Brown v. City of Eugene

279 P.3d 298, 250 Or. App. 132, 2012 WL 1712149, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 626
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 16, 2012
Docket161009774; A147405
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 279 P.3d 298 (Brown v. City of Eugene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. City of Eugene, 279 P.3d 298, 250 Or. App. 132, 2012 WL 1712149, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 626 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

This case arose when the Eugene Water and Electric Board (EWEB) sought judicial validation of a contract under which it agreed to sell water to the City of Veneta. Other interested parties intervened in that validation proceeding, including the City of Eugene. Intervenors argued that EWEB lacked authority to enter into the contract because, under the Eugene Charter, “extension of water service” is subject to control by the Eugene City Council, which has not approved the sale at issue. The trial court entered a judgment validating the contract. Intervenors appeal, renewing the argument that the water sale described in the contract constitutes an “extension of water service” and, accordingly, requires the city council’s approval. We affirm.

The facts are neither disputed nor extensive. EWEB and the City of Veneta entered into the contract in question in April 2010. The contract requires the City of Veneta to purchase “an estimated 150 million gallons per year to serve its customers.” It characterizes the water to be sold as “surplus water” and the sale as “wholesale,” and it specifies that EWEB will not directly provide service to customers in Veneta. The contract identifies a “point of delivery” just inside the Eugene city limits; it contemplates that EWEB will construct a transmission line from its existing water system to that point and that the City of Veneta will construct a line from there to its own water system. Section 3.3 of the contract provides, “Except as allowed by applicable statutes, administrative rules, and land use regulations, Veneta will not sell, allow unmetered water use (except for emergency events) or dispose of any of the Surplus Water purchased under this agreement outside of its Direct Service Territory.”

EWEB is not required to perform its contractual obligations until it obtains validation of the contract. ORS 33.710(2) provides that a governing body “may commence a proceeding in the circuit court * * * for the purpose of having a judicial examination and judgment of the court as to the regularity and legality of* * * [t]he authorization of any contract and as to the validity of the contract * * *.” Accordingly, EWEB petitioned for validation of the contract under that [135]*135statute. The trial court granted motions to intervene by the City of Eugene and by the LandWatch intervenors.1

All intervenors moved for summary judgment, arguing that the proposed sale would violate the Eugene Charter and the Eugene Code. In essence, intervenors argued that both sources of authority provide that the decision to approve the sale of water rests with the city council, not with EWEB. EWEB also moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Eugene Charter grants it full authority over the water utility, subject only to the city council’s control over “extension of water service,” which, according to EWEB, does not include wholesale sales like the one at issue in this case.

The trial court agreed with EWEB. It denied inter-venors’ summary judgment motions, granted EWEB’s, and entered a judgment validating the contract.

On appeal, the parties renew their arguments regarding the extent to which the Eugene Charter reserves to the city council authority over water sales.2 The parties’ dispute centers on section 44(3) of the charter, which states:

“The board [EWEB] shall maintain and operate the water utility and the electric utility of the city, subject to control by the council of extension of water service.”

EWEB contends that “water service” refers only to EWEB’s direct provision of water to the ultimate users. Because the contract states that EWEB will sell water wholesale to the City of Veneta, which will in turn distribute the water to end [136]*136users through its own system, EWEB contends that the contract does not call for an “extension of water service” by EWEB and therefore does not require the city council’s approval.

In their responses, intervenors frame their arguments slightly differently. The City of Eugene appears to accept EWEB’s assertion that “service” is limited to service provided by EWEB, but it contends that delivery of water wholesale to another distributor constitutes “water service.” In its view, the City of Veneta is just another customer to which EWEB would provide water service, albeit at the wholesale level. As we understand the LandWatch interven-ors’ argument, their view is that an “extension of water service” includes any provision of water from EWEB’s water system to new users, regardless of what entity actually distributes the water to the users. The arguments do not differ fundamentally; they both depend on the notion that the term “water service” is broad enough to encompass the wholesale provision of water to another entity, regardless of what entity distributes that water to end users.

The parties’ arguments turn on the meaning of Eugene Charter section 44(3), which was referred to the voters of Eugene by the city council and adopted in 1976. “A city’s charter is, in effect, the city constitution.” Portland Police Assn v. Civil Service Board, 292 Or 433, 440, 639 P2d 619 (1982). We interpret city charter provisions “by the same means as other legislation, including attention to the meaning intended by those who adopted it if that can be ascertained.” DeFazio v. WPPSS, 296 Or 550, 569, 679 P2d 1316 (1984). Because the charter provision was adopted by the voters, “[o]ur task is to discern what the voters intended * * *, which we derive by first looking to the text and context of the provision, taking into account any history of the measure that illuminates the voters’ intent.” Burke v. DLCD, 241 Or App 658, 665, 251 P3d 796, rev allowed, 350 Or 532 (2011) (applying those principles to construction of a statute enacted by legislative referral); see also Stranahan v. Fred Meyer, Inc., 331 Or 38, 56-57, 11 P3d 228 (2000) (applying the same principles to a constitutional amendment enacted by referendum); Ecumenical Ministries v. Oregon State Lottery Comm., 318 Or 551, 559 n 7, 871 P2d 106 (1994) (noting that [137]*137“caution is required in ending the analysis before considering the history of an initiated constitutional provision”).

As noted earlier, section 44(3) of the Eugene Charter states:

“The board shall maintain and operate the water utility and the electric utility of the city, subject to control by the council of extension of water service.”

The provision begins by granting EWEB complete authority to “maintain and operate the water utility * * * of the city,” but it then carves out a portion of that authority — control over the extension of water service — and gives it to the city council. Accordingly, control of wholesale water sales lies with EWEB unless those sales constitute “extension of water service,” a phrase that the charter does not define. The parties do not dispute the meaning of “extension”. — all agree that it means enlargement or expansion — rather, their disagreement centers on the meaning of “water service.”

Although we often turn to the dictionary when attempting to discern the ordinary meaning of terms in statutes and other laws, the dictionary provides little help in this case, as it includes definitions of “service” that lend at least some support to both parties’ arguments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P.3d 298, 250 Or. App. 132, 2012 WL 1712149, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-city-of-eugene-orctapp-2012.