Board of Supervisors v. Broyhill

79 S.E.2d 666, 195 Va. 603, 1954 Va. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 25, 1954
DocketRecord No. 4167
StatusPublished

This text of 79 S.E.2d 666 (Board of Supervisors v. Broyhill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors v. Broyhill, 79 S.E.2d 666, 195 Va. 603, 1954 Va. LEXIS 139 (Va. 1954).

Opinion

Whittle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Board of Supervisors of Fairfax County, hereinafter called the Board, filed a petition against M. T. Broyhill,' et al., hereinafter called Broyhill, for a declaratory judgment, pursuant to sections 8-578 to 8-585, inclusive, Code of 1950, praying that the court decree a certain sewer system, claimed by Broyhill, to be the property of the Board. A demurrer filed to the original petition was sustained and the Board was permitted to file an amended petition. From a decree dismissing this petition and adjudicating the sewer system to be the property of Broyhill, we granted an appeal.

In the amended petition it was alleged that under the provisions of section 1560m, Code of 1942, the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, on April 23, 1943, created Sanitary District No. 1 in said county; that pursuant to the provisions of this Act as amended (especially by Chapter 15, Acts of 1942) the Board, on April 18, 1945, enacted an ordinance setting forth the rules and regulations governing sewerage facilities in the sanitary districts in Fairfax County, said ordinance becoming effective May 5, 1945; that section V. A. 5 of the ordinance provides:

“Any person contemplating the construction of such sewerage works shall, at the time of submitting the plans, specifications and contract documents therefor, agree by a written contract approved by the Attorney for the Commonwealth, that if such plans, specifications and contract documents are approved, that upon the completion of the construction of such sewerage works and the approval thereof by the Sanitary Engineer the sewerage works so constructed will become the property of the Board and will thereafter be subject to all of the regulations concerning the facilities of the District as approved by the Board.”

[605]*605Further, the material allegations of the amended petition are that in 1942 the Federal government constructed sewerage facilities to serve that portion of Fairfax County now constituting Sanitary District No. 1; that the county at first leased this system from the Federal government and later issued bonds in the sum of $3,000,000 for the purpose of purchasing the system and constructing a sewage treatment plant, the system being purchased by the Board on December 5, 1950, since which time the county has operated the sewerage facilities; that Broyhill, owners of the subdivision known as Broyhill Park, dedicated the same as a subdivision, and on May 16, 1950, applied to the Sanitary Engineer of Fairfax County for permission to construct a sewerage system in Broyhill Park, which application was approved on June 2, 1950; whereupon Broyhill constructed the system and connected it to the system owned and operated by the Board, which construction was completed on December 18, 1950, and approved by the Sanitary Engineer on December 19, 1950.

It is further alleged that Broyhill Park sewerage system is governed by the ordinance of April 18, 1945; that Broyhill failed to sign a contract “as expressly required in the aforesaid Section V. A. 5 of the ordinance”, but that the said sewerage system became the property of the Board upon the completion thereof and upon approval by the said Sanitary Engineer; that an implied contract arose by the operation of said Section V. A. 5 whereby the Board became “irrevocably obligated”, after approval of the system and its connection to the county system, to dispose of the sewage of Broyhill Park through its system in return “for the obligation” of Broyhill to sign a written contract conveying to the Board “title to the said sewerage works”; that the signing of the written contract by Broyhill was not a prerequisite to the formation of the said implied contract but was instead the obligation and duty of Broyhill under the implied contract; that under this obligation it was the duty of Broyhill and not the Board to provide the impetus [606]*606for the signing of the contract; that the Board has fully carried out its obligation by disposing of the sewage from said subdivision; that Broyhill has benefited by having this sewage disposed of by the Board; that no consideration for this benefit has ever passed from Broyhill to the Board; and that Broyhill has never signed the written contract contemplated by the ordinance conveying title to the Board; that although Broyhill has been made aware of the position of the Board that title to the system is in the Board, Broyhill since said awareness has never asked the Board to discontinue its service but has continued to enjoy the benefit thereof; that Broyhill is charged with constructive knowledge of the terms of Section V. A. 5 of the ordinance; that having received the benefits from the system Broyhill is estopped from asserting lack of actual knowledge as a defense, and is, further estopped from asserting “that no implied contract exists”; that Broyhill has made numerous applications to the Board for sewerage service and individual connections to the system; that each application contained the following commitment, to-wit: “I agree to observe and comply with all ordinances and rules and regulations adopted by the said Board concerning the service rendered by the sewerage facilities of the District”; that the signing of said applications by Broyhill “was an express agreement on their part to abide by the provisions of the said Section V. A. 5”; that Broyhill on at least one occasion acknowledged the exclusive control of the sewerage system to be in the Board in that they requested that a certain dispute between Broyhill and the Sanitary Engineer be settled by the Board as ultimate authority; further, it is alleged that there had been an effective dedication of the system to the Board, duly accepted.

It is further alleged that Broyhill attempted to collect from Robert E. Stafford, Inc. et al., owners of a subdivision known as “Slade’s Addition to Broyhill Park”, a sum of money for the privilege of connecting their system to the Broyhill sewerage system. The right of Broyhill to make [607]*607such demand was challenged by the Board. (This demand on the part of Broyhill admittedly precipitated the present controversy.)

The prayer of the petition concludes: “Your petitioner prays that said judgment declare that the said Board of Supervisors of Fairfax County have been the sole owners with exclusive right of control of the said sewerage system of Broyhill Park * * * since the date of the said completion and the approval of December 19, 1950.”

A demurrer was filed to the amended petition alleging that the ordinance as a whole, and especially Section V. A. 5 thereof, was invalid. The demurrer was overruled and Broyhill was allowed time in which to file their answer.

The answer denied most of the allegations in the petition and called for strict proof thereof; it denied that title to the sewerage system had ever been in the Board; it denied the validity of Section V. A. 5 of the ordinance; it denied the allegations in the petition to the effect that by virtue of the connection of their system to that of the Board there was an effective dedication and passage of title of said system to the Board or that there had been an acceptance of such dedication by the petitioner.

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79 S.E.2d 666, 195 Va. 603, 1954 Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-v-broyhill-va-1954.