delivered the opinion of the court:
In thеse consolidated cases, plaintiffs, the villages of Jerome and Grandview, each brought an identical accounting action against defendant, the city of Springfield. The villages asked the city to account for rates it charged the villages under long-term, bulk-water-supply contracts. The city appeals from an order of the circuit court of Sangamon County granting the villages’ motions for summary judgment. At issue is the proper construction of the water-supply contracts.
In July 1971, the village of Jerome entered into a contract with the city under which the city was to supply water to Jerome for the next 40 years. Under section 2 of the contract, the city could increase or decrease the annual rate to reflect an increase or decrease in the average operation cost and the debt service for long-term funded debt. On October 8, 1974, the village of Grandview entered into a similаr contract with the city. Grandview’s contract ran until September 1, 1979, but it was to remain in effect on a year-to-year basis until one party gave notice of termination.
On December 23, 1969, the city passed an ordinance authorizing thе issuance of water revenue bonds. The bonds were issued in 1970, and the city set aside $2.25 million of the proceeds for a future water-supply reservoir, called the Lake II project. On December 17, 1974, the city passed a similar ordinance, and $9 million of the proceeds from the second bond issue were set aside for the Lake II project. The water rate the city charged the villages increased every year between 1972 and 1977. Part of this increasе was due to the debt service on the bonds issued for the Lake II project.
The city started purchasing land for the Lake II project in 1970. On December 13, 1976, however, the circuit court of Sangamon County dismissed a petition the city had filеd to condemn land for use in constructing Lake II. The court held that, because the city council had not yet authorized the construction of Lake II, there was no showing of necessity to take the land by eminent domain. On January 18, 1978, the сity council adopted a report that concluded the Lake II project could not be justified on a cost-effective basis for many years in the future. The report recommended that construction of the project be postponed, but land already acquired be retained on the assumption that Lake II would someday be built. The city also appealed the dismissal of the condemnation suit. Based upon the city council’s adoрtion of the report, the appellate court in City of Springfield v. Miller (1978),
The city earned rental and crop-sharing income from land it purchased for the Lake II project. The city credited this income to its “Waterworks Bond Construction Fund Account.” In addition, the city invested unexpended funds received from the two bond issues, and this income was also placed into the construction-fund accоunt. The city did not include any of this income in calculating the villages’ water rates under the contracts.
On May 8, 1978, Jerome filed a two-count complaint against the city. Jerome maintained that the rental, crop-sharing, and interest income received from the bond proceeds should have been credited to paying off the interest on the bond issues; therefore, the complaint alleged the city had overcharged Jerome and prayed for an accounting. Grandview filed an identical complaint on June 8,1979.
Both villages then filed motions for summary judgment. The city filed objections and its own motion for summary judgment in each case. The trial court found that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact and granted the villages’ motions for summary judgment. The court found that, under the proper construction of section 2, the villages were entitled to credit in the computation of rate increases for all income the city received from the bond proceeds. The court, therefore, ordered the city to account and to give credit to the villages by way of a refund or credit on future charges.
A preliminary issue involves appellate jurisdiction. The trial court ordered the city to account to the villages; therefore, the court must have retained jurisdiction to approve the accounting. Previously, a judgment that disposed of the rights of the parties was final and appealable, although it reserved an incidental accounting for future consideration. (Barnhart v. Barnhart (1953),
The resolution of this case depends upon the construction given to section 2 of the water-supply contracts, which allows the city to increasе or decrease the rate charged “to reflect an increase or decrease in the average operation cost, and the debt service for long term funded debt.” The issue is whether the interest, rental, and crop-sharing income should be included in calculating the “average operation cost, and the debt service for long term funded debt.”
A contract must be enforced according to its terms or not at all, and a court has no аuthority to compel the party to do something other than that which he has agreed to do in his contract. (Sweeting v. Campbell (1956),
The city asserts that the contract is unambiguous and must be enforced according to its plain meaning. The villages contend that section 2 of thе contract is ambiguous and that the parties intended to use the income from bond proceeds in calculating the water rates. The contract, however, states that two factors are to be considered in setting the annual water rate. Section 2 defines the first factor, “average operation cost”: “Said average operation cost shall be based on total gallons sold and the following items, exclusive of depreciatiоn; source of supply, purification, distribution, accounting and collecting, and general or administrative expense.” These words should be given their common and generally accepted meaning. (Crane v. Mulliken (1980),
The second factor to be considered is “debt service for long term fundеd debt.” The villages concede that, when they signed the contracts, this term meant the interest and fractional part of the principal that the city would be required to pay yearly to retire the bonds. Again, income from bond proceeds is not included in this definition. The amount or source of any income does not affect the amount of debt service or the average operation cost; therefore, no ambiguity exists.
The villages maintain that the meaning of the contracts is uncertain because the parties never considered, when the contracts were written, the possibility that the city would delay construction of Lake II. When the contracts were written, all the pаrties assumed that the city would build Lake II in the near future. The villages assert that “debt service should now be interpreted to include income earned on the bond proceeds.”
In reality, the villages are arguing that a change of сircumstances, not an ambiguity, exists. In construing a contract, however, the primary objective is to determine and give effect to the parties’ intentions at the time they entered into the contract. (Cedar Park Cemetery Assoсiation, Inc. v. Village of Calumet Park (1947),
The city’s bond ordinances offer further proof that the contracts are not ambiguous. The 1969 ordinance was in effect before the parties made еither contract. The ordinance requires the city to pay off principal and interest on the bonds from the “Bond and Interest Sinking Fund Account,” which the city is to fund from charges it makes for water sold. The ordinance also requires the сity to credit investment income from bond proceeds to the construction-fund account. This account is to fund improvements and extensions of the waterworks system; therefore, the city cannot use the investment income to рay off principal and interest on the bonds.
The villages contend that the ordinances were not made a part of the contract, and that they cannot be required to be aware of the city’s ordinances. When a muniсipal ordinance is applicable to a contract, however, it becomes by operation of law an implied term of the contract. Burns v. Regional Transportation Authority (1982),
Finally, the villages argue that the city is reaping a windfall. They assert that they must be given credit for the income on bond proceeds to avoid this inequitable result. The city, however, is not reaping any windfall. The ordinances require the city to place the income into the construction-fund account, and the city has done so. The funds in this account can only be expended for improvements and extensions of the waterworks system, including Lake II. Moreover, the city’s own residents receive no credit for income from bond proceeds when their water rates are calculated.
Even if the city does reap a windfall, the court is not authorized to construe into contrаcts provisions which are not there. (Abingdon Bank & Trust Co. v. Bulkeley (1945),
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s orders are reversed.
Reversed.
GREEN and WEBBER, JJ., concur.
