586 N.E.2d 248 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1990
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *209
Plaintiff-appellant, Woodbran Realty Corporation, filed a complaint against appellee, Orange Village, Ohio ("village"), seeking a declaration of appellant's rights under R.C.
The facts material to appellee's summary judgment motion were not in dispute in the trial court. Appellant is a licensed private-public utility. It provides services to the villages of Orange, Woodmere, Pepper Pike and the city of Beachwood pursuant to a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity ("certificate") issued by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio ("PUCO"). Appellant is the only public utility currently providing sewer services in Orange Village. Since 1985, appellant has received requests for sanitary sewer service from residents and property owners in areas within the village's municipal limits where appellant's sewer lines do not currently extend. Thereafter, on July 11, 1986, appellant sent a letter to the village asking that it begin the necessary approval process for appellant to extend its sewer lines throughout the municipality to serve those residents. Appellee's law director prepared an ordinance reflecting this request for submission to the municipal legislative process.
This ordinance (known as the "Woodbran Ordinance") was introduced to the village's council in August 1986 and was promptly referred to the village planning and zoning commission pursuant to requirements of the village's charter, Section 12, Article 3. On June 9, 1987, the planning and zoning commission unanimously recommended disapproval of the Woodbran Ordinance.
The ordinance was set for consideration by council at its regular meeting in August 1987. At that meeting, the Woodbran Ordinance was removed from the council agenda and, instead, Ordinance No. 1987-52 ("Singer Ordinance") was introduced for consideration. The Singer Ordinance authorized a study of alternatives for the installation of sanitary sewers for a portion of the municipality. Council adopted the Singer Ordinance on August 18, 1987. To date, council has not formally acted on the proposed Woodbran Ordinance.
Based on the foregoing, the trial court entered final judgment for appellee on the complaint. For the following reasons, we affirm the lower court's decision.
Appellant argues the trial court erred in granting the motion for summary judgment based on the court's misinterpretation of R.C.
First, appellant argues that Section 4, Article XVIII and R.C.
Section 4, Article XVIII provides, in pertinent part, that:
"Any municipality may acquire, construct, own, lease and operate within or without its corporate limits, any public utility the product or service of which is or is to be supplied to the municipality or its inhabitants, and may contract with others for any such product or service."
The Ohio Supreme Court held that "contracting for public utility services is exclusively a municipal function under Section
"[A] company organized for the purpose of supplying the inhabitants of a municipal corporation or township with sewage disposal services may supply said services as required by suchmunicipal corporation or township for such or other purposes. Such [company] may lay conductors for conducting * * * sewage * * * through the streets, lands, alleys, and squares in such municipal corporation with the consent of the municipalauthorities or the board of township trustees under such reasonable regulations as such authorities or board prescribes." (Emphasis added.)
The wording of this statute clearly requires municipal consent before sewage lines can be extended or installed in a municipality.
Addressing appellant's first argument, the fact that the village's zoning ordinances require access to sewers for further development of some areas does not give appellant the right to install the sewers without the village's consent. Furthermore, appellant's compliance with the village's regulations imposes no obligation upon the municipality to grant its consent. We interpret the words "with the consent of the municipal authorit[y]" in R.C.
Likewise, we can find no authority to support appellant's contention that R.C.
Finally, appellant argues that the Supreme Court's holding inLucas, that a municipality has the "exclusive power to exclude a public utility from serving its inhabitants," applies only when a municipality operates its own utility. We find nothing in the holding in the Lucas case or in the language of Section 4, Article XVIII that suggests appellant's assertion. Thus, these arguments are not well taken. *213
Appellant's contention that it has standing in a representative capacity to advance an argument based on the village's zoning code is without merit. Appellant is not an association with standing to bring a legal action on behalf of its members. See F.O.P. v. Columbus (1983),
Appellant argues that the village's refusal to permit appellant to install additional lines within the village's boundaries jeopardizes appellant's ability to provide utility services to customers outside appellant's jurisdiction. Appellant contends the village's actions violate the state interest protected by R.C.
Accordingly, Assignments of Error I and II are overruled.
Appellant contends it has a property interest in its Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity and has property rights derived from well-established patterns of conduct. *214
Appellant's PUCO certificate gives appellant the legal capacity to contract with the village. Local Tel. Co. v.Cranberry Mut. Tel. Co. (1921),
Appellant also has no "property interest" as a result of any "well-established pattern" of conduct. Appellant argues that since the village consented to extensions of appellant's sewer lines in various streets in the past, it has somehow consented to all other streets in the village.
Well-established patterns or mutual understandings in the nature of an implied contract may be the basis of a property interest. Bara v. Aurora Civil Service Comm. (N.D. Ill. 1983),
In the instant case, R.C.
In conclusion, the trial court properly granted appellee's summary judgment on appellant's complaint because, as a matter of law, Section
Assignment of Error III is overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
DYKE, P.J., and ANN MCMANAMON, J., concur. *215