Covington v. City of Rockingham

146 S.E.2d 420, 266 N.C. 507, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1375
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 4, 1966
Docket524
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 S.E.2d 420 (Covington v. City of Rockingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Covington v. City of Rockingham, 146 S.E.2d 420, 266 N.C. 507, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1375 (N.C. 1966).

Opinion

DenNY, C.J.

The defendant assigns as error the refusal of the court below to sustain its motion for judgment as of nonsuit made at the close of all the evidence.

It is clear from the evidence that in May 1948 plaintiff husband constructed an eight-inch sewer line, 58 feet in length, from a manhole in Rockingham’s sewer outfall under U. S. Highway No. 1, to his premises, and at the end of this line constructed a manhole on the premises of plaintiffs. From this manhole the plaintiffs ran laterals through their property aggregating 379 feet. According to plaintiffs’ evidence, these sewer lines were installed for the exclusive purpose of serving plaintiffs’ filling station and developing their own property. The plaintiffs maintain a trailer camp on the premises and the trailers are connected to one of the sewer lines installed by plaintiffs. Whether the plaintiffs required the Ro-Jan Motel to pay for the connection with their sewer system is not disclosed by the record.

There is no evidence tending to show that the defendant has exercised a scintilla of control over the sewer lines installed by the plaintiffs, unless the establishment of the charge for sewerage service is so construed. However, we think the tender of an easement, made in the complaint, is tantamount to an admission that the defendant, up to that time, had not exercised any control over these lines by way of maintenance or by selling and making connections thereto. The tender of the easement, according to the complaint, was made “in order that the defendant may have the right to maintain said sewer lines.” These lines were not constructed within the area of proposed streets but on the private property of the plaintiffs, and, insofar as the record discloses, the property has never been subdivided or further developed.

Plaintiffs contend that by establishing a charge for sewerage service and the collection of such charge from them and the Ro-Jan Motel and the towel store, all of whose sewage passes through plaintiffs’ lines into defendant’s sewer system, in effect, constituted an appropriation of plaintiffs’ property, and the court below so charged the jury.

A municipality may establish a charge for sewerage service and require all its water customers to pay for such service whether such *510 customers live within or without the corporate limits of such municipality. G.S. 160-249.

The pertinent question raised on this appeal is whether or not the defendant’s establishment of a charge for sewerage .service amounted to a taking of plaintiffs’ property, thereby creating a liability on the part of the defendant to pay the plaintiffs for the reasonable value of the sewer lines involved. This question must be determined in light of the facts in this particular case. Spaugh v. Winston-Salem, 234 N.C. 708, 68 S.E. 2d 838.

In Huntley v. Potter, 255 N.C. 619, 122 S.E. 2d 681, Moore, J., speaking for the Court, said:

“Where there is no contract or municipal ordinance involved and the territory served by private water or sewer lines is annexed to a municipality, the owner of the lines may not recover the value thereof from the municipality unless it appropriates them and controls them as proprietor. The bare extension of the city limits does not amount to a wrongful taking or appropriation of the lines. Maintenance as a voluntary act on the part of the city does not amount to a taking of the property. Farr v. Asheville, 205 N.C. 82, 170 S.E. 125.”

The case of Farr v. Asheville, 205 N.C. 82, 170 S.E. 125, tried before a jury, and in many respects similar to the instant case, involved the question of whether there had been a taking of plaintiffs’ water and sewer system. The facts relied on by the plaintiffs to show a taking were not considered sufficient to make out a case, and this Court held that the motion for nonsuit should have been allowed. The Court said:

“* * * The city owned a water line on the western boundary of the development, and also another line on Kimberly Avenue, which is east of the Farrwood development. The Farrwood construction was made in 1923 or 1924, and the city began furnishing water through the pipes claimed by the plaintiffs and collected water rentals from users within the area. The repairing of a leak and the flushing of a dead-end was incident to furnishing water. * * * Neither does the fact that a connection was made to the Farrwood Avenue lines outside the development constitute a wrongful appropriation of plaintiffs’ property. In the last analysis the plaintiff built a private water system, and for his own convenience and profit, connecte'd it with the city system on the east and west of his development. The city immediately began to furnish water to residents in the subdivision on the completion of the system and has continued *511 to do so up to the time the suit was brought * * * without any change in its methods and without any assertion of ownership of the water pipes laid by the plaintiffs. * * *”

In Manufacturing Co. v. Charlotte, 242 N.C. 189, 87 S.E. 2d 204, there was a verbal contract that the city would pay for the private sewer system when the involved area was taken into the city. This Court held the contract was void since it was not in writing, but that the plaintiff was entitled to recover on quantum meruit because, as stipulated, the city had “assumed maintenance and operation thereof.” In Jackson v. Gastonia, 246 N.C. 404, 98 S.E. 2d 444, it was stipulated that the City of Gastonia had “taken over, used and controlled * * * water and sewer lines to the same extent as if said lines had been installed by the defendant (City) originally.” These and similar cases relied on by the plaintiffs are not controlling on the facts in this record.

This Court, in Spaugh v. Winston-Salem, supra, said:

“From an examination of the cases cited and the decisions based on the particular facts of those cases, it is apparent that no comprehensive rule emerges, and that this case and others of like nature must be considered and determined in the light of the pertinent facts presented by the record in each case.”

The foregoing statement was quoted with approval in Jackson v. Gastonia, supra.

In the case of Candler v. Asheville, 247 N.C. 398, 101 S.E. 2d 470, this Court quoted with approval from the case of City of Seymour v. Texas Electric Service Co., 66 F. 2d 814 (C.C.A. 5), (certiorari denied 290 U.S. 685, 78 L. Ed. 590) as follows:

“ '* * * In owning and operating a utility plant a city acts not in a governmental but in a proprietary capacity, (but) when the council, exerting the power to regulate, comes to fix rates it represents not the city, as proprietor, but the State, as regulator. It exerts not the contractual power of the city, but the sovereign power of the state.’ ”

In Rhyne, Municipal Law, Sewers and Drains, § 20-5, page 462, et seq., it is stated:

“The power of a municipal board or body to fix charges or rates for sewer service is legislative in character (see Taxpayers & Citizens, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.E.2d 420, 266 N.C. 507, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/covington-v-city-of-rockingham-nc-1966.