Hickory Township v. Brockway

192 A.2d 231, 201 Pa. Super. 260
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 12, 1963
DocketAppeal, No. 127
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 192 A.2d 231 (Hickory Township v. Brockway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickory Township v. Brockway, 192 A.2d 231, 201 Pa. Super. 260 (Pa. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

Opinion by

Flood, J.,

The Hickory Township Ordinance fixes a uniform sewer rental charge of |50.10 per year for each residence (other than a trailer) in the township. Motels, however, are charged in accordance with a schedule which includes them in Class D, with restaurants, clubs, and trailer park central washrooms, and imposes a fixed charge for each receptacle upon the premises, [263]*263varying with the type of receptacle. The defendants refused to pay sewer rental for their motel on this basis, and paid a lower sum. The township filed a lien for the rental in arrears, followed by a writ of sci. fa.

The defendants filed an affidavit of defence which avers the following:

1. The sewer rental is arbitrarily fixed without regard to actual extent of the use of the sewage system.

2. The extent of the use of the system by the property owners in the township and the services and the benefits derived from it are in direct approximate proportion to the volume of water used or consumed on each premises since the water consumed constitutes the major volume of discharge and use of the sewer system.

3. The average amount of water used by domestic residential consumers in the area supplied by Shenango Valley Water Company during the years 1957 to 1961 was 6400 cubic feet per annum for which the users paid an average annual charge of $42.48. Such users pay a fixed annual sewer rent of $50.40 which is $0.007875 per cubic feet of water. During the same period the defendants used an annual average of 43,540 cubic feet of water in connection with their motel and paid annual water charges averaging $210.41. Their annual sewer charge,. based upon the receptacle charge for buildings in Class D, is $571.40 which is $0.013124 per cubic feet of water used. The residential user thus pays 113% of his water rent for his use of the sewer system whereas the defendants pay 271% of their water rent for the use of the system.

4. The defendants úse proportionately more of their water for sprinkling lawns and flowers and return less of it to the sewer than do the owners of private dwellings.

[264]*264The township filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer to the affidavit of defence. The objections were sustained and judgment was entered for the township. The defendants have appealed from that judgment, arguing that they have raised factual questions in their affidavit of defence which should be decided only after a hearing.

The method of determining the appellants’ water rents by flat rates for each receptacle on the premises is the same as that approved by the Supreme Court in Gericke v. Philadelphia, 353 Pa. 60, 44 A. 2d 233 (1945). Therefore, the fact that some consumers are unduly favored, in itself would not require that appellants’ rates be reduced. Since there is no allegation that their own rates are excessive for the service rendered, the appellants’ burden is not merely to show that some residential owners are unduly favored, but that the entire system of rentals is inequitable so far as they are concerned. It is in this setting that their objections must be examined.

1. The appellants complain that the rental must be proportional to the actual use of the sewer system, but is not proportional in their case. For this they rely upon Hamilton’s Appeal, 340 Pa. 17, 21-22, 16 A. 2d 32, 35 (1940). But what that opinion really says is that the charges (1) must be based upon “actual user of the system” and (2) must be “reasonably proportional to the value of the service rendered, not in excess of it”. In Hamilton’s Appeal, supra, the court struck down the proposed rental system primarily because of violation of the first of these two requirements. The so-called rental, it held, was in reality a tax, since it was based upon the assessed valuation of the property, even though the property made no use of the sewer. Thus a rental was charged for vacant lots, for buildings not connected with the sewer system and in other situations where no use whatever was [265]*265made of the system. It is obvious that this so-called rental was not based either upon amount of use of the system or upon any use of it since even though no use whatever was made of the sewer system a property owner had to pay a percentage of his assessed valuation. In North East Borough Appeal, 191 Pa. Superior Ct. 532, 159 A. 2d 528 (1960), in which this court repeated the statement that the charge must be based upon actual user, the property owner was compelled by the municipality to discharge the major portion of its sewage outside the borough system. As to it, the rental charge was held invalid.

Nor are these cases authority for the proposition that the rental must be proportioned with exactness to the use made of the sewers. What they say is that the charge must be “reasonably proportional”, not to the use made of the system, but to “the value of the service rendered”. Hamilton’s Appeal, supra. See also, Philadelphia’s Petition, 343 Pa. 47, 21 A. 2d 876 (1941). This value in the case of residences may be a different thing from what it is in the case of commercial buildings.

2. The appellant’s argument that sewer rental must be based on water cost or on water consumption cannot be sustained. There are obvious cases where this would be unjust. North East Borough Appeal, supra. It is true that the Supreme Court in Gericke v. Philadelphia, supra, has said that a sewer rental based upon Avater rates, with proper allowance for exceptional cases, is proper. But it has not said that this is the only equitable method of fixing seAver rents.

In the Gericke case it appeared that the rental charged by the City of Philadelphia to properties with water meters averaged considerably less than that charged to properties Avithout meters, which were charged a flat rate based upon the appliances or receptacles in the property. It was argued that the [266]*266rates, as between the two types of users, had no relation to the amount of water used and therefore were not equitable measures of the relative use of the sewers. The court said: “We must reject the contention that the apportionment between users paying by meters as a class and nonmetered properties which pay appliance rates is not an equitable apportionment . . .” Gericke v. Philadelphia,, supra, at p. 67, 44 A. 2d at 236.

3. The appellants further contend that the facts set forth in their affidavit show that the rental charged to them is so far out of proportion to that assessed against residential users that it cannot be said to be equitably apportioned. They argue that the facts set forth as to relative water consumption and sewer rent indicate that they are charged at a much higher rate than the average residence as compared not merely to water cost, but to water consumption as well, and that this'is clearly discriminatory.

The Supreme. Court has said that the fact that one property may use substantially more water than another similarly classified is not in itself ground for compelling a reduction of the rental to those properties which have fewer users or which use the water more economically. Gericke v. Philadelphia, supra, at p. 66, 44 A. 2d at 236.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 A.2d 231, 201 Pa. Super. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickory-township-v-brockway-pasuperct-1963.