Clean Water Coalition v. the M Resort, LLC

255 P.3d 247, 127 Nev. 301, 127 Nev. Adv. Rep. 24, 2011 Nev. LEXIS 24
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 2011
Docket57649
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 255 P.3d 247 (Clean Water Coalition v. the M Resort, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clean Water Coalition v. the M Resort, LLC, 255 P.3d 247, 127 Nev. 301, 127 Nev. Adv. Rep. 24, 2011 Nev. LEXIS 24 (Neb. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Hardesty, J.:

Confronting a statewide budget crisis, the Nevada Legislature, during the 2010 special session, undertook several revenue-adjustment and cost-cutting measures in an effort to balance the State’s budget, which resulted in the enactment of Assembly Bill 6 (A.B. 6), 26th Special Session (Nev. 2010). Section 18 of A.B. 6 mandates the transfer of $62 million in securities and cash from a political subdivision of the State created by interlocal agreement into the State’s general fund for the State’s unrestricted, general use.

In this appeal, we are asked to consider whether A.B. 6, section 18 violates the fundamental law of the state — the Nevada Constitution. We recognize that the Legislature is endowed with considerable lawmaking authority under Article 4, Section 1 of the Nevada Constitution. But that authority is not without some restraints. Two such restrictions are contained in Article 4, Section 20, which prohibits, among other things, local and special laws for the “assessment and collection of taxes for state . . . purposes,” and Article 4, Section 21, which requires laws to be “general and of uniform operation throughout the State” in all cases “where a general law can be made applicable.”

We conclude that A.B. 6, section 18 violates both. A.B. 6, section 18 converts $62 million collected by the Clean Water Coalition (CWC) as user fees into a tax that is contrary to Article 4, Section 20’s prohibition against local or special taxes. Because A.B. 6, section 18 applies only to the CWC, and a general law could have applied, it also violates Article 4, Section 21’s mandate that all laws shall be general and operate uniformly throughout the state in all cases where a general law can be made applicable. For those reasons, we reverse the district court’s judgment declaring A.B. 6, section 18 constitutional.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Clean Water Coalition

The Clean Water Coalition was created pursuant to an interlocal cooperative agreement among four Nevada political subdivisions, *306 all located in Clark County: the Clark County Water Reclamation District and the cities of Henderson, Las Vegas, and North Las Vegas. 1 In accordance with NRS 277.080-.180, the four members agreed to form the CWC based on their “common environmental, economic and regulatory interest in the efficient and responsible collection, treatment, reuse and discharge of municipal [e]fflu-ent.” 2 The agreement lists the CWC’s conferred functions, the first of which is to implement the Systems Conveyance and Operations Program (SCOP), which involves planning, designing, financing, constructing, operating, and maintaining a regional system to convey effluent from existing and future wastewater treatment facilities to its ultimate outfall location in the Colorado River system. The interlocal agreement recognizes that the SCOP may include physical facilities such as pipelines and real and personal property, including leases of such property, permits, and licenses. Other CWC functions include managing effluent flowing through CWC facilities and contracting to sell or lease power produced from energy recovery facilities that might be constructed.

The CWC’s powers include, among others, preparing, reviewing, approving, and implementing regional water quality plans; adopting and amending operating and capital improvement plans and budgets; financing facilities that may be needed to carry out its conferred functions, including funding all aspects of the SCOP; assessing members for their agreed share of administration, operation, maintenance, and capital costs; and establishing and adjusting regional sewer connection and user fees to defray CWC costs. Each of the CWC’s members collected sewer connection and usage fees from households and businesses, including The M Resort and other cross-appellants, in their respective localities, and then paid the CWC with the funds from the collected fees, in part to finance *307 the building of the SCOP. The CWC had been collecting the fees since approximately November 2002, 3 but by October 2010, it stopped collecting. It is unclear whether the SCOP project has been put on hold indefinitely or terminated altogether. 4

Litigation over A.B. 6, section 18

A.B. 6 was adopted and approved as part of the Legislature’s effort to balance the state’s budget during its 2010 special session. Section 18 of that bill requires the Clean Water Coalition, an entity created pursuant to interlocal agreement by the Clark County Water Reclamation District and the Cities of Henderson, Las Vegas, and North Las Vegas, to “transfer to the State of Nevada securities and cash which together total $62,000,000, for deposit in the State General Fund for unrestricted State General Fund use.” In adopting A.B. 6, section 18(1), the Legislature found and declared that:

(a) The transfer of money from the Clean Water Coalition to the State General Fund is necessary to ensure that the government of this State is able to continue to operate effectively and to serve', the residents, businesses and governmental entities of this State;
(b) The transfer of money from the Clean Water Coalition to the State General Fund will promote the general welfare of this State; and
(c) A general law cannot be made applicable to the provisions of [Section 18] because of special circumstances.

Section 18 became effective on March 12, 2010, and that same day, the CWC filed a district court complaint against the State *308 seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, challenging section 18’s constitutionality on numerous grounds, including that it violated Nevada Constitution Article 4, Section 20, prohibiting local and special laws for the assessment and collection of taxes, and Article 4, Section 21, prohibiting local and special laws where a general law can be made applicable. 5 The M Resort also filed a district court complaint against the State and the CWC, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief and damages, also based on allegations that section 18 is not constitutionally permissible legislation. 6 The two actions were consolidated, and the parties stipulated to other businesses (cross-appellants in this matter) intervening in the actions. The State answered the complaints and filed a counterclaim against the CWC, seeking a declaration that section 18 is constitutional and an order compelling the CWC to transfer the $62 million to the State’s general fund, as mandated under the bill.

Subsequently, on cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court entered an order declaring A.B. 6, section 18 constitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P.3d 247, 127 Nev. 301, 127 Nev. Adv. Rep. 24, 2011 Nev. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clean-water-coalition-v-the-m-resort-llc-nev-2011.