Batson v. Pleasant View Utility District

592 S.W.2d 578, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 27, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 592 S.W.2d 578 (Batson v. Pleasant View Utility District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Batson v. Pleasant View Utility District, 592 S.W.2d 578, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 355 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

LEWIS, Judge.

Plaintiffs filed their complaint challenging the right of defendant to unilaterally modify written contracts entered into between plaintiffs and defendant by imposing additional fees over and above those expressly stated in the contracts.

The Chancellor entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs from which the defendant has appealed.

The plaintiffs are land developers of residential subdivisions within the defendant utility district. They contracted with the defendant to construct and install water lines and appurtenances in the subdivisions they were developing. In exchange, the defendant agreed to assume full responsibility for the operation of the system to furnish water at standard rates to residents in the developments and, at the end of a one-year warranty period, to maintain the lines and appurtenances.

*580 Above the requirement of installation at contractors’ cost and the assumption of maintenance and service performance by the defendant, the contracts contained an additional requirement of a meter deposit to be paid to the defendant for each meter installed.

When a majority of the waterlines had been constructed and thereafter accepted by the defendant, the defendant added a water service fee of $500.00 per residence. The fee applied to all new residential installations and all lots in existing subdivisions that were not presently using water.

At trial, the defendant contended that it had the right to make such additional charges as were necessary to insure its financial stability. At that time the defendant legitimately required additional funding to meet obligations to its bond holders.

The plaintiffs contended that the additional “tapping fee” was in violation of their contractual obligations with the utility district.

The Chancellor determined the issue below to be whether or not the contract prohibited the defendant from assessing a water service fee on plaintiffs.

The Chancellor found:

The “water service fee” as per the Stipulation is a tapping fee “chargeable only upon new residential installation of water service connections”. Further the Stipulation states that “it is charged only upon new installations” and “the tapping fee is imposed for the purpose of providing funds for expansion of the system and providing funds for the payment upon the system’s bonded indebtedness.” It follows from a reading of the Stipulation that all new water service connections are to pay the water service fee; that it is imposed on new installations and provides funds for the expansion of the system.
Thus, in general, the purpose of the water service fee was accomplished by the contractors upon the installation of their systems. The contracts between Plaintiff contractors and the Defendant Utility District spell out in succinct language, accompanied by technical drawings, that the contractors are to install all necessary pipes, connections, valves, bends, tees, blocks, etc. The manner of installation, subject to inspection, was also made a part of these contracts. The meters were to be installed at the contractors’ cost. After the installation and inspections were completed the ownership of these water systems was then to be transferred to the Pleasant View Utility District. Then and thereafter if a deposit was made for the individual meter the water would be delivered to the customer by the Utility District.
This Court is of the opinion that the effect of these contracts was that the subdivision contractors were to build extensions onto the Pleasant View Utility District’s water system; and after the completion of the same and delivery of ownership to the Utility District, the Utility District would then furnish water through the individual meters of these contractor-added service lines. The Plaintiffs, in effect, had paid all the costs for their lines that the “water service fee” was imposed to cover.

The defendant has assigned two (2) errors on appeal:

1. The learned Chancellor erred in construing the contracts between Appellant District and Appellee Contractors as precluding Appellant from requiring payment by Appellees of tapping fees adopted to be uniformly charged to all customers desiring to tap onto Appellant’s main to bring water onto lots not previously purchasing water from Appellant.
2. The learned Chancellor erred, in view of the financial condition of the District, in failing to hold, that, under the financial situation in which it found itself, that the contract was subject to the pre-existing power and obligation of the Appellant District’s Commissioners to fix and change rates in accordance with the dictates of their discretion and to charge such rates and charges to all customers in order to discharge Appellant District’s obligations to its Bond holders.

*581 Pursuant to T.C.A. § 27-303, cases tried in a court of record, without the intervention of a jury, come to this Court where the hearing of any issue of fact or of law shall be de novo upon the record of the trial court, accompanied by a presumption of correctness unless the preponderance of the evidence dictates otherwise.

The facts of this case raise two basic issues:

1. whether or not the terms of the contracts preclude the imposition of additional “tapping on” fees; and,
2. whether or not, despite the contractual terms, the Pleasant View Utility District has the power to unilaterally impose additional fees on the developers.

The contracts in this cause are complex, involving numerous documents and technical requirements. By clause 5 of the contracts proper, “CONTRACT RESIDENTIAL”, the “PLEASANT VIEW UTILITY DISTRICT STATEMENT OF POLICY-RESIDENTIAL” attached thereto is incorporated by reference:

5. After determining that all pipe and other materials as well as workmanship meets all the requirements set forth in the engineers specification and, the Districts Statement of Policy, the second party agrees to assume responsibility for the operation of the new system, and at the end of the one-year warranty, will assume responsibility for the maintenance of lines and appurtenances covered by this agreement.

The Statement of Policy contains the following:

A. The District agrees that developers may tap or connect to existing waterlines and receive water service at the point or points where connections are made.

Further:

Prior to receiving service through an individual meter, a deposit shall be made to Pleasant View Utility District in an amount in accordance with meter deposit rates in effect at that time.

Defendant recognizes the distinction between a tapping fee and a meter deposit. In its brief, defendant notes:

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Bluebook (online)
592 S.W.2d 578, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batson-v-pleasant-view-utility-district-tennctapp-1979.