Charter Township v. Woodland Mobile Home Manor, Associates

413 N.W.2d 732, 163 Mich. App. 69
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 10, 1987
DocketDocket No. 90581
StatusPublished

This text of 413 N.W.2d 732 (Charter Township v. Woodland Mobile Home Manor, Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charter Township v. Woodland Mobile Home Manor, Associates, 413 N.W.2d 732, 163 Mich. App. 69 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Plaintiff appeals as of right from an opinion and order issued by the Genesee Circuit Court granting defendants a writ of mandamus, in which the court ordered plaintiff to allow defendants to connect to plaintiffs sewer system at the indirect rate in effect in May, 1981.

Defendants operate a mobile home park with approximately 611 units located on Sheridan Road in Clayton Township, Genesee County. Plaintiff maintains a sanitary sewer line installed within the right of way of Sheridan Road ending at a [71]*71point north of the mobile home park. None of the mobile homes in the mobile home park was located within two hundred feet of the sewer line. When defendants’ mobile home park was initially constructed, an internal sewer system was constructed at defendants’ expense. On October 31, 1979, plaintiff notified defendants by letter that the mobile home park must be connected to plaintiffs sanitary system within eighteen months. Defendants declined to do so on the ground that MCL 333.12753; MSA 14.15(12753) required structures to be connected to an available public sanitary sewer only if the structure sat within two hundred feet of the sewer line. However, on March 9, 1981, the Michigan Department of Public Health, Division of Community Environmental Health, issued a certificate of noncompliance to defendants because defendants were not connected to a sanitary sewer system. As a result, the Department of Commerce, Corporation and Securities Bureau, denied defendants’ pending license renewal application. Defendants bave since been operating on a' temporary permit which is annually renewable. Defendants were informed that connecting to a sanitary sewer system would be prerequisite to being fully licensed in the future.

Defendants then began negotiating with plaintiff regarding connecting to plaintiffs sewer. Recognizing that they would have to incur additional construction expenses to connect to plaintiffs’ sewer system, defendants proposed that they pay a special connection rate, which was lower than the connection rate then in effect pursuant to a Clayton Township ordinance. Plaintiff did not accept defendants’ proposal.

On May 4, 1981, at a special township board meeting, defendants presented a proposal whereby they would pay the construction expenses incurred [72]*72in making the connection, and would pay plaintiff the "indirect connection” charges. Clayton Township Ordinance 25.182, § 2 distinguished between an "indirect connection” and a "direct connection” charge in the following manner:

(a) indirect connection:
Where the premises are connected directly to a sewer, which sewer has been installed at the expense of the owner or by special assessment or at the expense of the sub-divider or developer from whom the owner purchased and not at the expense of the Township or County, then the connection charge for each user shall be $500.00 per unit for each of the first two units and $250.00 per unit for each unit thereafter per connection to the public sewer. Provided, however, that when any sanitary sewer special assessment which has been levied against a benefitted parcel shall be in excess of the direct connection charge as hereinafter set forth, then the indirect connection charge shall be reduced by the amount that such special assessment shall exceed the direct connection charge as hereinafter set forth down to no connection charge.
(b) direct connection:
In all other cases the connection charge shall be $1,200.00 per unit for each of the 1st two units per connection to the public sewer and $600.00 for each unit thereafter per connection to the public sewer.

Plaintiff rejected defendants’ proposal because plaintiff believed defendants should have to pay the higher direct connection charge. Plaintiff then initiated suit to compel defendants to connect to plaintiffs sewer system. In the meantime, on May 14, 1981, the township board held a meeting at which a motion was made to increase the direct and indirect connection charges. An amendment to the ordinance increasing the charges was subsequently adopted. The indirect charge was in[73]*73creased to $1,100 per unit for each of the first two units and $550 per unit for each subsequent unit. The new direct connection charge was $1,350 per unit for each of the first two units and $675 for each subsequent unit. The amendment became effective on December 1, 1981, after the plaintiff had begun the circuit court litigation. On December 9, 1981, defendants counterclaimed for a writ of mandamus requiring plaintiff to allow defendants to connect to the sewer.

While the litigation was pending, the parties agreed that defendants would begin the construction necessary for the sewer connection. Since defendants had already agreed to voluntarily connect to plaintiff’s sewer system the court’s only task was to decide what connection rate defendants should pay. Defendants constructed 1,250 feet of sewer line at their own expense in order to connect to plaintiff’s sewer system. On December 12, 1985, the court ruled that defendants should pay the indirect charge in effect before the amendment to the ordinance was enacted.

On appeal, plaintiff argues that the higher rates of the amended ordinance are applicable. Plaintiff is willing to allow defendants to pay the indirect charge if this Court holds that the amended rates are applicable. However, if this Court holds that the pre-amendment rates are applicable, plaintiff maintains that defendants should be forced to pay the direct charge.

MCL 333.12752; MSA 14.15(12752) states that public sanitary sewer systems are necessary for the protection of the public health, safety, and welfare:

Public sanitary sewer systems are essential to the health, safety, and welfare of the people of the state. Septic tank disposal systems are subject to [74]*74failure due to soil conditions or other reasons. Failure or potential failure of septic tank disposal systems poses a threat to the public health, safety, and welfare; presents a potential for ill health, transmission of disease, mortality, and economic blight; and constitutes a threat to the quality of surface and subsurface waters of this state. The connection to available public sanitary sewer systems at the earliest, reasonable date is a matter for the protection of the public health, safety, and welfare and necessary in the public interest which is declared as a matter of legislative determination.

MCL 333.12753; MSA 14.15(12753) provides that structures in which sanitary sewage originates must be connected to an available public sanitary sewer system. However, MCL 333.12751; MSA 14.15 (12751) defines "available sanitary sewer system” as

a public sanitary sewer sytem located in a right of way, easement, highway, street, or public way which crosses, adjoins, or abuts upon the property and passing not more than 200 feet at the nearest point from a structure in which sanitary sewage orginates.

Since no mobile home pad in the instant case sat within two hundred feet of plaintiff’s system, plaintiff could not force defendants to connect. Nevertheless, MCL 333.12758; MSA 14.15(12758) allows the owner of a structure to connect voluntarily:

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Related

Franchise Realty Interstate Corp. v. City of Detroit
118 N.W.2d 258 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1962)
Southern Cooperative Development Fund v. Driggers
527 F. Supp. 927 (M.D. Florida, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 N.W.2d 732, 163 Mich. App. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charter-township-v-woodland-mobile-home-manor-associates-michctapp-1987.