Bodine v. Osage County Rural Water District 7

949 P.2d 1104, 263 Kan. 418, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 12, 1997
Docket77,867
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 949 P.2d 1104 (Bodine v. Osage County Rural Water District 7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bodine v. Osage County Rural Water District 7, 949 P.2d 1104, 263 Kan. 418, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 164 (kan 1997).

Opinion

*419 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

The plaintiff, Marvin Bodine, is a resident ratepayer within Osage County Rural Water District # 7 (RWD). He sued RWD in a class action for improper water rates, alleging seven different claims. RWD purchases its water from the City of Osage City (City). RWD joined the City as a third-party defendant for indemnification purposes, should Bodine prevail in his action against RWD. The trial court granted summary judgment against Bodine and in favor of RWD. The trial court also dismissed RWD’s claims against the City as moot.

In reading the facts, it should be kept in mind that Bodine’s suit is against RWD only and Bodine concedes RWD’s rates are reasonable when compared to RWD’s expenses, or when compared to what other rural water districts charge. Oversimplified, the dis-positive issue in this case is Bodine’s contention that RWD is paying more money to the City than RWD is contractually obligated to pay.

RWD was formed in 1967 to provide water at a reasonable rate. Bodine was one of the founders of RWD and was a member of the board of directors from January 15, 1968, through February 26, 1980. In 1972, while Bodine was on the board, RWD entered into the contract at issue with the City, whereby the City agreed to sell treated water to RWD for a specified price. This contract provides in pertinent part:

“1. SALE OF WATER: The City agrees to sell to the District at the point of delivery hereinafter specified, during the term of this agreement or any renewal or extension thereof, potable treated water meeting applicable purity standards of the Kansas State Board of Health in such quantity as may be required by the District.
“2. TERM OF AGREEMENT: This agreement shall extend for a term of forty (40) years from the date of the initial delivery of any water to the District as evidenced by the daté of the first statement submitted by the City to the District, and, thereafter may be renewed or extended for such term or terms, as may be mutually agreed upon by the City and District.
“8. WATER RATES: The District agrees to pay to the City, subject to the provisions of Paragraph 7 above, for water delivered in accordance with the following schedule of rates: *420 a. Fifty cents (500) per one thousand (1,000) gallons, which amount shall be the minimum rate per month, or a yearly minimum sum of eight thousand dollars ($8,000), whichever shall be highest. The yearly minimum rate shall commence January 1, 1974.
b. If the City of Osage City is forced to take raw water from the Melvem Reservonas its source of supply due to extended drought or other conditions beyond its control, then the rate shall increase to sixty-six cents (660) per one thousand gallons, which amount shall also be the minimum rate per month, or a yearly minimum sum of $10,500.00, whichever shall be highest. The yearly minimum rate shall commence January 1,1974.
c. In the event unforseen costs arise in the production of treated water and the City is forced to increase water rates to all customers served, the rural water district base rate in effect will be increased by the same percentage points as charged to all other customers.
d. In the event the City shall at any time exceed a withdrawal from Melvem Reservoir of five hundred (500) acre feet now contracted for, and be required to purchase increased storage, the District will be required to pinchase the additional storage to meet its requirements from the same source.”

During the term of the Agreement, the following rate increases were imposed by the City and charged to the District:

Date Charge Per 1,000 Gallons
1972 $ .50
1978 $ .85
July 1981 $1.19
Sept. 1985 $1.94
Sept. 1989 $2.23

There were other rate increases which occurred on dates between the rate increases cited above. However, these rate increases cited above are the only rate increases which Bodine cites in his petition and in his motion for summary judgment.

Each of these rate increases was charged to RWD by the City, and RWD passed the rate increases on to the resident ratepayers. At the time these rate increases became effective, the City did not offer any evidence that it was “forced” to withdraw water from Melvem Reservoir, or that “unforeseen” costs arose in the production of treated water, or that the rate increase was equal in *421 percentage to a rate increase also imposed on City residents. However, water was taken from the reservoir and city rates were increased. According to Bodine, the City customers were not charged increased rates equivalent in percentage to some of the increased rates charged to RWD.

Bodine’s expert, Mike Butler, reviewed the water rate increases charged by the City to RWD and passed through RWD to its resident ratepayers. He drew the following conclusions about the rates:

“In conclusion, we feel that the District’s water rate is fair based on their expenditures. The $15.00 monthly debt charge is appropriate and the $4.10 per 1,000 gal. charge for water is about ten percent higher than the actual cost. However, we do believe that the rate charged for water by Osage City is totally unfair and this then is being passed on to the patrons of the District in the form of higher water costs.”

Butler also concluded that RWD paid its pro rata share of the City’s actual cost of water production and its share of any increases in the cost of water production, whether such increases were foreseeable. However, according to Butler, RWD also paid, over the life of the contract, some $400,000 beyond the cost of water production, based on the rates the City charged it.

Based on the rate increases from the City, which RWD passed on to its resident ratepayers, Bodine filed a class action petition on behalf of all of. the RWD residents against RWD. Under Count I, Bodine claims that RWD lacks the statutory and contractual authority to pay an amount to the City in excess of the contractual amount due under the Agreement and to pass these extra charges onto the residents of RWD. Under Count II, Bodine claims .that an implied contract to pay for private property exists among RWD, the City, and himself, and that RWD breached this contract because it took Bodine’s property by charging excessive rates, but gave no benefit to him in return. Under Count III, Bodine alleges that the water rates charged by RWD and paid to the City in excess of the water production costs are an illegal tax imposed upon nonresidents of the City. Under Count IV, Bodine claims that the excessive water rates should be struck down because they bear no rational or reasonable relationship to the contractual agreement or *422 the cost of producing water.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
949 P.2d 1104, 263 Kan. 418, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodine-v-osage-county-rural-water-district-7-kan-1997.