Mann v. Granite Reeder Water & Sewer District

141 P.3d 1117, 143 Idaho 248, 2006 Ida. LEXIS 116
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2006
DocketNo. 31587
StatusPublished

This text of 141 P.3d 1117 (Mann v. Granite Reeder Water & Sewer District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mann v. Granite Reeder Water & Sewer District, 141 P.3d 1117, 143 Idaho 248, 2006 Ida. LEXIS 116 (Idaho 2006).

Opinion

SCHROEDER, Chief Justice.

Granite Reeder Water and Sewer District passed an ordinance in 2003 to form a local improvement district and authorize improvement projects for sewer treatment facilities within the improvement district. The Respondents claim the ordinance authorizes Granite Reeder to incur debt that exceeds its revenue for the year and is a general obligation of the district which must be submitted to the district’s voters. The district maintains a vote is not required because the project would be funded by a special assessment against the benefited property within the improvement district not by a general obligation of the district. The parties stipulated to facts. The district court declared the ordinance void and enjoined Granite Reeder from contracting with the United States in relation to the project. Granite Reeder moved for new trial, but its motion was denied. This appeal followed.

I.

BACKGROUND

Granite Reeder is a water and sewer district organized according to Title 42, Chapter 32 of the Idaho Code. Idaho Code § 50-1703 authorizes water and sewer districts to form local improvement districts and to construct improvements to their facilities for the benefit of property within the improvement districts. The Respondents own property within Granite Reeder. In June 2003 Granite Reeder passed Ordinance No.2003-2 which formed “Local Improvement District No. 1” to acquire, construct, and install improvements to Granite Reeder’s sewage-treatment system for the benefit of properties within the improvement district. The ordinance estimated the project’s cost to be about $5.3 million, about fifty-eight percent of which (roughly $3 million) was to be paid from assessment levies on the properties benefited by the improvements. The remaining forty-two percent was to be paid “from other legally available funds, including grant funds and other legally available funds of the district.” The ordinance also appointed an engineering firm to draw up a wastewater facilities plan for the project.

The improvements’ costs included the cost of acquiring real property. In devising its plan for facilities within the improvement district, and before it passed the ordinance, Granite Reeder determined that it may need to acquire land from the federal government for facilities that would serve properties within the local improvement district. Granite Reeder stipulated that the cost of acquiring this land would exceed the District’s annual income and revenue. In December 2004 Congress approved the sale of roughly 80 acres to Granite Reeder. This property was not within Granite Reeder’s boundaries at that time, but apparently the U.S. Forest Service has petitioned to have the property annexed into the water and sewer district. The ordinance does not refer to the purchase of the property from the United States, and [250]*250to date no contract between these parties for this land apparently exists.

After the ordinance passed, Granite Reed-er applied for a loan from the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality. Idaho’s Water Pollution Abatement Act authorizes DEQ to lend municipalities, including water and sewer districts, funds to construct wastewater treatment facilities. In November 2003, after the ordinance was passed and after this suit had commenced, DEQ offered to lend Granite Reeder $3,135,000, which, according to the loan agreement, would create a special obligation of Granite Reeder, payable from assessments levied against the properties benefited within the improvement district. The loan agreement stated specifically that the loan would not be a general obligation of Granite Reeder. Granite Reeder estimated its project’s cost to be $5.3 million. According to the loan agreement, the remaining funds for Granite Reeder’s project would come from two other sources: (1) $2,226,000 from a “STAG” grant; and (2) $250,000 from “Other” sources, bringing the total amount of funds to the necessary $5.3 million.

The engineering firm hired by Granite Reeder proposed in its wastewater facilities plan three alternatives for acquiring the real property necessary to the project. One alternative involved Granite Reeder acquiring a special use permit, another proposed a land swap, and the final proposal called for an outright purchase of the property, which had been assessed at $236,000. The Respondents claim that the ordinance authorizes and/or requires Granite Reeder to contract with the United States to purchase real property, and that the contract would cause the district to incur debt in the form of a general obligation that exceeds the district’s revenue for the year. They maintain that I.C. § 42-3222 requires the district to submit the ordinance to the voters in the district. Section 42-3222 provides that if a water and sewer district deems it necessary to acquire, construct, install, or complete an improvement, or, deems it necessary to contract with a person or entity to carry out the district’s purposes, and, to do so requires “the creation of an indebtedness that will exceed the income and revenue provided for the year,” the board of the district must submit the “proposition of issuing such obligations or bonds, or creating other indebtedness to the qualified electors of the district.”

The Respondents sought declaratory and injunctive relief invalidating the ordinance and barring Granite Reeder from contracting with the United States for any purpose related to the plan as detailed in the engineering firm’s wastewater facilities plan. Granite Reeder defended on the basis that the Local Improvement District Code authorizes it to levy assessments against the benefited property and issue local improvement bonds without submitting the ordinance to the voters in the district. Granite Reeder distinguished the kind of debt contemplated in § 42-3222 from the ordinance’s authorization to acquire property and raise funds for the acquisition by issuing local improvement bonds pursuant to §§ 50-1722 and 50-1723. Idaho Code §§ 50-1719 and 50-1721 provide that bonds issued under the Local Improvement District Code are liens against the property benefited and assessed; Section 50-1723 in turn provides that when local improvement bonds are issued, the municipality is not hable for them. Consequently, when a water and sewer district raises funds by issuing local improvement bonds and levying against the benefited properties within the improvement district, the municipality does not create a general obligation of the district. According to Granite Reeder, § 42-3222 does not apply and no vote is required.

The parties stipulated to the facts upon which the district court issued its judgment. The district court invalidated the ordinance to the extent that the ordinance authorized Granite Reeder to “contract with the United States which pertains, in any way, to the proposed ‘Granite/Reeder Sanitary Sewer System’ as detailed by the [engineering firm’s] ‘Wastewater Facilities Plan,’ and any amendments thereto.” The court also ruled that the ordinance violated the due process rights of the district’s voters since the ordinance was required to be put to a vote and was not. The district court permanently enjoined Granite Reeder from contracting with the United States “for any purpose related, whether directly or indirectly, to the proposed Granite/Reeder Sanitary Sewer System as detailed in the [engineering firm’s] [251]*251‘Wastewater Facilities Plan,’ and any amendments thereto.” Granite Reeder appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
141 P.3d 1117, 143 Idaho 248, 2006 Ida. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-granite-reeder-water-sewer-district-idaho-2006.