Iroquois Properties v. City of East Lansing

408 N.W.2d 495, 160 Mich. App. 544
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1987
DocketDocket 86497
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 408 N.W.2d 495 (Iroquois Properties v. City of East Lansing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iroquois Properties v. City of East Lansing, 408 N.W.2d 495, 160 Mich. App. 544 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Beasley, P.J.

Defendant, City of East Lansing, appeals a judgment of the Ingham Circuit Court in favor of plaintiffs, Iroquois Properties, a Michigan limited partnership doing business as Cedar Greens, Ville Monte Limited Partnership, a Michigan limited partnership, and 731 Limited Partnership, a Michigan limited partnership.

In this case, plaintiffs attacked the constitutionality of defendant city’s rubbish collection ordinance (ordinance 470), claiming that the ordinance violated the equal protection clauses of the Michigan and United States Constitutions.* 1 The trial court certified this matter as a true class action and defined the classes as those owners of residential property with more than two units who pay, have paid or are required to pay a charge for the collection of rubbish. On July 17, 1985, Ingham Circuit Judge James T. Kallman filed a written opinion holding the refuse collection fee exacted by the ordinance to be unconstitutional and ordered the city to return all fees collected pursuant to the ordinance.

Prior to 1979, défendant city provided refuse collection services to single family residences, multifamily residences and to commercial businesses *547 without any specific user charge. Refuse collection was, at that time, financed out of the city’s general fund. While a few property owners, for reasons of their own, used private haulers, nearly all multifamily dwelling owners and commercial businesses used the city’s refuse collection service until ordinance 470 was adopted. Under the various city rules and administrative practices then in existence, single and two-family residences and some multifamily dwellings were allowed to use trash cans or bags, which were collected curbside once a week. Larger businesses and multifamily residences were, with few exceptions, required to use dumpsters, although one of the original named plaintiffs (Ville Monte) used trash bags collected at curbside by hand.

In 1975, in response to the increasing costs of refuse collection and changing landfill practices, the city undertook a comprehensive evaluation of its refuse collection system. Besides making observations and recommendations on ways in which the city’s rubbish collection system could be improved, the "Solid Waste Collection and Disposal Study” separately analyzed the cost of residential rubbish collection, which was composed of primarily single and two-family dwellings, and commercial, i.e., dumpster, rubbish collection, which was composed of primarily multifamily residences, and business and tax-exempt properties. According to the study, the cost per ton for residential rubbish collection ($19.68 per ton) was slightly greater than the cost per ton for dumpster collection ($15.84 per ton). In addition, the study concluded that dumpster users were receiving much more in the way of rubbish collection service than they were contributing in property taxes. The study suggested that residential users (single and two-family residence owners) were partially subsidizing *548 the garbage collection service received by dumpster users.

A following study by the city in 1978 indicated that the patterns revealed in 1975 were more accentuated. According to the 1978 study, the cost of dumpster collection consumed a larger share of the total cost of refuse collection (50 percent in 1975 compared to 56 percent in 1978), while the dumpster user portion of the property tax base had declined from 33.4 percent in 1975 to 31.03 percent in 1978. An updated study in 1979 indicated the trend was continuing: the cost of dumpster rubbish collection constituted 55 percent of the total cost of rubbish collection, while the dumpster users’ share of the property tax base declined to 30.07 percent. The total cost of the city refuse collection system in 1979 ($506,500) indicated a substantial increase from the same figure in 1975 ($259,817).

In light of these and other studies, the city considered three options:

(1) Termination of dumpster rubbish collection. (A study revealed that this would save the city $252,000 annually, but would cost dumpster users $442,463 in estimated fees to private haulers.)

(2) Charging a fee for dumpster collection. (City officials calculated that a fee generating $150,000 in revenue from dumpster users would result in a fairly equitable allocation of the costs of refuse collection between residential curbside users and dumpster users.)

(3) A 0.8 increase in the millage rate.

In June, 1979, the city decided to pursue the second option and, thus, passed ordinance 470, which made a number of important changes in the city’s refuse collection system.

First, the ordinance codified the city’s rules and *549 administrative procedures concerning refuse containers. Single family and two-family dwellings were required to use portable containers (i.e., trash cans) of not less than twenty nor more than thirty gallons capacity, or heavy-duty trash bags. If the city determined, from the number of trash cans or bags used, that the amount of refuse generated by a property owner exceeded the equivalent of two cubic yards of refuse per week, the city was permitted to require the use of a dumpster or to require collection more than once a week. Multiple-family residences (structures containing more than two dwelling units) were required to use dumpsters with a capacity of not less than three cubic yards.

Second, two types of multifamily residences were exempted from the dumpster requirement:

(a) condominiums and cooperatives constructed as detached single or two-family dwelling units with accessible curbside collection points, and

(b) multiple-family residences where the responsible party demonstrated that a multiple dwelling generated less than an average of two cubic yards of rubbish per week. This exception could be granted only where readily accessible curbside collection points were available and no special sanitation or site location problems existed. An appeal process was made available to owners of multiple dwellings denied a special exemption.

Third, the ordinance levied a fee on dwellings which fell into any of the following categories: dumpster users, premises generating an average of two cubic yards or more per week, and premises requiring curbside collection of portable containers more than once per week. A rate schedule was established based on the size of the container used and the frequency of collection. Not coincidentally, the rate structure adopted was the same one rec *550 ommended by the city’s financial people as a means to raise $150,000 from dumpster users and, thus, establish an equitable allocation of the cost of refuse collection between dumpster users and the users of the city’s residential curbside collection service.

After the ordinance was passed, city officials developed a master list of all potential users of the city’s dumpster service.

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408 N.W.2d 495, 160 Mich. App. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iroquois-properties-v-city-of-east-lansing-michctapp-1987.