McMahon v. City of Virginia Beach

267 S.E.2d 130, 221 Va. 102, 1980 Va. LEXIS 220
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 6, 1980
DocketRecord 781028
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 267 S.E.2d 130 (McMahon v. City of Virginia Beach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMahon v. City of Virginia Beach, 267 S.E.2d 130, 221 Va. 102, 1980 Va. LEXIS 220 (Va. 1980).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal presents the question whether a city may by ordinance require landowners who possess adequate supplies of potable water provided by their privately owned wells to connect with the municipal water supply system when the ordinance does not require use of the city water.

In the trial court, the Committee to Save Our Wells, an unincorporated association, and more than 200 individual landowners, 1 including B. F. McMahon, filed a bill of complaint for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief against the City of Virginia Beach (the City). Plaintiffs sought an adjudication that the mandatory water connection ordinance adopted in 1977 by the City Council *104 was unconstitutional and an injunction to prohibit the City and its agents from requiring plaintiffs to comply with the ordinance.

The parties agreed to a comprehensive stipulation of facts. An ore terms hearing was also conducted and on April 28, 1978, the trial court entered a final decree dismissing the Committee to Save Our Wells as a party, and upholding the constitutionality and validity of the ordinance. The individual landowners have appealed, assigning error to the trial court’s failure to rule that the City exceeded its power in adopting the ordinance requiring them to connect with the City’s water system and to pay various water connection charges.

Prior to adoption of the ordinance the landowners, who reside in the various residential areas of the City, had at their own expense installed wells varying in depth from 50 to 165 feet, sufficiently deep to avoid contamination from septic tanks. Tests of some of the wells, which the City made at the request of the owners, revealed no bacterial contamination. Although the testing program was not complete, the parties stipulated that the quantity and quality of the landowners’ well water was good. It was further stipulated that each landowner had invested several hundred dollars in wells and related equipment, and that some of the landowners, before making such investment, had been informed by City personnel that the City did not require “hookups to City water nor did the City contemplate mandatory hookups”.

The City has been concerned for many years with the problem of providing an adequate water supply for its residents. Under a contract expiring in 1993, the City purchases its water at a bulk rate from surplus supplies of the City of Norfolk. Numerous studies made by consultants, the United States Army Corps of Engineers, and others, have addressed the water problem. In the summer of 1977, a serious drought in Tidewater Virginia caused the City and the City of Norfolk to impose mandatory water conservation measures. Nevertheless, there was evidence that the City of Norfolk had recently increased its own water resources and expanded its treatment facilities sufficiently to assure an abundant supply of water for both municipalities until the end of the contract period. The City, however, had employed engineers to study and recommend alternative sources of water to supplement the supply available under the contract. These alternatives included potable water that might be withdrawn from shallow wells, such as those of the landowners, and brackish water that might be withdrawn from deep wells and made potable by treatment in a proposed desalinization plant. Moreover, *105 the City had found that its water distribution system was deficient, and presented potentially serious health problems, especially at the waterfront.

A capital improvement program was proposed to finance water and sewer lines. The City’s financial consultants, in recommending that the City issue $20,000,000 in general obligation bonds, did not suggest a mandatory connection ordinance. Upon recommendation of the City Manager, however, approved by the financial consultants in a supplemental report, City Council in March, 1977, adopted a mandatory connection ordinance, providing in pertinent part as follows:

Sec. 37-28. Connection required.
The owner of any dwelling or other building in which human beings live or congregate shall, whenever a public water line hereafter is made available by the city, connect such building or dwelling with such water line within one year after such line becomes available.

The parties stipulated that the word “connection”, as administratively construed by the City, means bringing the water service line to the dwelling. The line does not have to be brought into the dwelling but “should be readily accessible if and when the supply is needed”. It was further stipulated that the ordinance prohibited “the cross-connection between City and well water”.

Section 37-29 of the City Code prescribed the applicable connection and installation fees, requiring a minimum fee of $220. This section also provided for payment of a fee for installation of a waterline in the street, the fee for the first 100 feet of frontage of a single-family residence lot being $500, plus $5 for each foot in excess of 100 feet. Thus, the minimum fees would be $220 and $500, respectively, or a total of $720.

The City estimated that the ordinance would require that approximately 4,500 dwellings be connected to the municipal water system, resulting in collection of fees aggregating $3,465,000 “plus or minus $1,000,000”. Clearly, the average fee, based upon an estimated total of $3,465,000, would be $770, or slightly in excess of the minimum. There was evidence that the average frontage of the landowners’ lots exceeded 100 feet, and it was stipulated that the installation of the average eight-inch waterline in front of a dwelling cost $22 per linear foot. Thus the average cost of installing a waterline in the street abutting a landowner’s property would be $2,200.

*106 Included in the stipulation was the following:

K. Well water—
(1) Subsurface wells could at any time become polluted without prior knowledge of the City or the plaintiffs. The Norfolk Water System is routinely monitored for water quality under the National Safe Drinking Water Act.
(2) A prolonged water table decline could make plaintiffs’ wells inoperable.
(3) A prolonged lack of electricity would render plaintiffs’ wells useless.
(4) A significant drawdown of ground water might create a salt water intrusion in the plaintiffs’ wells.
The likelihood of the foregoing to occur is small.

In its final decree the trial court ruled that Code § 15.1-875 2 authorized a city, under the police powers set forth in Code § 15.1-873, 3 to require connection of premises with a municipal water system. The constitutionality of such a requirement, as the court noted, was upheld in Sanitation Commission v. Craft, 196 Va. 1140, 87 S.E.2d 153 (1955).

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.E.2d 130, 221 Va. 102, 1980 Va. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmahon-v-city-of-virginia-beach-va-1980.