Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad v. Central Weber Sewer Improvement District

287 P.2d 884, 4 Utah 2d 105, 1955 Utah LEXIS 185
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1955
Docket8171-8176
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 287 P.2d 884 (Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad v. Central Weber Sewer Improvement District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad v. Central Weber Sewer Improvement District, 287 P.2d 884, 4 Utah 2d 105, 1955 Utah LEXIS 185 (Utah 1955).

Opinion

HENRIOD, Justice.

Consolidated appeal by a sewer district from 6 judgments which excluded certain real and personal property (of gas, phone, power and 3 railroad companies) from the district and thus relieved it of the tax burden provided for in Chap. 32, Laws of Utah, 1951, the pertinent sections of which appear below, matters deemed unimportant for this case 1 having been deleted, and italics supplied. Affirmed, no costs.

*108 The statute allows creation of water and sewer districts by county commissions. A general tax (not a special assessment) is leviable against all taxable property in the district to accomplish the district’s purposes, (after any exclusions of property shown not to be benefited directly, have been effected). The 6-pro-testing utilities own rights of way, rolling stock, communication lines, real estate beyond the rights of way, improvements and personal property connected with each as outlined in their written protests, filed before the creation of the district, the utilities variously claiming that property such as transmission lines, rolling stock and rights of way would not be benefited directly by the sewer. They conceded, however, that some of the property that they listed, such as real property owned by them outside of the rights of way and the improvements and personal property thereon, would be benefited directly by the sewer project, suggesting and agreeing that such property was includable and taxable in the district. Although the parties stipulated that the sewer generally would benefit the area included in the' district, counsel for the sewer district did not contend in their briefs that the specific property claimed to be excludable, and situate in the area claimed not to be benefited, such as transmission lines, rolling stock, etc. itself would be benefited directly, and it is not unreasonable to assume that their failure so to contend was natural and inescapable since it appears reasonably certain that such property or its owners hardly could be benefited directly by sewer facilities incident to the project.

It does not appear otherwise from the record than that the county commission arbitrarily concluded that the property, subject of protest and claimed exclusion', would be benefited directly by, should be included in, and not eliminated from the district, i. e., that all such property was *109 taxable. The district court rejected the commission’s conclusion.

Eight errors are urged, which may be categorized into 3 basic complaints: 1) That on writ of review, only the certified evidence and record are reviewable, and no evidence is adducible in addition to that shown in the record; 2) That only realty is excludable, but personalty is not, though the latter is taxable; and 3) That the legislature did not intend to use the word “directly” in Sec. 3 of the 1951 act.

As to 1) : Ordinarily on writ of review the certified record alone is examinable. 2 Not so, however, where the record and determination of the commission or board are unsupported by some kind of reasonably substantial proof. In such event the judiciary may awaken to question their warrant, and in doing so, may receive, examine and weigh evidence, if necessary, as it did here on stipulated facts, to the end that due process guarantees will maintain. 3 We cannot subscribe to the view that the utilities, in failing to insist on introducing evidence before the commission other than their written protests, which generally described the property claimed to be excludable because not benefited, waived any right of review. There is nothing in the statute that says the respondents had to present evidence at the hearing. The only requirement up to that point was that, in order to protect one’s interest, he must have filed a written protest, objecting to the creation of the district. Here the respondents filed written protests, containing their objections, which embodied about all they could have presented orally at a hearing, and to permit a commission arbitrarily to ignore such contentions, and hold that a judicial review of the commission’s findings and conclusions could not be had, would be to render impotent the concepts of due process, which require that he who deigns to deny such process, must afford- it,— particularly where -he, who is denied it, reasonably has followed or attempted- to follow the language of a statute 'which at best, is not the product of the clearest draftsmanship.

We do not agree with the. .se-yver district that the review can.: extend - no further than to examine, the record .helo.w, nor do we agree with the utilities that the act contemplates a trial de novo. The *110 nature and extent of the review depends on what happened below as reflected by a true record of the proceedings, viewed in the light of accepted due process requirements. If the record made revealed the fact that the commission had conducted a hearing, taken evidence, heard witnesses under oath and otherwise had proceeded in accordance with such due process requirements, 4 and had the facts either supported or negatived the commission’s findings and conclusions, the reviewing court could have examined only the record before it, to determine if the commission regularly had pursued its authority, or had abused its discretion. But where, as here, there is nothing to review but an ipse dixit, due process would be denied if the reviewing Court could not get at the facts. To hold otherwise, invites .rule by men, not laws, and would lead to such absurd results as that which would maintain if a commission, desiring a sewer in one part of the county, forced much of a project’s cost upon industrial plants, persons or utilities by creating an irregular district with territorial tentacles reaching out to envelope property, though neither it nor its owners conceivably could enjoy the plumbing,- — followed by the simple device of holding an unrecorded and meaningless hearing.

As to 2) : An examination of Sec. 3 of the act makes it apparent that two classes of property owners are contemplated when provision is made for a) Any taxpayer to protest and for b) real property owners to protest, — all found in the same paragraph. To argue that “any taxpayer” means only “real property owner” is to blind oneself to the words and realities. If the act permitted only real property owners to register a protest, arbitrarily denying such right to taxable personal property owners, a constitutional question might present itself. We can see little justice under a statute which taxes both real and personal property, and whose language fairly may be interpreted to relieve both real or personal property from taxation if either is not directly benefited from a proposed sewer project, if a person who owns and simply stores a $50,000 piece of hauling equipment could get no relief from the taxes imposed by the statute, whereas one who owns an acre of marsh land worth $100.00 completely is immune from payment of the taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
287 P.2d 884, 4 Utah 2d 105, 1955 Utah LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-rio-grande-western-railroad-v-central-weber-sewer-improvement-utah-1955.