Holt v. Brookhaven Borough

50 Pa. D. & C.2d 211, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 175
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County
DecidedJune 22, 1970
Docketno. 4446 of 1970
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Pa. D. & C.2d 211 (Holt v. Brookhaven Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holt v. Brookhaven Borough, 50 Pa. D. & C.2d 211, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 175 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

LIPPINCOTT, J.,

A. STATEMENT OF ISSUES

This is a class action in equity by taxpayers of the Borough of Brookhaven seeking to have an ordinance increasing sewer rentals on certain properties declared illegal and to restrain its enforcement. Plaintiffs contend that the increase is unnecessary and that it will produce an illegal surplus. Defendants admit that a surplus will result, but argue that such surplus is legally permissible to create a capital reserve fund for anticipated future expansion of the sewer system. Defendants have also counterclaimed, seeking to impose upon plaintiffs all costs and expenses on the [212]*212ground that plaintiffs’ suit is malicious and “politically motivated.”

A hearing was held before the chancellor on May 15, 1970, sur an application for a preliminary injunction, at which time it was stipulated that a final determination of the case could be made upon the record adduced at such hearing.

B. FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiffs are resident owners of properties in the Borough of Brookhaven, which are connected to the Borough’s sewer system and subject to sewer rental charges.

2. Defendant, Borough of Brookhaven, is an incorporated municipality situate in Delaware County.

3. Defendant, S. Nelson Campbell, is the elected tax collector of the borough, charged with the responsibility of collecting the borough sewer rentals.

4. The borough is serviced by three separate sewage disposal or treatment systems: the Southwest Delaware County Sewer Authority, the borough’s own plant, and that of the City of Chester.

5. 417 building units are treated by the Southwest Delaware County Sewer Authority, which units are not subject to the sewer rental charge of the borough and are not involved in this litigation.

6. 1,340 building units are treated by Chester, which receives this sewage either directly from Brook-haven or via the trunklines of two other municipalities.

7. 524 units are treated directly by the borough in its own disposal plant.

8. The 1,864 units treated by Chester and the borough are subject to sewer rental charges imposed by the borough.

9. For a number of years prior to and including 1969, the annual sewer rental charges in the borough were $25 per building unit and $12 per school unit.

[213]*21310. In the latter part of 1969, the borough received notice that the City of Chester would increase its charge to the borough in 1970 for treating the 1,340 units by an additional $7 per unit.

11. On January 12, 1970, the borough adopted the ordinance in controversy, no. 291, which increased the annual sewer rental charges for all 1,864 units subject to sewer rentals from $25 to $32 for building units and from $12 to $16 for school units.

12. The only reason advanced by borough council for increasing the sewer rents was that the rate charged by Chester on the units treated by it was to be raised, there being no evidence that the operational costs of the disposal system would be any higher in 1970 than in 1969.

13. On November 30,1969, immediately prior to the adoption of ordinance no. 291, the sewer fund of the borough had a cash surplus in the amount of $35,310.-99.

14. On December 22, 1969, the borough adopted its proposed budget for the calendar year 1970, which indicated that the surplus in the sewer fund at the end of 1970 was expected to be $42,184.99.

15. The anticipated expenditures as set forth in the proposed budget for 1970 included the $7 increase imposed by Chester for sewers serviced by that city.

16. The income then contemplated in the sewer rent budget was based on the 1969 sewer rentals of $25 per building unit and $12 per school unit.

17. The rentals proposed to be collected under ordinance no. 291 would further increase the cash surplus in the sewer fund by the end of 1970.

18. The sewer fund has no bonded indebtedness or debt service charges and the only annual expenses are the normal, yearly operational costs.

19. The sewage disposal system of the borough is [214]*214entirely adequate to service all units presently connected to it.

20. The Sanitary Water Board of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has never ordered the borough to enlarge or expand its existing sewage disposal system, nor has it indicated that said system is operating above capacity.

21. It is probable that future development in the borough will necessitate an expansion of the existing sewage treatment facilities by either tying into the Southwest Delaware County Sewer Authority or expanding the borough’s own disposal system.

22. In anticipation of such future expansion, the borough had its engineer prepare plans for enlarging the borough’s treatment plant.

23. While bids were received by the borough in September 1969 for such enlargement, no action has been taken by borough council toward accepting these bids.

24. It is unlikely that the borough at the present time could enter into contracts with any of said bidders because of the lapse of time since the bids were submitted.

25. The borough has also entered into negotiations with the Southwest Delaware County Sewer Authority in contemplation of future development in the borough and agreements have actually been drafted encompassing this alternative proposal.

26. Such contracts, if concluded, would negative the necessity for expansion of the disposal plant of the borough.

27. Plaintiffs and other present users of the sewage system would derive no benefit from future expansion of the borough’s plant or by any contracts entered into with the Southwest Delaware County Sewer Authority.

[215]*21528. The sole persons who would benefit from the expenditure of surplus funds for future expansion are owners of properties not yet tied into the sewage disposal system.

DISCUSSION

The amounts of annual sewer rental charges are limited in boroughs by two statutory enactments:

1. The Borough Code of February 1, 1966, P.L. (1965) 1656, sec. 2062, 53 PS §47062, which provides:

“Such annual rental may include the amount expended annually by the borough in maintenance, repair, alteration, inspection, depreciation, or other expense, of such sewer, sewer system or sewage treatment works, and may include interest on money expended or borrowed by the borough in the construction of the sewer, sewer system or sewage treatment works, or in the acquisition, enlargement or extension of the sewer or sewer system, and may also include an amount sufficient for the amortization of debt incurred by the borough for any such purposes, including the construction of sewage treatment works according to law. The said annual or fixed sum shall be apportioned equitably among the several properties served by the said sewers, sewer system or sewage treatment works.”

2. General municipal law Act of July 18, 1935, P.L. 1286, as amended, as set forth in 53 PS §2232:

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Bluebook (online)
50 Pa. D. & C.2d 211, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-brookhaven-borough-pactcompldelawa-1970.