Cosentino v. City of Omaha

183 N.W.2d 475, 186 Neb. 407, 1971 Neb. LEXIS 714
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1971
Docket37623
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 183 N.W.2d 475 (Cosentino v. City of Omaha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cosentino v. City of Omaha, 183 N.W.2d 475, 186 Neb. 407, 1971 Neb. LEXIS 714 (Neb. 1971).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Plaintiffs taxpayers attacked agreements concerning *408 treatment of packinghouse waste in a facility financed by bonds of a private nonprofit corporation. Income to pay the bonds was to be received from the City of Omaha as lessee under a lease-purchase agreement. After trial the district court dismissed plaintiffs’ petition. Plaintiffs appeal. They contend that the city (1) granted an invalid franchise, (2) unconstitutionally lent its credit to a private corporation, and (3) failed to comply with statutory requirements relating to competitive bidding.

BACKGROUND

Packinghouses and other industries in Omaha historically discharged raw waste through city sewers into the Missouri River. The method, everyone once thought, was efficient, economical, and beneficial to all.

In 1957 federal authorities cited Omaha for permitting uncontrolled discharge of raw domestic and industrial wastes through city sewers into the river. They held hearings in 1957, 1964, 1966, and 1967. Omaha constructed interceptor sewer systems and the Missouri River Sewage Treatment Plant. The south half of the plant, designed to treat packinghouse and other wastes, was inoperable because it could not process paunch manure.

Paunch manure is the solid materials retained in the first stomach of cattle and sheep. From the Omaha sewers it came mixed with street washings, storm drainage, and other industrial, animal, and human wastes. Engineers in 1964 reported: “. . . paunch manure ... is a mean and nasty material .... Nowhere are successful processes in operation for disposing of this material in urban areas except . . . land fill. . . .” The city rejected the landfill method because of insufficient land and high moisture content of paunch manure. Solution of the problem would be clearly pioneer.

Some in-plant method of substantial treatment of paunch manure had been recommended. Such treatment at a central facility prior to mixture with other wastes in interceptor sewers won approval in 1964 for several reasons. First, packinghouse capital was inade *409 quate. Second, central treatment represented overall economy. Third, it obviated important objections to in-plant methods.: Difficulties of (1) the city monitoring in-plant units and (2) one malfunctioning in-plant unit forcing a shutdown and bypass of the south half of the Missouri River Sewage Treatment Plant.

The city authorities decided to use a new process patented by Charles Greenfield. He intended not only to process paunch manure satisfactorily but also to recover animal fat which would become marketable animal feed. He testified that this phase of recycling would be profitable. His process was operating on a small scale at several places. Essential variables of the process were within his proprietary knowledge so that its successful operation would require application of that knowledge.

Defendant Carver-Greenfield Corporation held exclusive rights to license patents on the process. It organized a wholly owned subsidiary, defendant Carver-Greenfield Omaha, Inc. Defendant Omaha Pollution Control Corporation was organized as a Nebraska private nonprofit corporation. Its articles of incorporation were not amendable to the extent that they stated a corporate purpose to give the treatment facility to the city after payment of indebtedness.

THE AGREEMENTS

The agreements were made in September 1967. Carver-Greenfield granted Carver-Greenfield Omaha and Pollution Control a royalty free license to process packinghouse wastes through the project. Carver-Greenfield Omaha was to pay royalties on sales of recovered materials, but Carver-Greenfield agreed to subordinate royalties to operational fees and expenses.

The city agreed upon operation of the facility by Carver-Greenfield Omaha for a semiannual fee of $50,000 payable out of revenue from the operation. The term was 10 years renewable for 10 years at the option of the city.

Under the lease-purchase agreement Pollution Control *410 was to purchase land and construct the facility by issuance and sale of its bonds in the principal sum of $5,500,000. Expenditures were subject to reasonable approval of the city. The city agreed to construct the collecting sewers, - Its electors in May 1966 had approved issuance of general obligation bonds in the sum of $1,200,000 for that purpose. The city also agreed to (1) pay premium charges on casualty and liability insurance policies and taxes, (2) operate and maintain the project for a term of 30 years, and (3) pay a basic net rent of $180,000' semiannually commencing the 29th month after sale of the city bonds. Rent and miscellaneous sums were payable by the city to Pollution Control as long as' the latter’s bonded indebtedness and related items were unpaid. The city had an option to purchase the facility at any time for a price equal to the total of unpaid installments of rent, bond interest, and trust indenture premium. Otherwise, the agreement contemplated transfer of title, subject to rights of Pollution Control, to the facility at the expiration of 30 years to the city.

In the bond indenture Pollution Control covenanted that the lease was valid. It pledged its interest in the lease-purchase agreement, a policy of title insurance, and income from the facility to the trustee for the bondholders. The indenture provided, in event of default, for acceleration of principal and interest and for any action- deemed desirable by the trustee to produce revenue.

Packinghouses promised the city to contribute to payment of Pollution Control bonds. The amount was $0.07 to $0.10 a head of beef killed at their Omaha plants each year, the amount varying with salable grease to be obtained during the year. Based on the slaughter rate in 1965, the amount of this annual payment was estimated at $148,000. Municipal surcharges would be removed, but payment of sewer use fees common to all sewer users would be continued.

The city took bids on the sewer construction contracts *411 financed with proceeds of the sale of its general obligation bonds, but no other competitive bidding occurred in connection with the project.

Pollution Control owned the land upon which Carver-Greenfield was constructing the plant at the time of trial in May 1969. The claim of Greenfield’s patents read on the processes or apparatuses included in design of the plant. Pollution Control has paid consolidated real estate taxes to the treasurer of Douglas County. Internal Revenue Service had ruled that interest on Pollution Control bonds would be excludable from gross income under section 103(a) (1) of the Internal Revenue Act of 1954. It considered the bonds an issue on behalf of the city.

THE FRANCHISE ISSUE

Plaintiffs contend that the lease-purchase agreement was a franchise that violated section 14-811, R. R. S. 1943, which required electoral approval of franchises in Omaha, a metropolitan city. The force of the contention depends upon other statutory - sections.

Section 14-365.05, R. R. S. 1943, reads: “For the purpose of providing for such sewage disposal plant . . . (a metropoliton city) may also enter into a contract with any corporation ...

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Bluebook (online)
183 N.W.2d 475, 186 Neb. 407, 1971 Neb. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosentino-v-city-of-omaha-neb-1971.