Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust v. Town of Proctor

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 30, 2014
Docket2014-126
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust v. Town of Proctor (Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust v. Town of Proctor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust v. Town of Proctor, (Vt. 2014).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2014-126

SEPTEMBER TERM, 2014

Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Rutland Unit, v. } Civil Division } } Town of Proctor } DOCKET NO. 216-3-13 Rdcv

Trial Judge: William D. Cohen

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Plaintiffs Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust (Jones) appeal the superior court’s summary judgment ruling in favor of defendant Town of Proctor (Town) with respect to Jones’ complaint seeking damages based on the Town’s allegedly inequitable water and sewer billing system. We affirm.

Jones owns a house in the Town of Proctor separated into five units. In March 2013, he filed a complaint alleging that the Town’s system of charging for water and sewer per living unit rather than by usage was inherently unfair. He alleged that on December 1, 2011, he installed a water meter at his building and discovered after a year of metering that he had paid $2765 more during that year than what he should have paid, taking into account the total town water usage and the total amount billed to property owners for costs associated with water and sewer usage. Applying this method over the thirty-five-year period during which he owned the building, he estimated that the Town had overbilled him by over $102,000. He requested a jury trial to set damages.

The Town filed an answer and a motion to dismiss, stating that its water and sewer rates conformed to the requirements of Vermont statutes and were equitable, reasonable, and non- discriminatory. The Town further stated that its rates were based on a system of equivalent users operating from a baseline established under a Department of Environmental Conservation water- supply rule, and that the rates are calculated by dividing the estimated total cost of the services by the number of equivalent users, with large users being charged multiple equivalent-user fees according to estimated usage. Jones responded that a flat-rate system was not per se inequitable, but that the Town’s method of equating all residences and commercial businesses was inequitable and discriminatory against owners of apartment buildings and small houses. The superior court denied the motion to dismiss as premature, stating that the parties should file summary judgment motions with accompanying statements of undisputed material facts to aid the court in determining whether Jones had any legally recognized claim.

The parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In his motion for summary judgment, Jones reiterated his belief that the Town’s method for billing water and sewer was inequitable and discriminatory because a small apartment unit was not an equivalent user when compared to a large residence. In his accompanying statement of undisputed material facts, he stated, among other things, that: (1) under the Town’s flat-billing system an efficiency apartment is an equivalent user to a Proctor mansion containing multiple bedrooms and bathrooms; (2) there are no laundry facilities in his apartment building; (3) the water meter installed on his property indicated that he used 92,870 gallons of water between December 1, 2011 and November 30, 2012; (4) based on information from the Town that it charged property owners $375,000 the previous year to pay for the 140,525,000 gallons used, the average user paid $267 for water and $287 for sewer per 100,000 gallons, and yet the Town charged him $3420 for using only 92,870 gallons; and (5) under the Town’s rate system, approximately 17% of the housing-related expenses of his efficiency apartment go toward water and sewer charges, while the Proctor mansion’s water and sewer bills amount to less than 4% of its property taxes.

The Town opposed Jones’ motion, arguing that his alleged facts, even if presumed to be true, did not support his claim that the Town’s water and sewer billing system was inequitable or unlawful. The Town further argued that his alleged facts were not substantiated as required by Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c)(1), which states that a party asserting a genuinely disputed material fact must support the assertion by filing a separate and concise statement of disputed facts “with specific citations to particular parts of materials in the record, including depositions, documents, electronically stored information, affidavits, stipulations . . . , admissions, interrogatory answers, or other materials.” Along with its opposition to Jones’ motion for summary judgment, the Town filed its own motion for summary judgment accompanied by an affidavit from the town administrator. The motion and affidavit stated, among other things, that: (1) the Town’s rate system is expressly permitted by statutory law, particularly 24 V.S.A. § 3615(2); (2) the rates are calculated by dividing the estimated total cost of services by the total number of equivalent users, with large users charged multiple equivalent- user fees according to the estimated flows in the Department of Environmental Conservation water-supply rule; (3) an equivalent user, the base and minimum unit under the Town’s water and sewer ordinance, is a “dwelling unit,” defined as a building or entirely self-contained portion of a building that includes complete housekeeping facilities for one family; (4) rates are not determined by the size of the dwelling unit; (5) an equivalent unit is not the same thing as a connection insofar as a single connection can serve multiple dwellings; and (6) the Town has determined, as permitted under § 3615(2), that no user will be billed less than the minimum charge determined for a single-family dwelling unit; and (7) on May 19, 2009, the town voters rejected a proposal to install meters to determine water and sewer usage and rates.

In response to the parties’ motions, the superior court issued a decision denying Jones’ motion and granting the Town’s motion. The court ruled that Jones failed to present affidavits or other supporting materials to sustain his burden of demonstrating that the Town’s water and sewer rates were unreasonable. The court stated that Jones had relied only upon bald statements and extreme hypotheticals to support his claims, and that it was not inherently unreasonable for the Town to base water and sewer rates on the number of dwelling units located on a property, even if those dwelling units are efficiency apartments. Jones filed a motion under Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 59 asking the court to accept new evidence—specifically his affidavit and some lister cards—in support of his contention that the Town’s water and sewer rates are inequitable and discriminatory. The court denied the motion

Jones appeals, arguing that the Town’s rate system is inequitable and discriminatory in that it treats as equivalent users all dwelling units regardless of their size, number of fixtures, 2 number of bedrooms, or potential water usage. We treat his argument as based on the governing statute because he has not explicitly asserted a constitutional claim. We also note that he sought damages rather than injunctive relief, although he has not indicated any legal basis entitling him to a damage award. Jones acknowledges that his inexperience as a pro se litigant may have led to procedural errors fatal to his case, but asks this Court to rectify what he perceives as a clear injustice. He points out that he attempted to file an affidavit and lister cards as additional evidence in his post-trial motion, but the court did not allow him to do so. He also states that an affidavit may not have been necessary in this case because there are disputed facts at issue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Shenandoah LLC
2011 VT 68 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2011)
Handy v. City of Rutland
598 A.2d 114 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1991)
Robes v. Town of Hartford
636 A.2d 342 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Bryan E. Jones and Bryan E. Jones Trust v. Town of Proctor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-e-jones-and-bryan-e-jones-trust-v-town-of-proctor-vt-2014.