Kliks v. Dalles City

335 P.2d 366, 216 Or. 160, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 257
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 335 P.2d 366 (Kliks v. Dalles City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kliks v. Dalles City, 335 P.2d 366, 216 Or. 160, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 257 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, J.

This is a suit brought against the defendant city and several of its officers to determine the validity and construction of certain city ordinances fixing water rates under which the plaintiffs were required to pay *164 for water used in the Commodore Apartments, an apartment building owned by them. In addition to a prayer that the ordinance be declared void on the ground that it establishes discriminatory and unreasonable rates for water as applied to the use in the plaintiffs’ apartment building, plaintiffs request the court to fix a maximum charge for their use of water; that the defendant be enjoined from interfering with such use and that there be an accounting with respect to charges and payments for water from and after January, 1954.

The ordinances in question, which establish the water rate structure, are challenged on two principal grounds; (1) that the inclusion of rooming houses, boarding houses, motels, hotels and trailer courts under a classification distinct from, and under a more favorable rate structure than, apartment houses constituted an unreasonable discrimination, and (2) that the minimum service charge applicable to apartment houses was based upon the use of a quantity of water which so far exceeded the actual use of the water by the plaintiffs’ tenants that the charge was arbitrary, unreasonable and confiscatory.

The plaintiffs contend that these ordinances violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and Article I, § 18 and 20 of the Oregon Constitution. The trial court held that the classification established by the ordinances was not discriminatory but that the minimum rates as they were applied to the plaintiffs’ property were arbitrary and that therefore the ordinances were to that extent void. The defendants have appealed from that part of the decree which declared void the minimum unit rates as applied to the plaintiffs’ property. The plaintiffs cross-appealed from the decree in its entirety.

*165 Prior to October 1, 1953, apartment houses in The Dalles were classified as commercial users of water and were charged for water at a rate of $2.00 a month minimum which entitled the customer to use 7500 gallons of water during that period. All water in excess of 7500 gallons was charged for at the same meter rate per thousand gallons as that charged all commercial users. In October, 1953 the rate structure applicable to apartment houses was changed by the enactment of Ordinance No. 706. This ordinance provided that apartment houses having more than four living units would be charged $2.00 per month minimum rate for each apartment unit, which entitled the customer to 7500 gallons of water for each unit.①

①GENERAL ORDINANCE NO. 706

An Ordinance to amend certain parts of Section 6 of General Ordinance No. 687, as amended, relating to water rates, security deposits, and payment thereof.

* #

(d) The following schedule of water rates is hereby established and shall be charged for water supplied by the City:

FLAT RATE (Residential) %" TAP:

Single Family Residences $3.00 per month
Two Family Residences 2.50 per unit per month
Three Family Residences 2.25 per unit per month
Four Family Residences 2.00 per unit per month
(All apartments over four families subject to metered rates.)

*166 FLAT RATE OVERSIZE CONNECTIONS:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
335 P.2d 366, 216 Or. 160, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kliks-v-dalles-city-or-1959.