Fairbanks North Star Borough v. College Utilities Corp.

689 P.2d 460, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 350
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1984
Docket7849, 7858
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 689 P.2d 460 (Fairbanks North Star Borough v. College Utilities Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairbanks North Star Borough v. College Utilities Corp., 689 P.2d 460, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 350 (Ala. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I.

In the spring of 1982, the Mayor of the Fairbanks North Star Borough (Borough or *461 FNSB) introduced an ordinance that, among other things, raised the rate at which real property in the College Service Area 1 was to be taxed. 2 In previous years the rate had been set at zero mills; the ordinance raised that rate to one mill. 3 Notice of the proposed ordinance was published in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, a daily newspaper of general circulation in the Fairbanks area, and the Borough Assembly subsequently enacted the ordinance.

George Gordon (Gordon), a property owner in the College Service Area, learned of the change in rates when he received a corporate 4 real property tax bill from the Borough in July 1982. Over the following five months, Gordon protested the rate increase to the Borough attorney, individual Borough assemblymen, and the chairman of the College Service Area Commission. 5 Failing to obtain administrative relief, Gordon sued the Borough in superior court, challenging the one-mill assessment and seeking a refund of the taxes he and other College Service Area property owners had paid under the new rate. The Borough moved to dismiss the complaint under Alaska R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Following extensive discovery, Gordon moved for summary judgment on liability. The superior court, after oral argument on the Borough’s motion to dismiss, concluded “that the Borough gave inadequate notice to property owners” of the proposed millage rate change. The court granted Gordon’s motion for summary judgment and ordered the Borough to refund the taxes collected under Ordinance No. 82-20-1A. The superior court further concluded that Gordon was a successful public interest litigant, and awarded him actual costs and attorney’s fees. The Borough appeals from both the superior court’s determination that notice was inadequate and its award of full attorney’s fees. Gordon cross-appeals, challenging the superior court’s conclusion that the one-mill rate increase was authorized by statute.

II.

AS 29.48.150 prescribes the procedures for enacting ordinances:

The following procedure governs the enactment of all ordinances except emergency ordinances. An ordinance may be introduced by a member or committee of the assembly or council or by the municipal executive or chief administrator. An ordinance shall be set for hearing by the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes authorized on the question. A summary of the ordinance and its amendments is published together with a notice of time and place for public hearing. The hearing follows publication by at least five days. Copies of the ordinance must be available to all persons present or the ordinance must be read in full. The assembly or council shall hear all *462 interested persons wishing to be heard. After the hearing, the assembly or council shall consider the ordinance and may adopt it with or without amendment. The assembly or council shall print and make available copies of adopted ordinances.

It is undisputed that a summary of proposed Ordinance No. 82-20-1A was published five days before the public hearing. At issue in this case is the adequacy of that published summary.

Ordinance No. 82-20-1A is comprised of two sections. The first section appropriates funds for service area expenditures in fiscal year 1982-83, while the second section establishes rates of taxation for some of the service areas. Section one lists all fifty-seven service areas, setting out the total expenses and revenues for each one. Section two lists twenty service areas in which a property tax is to be levied. The College Service Area is listed in both sections.

Pursuant to its statutory duty under AS 29.48.150(a), the Borough Assembly published the following notice in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner on May 22, 1982:

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Public hearing will be held by the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly at its regular meeting in the Borough Assembly Chambers of the Fairbanks North Star Borough Administrative Offices, 520 5th Avenue, Fairbanks, on May 27, 1982, at 8:00 p.m., on the following ordinances:
ORDINANCE NO. 82-20-1A. An Ordinance Amending The FY 1982-83 Budget By Appropriating Funds For the Borough Service Areas And Fixing the Rate Of Real Property Tax Levy For These Service Areas For the 1982/83 Fiscal Year.
All citizens of the Fairbanks North Star Borough will have an opportunity to be heard. Copies of the ordinances are available at the office of the Borough Clerk, Fairbanks North Star Borough Administrative Offices, 520 5th Avenue, Fairbanks.

The question before us is whether this published summary of Ordinance No. 82-20-1A meets the requirements of AS 29.48.-150(a). 6

The superior court, in concluding that the published summary was inadequate, focused primarily upon what it viewed as its vagueness:

Notice was published on May 22, 1982 and was very vague. The Fairbanks North Star Borough contains 57 service areas. Ordinance No. 82-20-1A affected twenty of those service areas. The public notice gave no indication of who or what Ordinance 82-20-1A would affect. A public hearing was held on May 27, 1982 and only a handful of people attended. On these facts the conclusion is inescapable that the Borough gave inadequate notice to property owners.

We conclude that the published summary of the ordinance complied with the mandate of AS 29.48.150.. The text of the summary is not “vague”; the summary described clearly, if generally, what the proposed ordinance would accomplish. 7 According to Gordon, the summary should *463 have specified that the proposed tax rate for the College Service Area was one mill, or at least that the proposed ordinance would increase the present mill rate. We cannot agree that the term “summary”, as used in AS 29.48.150(a), requires that level of detail. Were we to require that the summary of the ordinance set forth the tax rate increase for the College Service Area, it would follow that any contemplated increase in the tax rate of other service areas would have to be specifically mentioned. We cannot countenance such a result. The Legislature decided to require publication only of a “summary” of each proposed ordinance, not publication of the ordinance itself. In this respect, AS 29.48.150 differs from the statutory publication requirements of other jurisdictions. 8 The published notice in this case adequately and accurately summarized the proposed ordinance. No greater level of detail was required.

Accordingly, we hold that the published summary of Ordinance No. 82-20-1A satisfied the requirements of AS 29.48.150(a).

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Bluebook (online)
689 P.2d 460, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairbanks-north-star-borough-v-college-utilities-corp-alaska-1984.