Beauty Built Construction Corp. v. City of Warren

134 N.W.2d 214, 375 Mich. 229, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 254
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1965
DocketCalendar 80-96, Docket 50,022-50,038
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 134 N.W.2d 214 (Beauty Built Construction Corp. v. City of Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beauty Built Construction Corp. v. City of Warren, 134 N.W.2d 214, 375 Mich. 229, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 254 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

T. M. Kavanagh, C. J.

This is an appeal from the Macomb county circuit court by plaintiff Beauty Built Construction Corporation. By stipulation, an order of the trial court consolidated other cases, 1 *231 each of which will be controlled by the decision in this case.

Plaintiff disputes the collection of a sewer tap fee by defendant city. The fee collected was $200 per residential'unit constructed, such fee being required prior to connection with the city of Warren sewage treatment system. Payment of the fee has been conceded by all, the parties to this controversy to be a payment under.protest. . , ,

Plaintiff-brought this action for declaratory judgment and injunctive order seeking relief against the city of Warren for money damages, allegedly resulting from a resolution adopted on January 13, 1959, by the defendant city, which provides as follows :

“Whereas, it is necessary and in the best interests of the citizens of the city of Warren that all future sewer taps, which will be utilizing and consuming the treatment facilities available in our sewage treatment plant, with the exception of structures existing of this date, be subject to a sewer tap charge hereinafter set forth:
“Now therefore, be it resolved, that all future sewer taps in the city of Warren shall be subject to the following sewer tap charge:
“Single residence ............ $200.00 each
Duplex, apartments and multiple dwellings ............ 200.00 per unit
Trailer parks .............. 200.00 per trailer unit
*232 “Commercial and industrial to be based upon size of water meter, as follows:
“5/8" meter .......................... $ 200.00
3/4" 240.00
1" .................................. 320.00
1-1/2" .............................. 480.00
2" .................................. 640.00
3" .................................. 960.00
4" .................................. 1,280.00
6" .................................. 1,920.00
8"................................... 2,550.00
10".................................. 3,200.00
“Be it further resolved, that all structures presently existing in the city of Warren that have not yet been connected to the city’s sewage facilities, are hereby excepted and will not be subject to the above rates.
“Be it further resolved, that the water department of the city of Warren and any and all other departments concerned with the enforcement hereof be and are hereby instructed to take any and all steps necessary to give immediate effect to this resolution.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The following additional facts are material to the decision in this case. The defendant city of Warren is a home-rule city incorporated in 1956. Prior to that time it had been a charter township. Warren township adopted an ordinance on May 14, 1946, under the revenue bond act of 1933 which provided for a combined system of water and sewage on a utility rate basis.

Thereafter improvements and extensions of the system were financed by the issuance of revenue bonds. Before 1959 all sewage from the sanitary system was disposed of through the facilities of the city of Detroit under contract. In 1955 the electors *233 of the then charter township of Warren approved a $15,000,000 general obligation bond issue to finance a sewage treatment plant for the charter township. This plant has been built and in operation since 1959 and is now a part of the combined water and sewer system of the city of Warren.

Outstanding bonds on this issue were then retired by the required levies of ad valorem taxes on all taxable property within the city. At the time the sewage plant was constructed it was anticipated the facility would be adequate until 1970 or for 120,000 people, but the unanticipated growth of the city indicated extensions to the plant would be required by 1964 or 1965.

In order to provide for the necessary sewage improvements, the city adopted the aforesaid resolution requiring sewer tap fees to be charged to all new buildings constructed and connecting to the system in the future.

On December 20, 1960, ordinance No 58.1 was adopted by the city of Warren amending ordinance No 58, for the purpose of having all revenues of the combined system, including sewer tap fees, accounted for in accordance with the requirements of the revenue bond act.

Under ordinance No 58.1 all revenues of the combined system, including the sewer tap fees, are first deposited in a receiving fund from which revenues are earmarked from time to time to a number of funds, the order of which is established by the revenue bond act.

Plaintiff contends ordinance No 58.1 was adopted for the ostensible purpose of bringing the revenues, acquired by reason of collection of the tap charge complained of, under the provisions of the revenue bond act. Defendant contends the adoption of or *234 dinance No 58.1 was “taken not to bring these revenues within the provisions of the revenue bond act” but’ rather “to reflect in the official minutes of council action what had already been accomplished in fact and in law by the mandatory terms of that act and previously adopted city and township ordinances.”

The trial court found that under the amending ordinance, all revenues of the combined system, including the sewer tap fees, are first deposited in a receiving fund, from which the revenues are then allocated periodically to a number of funds, and that the order of priority established by the revenue bond act was followed by the city.

Fifth in priority is the improvement fund into which fund any remaining revenues in the receiving fund, after meeting the priority requirements of the preceding funds, would be deposited. The trial court found the accounting requirements as provided for in the revenue bond act were complied with by the city of Warren.

The principal question we consider on appeal is whether the resolution of January 13, 1959, created an arbitrary and discriminatory classification of persons required to pay the sewer tap fee contrary to the equal protection clauses of article 2, § 1, Michigan Constitution (1908) and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

The pertinent portion of the resolution in controversy provides:

“Be it further resolved, that all structures presently existing in the city of Warren that have not yet been connected to the city’s sewage facilities, are hereby excepted and will not be subject to the above rates.”

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Bluebook (online)
134 N.W.2d 214, 375 Mich. 229, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beauty-built-construction-corp-v-city-of-warren-mich-1965.