Ace Ambulance Service, Inc. v. City of Augusta

337 A.2d 661, 1975 Me. LEXIS 341
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 15, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 337 A.2d 661 (Ace Ambulance Service, Inc. v. City of Augusta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ace Ambulance Service, Inc. v. City of Augusta, 337 A.2d 661, 1975 Me. LEXIS 341 (Me. 1975).

Opinion

WEATHERBEE, Justice.

This appeal involves the dismissál of a complaint brought in Superior Court, An-droscoggin County, by the appellant, Ace Ambulance Service, Inc., against the City *662 of Augusta and the City of Gardiner, the County of Kennebec and the Southern Kennebec Valley Regional Planning Commission. We deny the appeal.

The appellant, a private ambulance service operating throughout the Southern Kennebec Valley Region (which includes the City of Augusta), alleged that the defendants

“jointly and individually plan to organize a non-profit ambulance service which will compete with plaintiff at lower prices and which will thereby cause losses to plaintiff in the form of diminution in the value of current capital investment, lost revenue and lost profits.”

The appellant in its complaint seeks (1) to have the defendants enjoined from organizing, subsidizing or in any other manner undertaking the provision of ambulance service and, (2) in the alternative, the appellant seeks compensation for deprivation of its property which it alleged would be caused by fulfillment of the defendants’ plans.

The defendant, The City of Augusta, in its answer, admitted that it is involved in plans to carry on a public ambulance service, claiming clear legislative authorization under 30 M.R.S.A. § 5105 (7), 1

The presiding Justice granted a motion to dismiss the complaint as to all the defendants except the County of Kennebec for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. M.R.C.P., Rule 12(b)(6). 2 The appellant appealed from the dismissal only as to the defendant City of Augusta.

The nature of an appeal from a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal requires a full inspection of the claims which might entitle a plaintiff-appellant to relief. The sufficiency of a complaint is measured by a standard less harsh than that applied upon the filing of a demurrer under our former practice. We have said that a complaint should not be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6)

“ ‘unless it appears to a certainty that plaintiff is entitled to no relief under any state of facts which could be proved in support of the claim.’ ” Richards v. Ellis, Me., 233 A.2d 37, 38 (1967) (quoting from 2A Moore, § 12.08) (emphasis in the original) . 3

See also Cohen v. Bowdoin, Me., 288 A.2d 106 (1972); New England Merchants National Bank v. McKinnon, Me., 307 A.2d 225 (1973); Field, McKusick and Wroth, Maine Civil Practice, Vol. I, § 12:11.

Here, as in Richards, the almost obvious issues concern broad principles of substantive law. The present complaint alleges an invasion into the field of ambulance service by a municipal corporation in competition with existing private service. The defendant City answers that it was authorized to enter this field by a statute enacted by the Legislature. Although not specifically pleaded, we find it implicit in the *663 complaint that the plaintiff disputes the constitutionality of a statute which purports to endow a municipality with such unconditional authority.

It is also discernible from the complaint, although also not specifically alleged, that the plaintiff claims, alternatively, an entitlement to money damges on the theory that the City’s entrance into the field will constitute a taking of part of the plaintiff’s existing business in the nature of eminent domain. The City does not dispute that this has been its understanding of the plaintiff’s alternative allegation.

Our problem then becomes one of the application of substantive law.

Constitutionality of the Statute

On appeal, the plaintiff urges us that the Legislature may constitutionally permit a municipality to enter this private sector in competition with existing private service only if it is determined that the existing local private service is inadequate. 4 A municipality, we are reminded, may raise and appropriate money for proper public purposes only. Laughlin v. City of Portland, 111 Me. 486, 490, 90 A. 318, 320 (1914). The defendant concedes that providing emergency ambulance service to injured and sick persons in need of immediate medical attention is a proper public service as such&emdash;but argues that under the rule established in Laughlin a particular municipality may not engage in this activity, even with statutory authorization, if the needs of its citizens are already being served adequately by private individuals. We do not so construe Laughlin.

Laughlin has long been considered definitive as to the Legislature’s authority to authorize municipalities to enter fields of endeavor already occupied by commercial enterprise. Laughlin reasoned that the authority for a municipality to raise and appropriate money is akin to the right to take private property by eminent domain and is limited by art. I, § 21 of the Maine Constitution. Public funds, the Court said, can be spent only for “public purposes” and only as “the public exigencies require it.” 111 Me. at 490, 90 A. at 320. The Legislature’s decision that the purpose for which private property is to be taken is a public use, although presumably correct, is subject to judicial review.

On the other hand, the question of determining exigency has long been considered to be a political decision for the Legislature to make, free from judicial review (unless it can be said there is no rational basis upon which exigency could be found). Hayford v. Bangor, 102 Me. 340, 343, 66 A. 731, 732 (1907); Kennebec Water District v. City of Waterville, 96 Me. 234, 52 A. 774 (1902). See also In re Bangor Hydro-Electric Company, Me., 314 A.2d 800 (1974).

We adhere to the Laughlin Court’s acceptance of the double test&emdash;that is, the necessity of the presence of both public use and exigency&emdash;based upon the analogous relationship of this situation to that of eminent domain. It is necessary to remember, however, that in authorizing a taking by eminent domain the Legislature may make a finding of public use and delegate the determination of exigency to the municipality or public-service corporation which exercises the taking authority (Roberts v. Portland Water District, 124 Me. 63, 126 A. 162 (1924)) or the Legislature may itself determine both the proper nature of the use and the exigency of the taking. Riche v. Bar Harbor Water Company, 75 Me. 91, 96 (1883); Hayford v. City of Bangor, 102 Me. 340, 66 A. 731 (1907); In re Bangor Hydro-Electric Company, Me., supra at 805.

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337 A.2d 661, 1975 Me. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ace-ambulance-service-inc-v-city-of-augusta-me-1975.