Anna M. Alfonso v. Diamondhead Fire Protection District

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 2011
Docket2012-CA-00217-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Anna M. Alfonso v. Diamondhead Fire Protection District (Anna M. Alfonso v. Diamondhead Fire Protection District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anna M. Alfonso v. Diamondhead Fire Protection District, (Mich. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2012-CA-00217-SCT

ANNA M. ALFONSO, ET AL.

v.

DIAMONDHEAD FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT, JACK CLEVELAND, EDWARD DABLER, PATRICK DESTEFANO, ELOISE KINJA, PAT KINSELLA, RUSSELL LOVE, CHARLES REDDIEN, PAUL SNEMYR, AND DICK WEBER

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/28/2011 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROGER T. CLARK COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HANCOCK COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: DAVID NEIL McCARTY OLIVER E. DIAZ, JR. WILLIAM M. KULICK ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: MICHAEL B. DICKINSON EDWARD C. TAYLOR NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/01/2013 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

WALLER, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. A group of property owners filed suit against the Diamondhead Fire Protection

District (DFPD) board of commissioners and several current and former DFPD officers,

seeking declaratory judgment that a fee charged for fire-protection services is an

impermissible tax. Finding the DFPD had authority to charge fees for services rendered, the trial court entered a judgment in favor of the DFPD. The property owners appeal, raising two

issues: (1) whether the monthly fee is an illegal tax, and (2) whether the power to tax should

be construed narrowly. We find that the trial court correctly decided that the DFPD provides

a service to the community, and therefore, the challenged fees for such services are lawful.

Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. In 1974, the Hancock County Board of Supervisors adopted a resolution creating the

DFPD. When it initially was formed, the DFPD was funded through ad valorem taxes and

contributions from the Diamondhead Property Owners Association (POA). However, in

1993, the POA stopped contributing to the DFPD. Since 1993, the DFPD has charged local

property owners a monthly fee for fire-protection services. From 1993 to 2002, the monthly

charge for individuals was $15; however, in 2002, the price increased to $20 per month.

¶3. Since 1974, the DFPD has grown tremendously. The DFPD now has two fire

departments and fifteen full-time employees. At all times, the DFPD has four experienced

firefighters on duty, including a captain and lieutenant. Half of the staff members are

nationally registered emergency medical technicians. With full-time employees, the DFPD

is responsible for payroll taxes, workers’ compensation, supplies, equipment, repairing and

maintaining equipment, providing uniforms, training, oil and gas costs, administrative costs,

and so on. According to Fire Chief Jerry Dubuisson, the DFPD responds to more than 700

calls for emergency assistance a year. The DFPD also conducts post-fire investigations,

commercial fire and life safety inspections, pre-incident plans, fire-hydrant inspections, and

public fire-and-life safety education training.

2 ¶4. On March 3, 2009, several property owners sued the DFPD and several current and

former members of the DFPD board of commissioners (collectively referred to as the DFPD).

While conceding the DFPD could charge fees for services rendered, the property owners

argued that they were not receiving a service from the DFPD and, thus, the fee was an

impermissible tax. The property owners alleged claims of negligence and extortion against

the DFPD. The property owners also filed a motion for declaratory judgment, requesting the

trial court to determine the meaning of “services rendered” under Mississippi Code Section

19-5-177(e) and declare whether the DFPD should be enjoined from collecting its fire-

protection fee. The DFPD filed a response, urging that it had authority to charge the fee for

services rendered. The DFPD also filed three affidavits to support its position from Fire

Chief Jerry Dubuisson, Ty Windham of the Mississippi State Rating Bureau, and State Farm

Agent Teri Eaton.

¶5. Dubuisson stated that, without the fees, the DFPD would have to decrease staffing to

two, full-time firefighters per shift and decrease salaries; it could not operate twenty-four

hours a day; and it possibly would close one of the fire stations. Regardless of funding,

Dubuisson opined that the DFPD would still respond to more than 700 emergency calls per

year. Dubuisson stated that a reduced staff would result in response delay times, and reduced

pay would result in a less experienced staff. Windham, superintendent of public protection

with the Mississippi Rating Bureau, stated that the DFPD’s current fire rating is Class Six.

If the DFPD reduced its staff, Windham stated the rating would fall to Class Ten, the lowest

rating available. Eaton, a State Farm insurance agent, stated “[i]n the event the Diamondhead

community[’s] fire rating were to decrease from a six to a ten, the homeowner insurance

3 premium on a $245,000 residence in the Diamondhead community would increase by

approximately $4,409 per year.”

¶6. The trial court determined that the DFPD had authority to assess fees for “services

rendered” and did not find any restrictive language regarding the term. The trial court stated

“a fire department provides services in a variety of ways other than simply putting out a fire

or filling a fire extinguisher, services for which plaintiffs maintain property owners could be

charged.” Accordingly, the trial court determined the DFPD’s charge for fire-protection

services was a fee, not a tax, and thus permissible.

¶7. The property owners filed a motion to reconsider, which the trial court denied.

Aggrieved, the property owners filed an appeal with this Court.

DISCUSSION

¶8. “This Court employs a de novo standard of review when reviewing questions of law,

including motions for declaratory judgment.” Tunica County v. Hampton Co. Nat’l Sur.,

LLC, 27 So. 3d 1128, 1131 (Miss. 2009).

¶9. The issue before this Court is whether the DFPD’s fee for fire-protection services is

based on services rendered or whether the charge amounts to an illegal tax.1

¶10. Mississippi Code Section 19-5-151 provides for the incorporation of water, sewer,

garbage and waste collection and disposal, and fire protection districts in unincorporated

areas of the state. The Legislature has given such districts explicit authority to assess fees

1 The property owners have presented two issues: (1) Whether the monthly fee is an illegal tax and (2) whether the power to tax must be narrowly construed. Because the issues are related, they will be discussed together.

4 for services rendered as a funding mechanism. See Miss. Code Ann. § 19-5-177 (1)(e) (Rev.

2012). However, the meaning of “services rendered” is an issue of first impression.

¶11. The property owners argue that they receive a service from the fire department only

if the department responds to an emergency call and that the assessed fees are really for

“anticipatory services.” However, the DFPD asserts that many day-to-day actions are

required for it to have the ability to put out fires. To conduct its fire-protection service, the

DFPD is required to maintain and repair equipment; to have certified and experienced

firefighters available on a daily basis; to provide nationally registered emergency medical

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