City of Lamar v. City of Clarksville

863 S.W.2d 805, 314 Ark. 413, 1993 Ark. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 18, 1993
Docket92-1131
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 863 S.W.2d 805 (City of Lamar v. City of Clarksville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Lamar v. City of Clarksville, 863 S.W.2d 805, 314 Ark. 413, 1993 Ark. LEXIS 565 (Ark. 1993).

Opinion

Robert H. Dudley, Justice.

The City of Clarksville owns electric, water, and waste water utility systems and operates those utilities through the Clarksville Light and Water Commission. CL&W impounds water, produces potable water, and transmits and distributes the water to retail customers inside and outside its city limits. In addition, Clarksville sells treated water at wholesale rates to six other nearby water utility distribution systems. Those six water distribution systems, in turn, provide water to retail customers located in their respective territories. The six water distribution systems that purchase water wholesale are the six appellants, East Johnson County Water Association, Horse-head Water Users Association, Ludwig Water Users Association, and the Cities of Lamar, Coal Hill, and Hartman. Clarksville increased the rate it charges the six distribution systems for water. The sale of water to the six appellants is governed by contracts that, in the material part, provide any “increase or decrease in rates shall be based on a demonstrable increase or decrease in the costs of performance hereunder.” (Emphasis supplied.) This case primarily involves a dispute over whether Clarksville has demonstrated an increase in the costs of performance sufficient to justify a rate increase to $1.56 per thousand gallons of water.

Since the date the contracts were initially signed Clarksville has made various improvements to its water system, and, in both 1985 and 1988, increased the rates it charged the six appellants. The 1988 wholesale rates resulted in an average charge of 78 cents per thousand gallons. In 1989, Clarksville commissioned a rate study to determine the cost of water after additional improvements were constructed. The improvements were to be made with the proceeds of a proposed 1990 bond issue. After the study, in February 1990, Clarksville enacted an ordinance that raised the rates for all customers effective April 15, 1990. This new rate structure resulted in an average wholesale price to the six appellants of $1.56 per thousand gallons of water. The six appellants refused to pay this higher rate and, instead, continued to pay the previous rate of $.78 per thousand gallons.

Clarksville filed suits in circuit court against the six appellants and sought monetary judgments for the difference in the rate paid and the rate charged for water supplied after the effective date of the ordinance and, in addition, sought a declaratory judgment that the ordinance setting rates was valid. Appellants counterclaimed for alleged breaches of the contracts, and three of the appellants sought a modification of provisions in their contracts that limited the quantity of water to be supplied.

The cases were consolidated and tried to the court. The trial court’s letter opinion found that Clarksville had met the burden of showing a demonstrable increase in the cost of performance of $1.56 per thousand gallons. Consequently, the trial court gave monetary judgments against the six appellants for the difference between the old and new rates. However, the trial court did not give a declaratory judgment on the validity of the ordinance. The six appellants appeal, and Clarksville cross-appeals. We affirm the monetary judgment on direct appeal and reverse, in part, on Clarksville’s cross-appeal.

The first assignment of error by the six appellants is that the trial court erred in using the “reasonableness” standard provided in Ark. Code Ann. § 14-234-110(b)(1) (1987) to approve the rate increase. The cited statute provides that “[w]ater may be supplied to nonresident consumers at such rates as the legislative body of the municipality may deem just and reasonable.” We recently interpreted this statute in a case involving Fayetteville providing wholesale water to the Mount Olive Water Association, and we affirmed the trial court’s determination that increased rates were “just and reasonable” under the provisions of the statute. Mt. Olive Water Ass’n v. City of Fayetteville, 313 Ark. 606, 856 S.W.2d 864 (1993). However, in that case, the contract provided that Fayetteville “in its sole discretion has the right to increase or decrease the rates and charges,” and, therefore, the statutory reasonableness standard was the only standard governing the rate increase. The case at bar has the contractual standard that any “increase or decrease in rates shall be based on a demonstrable increase or decrease in the costs of performance hereunder.” Clarksville did not argue that the statutory reasonableness standard governed and does not make such an argument in this appeal. It is evident from the trial judge’s letter opinion that he was well aware the contract provisions governed because, in material parts, the letter provides:

This first issue we are concerned with is whether the increase in water rates by Clarksville is based on a demonstrable increase in the cost of production.
... I conclude that Clarksville has met the burden of showing a demonstrable increase in the cost of production.
I now consider the amount. The decision on the amount is not predicated on the credibility of witnesses since I feel they were all very knowledgeable and thorough. It is based more on what the Court considers the more proper methodology. . . .
Stated another way, I am convinced the methodology and figures produced by Clarksville are more realistic than those of the defendants. . . .
I am not going to recite all the evidence that supports Clarksville’s contention that its cost of production has increased, except to say I feel it is ample to sustain the contention a raise is justified and the average rate of $ 1.56 per thousand gallons is reasonable.

In sum, it is evident that the trial judge used the language of the contract as the standard for the rate increase, and did not use the “reasonableness” standard of the cited statute.

In several sub-arguments under this same assignment of error the appellants contend that even if the trial court attempted to use the “cost of performance” standard, it erred by using “reasonableness” standards of methodology. These sub-arguments concern various costs that the trial court allowed in determining the cost of performance. The facts leading to the sub-arguments are summarized as follows. Clarksville introduced the testimony of James Ulmer, the consulting engineer who conducted the rate study. He testified a “cash basis” rate analysis reflected a cost of $2.49 per one thousand gallons of water, and that a “utility method” of determining the cost of production, which would include a 1.5 times interest earning ratio, reflected a cost of $2.00. Clarksville also introduced the testimony of Stephen Merchant, an economist with experience in utility rate matters, who testified that Clarksville had to meet the debt service requirements imposed by the public bond markets in order to obtain financing for its waterworks improvements. The trial court found Clarksville’s figures to be “realistic” and ruled that the rate set in the ordinance, $1.56 per one thousand gallons, was based on an increase in the cost of performance.

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Bluebook (online)
863 S.W.2d 805, 314 Ark. 413, 1993 Ark. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lamar-v-city-of-clarksville-ark-1993.