it possible for all who want sewage treatment within TSD to get it. Thus, as conceded by counsel at oral argument, the issues raised at trial are not moot. To the extent that Trimont’s request for taking of judicial notice asks us to litigate the matter anew in this court, we decline the invitation. (Evid. Code §§ 452, 459;
San Luis Obispo Bay Properties, Inc.
v.
Pacific Gas & Elec. Co.
(1972)
The court’s most crucial finding of fact, number 42, provides as follows: “When the 1971 Agreement was executed, the parties thereto intended that TSD’s obligation to guarantee 300,000 gpd of sewage service to Northstar under paragraph 4 of the Agreement would continue so long as Northstar needed the service. The parties intended that, upon County’s fulfillment of the condition precedent to said obligation, TSD would be required to reserve said 300,000 gpd of service for Northstar’s exclusive use, and to refrain from taking any action that would cause said 300,000 gpd of service, or any portion thereof, to be unavailable to Northstar when needed. The parties did not intend TSD’s obligation to terminate after a fixed period of time, or whеn TSD ceased to operate its own facilities for the treatment and disposal of sewage, or when a regional agency assumed the functions of treating and disposing of sewage delivered to said agency by TSD.”
Health and Safety Code section 6823 provides as follows: “The district may contract with the Federal Government of the United States or any branch thereof, or with any county, city and county, municipal corporation, district or other public corporation or with any person, firm or corporation, for the joint acquisition or construction or use of any sewer or sewers or other works or facilities for the handling, treatment or disposal of sewage or industrial waste from the district and such other area as may be designated in said contract, when in the judgment of the legislative body of said district it is for the best interests of the district so to do. Any such contract may provide for the construction and maintenance of such sewer or sewers, or such other works or facilities, and for the payment by or for the parties thereto of such proportionate part of the cost of the acquisition, construction or maintenance of such sewer or sewers or other works or facilities as may be stated in said contract, the payments to be made at such times and in such amounts as may be provided by said contract. Any such contract may provide for the joint use of any sewer or sewers, works or facilities for the handling, treatment or disposal of sewage or industrial waste upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the parties thereto, and for the flowage,
Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code.
We are not persuaded that Trimont’s guarantee is immune from attack on the ground that the legislative body of TSD must have concluded that the guarantee was in the best interest of the district when it entered in the agreement in 1971. We recognize that courts “cannot enter the board room and substitute their judgment for that of the board nor interfere at all
The only legislative history on section 6823 that we have located is the report of the Legislative Counsel, which sheds no light on our problem.
It is possible to read
Werner
as suggesting that sanitary districts do not exercise police powers. Subsequent cases have rejected that view and have held that sanitary districts owe their very existence to a delegation of portions of the police power by the Legislature. (See discussion,
post,
at pp. 347-348.) In
People
ex rel.
Younger
v.
County of El Dorado
(1971)
We are aware that rules of tort liability of a sanitary district have been held to be “analogous to the rules applicable to municipal corporations.”
(Ambrosini
v.
Alisal Sanitary Dist.
(1957)
The opinion states that “the installation of the sewage system was quite obviously an exercise of the police power of the defendant city for the public health and welfare of its residents”
(Tronslin
v.
City of Sonora, supra,
One commentator has suggested that “Sewerage and sanitary districts and authorities have only such powers as are expressly granted to them, such as are impliedly necessary to effectuate the conferred powers, and those incidental powers necessary to operate as an independent legal entity.” (3A Antieau, Local Government Law (1983) Independent Locаl Government Entities, § 30G.02, p. 30G-6; see
Youngman
v.
Nevada Irrigation Dist.
(1969)
In addition to the fact that the contract in Tronslin was executed as an incident to the extraterritorial disposal of the city’s sewage, the case is distinguishable from ours in other respects. In Tronslin, the $24 per year sewer charge was imposed on those already using the service. Moreover, there was no shortage of capacity.
See Statutes 1891, chapter CLXI, page 223. The 1891 act was repealed by Statutes 1939, chapter 1124, page 3072. (See also Stats. 1939, ch. 60, p. 616 et seq.)
As adopted October 10, 1911, article XI, section 19 provided: “Any municipal corporation may establish and operate public works for supplying its inhabitants with light, water, power, heat, transportation, telephone service or other means of communcation. Such works may be acquired by original construction or by the purchase of existing works, including their franchises, or both. Persons or corporations may establish and operate works for supplying the inhabitants with such services upon such conditions and under such regulations as the municipality may prescribe under its organic law, on condition that the municipal government shall have the right to regulate the charges thereof. A municipal corporation may furnish such services to inhabitants outside its boundaries; provided, that it shall not furnish any service to the inhabitants of any other muniсipality owning or operating works supplying the same service to such inhabitants, without the consent of such other municipality, expressed by ordinance.” (Const, of U.S. and Cal. and other documents (Cal. Sect, of State ed. 1912) p. 127.)
See discussion ante, pages 342-343.
Indeed, as we point out in part II (F),
post,
we are unaware of any case in the United States that has so held. Trimont relies on
Morrison Homes Corp.
v.
City of Pleasanton
(1976)
The powers of a sanitary district have been expressly analogized to the powers of irrigation districts. (See
Pixley
v.
Saunders
(1914)
The first sentence of paragraph 4 of the TSD-Trimont agreement provides: “Upon completion of construction of said expansion facilities, District guarantees to receive, process, treat and dispose of an average daily flow of three hundred thousand (300,000) gallons of sewage from Development.”
As we have noted (see p. 348, ante), we are unaware of any California case that has expressly considered the provision of municipal utility service to those outside the municipality in the event of shortage.
See discussion,
ante,
at pages 346-347. There is a similar suggestion in
South Pasadena
v.
Pasadena Land etc. Co.
(1908)
At trial, Dart objected to any determination of its rights as against TSD, contending that, in this litigation, Dart and TSD were not adversaries but were rather codefendants asserting a common position against Trimont. Moreover, Dart indicated that those rights were the subject of separate litigation between Dart and TSD. We view Dart’s objection as well taken. The issues at trial in the instant case focused on Trimont’s guarantee, not on Dart’s contract with TSD. We have an inadequate record on which to evaluate Dart’s contract, the way in which TSD has or has not complied with it, and any unfilled need for service by Dart, particularly in light of our dissolution of the injunction in this case. If, in fact, Dart has a problem with obtaining service from TSD, we presume the parties will reach a sensible accommodation, or, failing that, litigate the issue in an action that will supply an adequate record for review.
