City of Mount Dora v. JJ's Mobile Homes, Inc.

579 So. 2d 219, 1991 Fla. App. LEXIS 3766, 1991 WL 61812
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 25, 1991
Docket90-733
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 579 So. 2d 219 (City of Mount Dora v. JJ's Mobile Homes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Mount Dora v. JJ's Mobile Homes, Inc., 579 So. 2d 219, 1991 Fla. App. LEXIS 3766, 1991 WL 61812 (Fla. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

579 So.2d 219 (1991)

CITY OF MOUNT DORA, Florida, Appellant,
v.
JJ's MOBILE HOMES, INC., Appellee.

No. 90-733.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

April 25, 1991.

*221 Sherri K. Dewitt and Houston E. Short of Graham, Clark, Pohl & Jones, Winter Park, for appellant.

Mary M. McDaniel of Minkoff & McDaniel, P.A., Tavares and Robert Q. Williams of Williams, Smith & Summers, P.A., Tavares, for appellee.

COWART, Judge.

This case involves a territorial dispute between a private utility company with certificates from the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) authorizing it to provide utilities in a certain geographical territory and a municipality which, subsequent to the acquisition by the private company of its utility franchise, annexed a portion of the private utility company's service area and claims the right to provide similar utility services in the annexed portion of the private utility company's service territory.

In 1981, a private utility company, JJ's Mobile Homes, Inc. (appellee herein, plaintiff below) obtained from the Florida PSC certificates of necessity granting the private utility company the right (franchise) to operate a water and sewer utilities system within a specified geographical territory near, but outside of, the city limits of a municipality (the City of Mount Dora, appellant herein, defendant below). In 1988, the municipality voluntarily annexed into its city limits a tract of land most of which is within the private utility company's certified service territory and by ordinance approved a land developer's proposal that the municipality serve the developer by extending the municipality's water and sewer utilities into a portion of the newly annexed area of the private utility company's certified service territory.

The private utility company, as plaintiff, filed this action against the municipality, as defendant, for a judicial determination that the private utility company had the legal right to provide water and sewer service within all the territory specified in its certificates from the Florida PSC and that the municipality did not have the legal right to provide the same utility service within the territory. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the private utility company and the municipality appeals.

We adopt the trial court's finding of uncontroverted facts, conclusions of law and results. The trial court found the following facts to be uncontroverted:

1. The Plaintiff (private company) owns and holds Florida Public Service Commission Certificates Number 298-W and 248-S granting the Plaintiff the right to operate a water and sewer utility system within a specified territory.
2. On March 5, 1981, the Florida Public Service Commission entered an order approving the issuance of the foregoing water and sewer certificates to the Plaintiffs and in said order, found that notice as required by law had been given and that the issuance of the certificates to the plaintiff was "in the public interest."
3. Pursuant to that authority, the Plaintiff owns, operates and maintains an approved water and sewer utility system within the certified territory, which utilities have been in operation since the mid-1970's.
4. The Plaintiff's certificated territory encompasses Dora Pines mobile home subdivision, together with a large parcel of currently undeveloped property. The Plaintiff's utilities currently serve the Dora Pines mobile homes subdivision, which consists of approximately one hundred *222 thirty-eight (138) water and sewer customers.
5. At the time the Plaintiff's water and sewer systems were constructed, they were designed and built for the purpose of providing water and sewer utility service to the entire certificated territory. The Plaintiff's utilities have the present ability to provide water and sewer service to the certificated territory.
6. The Plaintiff's water and sewer utilities have current operating permits from the Department of Environmental Regulation, which permits are valid through October 15, 1994. The sewer plant is currently permitted for ninety-five thousand (95,000) gallons per day, and current flows going into the plant are only about seventeen thousand (17,000) gallons per day. The plant is designed so as to be expandable up to two hundred ninety-five thousand (295,000) gallons per day.
7. Sometime in 1987, the Plaintiff learned that the Defendant was considering the voluntary annexation of a large tract of property, a significant portion of which was within the Plaintiff's certificated territory. The Plaintiff objected at that time to the City's proposed extension of its municipal utilities into the Plaintiff's certificated territory.
8. In Ordinance 467 (adopted May 3, 1988) and Ordinances 488, 489 and 490 (adopted October 3, 1989), the City voluntarily annexed a tract of contiguous property, most of which lay within the Plaintiff's certificated territory. In Ordinance 529 (adopted October 3, 1989), the City authorized a planned unit development for the annexed property and as a part of that ordinance, adopted a developer's agreement calling for water and sewer utilities to be furnished by the City to the annexed property.
9. On March 31, 1989, the Plaintiff, through its attorney, formally notified the City of its claimed right to provide water and sewer service to its certificated territory.
10. The Plaintiff is currently actually operating its water and sewer utility within its certificated territory. The Plaintiff's existing water and sewer lines extend to a point that is immediately adjacent to the annexed property making them much closer to the annexed property than the Defendant's water and sewer line.

The trial court made the following conclusions of law:

1. The Public Service Commission water and sewer certificates issued to the Plaintiff grant the Plaintiff the exclusive right to provide water and sewer utilities service to the certificated territory. This right precludes any other entity from having the right to serve the certificated area with water and sewer utilities.
2. Although municipal utility systems are not subject to regulation by the Public Service Commission as a utility, neither are municipalities given dominion over decisions of the Public Service Commission.
3. The Plaintiff's actual operation of its water and sewer utility within its certificated territory is in territory which is immediately adjacent to the Defendant. Therefore, pursuant to Section 180.06, Florida Statutes (1989), the Defendant must obtain the Plaintiff's consent before construction of water and sewer utilities within the Plaintiff's certificated area. Without that consent, the Plaintiff has the exclusive right to provide service within its certificated territory.

The trial court declared and adjudicated:

... that the water and sewer certificates issued to the Plaintiff by the Florida Public Service Commission grant the Plaintiff the right to furnish water and sewer utility service to the certificated territory as described in the certificates to the exclusion of all other utilities, including those owned by the Defendant. Accordingly, the Defendant may not extend its water and sewer utility lines into any part of the Plaintiff's certificated territory.

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Bluebook (online)
579 So. 2d 219, 1991 Fla. App. LEXIS 3766, 1991 WL 61812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mount-dora-v-jjs-mobile-homes-inc-fladistctapp-1991.